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"infirm" Definitions
  1. ill and weak, especially over a long period or as a result of being old
  2. the infirm noun [plural] people who are weak and ill for a long period

218 Sentences With "infirm"

How to use infirm in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "infirm" and check conjugation/comparative form for "infirm". Mastering all the usages of "infirm" from sentence examples published by news publications.

For the elderly and infirm it is an excruciating ordeal.
Elderly and often infirm jailbirds are expensive to look after.
I felt frail and infirm, betrayed by my own body.
The Christians stood out in their service to the infirm.
And where are the children, the elderly and the infirm?
That the judgment involved is predictive does not make it infirm.
The old or infirm will doubtless want to keep their cars.
People often deride them as being old but they are hardly infirm.
There are prisoners so old and infirm they rarely leave their cells.
School children, jobseekers, the elderly and infirm in particular will all benefit.
They must find somewhere smaller and kinder to his suddenly infirm legs.
Nationally-syndicated newspaper comic Doonesbury lampooned the raid for targeting the infirm.
Baker was 81 and infirm at the time; he died during filming.
With that, she cares for her two children and an infirm mother.
It is costing loves, Mr. President, of children, the elderly and the infirm.
She has heard there is work in caring for the elderly and infirm.
We'd also like not to have our elderly and infirm residents starve or freeze.
Across the country, judges routinely appoint advocates in cases involving children and the infirm.
Something would eventually kill you, but hopefully you'd spend less time infirm before it came.
Many included message of support or pictures of Erdogan kissing children, the elderly and infirm.
The bricks-and-mortar surgeries left to deal with the elderly and infirm may struggle financially.
As pastors, we seek to comfort the young and the old, the healthy and the infirm.
Jon had made contact with a middle-aged couple who were caring for their infirm mother.
But now I'm 21700 and infirm, and it has become more a burden than a joy.
Why do we demand that people cope with an increasingly infirm world in healthy ways at all?
City residents fearing for their lives as a new virus kills the frail and infirm among them.
The infirm president's candidacy became a rallying point for the protestors who have filled the streets for weeks.
Just then, a coupled of middle-aged Brazilians, tired but hardly infirm, ask if they can get on.
The reason is that social distancing works best if everyone — young and old, healthy and infirm — practices it.
Women carrying children, family members carrying the infirm — all moved as quickly as they could to reach safety.
He considered his own mother-in-law, who is 96 and infirm, and said he was less certain.
To make it harder for young people, people of color, the elderly and infirm who are poor and vulnerable.
Local cops use their fading power to abuse Sheffield's residents, executing looters and rounding up the sick and infirm.
King Salman of Saudi Arabia said he was ill—which is probably true since he is 80 and infirm.
They patrol the prison's borders, sniff for narcotics, search for escapees and provide support to the infirm and elderly.
Insurance companies pay off bogus con-man claims while searching for ways to deny health care to the infirm.
Her group supports elderly or infirm jazz musicians, often in the form of free health care or financial assistance.
Notably, she founded the Missionaries of Charity, a global congregation that provides aid to the the poor, infirm and homeless.
This transition might help the aged and infirm  —  an increasing fraction of the population  —  to "age in place" more gracefully.
Not just any birdhouse, a birdhouse for old, infirm birdies, with a special area for art therapy and birdie bingo.
Mr. Young recommended three poems: "Clearances" by Seamus Heaney, "Funeral Blues" by W. H. Auden or "Infirm" by Gwendolyn Brooks.
Nancy increasingly makes peace with such neglect but told me that an elderly, infirm friend of hers has another approach.
Meanwhile there's a new fire outside the official outage zone, suggesting the company couldn't even get that part right. Infirm?
Smith in "Persuasion," Anne Elliot's confidante, wise and infirm before her time; the invalids of "Sanditon," Austen's final, incomplete manuscript.
Many are too infirm to negotiate subways or buses, yet are not so disabled as to need Access-A-Ride.
Get-out-the-vote organizers, who had been assisting elderly and infirm voters, were suddenly coming under criminal investigation for handling
China has long recognized that it needs to improve its social safety net, to provide for the elderly, infirm and unemployed.
The disease appears to affect the elderly or infirm worse than any other demographic, as the outbreak in Italy has shown.
Yet, surely they would have impacted Mykhailo by adding additional requirements on his infirm grandfather while violence spread near his home.
While the very young, the elderly, and the infirm are most at risk, when pollution gets high enough, everyone can suffer.
I believe that dying at an old and infirm age is not something to be raged against or resisted at all cost.
Social Security's disability insurance provides infirm workers with a financial backstop in the event they're no longer able to earn a living.
For even as the island's old and infirm must hustle to survive, they have benefited from its success at providing health care.
Increasingly infirm, Castro still traveled with heavy security in the last months of his life, though he was rarely spotted in public.
Some things the government does are uncontroversial goods: protecting us from enemies, preserving the health and dignity of the old and infirm.
For J, surrounded by the elderly and infirm in her Florida apartment building, female middle age is a form of early retirement.
Hospitals are running low on medicine and high on patients, as they take in the infirm from medical centers where generators failed.
Others, the weariest and most infirm, have stayed behind, most with hopes of catching up to the larger group at some point.
Setting aside politics, an impeachment inquiry built upon this whistleblower complaint is a bad idea because it is on infirm legal ground.
It's likely there are also thousands who will soon need services for the first time as their parents become old or infirm.
Previously, an infirm, older person could send a relative or neighbor with the relevant paperwork as a proxy to collect monthly rations.
When the heat index creeps above 110 degrees Fahrenheit, it becomes dangerous for the very young, the very old, and the infirm.
The ensuing enforcement actions have ensnared not just Dreamers, but also elderly and infirm immigrants, domestic violence victims, and others, as you'd expect.
Children, older adults and those who are infirm are particularly vulnerable and should seek immediate help if they get stung, Dr. Boesen said.
The famously infirm Citigroup Center, which had been built on feeble stilts reinforced in secret under cover of night, was reflected in them.
He wanted to help a niece and spend time with his mother, who is 86, infirm and living alone in his native England.
My mother was born there, and this birthday trip was mainly an excuse to bring my grandmother back to see her infirm brother.
Strom Thurmond served to age 275, and was visibly infirm and unable to perform his senatorial duties toward the end of his service.
At one point, Mr. Johnson likened Mr. Corbyn to Konstantin Chernenko, the aging, infirm Soviet leader who stumbled into office in the 1980s.
Mr. Yeltsin, increasingly infirm, erratic and under siege politically, initially balked at the deal, which effectively acknowledged Russia's defeat, but ultimately endorsed it.
Most stores have yet to improve access for the infirm with, say, handrails (public facilities have brought in features such as slow escalator speeds).
The president, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, is an infirm man in his 80s who is rarely seen in public, resulting in persistent speculation about his health.
Other GPs grumble that Babylon is stealing their young and healthy patients, funding for whom has historically subsidised the care of older, infirm folk.
Monsignor William Dombrow, 77, was rector of Villa Saint Joseph, a retirement home for aged and infirm priests in Darby, Pennsylvania, outside of Philadelphia.
Will a Supreme Court split evenly along political lines approve a policy deemed constitutionally infirm by the majority of the courts to consider it?
Some of those studies also enrolled people who already were elderly or infirm, making it difficult to extrapolate the findings to younger, healthier people.
MAYAGUEZ, Puerto Rico (Reuters) - Few people in Puerto Rico have suffered more from the devastation of Hurricane Maria than the elderly and the infirm.
The poor, the elderly and the infirm need the limited first responder resources to be spent on them, not on those merely choosing to stay.
But one doesn't get the impression that nurses are envied; dealing with the infirm and elderly, and the anti-social hours, must be hard work.
Women feel the strain of long-term care keenly, as they tend to be the ones looking after their elderly and infirm parents and spouses.
They also put 22003 cities on their highest "red" weather alert – warning of a possible health threat for everyone, not just the frail and infirm.
Similarly, one might never suspect that gulls play key roles in our local ecosystem: acting as scavengers, and rubbing out the unfit and the infirm.
The concerns range from caring for the sick and infirm to persuading people reluctant to leave their homes that it is wise to do so.
It is not up a mountain or deep in a jungle but near enough to a parking lot that the infirm can enjoy it, too.
The very popular Beats Powerbeats2 has a similar setup and the confusingly popular LG Infirm feature a set of wires that connect to an awkward necklace.
Without food and water, those most at risk -- the elderly, the infirm, the chronically ill, pregnant women, sick newborns -- will suffer and will begin to die.
"The spirit flourishes more strongly and more actively in an infirm and weakly body," the twelfth-century French abbot St. Bernard of Clairvaux assured his followers.
PENCE: Because there is — a society can be judged by how it deals with its most vulnerable, the aged, the infirm, the disabled, and the unborn.
Not tomorrow, but very soon, I will have to get used to the idea of living with robots, most likely when I'm elderly and/or infirm.
What's more, the system would not aid those who have effectively aged out of criminal behavior but aren't sufficiently ill or infirm to qualify for release.
But Faircloth feels like they aren't doing enough to keep it that way — and that's particularly concerning with Limestone's large number of elderly or infirm prisoners.
Vanessa works steady hours and likes her job, even the tougher bits like bathing the infirm or hoisting someone out of bed with a Hoyer lift.
Expenses that people fail to account for include the indirect cost of unpaid caregiving, which largely affects women who are looking after infirm spouses and parents.
And on Friday, Yoenis Cespedes re-entered the long list of the infirm with a leg injury that put the rest of his season in jeopardy.
Naps are seen as a sign of laziness or of weakness, as something needed only by the very young, the very old or the very infirm.
Ed Gjertsen II, a financial advisor in Northfield, Illinois, knew something was fishy when an elderly and infirm client started cashing checks at a local bar.
But it does require some courage to champion the vulnerable and the sick and the infirm, those who often have no access to the corridors of power.
The mutual agreement will allow each to take medical and some financial decisions for the other, should they grow infirm, undergo surgery or otherwise lose their faculties.
" If a nation's reading habits reveal its character, as he believes they do, we are "an infirm, ineffectual tribe still stuck in some sort of larval stage.
The program had always been on infirm legal footing, as conservatives argued that former President Barack Obama did not have the power to create it without Congress.
Its legal roots date back to the Civil War, when the Union Army discovered that its peacetime officer corps was perilously aged, infirm and incapable of command.
They serve older adults and the infirm — the demographic most at risk from the coronavirus — and such facilities face particular challenges in stopping the spread of infection.
At the Vatican, elderly and infirm pilgrims watched Pope Francis' weekly audience on large screens in an air-conditioned auditorium to avoid the sweltering temperatures gripping Rome.
Local party snoops, known as the Committee for the Defence of the Revolution, with representatives on every block, make sure the elderly or infirm are not left behind.
The case against another nonagenarian former guard at Stutthof, where more than 60,000 people died, was halted last year because the suspect was too infirm to stand trial.
It is, rather, to expose the facile thinking that is often brought to bear on this subject when the people committing suicide are old, or sick, or infirm.
And by then the "death panel" fiction had negated any shot at a reasoned, ideological debate — you're joining the Democrats' plan to kill our infirm children and parents?!
Elena asked the assistant texting behind the high desk to bring Sonia some water and one of the folding chairs they kept around for rich or infirm visitors.
In a now-famous scene, Comey raced to the bedside of an infirm Ashcroft to prevent White House officials from getting him to sign off on reauthorizing the program.
Studies suggest robots can deliver medicine and help with caregiving, helping the elderly and infirm with everyday tasks as well as with medical monitoring And then, there are robocats.
Some heat waves have been especially lethal, like the one in Chicago in 1995 when more than 700 people, most of them old or infirm, died over five days.
The differences range from how many times a person can be stunned to which people shouldn't be targeted at all, such as the pregnant, the elderly and the infirm.
He is sufficiently infirm that he's uncomfortable sitting or standing, so most of the time he can be found propped up on a stool or leaning on a cane.
Yet it has provided a life-saving safety net since 1965 for the infirm elderly and those with disabilities who lack the resources to pay for their own care.
In the lead-up to the election, Channel One, under Ernst, portrayed Putin as Yeltsin's inevitable successor, and relentlessly attacked his rivals, presenting them as infirm, corrupt, even murderous.
A few years ago Mr Aboutaleb cancelled a test evacuation of 12,000 Rotterdammers after computer models suggested a handful of elderly or infirm evacuees might die in the process.
When a second, similarly infirm executive order was stayed by US District Judge Derrick Watson, of the District Court of Hawaii, it was Sessions's turn to attack the courts.
He told her that he'd started getting some odd People You May Know suggestions on Facebook, people who were much older than him, many of them looking sick or infirm.
Lucy Nicholson's work in the Washington Post gives a sensitive, comprehensive overview of the challenges that both the inmates and the staff face caring for the elderly and infirm inmates.
San Sebastián is about two hours from the capital, San Juan, and for many residents, particularly the elderly and the infirm, having electricity was a matter of life and death.
The conservatorship system in California, troubled for decades, has undergone reforms in recent years that were designed to further protect the old and infirm people who are its typical clients.
It's clear that some people are especially at-risk, particularly the elderly or infirm; and that any of us could get unlucky and contract a case more severe than mine.
" Mike Pence spoke well last night when he concluded: "A society can be judged by how it deals with its most vulnerable, the aged, the infirm, the disabled, and the unborn.
The last-place team in the American League East, the Yankees have been taking on water in most other places, their disabled list increasingly inhabited by the aged and chronically infirm.
The robots already in production, Belpaeme tells me, are principally geared to monitoring the elderly and infirm, or providing companionship while, as yet, performing only the most straightforward of physical tasks.
The significant caveat is that the Spanish flu was deadliest to the young and healthy, whereas the coronavirus, like most epidemics, exacts its worst toll on the elderly and the infirm.
The North Broward Bureau houses minimum- and medium-security offenders and its main mission is to manage "the mentally ill, medically infirm and special needs inmate population," according to the sheriff's office.
Terry Knope, 43; Raylaine Knope, 40; Taylor Knope, 18; Jody Lambert, 21; and Bridget Lambert, 19, were arrested on charges of human trafficking and cruelty to the infirm, according to The Advocate.
The Renoir, painted in 1914 when the artist was so infirm that he had to strap his brushes to his hand, wasn't going to change anyone's life, but that didn't really matter.
Mr. Reif, the Senate Republican spokesman, said on Wednesday that Democratic lawyers monitoring the count at the Nassau County Board of Elections were discriminating against older, infirm Republicans by challenging their ballots.
Keeping someone locked up when they are elderly and infirm, in a wheelchair or on oxygen, until they die alone and far away from loved ones, doesn't create a safe and healthy society.
Public health experts say that exercising this kind of caution if possible is a good strategy for the aged, infirm and people with medical conditions like asthma, who face the most lethal risk.
Governors and other public officials should consider a one-time review of all elderly or infirm people in prisons, providing immediate medical furloughs or compassionate release to as many of them as possible.
In his later years Mr. Kohl was seen as a diminished figure, infirm and in a wheelchair after a fall resulted in a head injury in 2008 that made speech difficult for him.
Clients should also already have handled their estate plans, particularly their medical directives, powers of attorney and any additional details on how they would like to be cared for once they are infirm.
Halliday lavishes attention on Ezra's infirm, surgery-marked body in a way I have rarely seen before: From his stomach all the way up to his sternum ran a pink, zipper-like scar.
There are the immediate needs of ensuring that all the population have the basics, including medical care, and that the most vulnerable — the elderly, the infirm and people with disabilities — are cared for.
ALGIERS — Algeria's 2000-year-old president, Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who has been infirm since a stroke in 2013, is planning to run in April's presidential elections, the state news agency, APS, reported on Sunday.
Women are the country's caretakers: in our houses for children, the elderly and the infirm; in schools and day cares; in elder care and hospice facilities; in hospitals and clinics; in hotels and restaurants.
" He continues: "Nature took its course and very sadly he became too infirm to run it so a Dutch couple bought it, in tact, and just changed the name to The Dutch Eel Company.
While I would be glad to help them on an emotional and even a caregiving level once they're too elderly or infirm to care for themselves, I have strong reservations about helping them financially.
Many of Harvey's victims were elderly and infirm patients at hospitals in Cincinnati and London, Kentucky, where he worked as a nurse's aide, while others were ex-lovers and acquaintances, according to court records.
That analysis can prove troublesome for life insurers who, as a result, must set aside funds for claims on older long-term care policies, which cover expenses like assisted living for infirm and elderly customers.
Until then, those who remain to face the executioner's needle increasingly seem to be not the worst of the worst, but rather the sick and dying, the aged and infirm, the impoverished and the incompetent.
" Mr. Pence, a Republican, said he signed the bill because he thinks "that a society can be judged by how it deals with its most vulnerable — the aged, the infirm, the disabled and the unborn.
So we see him handle, nail a cutter in transition, practice some short range jump shots even though he could readily shed any double put on by the comparatively sad and infirm opponents he faced.
We saw it in the mass murder and enslavement of Yazidis in Iraq and Syria, where ISIS killed the old and infirm and the able-bodied men, and sold the women and children into slavery.
The real challenge, she explained, would be persuading this infirm animal, who was still weak from confinement and dazed to find himself in the full shock of daylight, that he had to begin walking again.
She and her husband had previously applied for a "green card" for her four-year-old son, Mykhailo, who was living in Vinnytsia with a grandfather who was too old and too infirm to protect him.
To be eligible for Medicaid, you must earn less than $17,000 a year and must prove that you are working, studying or taking care of young children or infirm relatives for at least 80 hours a month.
The program won't cover the cost of service if you're infirm and require a long-term stay in a care facility or if you need help at home with eating, bathing and other activities of daily living.
But as bioarchaeologist Siân Halcrow pointed out in a related Nature News & Views article, some scholars believe the drinking vessels, some of which were crafted to look like animals, were used to feed the elderly and infirm.
By the time he joined her nine months later she'd forgotten their years together, and he was too infirm to actively love her company as he'd once done, although he never forgot the fact of his affection.
A stressed, young white mother patronizingly tries to connect with black child-minders in a park; a mother and her teenage daughter bicker over the care of the older woman's infirm mother, revealing the narcissism of each.
I hope that current members of Congress recognize it takes little courage to aid those who are already powerful, already comfortable, already influential—but it takes great courage to champion the vulnerable and the sick and the infirm.
Initially, the infirm Queen—who cannot dance along with everyone else—is entertained, but as the sequence continues and she watches her lover engaging physically with this fit, striking young man, their moves becoming sillier and more ostentatious.
By last week, after eight more clients had come forward with similar stories, the number of charges had grown to 10 counts each of felony theft and money laundering, as well as racketeering and exploitation of the infirm.
And while he said it was "heartening" that the government opted not to assert constitutionally infirm executive branch powers, the judge said DOJ's reading of Trump's order did not match its depiction by the president and AG Sessions.
It broadly undercuts the idea of government as a protector of all parts of society—including the weak, the infirm, the elderly—and in particular challenges the idea of collective action to minimize the threat of Covid-19.
Hopkins was assaulted in jail last week and O'Connell argued that, as well as being infirm and not a flight risk, his client's safety was at risk if incarcerated due to his high-profile activities at the border.
A court in northwestern Russia cleared Yuri Dimitriyev (pictured) of most of the accusations he faced, including those of "child pornography" and "depravity" which were based on photographs he took to trace the development of his infirm adopted daughter.
That may come in handy for future prototypes with room for cargo, a second passenger, a seat or some kind of other accommodation for the physically infirm, or for the next big thing — whatever it turns out to be.
But as always, Nicholas abides with a care and total respect usually reserved for the old and infirm—with "On My Mind" he attends to the weather-beaten "Turn Me Out" like Jacob Husley with two elderly Polish ravers.
" Johnson said the issue won't go away, even if it flies beneath the radar of most investors, because it's the appearance, or optics, that could lead some investors to believe ETFs with waivers have expense ratios that are "infirm.
If the time comes when I am still compos mentis but physically infirm, would I be prepared for the one-armed Care-O-bot to take me to the toilet, or PARO to be my couch companion during movies?
The city's independent oversight body for the jails, the Board of Correction, has identified around 5003,2500 people who could be released — including inmates aged 219 and above, the infirm, nonviolent, low-level offenders or people jailed for parole violations.
"Upon reconsideration and a re-weighing of the evidence in conformity with the Fifth Circuit's opinion, the court holds that the evidence found 'infirm' did not tip the scales," Judge Nelva Gonzales Ramos wrote in her ruling on Monday.
Because Mr. Cosby, 81, is legally blind, he will continue to have another inmate worker assigned to him "to help him get around as other elderly and/or infirm inmates have as well," Ms. Worden said in an email.
Unlike Tsar Nicholas, his wife and his children (whom the church credits with enduring pain with fortitude), Grand Duchess Elizabeth is honoured for something more positive, the work she did to relieve the poor and infirm of her adopted country.
Castro's brother and the nation's President, Raul, announced his death Friday on Cuban TV. At the end, an elderly and infirm Fidel Castro was a whisper of the Marxist firebrand whose iron will and passionate determination bent the arc of destiny.
First, caucuses are undemocratic anyway, because anyone who can't afford to or is unable to spend hours on one specific day in a gym or hall — the elder, the infirm, the poor, the struggling — is frozen out of the process.
The town of Oppido Mamertina in the Calabria region made headlines in 2014 when locals carrying a statute of the Madonna in a traditional religious procession diverted its route to pass by the home of local mob boss who was infirm.
Folklore holds that the forest was once a site for ubasute, the (possibly apocryphal) practice of carrying the old or infirm to a remote place and leaving them to die, so that they would not be a burden to their families.
Marketed as a way to help older or infirm people keep cycling, most of the systems power the axle that joins the two crank arms of the bike and are outwardly invisible, with on-off switches hidden under handlebar tape.
And during the two trips that we took to Vietnam in 2013 and 2015, when we visited orphanages and homes for the elderly and infirm, we saw firsthand the diseases and deformities that are still affecting generations of Vietnamese people.
West Virginia, for instance, is planning to use the app to meet new requirements that it find a way to make sure the disabled and infirm can participate, a move that is likely to add thousands of voters this year.
Mothers and daughters leave their families so that they can do the type of "women's work"—caring for the young, the elderly, and the infirm—that females in affluent countries no longer want to do or have time to do.
"The Supreme Court has held that the public health is a primary objective of the government, and we have to stand strong for the protection of the babies and the infirm who would be affected by this disease," he said.
With one of the most rapidly ageing populations in the world, Finland is on the front line of a problem affecting most Western countries - how society can afford to care for an ever larger population of the elderly and infirm.
Another option arose early in 2018 when New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announced a "geriatric parole program" to expedite the release of old and infirm inmates who meet certain criteria, both for humanitarian reasons and to save the state money.
Traditionally, worshippers (excepting children, the infirm, and pregnant women) abstain from food, drink, and sex for a 25-hour period — from just before sunset on the 10th day of Tishri (September 18 this year) to just after sunset the following day.
When they suggest that the so-called '2019nCov' coronavirus appears to be of greatest threat to the old and already infirm, they encourage us to ignore the plights of people in those groups, and take an ageist and ableist point of view.
Rising demand and falling budgets for social care—which includes old-folks' homes and other help for the infirm—have led to thousands of pensioners ending up in hospital because there are not sufficient resources to look after them in the community.
Equally sacred, however, are the lives of the poor, those already born, the destitute, the abandoned and the underprivileged, the vulnerable infirm and elderly exposed to covert euthanasia, the victims of human trafficking, new forms of slavery, and every form of rejection.
"The commission's effort to retroactively convert what it has admitted was a constitutionally infirm delegation of hiring authority into a constitutionally permissable appointment process would not be a ratification of the commission's prior acts but rather a mischaracterization of those acts," RD argued.
About half of patients who contract C. auris die within 90 days, although the patients are typically infirm and so it is not clear whether they die from the fungus or it merely is among an ultimately lethal combination of poor health factors.
Since then, her father and a lawyer, Andrew Wallet, have overseen Spears's life and finances via a court-approved conservatorship, known sometimes as a guardianship, designed for people who cannot take care of themselves — typically the old, the infirm and the mentally disabled.
Many elderly and infirm patients were left without medicine and vital treatment because of a severely depleted public health system There is no scenario in which, as Trump claims, the figures were simply cooked up by Democrats to make him look bad.
Italian authorities issued fire alerts for the Mediterranean island of Sardinia, where temperatures were expected to climb above 40 C. They also put 13 cities on their highest "red" weather alert warning of a possible health threat for everyone, not just the frail and infirm.
Above the stool he'd installed some suction cup grab bars which, while primarily marketed to the elderly and infirm, are handy for shower sex enthusiasts who want to get a grip and reduce their chances of a post-coital trip to the emergency room.
In a statement, the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops described the proposals as "an affront to human dignity, an erosion of human solidarity, and a danger to all vulnerable persons—particularly the aged, disabled, infirm and sick who so often find themselves isolated and marginalised".
Last year, Maryland's attorney general sued the facility and its owner, Neiswanger Management Services, alleging that they evicted frail, infirm and mentally disabled residents "with brutal indifference" when their health coverage ran out or the facility had the opportunity to get someone with better insurance.
Working almost exclusively in ink drawings, Mr. Cuevas depicted the wretched of the earth — the infirm, the deformed, the mad — in an unblinking expressionist manner that reflected the influence of artists like Goya, Breughel and Grosz as well as the forms of pre-Columbian art.
If we value freedom, those of us who drive cars should pay higher gas taxes so that those who are old, infirm, too poor to have a car, or want to reduce their environmental impact can have fast and efficient bus and train service.
Christ would've loved the poor, the dispossessed, the evicted, the dropped-out, the overwhelmed by student loans, the haven't gotten a raise in ten years, the never gonna get to retire, the obese, the infirm, the depressed, the isolated, the addicted, the meth-mouthed.
These include a program started by Nazi physicians in the 1930s to kill mentally ill and chronically infirm persons and over 100 controversial deaths facilitated in the 1990s by Dr. Jack Kevorkian, a pathologist who believed that terminal patients had a right to determine when they died.
Opening on Grimes as he surveys some makeshift graves and grapples with all the pain he's known, the episode then flits forward a few decades to find him infirm, using a cane and sporting a hilariously phony beard that's clearly been stuck upon his existing one.
The day of her marriage marked Meghan's official hiring into the job she will have for the rest of her life until she gets divorced, becomes too infirm to perform it or dies, and I'd like to know more about what kind of person would do that.
The appeals court — the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, in New Orleans — found that Judge Ramos had relied too heavily on Texas' history of discriminatory voting measures and other evidence it labeled "infirm" and asked her to reweigh the question of discriminatory intent.
Morgan Art Foundation, which said it has been Indiana's agent for more than two decades, accused American Image Art and others of exploiting the now "bedridden and infirm" artist, by forging some of his famous works and selling them for millions of dollars to unsuspecting collectors.
" Roberts countered that the courts should not provide a "way of challenging national policy through damages actions against the individuals implementing it," claiming that "we don't want people forming policy to have to worry [that] they are going to have to ... pay ... if the policy is found infirm.
Copenhagen's legendary bicycle setup has been propelled by all of these aspirations, but the critical element is the simplest: People here eagerly use their bicycles — in any weather, carrying the young, the infirm, the elderly and the dead — because it is typically the easiest way to get around.
"Because these are elderly and infirm people, it's like we are waiting for them to be picked off, one by one," said Kevin Connolly, whose 81-year-old father-in-law, Jerry Wall, has been at Life Care for about a year, recovering from heart and kidney failure.
" Whitman lived at the end of his life in a small house in Camden, N.J. Multiple strokes left him wheelchair-bound and infirm, but he spent countless hours talking with Horace Traubel, who transcribed their conversations for a nine-volume, 6,000-page collection called "With Walt Whitman in Camden.
Ultimately, the man who said, "Only God, who appointed me, will remove me," was forced out by the military in 2017 — not because he was a vicious dictator, but because, as the ailing and infirm leader ceded day-to-day power to his ambitious young wife, she had alienated his cronies.
"This caravan was organized by leftist groups in Honduras and human traffickers who have no regard for human life," Pence said, adding that the Guatemalan president informed him that the caravan abandoned "the elderly and the infirm and vulnerable children" on the side of the road until Guatemala sent buses to help.
Now the families and their lawyers describe a succession of roadblocks as they try to claim payouts, from as little as a few thousand dollars to potentially several million dollars, to help thousands of retired players left mentally infirm, in some cases severely, from years of hits and tackles on the league's fields.
The world of Wolfenstein 2 is macabre, vibrant, comic, disgusting, ass-out weird—at one point your character travels to Venus to audition for a part in a film in front of an infirm and occasionally urinating Hitler (where you have the opportunity to crush his head under your boot)—and very, very satisfying.
Earlier this week, in a not subtle at all announcement designed to make him look transparent and healthy and Hillary Clinton look like an infirm liar, Trump said he would appear on Dr. Oz on Thursday to reveal the results of a physical taken a week ago, along with other information relating to his health.
"While low-wage work can be found across the economy, it is particularly prevalent in jobs that involve the education and care of children, the elderl, and the infirm, work that traditionally was done by women at home, and often continues to be done almost exclusively by women when it is paid," the report says.
When he strong-arms his wife, Abby (Debbie Honeywood), into selling the family car that she also depends on for her own job taking care of the disabled, elderly and infirm, you feel the movie starting down a track that will, at some point, make you get angry, then consider terminating your Amazon Prime membership.
Pence was going against his own principles, as these tweets from before he joined the ticket show: Throughout my public career, I have long believed in the public's right to know and a free and independent press I believe that a society can be judged by how it deals with its most vulnerable - the aged, the infirm, the disabled and the unborn.
American socialists dream not of the underperforming Soviet command economy, which impoverished millions while regulating every feature of economic life; they imagine instead the Swedish or German models, with powerful green economies, where states use taxes to free people of needless fears: of getting sick, of becoming a burden for their families when they are old and infirm, of whether they can send their children to college.
The judges (who included the culture editor of The Economist) were struck by the confidence with which the renovated gallery integrated with the park beyond, once mostly a source of switchblades and used condoms; how its programming included tours for the elderly, the infirm and those with dementia (something Ms Balshaw had learned from visiting museums in Japan); and how black Mancunian teenagers elbowed visitors out of the way in the rush to see what they regarded as their museum.
These actions should minimally include providing correctional facilities with testing kits, making all testing free and accessible to incarcerated persons, ensuring adequate access to sanitary supplies including soap and hand sanitizer, outlining clear and realistic plans to respond to understaffing issues that are likely to occur when correctional staff become ill, releasing the sizable number of individuals incarcerated because they cannot afford bail, and releasing older, infirm people who pose no community safety risks but are especially vulnerable to COVID-19.
Despite fumble after fumble by the GOP in recent weeks — including President Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpPossible GOP challenger says Trump doesn't doesn't deserve reelection, but would vote for him over Democrat O'Rourke: Trump driving global, U.S. economy into recession Manchin: Trump has 'golden opportunity' on gun reforms MORE's chief budget officer making the public case to allow small children, the elderly, and infirm to go hungry and a healthcare plan that would leave 24 million people uninsured — a resurgence for those of us who believe in progressive values is not guaranteed.
Each time we painstakingly pull ourselves closer to our founding ideals, that all of us are created equal, endowed by our creator with certain inalienable rights; the ideals that say every child should have opportunity and every man and woman in this country who's willing to work hard should be able to find a job and support a family and pursue their small piece of the American Dream; our ideals that say we have a collective responsibility to care for the sick and the infirm, and we have a responsibility to conserve the amazing bounty, the natural resources of this country and of this planet for future generations, each time we've gotten closer to those ideals, somebody somewhere has pushed back.
Such cases certainly exist, and let's stipulate for the sake of argument that they might provide a possible point of synthesis between the church's traditional teaching on mortal sin, confession and communion and the new rhetoric of "accompaniment" for divorced and remarried Catholics – an example of how it might be licit for someone in the process of trying to escape from a toxic situation to receive communion along the way, even though their promise of amendment is inherently infirm; an instance where the current pontiff's stress on gray areas might be consonant with the teaching of his predecessors; a case where John Paul II's distinction between "sincere repentance" and "the judgement of the intellect concerning the future" might be plausibly applied.

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