Furthermore, its response in the aftermath of the tragedy has been to gag or discredit the reputation of those who have attempted to speak out. |
|
She posted an emotional message on her Instagram feed to speak out against body-shaming commenters. |
|
Likewise he can speak out on environmental issues unencumbered by the focus-group fudges that blunted his election campaign. |
|
Control would be passed to frontline ward staff and patients would be encouraged to speak out if they thought hygiene standards were slipping. |
|
If smacking children becomes illegal those people who really want to change or become better parents will not speak out for fear of consequences. |
|
It definitely has a place in music, but it's not our thing to stand on a soapbox and speak out. |
|
His elevated social status allowed him to speak out on issues in exactly the way that he saw fit, no matter what the consequences. |
|
The highly publicized dispute led numerous arts professionals to speak out on behalf of the director. |
|
Freedom of speech is a fact, although by no means do individuals yet speak out freely at public meetings. |
|
I just don't know what companies are doing because they're not willing to speak out publicly. |
|
She did speak out when she went to the hospital the next morning and went to the police. |
|
As a Nobel prizewinner, he has access to international platforms where he can speak out against such atrocities. |
|
If we do not speak out and act to stop the brutish behaviour of our Government, then we become accomplices to its wrongdoings. |
|
First of all, for those of you who don't know me, I am a former vivisector and I speak out against vivisection now. |
|
Older people can be some of our most vulnerable citizens and far too often can find it hard to speak out. |
|
It's no coincidence that those who speak out are no-platformed, attacked, vilified, slandered, and have their employment threatened. |
|
Of course, height enhancers could speak out against heightism, while still relieving short children of the burden of growing up short. |
|
It was the smaller children and young girls who could not be expected to speak out. |
|
Boshra feels that most senior editors sympathize with the reporters' sentiments, but have more to lose if they speak out. |
|
They are the ones who speak out, resist, and pay with their liberty or their lives. |
|
|
A sense of fear pervades the entire state, with people afraid to speak out against the atrocities of Pakistani terrorists. |
|
Are they going to speak out against impunity, especially for a former legislator who knows the importance of the rule of the law? |
|
When Hindus speak out against such a situation, we are labeled communalists. |
|
A sense of natural justice compels me to speak out in defense of mimes who cannot speak for themselves. |
|
So it is natural for people to have an opportunity to speak out about their complaints and dissatisfactions. |
|
If I do not speak out against this nonchalant murder of innocents, I am complicit with my government. |
|
I think the University certainly has the right, and sometimes the moral obligation, to speak out against speech that it finds offensive. |
|
Speaker after speaker inveighed against their inability to speak out against the Tesco plan. |
|
They ought to be demanding that the presidential candidates speak out forthrightly on these issues. |
|
Some critics of this letter may argue that at 19, I really have no right to speak out. |
|
While York College itself has not taken a stance on the issue, the biologists have academic freedom to speak out, he said. |
|
The freedom of scientists to speak out and share their insights is one of the fundamentals of a modern knowledge-based democracy. |
|
They know who has the upper hand and are afraid to speak out against this hand that provides only crumbs to them. |
|
What they wished rather was that he should speak out of the fulness of his heart and there leave the matter. |
|
Even though Downing Street and the Treasury would try to gag him, he felt compelled to speak out about his governing passion. |
|
He was a victim of genetic pollution and courageously decided to fight back and speak out against bio-serfdom. |
|
Despite disagreeing with his colleagues, he has defended their right to speak out. |
|
How can we expect these men to speak out in civil society for causes they have not supported in their own denominations? |
|
Many residents are activists, driven to speak out on causes affecting residents of public housing. |
|
But where we find our true calling in this fight, is against the judgmental way that these other discerners speak out. |
|
|
Truth, also born into slavery, was an abolitionist and the first Black female orator to speak out against slavery. |
|
Tracey, 32, who has waived her automatic right to anonymity, said it was only now that she felt strong enough to speak out about her ordeal. |
|
So when they do speak out, it is worth noting that they have a serious concern well worth listening to. |
|
So, for those who speak out or bring legal cases against the Church, where does it all go wrong? |
|
She gazed upon him hour after hour, and her very soul seemed to speak out of her dying eyes. |
|
To complain is to speak out about this, and we can do so petulantly, aggressively, calmly, pointlessly, or constructively. |
|
Should I really just accept decisions of the majority of the town council, and not speak out if I believe them to be wrong? |
|
On race, too, we failed to speak out at crucial moments and to face up to self-evident truths. |
|
If the individual does not speak out against untouchability, it means he is winking at its practice. |
|
Students are also being encouraged to seek help or speak out if they see something amiss on or around school grounds. |
|
Some write feminist theology, take a stand and publicly speak out, not mincing words. |
|
As an anchorite, she had chosen a life of silence and yet she teaches her daughters to speak out with honesty and courage. |
|
They don't want to speak out for fear of losing their business through governmental retaliation. |
|
Individual researchers have tried to speak out against bogus anti-ageing treatments and practitioners, but this can be a tricky business. |
|
I am afraid that if I do speak out, against all that he has done, I will become a social leper. |
|
Another thing I think is really important to stress is that anyone, no matter how old he or she is, has the right to speak out and take action. |
|
We have to speak out passionately to try to get the Tampa boat people on shore. |
|
But he was so moved by our picture of the appalling injuries Rob was left with that he wanted to speak out publicly about his ordeal. |
|
Likewise, democracy empowers disaffected minorities to speak out and assert themselves along ethnic, religious, or tribal lines. |
|
During the authoritarian era, people dared not speak out about the abuse of power or privilege, no matter how angry they were. |
|
|
As a result of such excess, the modest small business was afraid to speak out because all business was tarred with the one brush, he said. |
|
It just put my back up and made me more and more determined that I was going to speak out. |
|
If you speak out, you can provide the evidence that the police need to put criminals behind bars. |
|
So we need to encourage ministers and priests and rabbis and bishops to speak out from the pulpit against anti-gay violence and gay bashing. |
|
Persons with a positive or more neutral experience may not feel as compelled to speak out or to participate in such research. |
|
Too, a tyranny can rise more easily by shutting up a thousand people than a million, and that's a reason to stand up and speak out. |
|
Besides, petty judges and advocates were the only members of the third estate with wide experience of public life, and the confidence to speak out which it bred. |
|
Moral clarity would dictate that civil-rights and other civic leaders would speak out against such a senseless act of violence. |
|
Of course, this call for hip-hop artists to speak out comes from a completely sincere and rational place. |
|
If you want our respect, you have to speak out against the fundies first. |
|
She did nothing but speak out against the climate control bill. |
|
It buys you a moment to get used to being on stage, it gives you a chance to speak out loud and to steady your voice and it establishes a relationship with the auditors. |
|
The vast majority of artists, mind you, don't speak out publicly at all. |
|
My new mother did not dare speak out against my father to defend me. |
|
I think people need to be able to speak out freely on public issues. |
|
We need to speak out against intolerance that masquerades as tolerance. |
|
Our president was roused to speak out against guns by the massacre of 20 youngsters at Sandy Hook. |
|
It shocked me to realize that he had decided to speak out on my behalf. |
|
She made an appearance at the February 2009, I Love Mountains rally in Frankfurt, Ky. to speak out against mountaintop removal. |
|
It's this loyalty that has led girls like Sara Ziff, Charlotte Waters, and coco Rocha to speak out. |
|
|
Well, if an officer of your rank, with clout and a good deal of power and influence does not speak out, do you honestly expect that others below your rank would? |
|
Mr. President, you can speak out and help us confront this corrosive element, but time is running out. |
|
We all have the obligation to speak out strongly, and oppose this malevolence, without compromise. |
|
I could have kept my mouth shut but I felt I needed to speak out. |
|
There has been plenty of discussion in the last few years of the need for college presidents to speak out more often and thoughtfully on public issues. |
|
Ian Somerhalder wasn't the only genetically gifted celeb to speak out on Marius' behalf. |
|
As the case heads to trial in October, some of the men he mentored and manipulated decades earlier speak out. |
|
But while leading figures in other sports often speak out on matters that affect their livelihoods, footballers hush up or are airbrushed into meaningless platitudes. |
|
Fonda was always willing to speak out even when it might be detrimental to her career. |
|
Was I obliged to speak out against the profiteers who were plying them with high-interest credit? |
|
How can you expect people to speak out if you publicly humiliate them? |
|
It was a reminder that there are those who will speak out for even the most despised, if only in loose, off-the-cuff moments. |
|
So you will appreciate I have a right and a duty to speak out when I witness boorish and loutish behaviour on the streets of Sligo, from whatever quarter it comes. |
|
So he positions himself as a victim, yet he is part of the crowd of people who speak out against victimology when third-world or poor people talk about being victimized. |
|
He used his celebrity to speak out against fascism and racial prejudice. |
|
Hopefully, enough conservative voices speak out to prevent the country from declining further into the chaos and unworkability of full-blown socialism. |
|
Those who dislike speech or publications vilifying certain groups should speak out in their defence, not use the law to punish unwelcome opinions. |
|
I did indeed speak out against abuses by unions but my respect for organized labor is a matter of record. |
|
This sleazeball, caught up in his own misguided sense of importance, was ill-advised to speak out and seek to defend the indefensible. |
|
Most kept a low profile, but the Quakers, especially in Pennsylvania, were the most important group to speak out for neutrality. |
|
|
She slates those who do speak out, blasting them as moaners, though failures in the system cause untold misery. |
|
Japanese politicians should speak out against the nuclear domino theory, not go along with it. |
|
It received a hostile critical reception, which caused Saatchi to speak out angrily against the critics. |
|
Are the stars of Mockingjay obligated to speak out in their defense? |
|
They'd be better using resources to provide quality services for citizens, rather than conduct a witchhunt against their own councillors who speak out. |
|