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147 Sentences With "pariahs"

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

Treating half the country as pariahs only increases their anger.
So why, he asked, were depressed people treated as pariahs?
She said the country looked upon them as infected pariahs.
Sailors stripped of their Tridents become pariahs, several SEALs said.
Now their employer has made them pariahs about to be unemployed.
Hackers aren't social pariahs who operate in silos and work alone.
In public they were social pariahs who were avoided at all costs.
I would think they would be sort of pariahs in the elite.
My parents were social pariahs while we, their three children, were regrettable unfortunates.
In the current atmosphere, many of the Markham club members feel like pariahs.
But after all, Mr. Trump hired Mr. Manafort, international pariahs' lobbyist of choice.
But it isolates them and it makes them pariahs within their own industry.
The convenient thing about pariahs is that people don't have to listen to them.
"We are social pariahs," she complained as she fights back more tears of frustration.
Remember how Google Glass wearers were treated like pariahs for donning the specs in public?
His sons, once viewed as pariahs by many Egyptians, appeared at nightclubs and soccer matches.
That being said, despite being labeled social pariahs, many Zambians in Nyoni's film rely on witches.
Labeling countries terrorist-supporting pariahs is an act of desperation — a "Hail Mary," in football terms.
He sought business with war-torn places like Chad and with international pariahs like North Korea.
The cost of labeling Saudi Arabia and its crown prince pariahs could be a high one.
"It really narrows the circle of climate pariahs to two countries," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
"When we went back home, everyone treated us like pariahs for what we had done," Lee said.
Indeed, if we treat them as outcasts and pariahs of the technological landscape, society pays a price.
But confronting the industry has turned the McCoys into social pariahs in their small town of Inez.
Sometimes, those suspected of using dark magic are distrusted pariahs who already live on the margins of society.
Christian religious orders in Nigeria try to look after these returnees but they are treated as social pariahs.
But not all the powerful men accused of sexual assault become pariahs by sole virtue of being accused.
At the peak of the 2003 outbreak, people of Asian descent were treated like pariahs in the West.
People who experience these illnesses would rather stay silent than seek help and be seen as "crazy" social pariahs.
They admired these aunts, these pariahs and poets who kept relationships and children with men they weren't married to.
These attacks are intended to brand their targets as pariahs and stigmatize anyone who dares to challenge this narrative.
People who take advantage of the defenseless, whether they be children, seniors or animals, are pariahs in our society.
This movement has led many Christians to conclude that they are about to become pariahs in their own nation.
Their world and the people around them treated them like social pariahs, so in many ways, we were outcasts together.
Hodges court decision on same-sex marriage, many evangelicals feel they are being turned into pariahs in their own nation.
"People with HIV are not pariahs—they're just like anyone else with any type of chronic medical condition," he says.
And liberal academics endure the strange, simultaneous abuse of being seen as jobless pariahs and members of some oppressive elite.
Despite the economic and political power they now enjoy, Mormons have a vivid recollection of what is like to be pariahs.
Heedless of whether his hosts are powerful, puny or pariahs, he has flown everywhere from America to the Maldives and Zimbabwe.
" Ortega and his loyalists had become pariahs, Ramírez said: "They can no longer live with the rest of us, within society.
It will be interesting to see if they can take the actions necessary to prevent their companies from becoming social pariahs.
They are pariahs in China, among the millions unable to go home and feared as potential carriers of the mysterious coronavirus.
We've had two surgeons general come out and say that addiction is an illness, but we still treat addicts like pariahs.
Who are they going to trust, this seemingly familiar person they've seen on TV a lot or a bunch of social pariahs?
Yes, Republicans like Ayotte will have demonstrated a degree of independence from Trump, but they'll have made themselves pariahs to conservative voters.
Ironically, those qualities are the same that may make both men pariahs in the national GOP, where moderation can hinder political ambitions.
George Orwell, who lived here briefly in the 1920s, dismissed it as having just five features: pagodas, pariahs, pigs, priests and prostitutes.
" One gay man interviewed said that "often one of the families doesn't want you there, so you end up feeling like pariahs.
When Franz realizes he cannot yield, though, he and his family become pariahs, spat upon and shunned by most of their neighbors.
" And, of course, one of the reasons that sex workers are pariahs in the first place is that sex work is illegal."Absolutely.
And read more coverage: Some people who have been associated with the virus, even remotely, described being treated like pariahs upon returning home.
Ms. Listhaug said that people who smoked felt like "pariahs" in Norway, and that she would not be the "moral police" in government.
Potrykus and Hess are both fond of pariahs who replace the society that has rejected them with a universe of their own imagination.
Every facility has people in it who have so violated a community, a community that is so angry, so hurt, that they're basically pariahs.
Their families are too scared to take them in, society treats them as pariahs and they risk further violent abuse as unprotected single women.
Mr. Trump has cast companies that make goods in China and other foreign countries as economic pariahs, siphoning off jobs better left at home.
Soda and snack companies have long faced public pressure to curb their use of dietary pariahs such as high-fructose corn syrup and hydrogenated oils.
In other words, it helps turn fossil fuel companies into social pariahs and thereby revoke their social license to thwart political solutions to climate change.
"Murderers have been known to earn a second chance after serving their time, so why not sex pariahs?" asked Jack Shafer at Politico on Wednesday.
But most foreign governments are reluctant to take them back, leaving them international pariahs wanted by no one — not their home countries, not their jailers.
The revised storyline casts the vampire as an outsider, and follows the lives of immigrants, who must also battle with their image as social pariahs.
But treating members of Donald Trump's administration as ordinary public officials rather than pariahs does more to normalize bigotry than exercising alongside a white separatist.
It's one thing to say that people who have harmed others, and feel remorse, deserve an opportunity to make amends, and shouldn't be pariahs forever.
Officials with the Forest Grove School District in Oregon say there are ways to address sexual misconduct cases without applying labels that turn offenders into pariahs.
The documents show that the Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca took pains to continue working with international pariahs, such as relatives of Syrian dictator Bashar Assad.
And, South Korean pro-nuclear types point out, India and Pakistan have been declared nuclear powers since 1998 without going to war or becoming international pariahs.
In fact, completely the opposite is true, especially when we are treating our Canadian brothers and sisters like pariahs after we've had each other's backs for decades.
And as far as examples to capture the public imagination go, a single mom from Ecuador taking on one of Britain's richest pariahs isn't a bad one.
But if tech companies such as Apple want to avoid becoming pariahs like tobacco firms are today, they will need to do more to change their ways.
It's also going to require work to come together to figure out whether there is a road back for any of the accused men who have become pariahs.
As they looked toward a world where pariahs like Iran and Cuba were won over with diplomacy, they fell victim to a sneak attack by an old adversary.
This is because we fear becoming social pariahs, explains psychoanalyst Sally Weintrobe, who has been writing about our emotional relationship with climate change for the past eight years.
"The 'strategic patience' touted by this administration is a ridiculous euphemism for passivity and paralysis that invites further aggressive actions by Russia and other international pariahs," Nunes added.
Overnight pariahs, they hunker down in a state of semi-seclusion — turning in their guns, shutting off their cellphones, living with the fact that they caused a death.
We were climate pariahs, our scientists showing up at international conferences of their peers with government communications staffers in tow, lest they stray too far from the party line.
For a brief moment in time after the Holocaust, her words helped turn anti-Semites into pariahs, anti-Semitism into a vile and rejected idea unfit for civilized peoples.
These are two men who see themselves reflected in the other—two international pariahs who, while hostile to a free press, understand the media's love of a gripping performance.
Bumhunters are pariahs because they turn what can be a cerebral, competitive game into its most cynical iteration, and, in the process, discourage that new player from ever coming back.
Mr. Smith said state attorneys general were doing the bidding of environmental activists who set out to make pariahs of Exxon Mobil in pursuit of policies to limit climate change.
Why it's hard to think through these accusations As more men are tarred as bad actors, and once-cherished public figures become pariahs, imposing responsibility can feel uncomfortable, even alarming.
Mr. al-Bashir rose to power in a military coup in 1989 and for much of the time since, he and Sudan have been regarded as pariahs in the West.
Adding a mafia-lite dimension to Nigeria's already poor global image risks turning Nigerians into international pariahs, which is bad news for a country that is highly dependent on remittances.
The nonworking poor person getting something for nothing is a lot like the cheat committing voter fraud: pariahs who loom far larger in the American imagination than in real life.
His broad fund-raising base of Wall Street bankers, pharmaceutical executives and Silicon Valley billionaires had become pariahs to many Democrats, who viewed the influence of big donors as corrosive.
Some people say the attitude toward the Trump children will be more lenient; others think that the Trump brand is irrevocably damaged and that the whole family will be pariahs.
International outrage could turn that into a wake-up call for China's leaders, despite their totalitarian swagger, if the world begins to see them as pariahs, not just trading partners.
The gangster side of him was how he related to the men/woman who believed that they were ghetto bound—pariahs, outcasts, and unqualified to play a role in anything meaningful.
Even though over decades there has been no evidence that eating genetically modified crops is harmful to health, and little that they harm the environment, they have been treated as pariahs.
The degree to which Mr. Flake and Mr. McCain have become pariahs among conservative activists was on display during a weekend of state party dinners and organizing events in which Gov.
I had no idea that cars are the best phones, because in New York we're freaks and pariahs who are never in cars alone and don't understand how normal Americans live.
At the same time, an Ebola outbreak that started in neighboring Guinea quickly spread across West Africa, turning Sierra Leone's national team — and others from the region — into international soccer pariahs.
Proponents saw the act as an ethical statement about investments in technologies that contribute to climate change, and as part of an effort to paint the fossil fuel companies as pariahs.
"They can't decide whether they ought to feel like pariahs or victims, and they're looking for places where they can work this stuff out," a well-connected Silicon Valley organizer told me.
Europe continues to enforce an arms embargo against Sudan, and many Sudanese leaders are international pariahs, accused of committing war crimes during a civil war in Darfur, a region in western Sudan.
We're still seen as social pariahs, even here in the UK, where a single sex worker working alone is legal but breaks the law if she works with a friend for safety.
Her alliance with the Dixie Chicks, country pariahs for so long for their outspoken, nonconservative politics, on the stage of country music's most prestigious awards show, was a robust victory for tolerance.
At the White House, they are pariahs, criminals who menace American neighborhoods, take American jobs, sap American resources and exploit American generosity: They are people who should be, and will be, expelled.
Because banks cannot risk jeopardizing their access to the plumbing of the dollar-based global financial network, they have taken pains to steer clear of nations and companies deemed pariahs in Washington.
Although the report will not place those named in it under sanctions, it makes them potential targets if the confrontation between Russia and the West escalates, thus perhaps making them pariahs in advance.
His troubles reveal the dynamics that many left-leaning college campuses are struggling with as activists, eager to localise national issues of racial and economic justice, find soft targets and dub them pariahs.
The attorneys general, Mr. Smith said, are doing the bidding of environmental activists who set out to make pariahs of Exxon Mobil and its industry in pursuit of policies to limit climate change.
Once H.I.V. came to light in the early 16003s, infected people were treated as pariahs, blamed for their own illness and shunned as if you could catch H.I.V. from a handshake (you can't).
One feels that Furst, like the idealists he describes, dreams of a society "where every human being … was accepted," that, like Lenny's, his deepest sympathy lies with the pariahs, the "deranged," the dispossessed.
And just as with Uber or Yelp, a one-star rating has the potential for real economic effects: low-score people in "Nosedive" may lose their jobs, be ineligible for loans, or just become pariahs.
No man is an island, and the hope is that other offshore jurisdictions will have to play catch-up with tighter transparency standards for fear of becoming pariahs of a cleaned-up global financial system.
Macdonald drew the ire of social media for suggesting that Barr and C.K. — pop culture pariahs who have retreated from public life for racist antics and sexual misconduct, respectively — have lost "everything" thanks to their mistakes.
"It gives us the feeling we are not alone," said a visitor from Hessen, who had driven to Koblenz with eight friends; the German press, all agreed, twisted their words and made them feel like pariahs.
The former political wing of the Irish Republican Army, Sinn Fein were seen as political pariahs by many in Ireland until cementing its place as the third largest party in the aftermath of the financial crisis.
At the same time, by creating a stigma regarding payday lending and making payday lenders and borrowers pariahs, regulations and laws at state and federal levels prop up prices by discouraging competition from more mainstream lenders.
Thanks to Goldin's P.A.I.N. (as well as oodles of lawsuits and a searing New Yorker exposé), the Sacklers are worldwide pariahs—whether or not their name continues to tag museums like a deluxe badge of greed.
Since returning to power, he has moved to take over the media, the army, the police, the courts, the legislature, and the Supreme Electoral Council, while forging ties with international pariahs such as Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.
We make pariahs of people who have made mistakes right along with people who plan and carry out murder and harm "in cold blood," rather than getting to the root causes of either type of offending behavior.
Such a competition, seemingly the brainchild of the Real Madrid president, Florentino Pérez, would render the teams and players in it as pariahs to the rest of the soccer world, Gianni Infantino, the president of FIFA, said.
If unwatched YouTube videos, unfriended Facebook pages, and brand pariahs on Twitter constitute the Lonely Web, then this was something lonelier still—a solitary empire cultivated over years, built in tribute to the object of its creator's affections.
Social platforms may currently be positioned as pariahs in the news landscape, but they don't have to be: these could also be opportunities to change the conversation, bringing in more people who traditionally are not being cut in.
Dana was 32 with five kids under the age of 12, two of them still in diapers, to support on her own, in an era of staunchly conservative family values — single mothers were rare, and divorced women pariahs.
I shouldn't have to tell a news outlet to not give a man who has been notoriously associated with racism, misogyny, xenophobia, antisemitism, transphobia, and homophobia a platform, much less humanize their advocates and depict them as social 'pariahs.
"It felt like a dating site for pariahs," she noted—and one with bad design, shitty UI, and and very few members, many of whom are too ashamed of their diagnosis to actually post a picture on their profile.
"People are still going to cross out of necessity even though they view us as pariahs over there," said student Paola Gomez, 21, standing outside her home as the noise of workers putting up the sections drifted across the border.
"For years we were pariahs, and no one wanted anything to do with us," said Julie Reiskin, executive director of the Colorado Cross-Disability Coalition, a nonprofit group that advocates for people with disabilities, many of whom are eligible for PACE.
But more than conspicuous, Los Frikis—a community of Cuban punks who came together throughout the late 1980s and 90s, resembling punks of freer nations in style and taste—came to be viewed as pariahs by everyone but their own.
The agreement signed by Russia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan and Iran — a club seen in the West as mostly a rogues' gallery of dictatorships and pariahs, but at least now getting along among themselves — took both approaches in the eventual compromise.
Many people of Asian descent were treated like pariahs in Western countries -- there were reports of non-Asian people covering their faces in the presence of Asian coworkers, and real estate agents who were told not to serve Asian clients.
There are photos of Castro with Minister Malcolm X during his trek through Harlem in 2628 that speaks volumes as Brother Malcolm and the Nation of Islam were considered pariahs even among many self-styled liberal American whites who feared them.
But the day 19-year-old Nikolas Cruz barged into his former school with a Smith & Wesson M&P 15, they were pulled through a prism of identities: They became survivors, advocates, activists, leaders, mourners, celebrities, political figures and pariahs.
Here were a black pop star and a group of Nashville pariahs performing on country music's biggest stage, a victory for the genre's big tent approach — and yet many of the genre's fans were outraged, as expressed in incensed, often racist online comments.
After Natalie Maines, the group's lead singer, told a crowd in London in 2003 that they were "ashamed" that President George W. Bush was from Texas, their home state, the Dixie Chicks became pariahs and were shunned by country radio for years.
Mieczysław Rakowski, the last Prime Minister of communist Poland, recalls how a woman from Krakow with two sons and a sick husband asked Gomułka in a letter how she should tell her children that they had now become pariahs in their own country.
Treating racist extremists as pariahs is not just an expression of our revulsion at their views; it is a necessary tactic in defending our liberal democratic order against those who aim to gain power within our systems only to replace them with something horrific.
It's about the thousands of kids across the country who, on top of all the craziness of adolescence, are also realizing, often to their horror, that their bodies and souls do not align, and that as a result they may face a lifetime as pariahs.
The phasing out of aid for anti-Assad rebels (presumably the indigenous Sunni-dominated factions) gives Russia and Syria the only thing they've ever wanted: the ability to frame the conflict in Syria as one between the regime and a handful of radicals and pariahs.
He noted that the Yankees' Alex Rodriguez and Milwaukee's Ryan Braun were no longer the pariahs they had seemed to be after they served suspensions for using performance-enhancing drugs and that Mets fans had welcomed Lenny Dykstra at a recent reunion after his jail sentence.
It was a disease that turned victims into pariahs, cut down creative lives, and tainted and buried reputations, including those of Mr. Lopez and Mr. Ramos, who had faded from view until the recent publication of books about them, one by Mr. Caranicas, and now this survey.
Each is a stalemated conflict that military force is unlikely to resolve, each involves international pariahs who want to mend fences with the United States, and each has a rare window of opportunity, in Afghanistan owing largely to a national ceasefire of three days last month.
North Korean government officials have to limit their computer time, because of electricity shortages, and they are international pariahs — yet they are very savvy and shrewd, and they were counseled by one of the smartest Trump handlers of all, President Moon Jae-in of South Korea.
Since he became the assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs last fall, A. Wess Mitchell has jettisoned the Obama-era policy of focusing on human rights violations in nations such as Hungary in favor of a policy that sees regional authoritarian governments as potential partners, not diplomatic pariahs.
Amir Ahmad Nasr, a Sudanese-born writer who won fame as the country's best-known young blogger, predicts a fresh boost in the fortunes of Sudan's rulers, who have long been regarded as pariahs because of genocide in the Darfur region and war-crimes charges against President Omar al-Bashir.
"I have a whole new respect for the plight of pariahs," said Mr. King, who was among 650 Americans who returned to the United States last month after being stuck for more than a week on a cruise ship that no country initially allowed to dock because of fear of coronavirus.
Because the Cromar family gave up medical marijuana when they moved back to Utah, they have avoided the possibility of religious sanction — such as exclusion from temples — but Dave Cromar said that in some cases they have still been treated as pariahs by members of their congregation as they have pressed for the legalization of medical cannabis.
Although I've since left the fun, fervent excesses of erotic fandom behind, I was recently brought back by a wave of clickbaity headlines about more recent iterations of those fan communities, particularly a group of people who write about their attraction to fictional pariahs like Pennywise, the evil clown from Stephen King's It, and Venom, the alien-like Spider-Man villain.
Demonstrators characterized the PT era, which began thirteen years earlier with the presidency of former metalworker and union leader Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, and admittedly had its fair share of scandals even as it lifted millions out of abject poverty, as an insidious plot to subvert the fabric of Brazilian society and align the nation with international pariahs like Iran and Venezuela.
A gay and devoutly Christian president would represent one more great stripping-away of the dehumanizing myths so long, and so successfully, propagated by the religious right: In this case, the notion that the gays (much like the communists, the atheists, the feminists, the blacks—name your pariahs) want to "take over," with the ultimate aim of destroying traditionalist Christianity and all its fine values.
And if you're a black viewer, you're like, you're really thinking about the ways in which black people can turn on each other when it comes to something like what is a black identity because it's something we're told isn't valuable, but then it becomes the most valuable thing that you're so protective over, and for people who don't fit into it, they become pariahs in a way.
Jeff Bagwell and Ivan Rodriguez, who had been linked via innuendo with performance-enhancing drugs, were elected; Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens, whose steroid usage is more concretely known and who therefore had become about as close to being a pair of pariahs as baseball has this side of Pete Rose and Shoeless Joe Jackson, saw their percentage of the vote bounce up from 218 and 19943 percent, respectively, to 21994 and 21995.
Dumb serves as a time capsule of the rise and fall of the little ragtag mag that upended the entire skate industry—and pop culture writ large—by using archival footage and candid interviews from the original Big Brother staff (Tremaine, Steve Rocco, and Dave Carnie), the pariahs of the skate world who were welcomed with opened arms (Bam Margera, Jason "Wee Man" Acuña, Steve-O), and even outsider fans who felt their gravitational pull (Jonah Hill).
Their reemergence in this exhibition doesn't threaten the judgment of history, but it does conjure a more inclusive, appropriately messy vision of the past, in which a painting like Cadmus's "Greenwich Village Cafeteria" (21941), with its sprawling cast of social pariahs (including a dandy tossing a come-hither look as he pulls open the men's room door with a manicured hand) might conceivably hang on the same walls as Piet Mondrian's "Composition No. II, with Red and Blue" (113, donated to the museum by Philip Johnson in 211).
" Responding at Crooked Media, Brian Beutler wonders if even a thorough electoral drubbing would do the trick, since the extra-political institutional structure that allowed the Republicans to erode democratic norms would still be in place: "In a world where Sean Spicer remains respectably employable, corporate America loves regressive tax cuts, mainstream news outlets refuse to make pariahs of people who seek their destruction, and the cult of false equivalence remains the analytic foundation of political journalism, voters can 'boycott' Republicans in historic numbers, only to watch Republicans return to power unreformed a few years later.

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