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12 Sentences With "more inhumane"

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

Nor is it clear that a different system, with a sometimes more old-fashioned set of penalties, would necessarily be more inhumane.
Hurst told CNN on Wednesday morning he did not accept criticism that such a measure was "inhumane," asking "what's more inhumane" than child molestation.
Putting immigrant families in detention centers is doubly cruel, and could become more inhumane if such centers are expanded to operate on a larger scale.
One side wants him to back off the more inhumane-sounding proposals (like rounding up immigrants via a "deportation force") in order to appeal to suburban whites.
"The Trump administration's attempt to deny passports to long-term American residents living in border areas is just one more inhumane act in a series of unlawful actions," he says.
Now, I get that sometimes art explores uncomfortable topics or imagines how atrocities could have been even more inhumane and devastating, but artists still have to ask themselves "why" they want to tell that story (which, Weiss tried to explain this with no success).
He argues that ISIS is attempting to annihilate Islam itself, and instead replace it with its own more inhumane practices. Nance ties the history of ISIS back to changing developments within Al-Qaeda. Nance ascribes growth of influence by ISIS directly to problems within U.S. leadership related to combating Al-Qaeda in Iraq. He provides an overview of ISIS management, soldiers, and command format.
The remainder included mothers with infants; the sick and elderly; and chief rabbi Max Friediger and the other Jewish hostages who had been placed in the Danish internment camp, Horserød, on August 28–29. They were driven below deck without their luggage while being screamed at, kicked and beaten. The Germans then took anything of value from the luggage. Their unloading the next day in Swinemünde was even more inhumane, though without fatalities.
A committee commissioned on 11 February 1927 consulted numerous experts and visited a slaughterhouse in Copenhagen. Its majority favored a ban and found support in the Department of Agriculture and the parliamentary agriculture committee. Those who opposed a ban spoke of religious tolerance, and also found that schechita was no more inhumane than other slaughter methods. Ingvar Svanberg writes that many of the arguments against shechita were based "on the distrust of 'foreign' habits" and "often contained anti-Semitic elements".
Pragasam instantly dies in Jeeva's arms and following his cremation, Jeeva tells the cops not to pursue the killers anymore as it would bring nothing but trouble for his middle-class family. However, Jeeva undergoes a violent transformation and decides to take the law into his hands, fearing the gang might commit more inhumane crimes if left free. He recalls one of the men, during his father's death, looked the same as Pragasam described him during his visit to the morgue. Jeeva enlists the help of his friend Kutti Nadesan, a Chennai gangster, to track down the gang.
He praised the way the Doctor was portrayed in terms of his more inhumane instincts in contrast to the Tenth Doctor and rated the episode as "four out of five". Radio Times reviewer Patrick Mulkern said that the episode "neither moved [him] to wave a Save the Starwhale banner nor reach for the nearest harpoon" and made him feel "out of the loop" as it seemed more directed at children than adults. However, he praised the acting of Smith, Gillan, and Sophie Okonedo, as well as the creation of the robotic Smilers. IGN's Matt Wales had a more mixed opinion about the episode, rating it a "good" 7 out of 10.
The trial were soon discontinued, and the victims were sent to the guillotine, shot, or disposed of in a more inhumane way. In a twenty-page letter to his fellow republicans, Carrier promised not to leave a single counter-revolutionary or monopolist (in reference to hoarders and aristocratic land owners) at large in Nantes.Christopher Desloge, Desloge Chronicles - A Tale of Two Continents, Lulu.com, 2013 p.13 His vigorous action was endorsed by the Committee of Public Safety, and in the following days Carrier put large numbers of prisoners aboard vessels with trap doors for bottoms, and sunk them in the Loire river.Chronicle of the French Revolution, Longman Group 1989 p.

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