Faith communities often have a systemic propensity to infantilise people, fixed firmly in vulnerability rather than empowerment for human liberation. |
By curtailing the autonomy of the self-determining individual, authoritarian public health policies infantilise society, weaken democracy and diminish humanity. |
Yet Blair felt unfulfilled, partly because Kelly tended to infantilise her. |
To be classified as a child soldier guarantees some protection. However, this should not be a reason to free those classified as child soldiers from responsibility or to infantilise them. |
This call to infantilise academic life is coupled with the demand to medicalise the problems of existence faced by young adults. |
Why didn't they stop selling bagged fruit and veg, with their unnecessary use-by dates, which infantilise customers and make them throw away food that is perfectly edible? |