The manual explicitly prohibits threats, coercion, physical abuse, and waterboarding, which creates the sensation of drowning. |
Rabbinical courts throughout the rest of the world function without such powers of coercion. |
We have to see the reason behind the coercion, to experience the terribleness in the threat, before we, too, feel its presence. |
The Court held that picketing could also be a tool of economic coercion and restraint of trade, and hence could be regulated. |
He could use bribery, blackmail, and other forms of coercion to keep his dishonored promises in circulation. |
The women who reported more severe coercion were more likely to be diagnosed with bipolar affective disorder. |