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"pilloried" Antonyms

507 Sentences With "pilloried"

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

Pilloried for its move away from anonymity It has also been pilloried by existing users over its move away from anonymity.
Urban audiences have pilloried owners accused of abusing the creatures.
The cover was pilloried from many sides in social media.
Her remarks were pilloried by Sanders supporters and some Democrats.
Critics have pilloried the new repair plan over safety concerns.
What will he demand from an organization he has pilloried?
First, it was pilloried for choosing to reserve seats for women.
Predictably, McCullough was pilloried by liberal critics online after her response.
The Incroyables were pilloried, parodied, emulated, reviled, attacked and much discussed.
Men were being pilloried, fired, and investigated for their sexual transgressions.
Michelle Obama was both praised and pilloried for her sensible shoes.
In the opening scene, he finds himself pilloried by the press.
Her detractors pilloried her movies as sexist, politically incoherent and grotesque.
Yet at the turn of the millennium, she was again pilloried.
They are young reality TV upstarts desperate not to get pilloried online!
Trump pilloried opponents for being beholden to industry interests during his campaign.
The Galaxy S210 was rightly pilloried for looking like a Band-Aid.
During Ahok's campaign for governor, Islamist activists pilloried him for his religion.
They're getting pilloried at Facebook and their behaviors during the Russia investigations.
It was pilloried by critics and was a disappointment at the box office.
Pena Nieto was widely pilloried for hosting Trump at short notice last Wednesday.
He was pilloried and ridiculed on social media by fans and fellow players.
Clinton will also be pilloried as in sympathy with Black Lives Matters protestors.
We watched a special prosecutor get pilloried (though some thought he deserved it).
Masahiro was pilloried for his capitulation, past his resignation, past his early death.
"Suicide Squad," pilloried by critics but a box-office hit, arrives on HBO.
Carter was pilloried for seemingly consulting with a literal child about national security matters.
This week, President-elect Donald Trump pilloried Indiana union leader Chuck Jones on Twitter.
JUUL has also been pilloried for borrowing marketing techniques (and cash) from Big Tobacco.
She's stood up in a lot of issues and gotten pilloried sometimes for that.
"He was pilloried in a way that I just found so ugly," he said.
Infuriated, the president of the New York City Patrolmen's Benevolent Association pilloried the board.
But Mr. Pruitt is now being pilloried by conservative allies of the White House.
Clinton was pilloried for her ostensibly traditional choice to stay with her unfaithful husband.
They've been pilloried by the right and the left and they've been berated by Congress.
The 23-year-old pact, pilloried by President Donald Trump, is due for an upgrade.
Anyway, the Tesla and SpaceX founder has long been pilloried for his tunnel idea online.
Some human rights advocates have pilloried the law for stigmatizing Muslims who wear head scarves.
James Inhofe, even though he's someone who Democrats have pilloried as a climate-change denier.
Despite its popularity in Congress, some prominent national security advisers have also pilloried the bill.
Instagram is often pilloried by its fans and critics for turning vacations into photo ops.
Sometimes, he was pilloried for this behavior; other times, he was fetishized because of it.
He has pilloried the Chinese repeatedly while campaigning, sometimes doing so in a mocking accent.
Trump was being pilloried by journalists for a paucity of briefings and dodging their questions.
Mr. Putnam, a former technology executive, has pilloried her in particular for two past statements.
Women who do the same, however, are still pilloried: sluts, whores, tarts, strumpets, harlots, trollops.
"He has been pilloried in public discourse on this issue, falsely," Celli told the judges.
In the 1990s Nike and Gap were pilloried for their alleged use of "sweatshop" labour.
In a speech heavy on criticism of Republicans, nearly all the GOP candidates immediately pilloried it.
Once upon a time, miscreants subjected to public ridicule were pilloried for perhaps a few hours.
In "Colorado River Songs," an album she released in 1964, she pilloried the Bureau of Reclamation.
A senior F.B.I. lawyer, Lisa Page, was forced to resign after being pilloried by House Republicans.
For this he has been praised by the industry but pilloried by the public interest bar.
He will get pilloried for not doing enough to stop a bad bill that hurts Nevada.
Last week, the Clinton campaign pilloried NBC News for publishing a story about the candidate coughing.
He's been parodied and pilloried by eye-rolling onlookers for years, but he's a good actor.
To do so risked being called a racist and being pilloried by the stewards of political correctness.
The campaign drew the attention of the wider community, who either fell for it or pilloried it.
But Sessions pilloried white supremacists in the aftermath more than the president did in his initial comments.
Even ex-Republicans who do call for Trump's impeachment and removal are regularly pilloried on the left.
Few companies in the history of business have been pilloried like Facebook in the last two years.
The media has pilloried Steve Bannon to the point of utter exhaustion, both ours and theirs apparently.
His podium protest on Sunday was pilloried by Chinese state media and prompted a warning from FINA.
But Deep Adaptation has been pilloried as an all-around shoddy piece of work by academic standards.
In the Democratic Party, Bernie Sanders has pilloried Hillary Clinton for her support of past trade treaties.
Twenty years ago, Monica Lewinsky was pilloried throughout the American media for her affair with Bill Clinton.
Mr. Moore has been pilloried in press accounts of the episode as a duplicitous spy for hire.
Mr. Ghosn was pilloried in the press, but the aggressive cost-cutting worked and stabilized Nissan finances.
Sanders denied the claim publicly during the Democratic debate in Iowa, and his supporters pilloried Warren online.
Those events have been pilloried by some progressive activists who have tarred Buttigieg with the hashtag #WallStreetPete.
He became the butt of jokes for being too folksy, pilloried for being a Georgia peanut farmer.
And there was collateral damage, as a man misidentified as the attacker was pilloried on social media.
The post was pilloried on Instagram and Twitter as being racist and ignorant about India's technological advances.
They pilloried the move as a big-government intrusion that would outlaw children from doing their chores.
The gash should be pilloried in Lafayette Square naked and whipped by passerby while being filmed for posterity.
In the process, he separated himself from industry peers who were being pilloried as culprits in the crisis.
In Silicon Valley, where Facebook has its headquarters, some critics pilloried the company after the indictment became public.
What's more interesting is that Guess managed to hit upon the perfect balance of being pilloried and protected.
Facebook has been pilloried for allowing the spread of fake news on its platform and its limited response.
He should not be given a pass for his behavior, but nor should he be pilloried so disproportionately.
Trump backed off from the idea after Republicans and Democrats pilloried the plan on the Sunday political shows.
The National Olympic Committee has been pilloried since the Nassar case and come under heavy scrutiny from legislators.
History is filled with examples of scientifically sound guidance that was ignored or pilloried by those in power.
For a solid week, the administration was pilloried by Democrats, journalists, activists and even members of his own party.
The scholarly work that D'Souza (and Woodward) pilloried in the early 90's has stood the test of time.
EA employees who are innocent of the sins committed by their firm's C-suite are pilloried for them nevertheless.
They're a fungible meme engine — a medium that is as celebrated today as it was pilloried a decade ago.
The 2022 World Cup in Qatar has been rightly pilloried for its shady bidding process and human rights violations.
Self was pilloried for the move, and the Kansas state legislature voted to begin raising tax rates this summer.
Even Republicans, who pilloried and then impeached the president for his sexual escapades, admired Clintonism for its political suppleness.
President Trump has pilloried Fed Chair Jerome Powell, branding the central bank under his guidance "loco", "crazy" and "ridiculous".
Those platforms gave Americans ecosystems to have views reinforced and opposing ones pilloried, breeding a non-stop us vs.
In "Kitchen Confidential," he relentlessly pilloried the TV chef Emeril Lagasse, noting several times his resemblance to an Ewok.
Sessions was pilloried for his "zero tolerance" policy, which resulted in the separation of thousands of children from their families.
A "soft" Brexit that would keep Britain in the single market, like Norway, is pilloried as no Brexit at all.
Its Irish rival, in contrast, is often pilloried for treating its staff badly by western European norms to save money.
The detentions were a rare success for Belgian authorities, who have been pilloried for mishandling leads in the bombings investigation.
Clinton pilloried Mr. Trump for his "Twitter rants and conspiracy theories" and called his approach to national security entirely unserious.
With the millions of dollars she has given to San Francisco institutions, she believes she should be praised, not pilloried.
The president is a misogynist thug who has boasted of some of the same crimes Weinstein is being pilloried for.
The retailer was pilloried for racial insensitivity for marketing a top with a monkey design worn by a black boy.
In a country where layoffs are rare, Mr. Ghosn was pilloried in the press and labeled a "gaijin," or foreigner.
At times he has pilloried Republicans for becoming the "Party of White," arguing in 2010 that Republicans like then-Gov.
Abigail Disney now eschews them; famous environmentalists including Leonardo DiCaprio and Prince Harry have been publicly pilloried for using them.
To read Heather MacDonald's account of being pilloried at Claremont McKenna College is to enter a world of chilling intolerance.
Trump's budget plan has been pilloried by politicians on both sides of the aisle since its unveiling on Tuesday. Sen.
And this week, Brooks doubled down on his comments to side with Sessions, who has been publicly pilloried by Trump.
She felt pilloried by supporters of Conyers, and still feels blackballed by the political establishment in her home state of Michigan.
Rebecca Tuvel, a philosopher at Rhodes College in Memphis, was pilloried for her article, "In Defence of Transracialism", published in March.
But mainstream Republicans have pilloried Barack Obama with such abandon that they are struggling to answer Mr Trump and Mr Cruz.
Of course, Mr. Temer faces an array of other challenges that have little to do with how his poetry is pilloried.
Perdue said he was trying to "make school meals great again," but he was pilloried for it by "The Daily Show."
Conway also dismissed persistent speculation that Spicer, who has been pilloried on TV comedy shows since Trump took office on Jan.
Spicer was then tasked with repeating that astounding falsehood to reporters — something for which he and the administration were quickly pilloried.
For weeks, he was pilloried in the media and by opponents as a symbol of China's efforts to compromise Australian democracy.
Elizabeth Warren, pilloried the former mayor for his past sexist statements and for trying to buy his way into the presidency.
He assumed his post in 2017 from the beleaguered Margaret Chan, who was widely pilloried for her clumsy response to Ebola.
Whether the quiet efforts to contain the President are something to be praised or pilloried is something up for serious debate.
It was pilloried by politicians for appearing to profit at the expense of clients, and became synonymous with Wall Street avarice.
If near-perfect Teigen got pilloried for standard IVF, what would happen to others acknowledging the use of third-party reproduction?
The National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) has pilloried Wexton and the Democratic establishment for failing to stand out from the pack.
Trump backed off from the idea over the weekend after Republicans and Democrats pilloried the plan on the Sunday political shows.
But in a recent interview, he made clear that he remains annoyed by how his best player and team were pilloried.
What makes it confusing for us, and probably emboldening for Kanye, is that he's so often been pilloried for being right.
When a video of a deliberate DeChambeau was posted he was pilloried and ridiculed fans and fellow players on social media.
The agency that I left 13 years later was different: afraid to say anything for fear of being pilloried in the press.
They're Schrodinger's Investment, toxic and revered and hated and loved and pilloried by technical analysis videos all at once without any differentiation.
The moves come at a time when Facebook has been pilloried for a decision not to send political ads to fact-checkers.
He has sometimes been pilloried as impish and arrogant, and he bristles at being labeled an "enfant terrible," as he often is.
The American singer-songwriter is being pilloried for posting a picture of an Indian goddess on Instagram, with the caption 'current mood.
Buzzfeed was pilloried by many "traditional" journalists for breaching ethical standards of spreading unsubstantiated smut (even as Buzzfeed said it was unsubstantiated).
Clinton had been pilloried in coal country for acknowledging that coal mining would have a declining role in a 21st-century economy.
Notre Dame law professor Amy Barrett, nominated by Trump for the 7th Circuit, was pilloried in a committee hearing by California Sen.
Ms. Bai is the latest in a growing list of entertainers who have been pilloried in China for holding "incorrect" political views.
This being Quebec, he was also pilloried by some French-speaking Quebec nationalists for bastardizing the language of Molière by speaking Franglais.
While they did not sponsor Stonewall, their presence now testifies to our success over the forces that would have previously pilloried them.
The former veep pilloried what he viewed as Trump's recklessness and called for congressional authorization of any further military engagement with Iran.
Hedge fund managers seem to be pilloried daily by politicians and plutocrats, including Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and billionaire Warren Buffett.
It has pilloried Ms. Yau and Mr. Leung in particular, and may issue a narrow ruling that bars them from taking office.
A détente was eventually reached, and Fox anchor Megyn Kelly, whom Trump had pilloried, sat down with him for a softball interview.
Presidential candidates on the campaign trail pilloried Pfizer in November, when it announced a $2500 billion deal with Allergan that involved an inversion.
"We noticed a trend that included people we respected being pilloried, in several cases, on accusations of racism and sexism," Lindsay tells me.
Obama was pilloried as a left-wing radical, even though his policy centered on reforming and improving the existing private health care system.
Three months later Kuchar upped the payment to Ortiz to $50,000, but only after being pilloried on social media for his perceived stinginess.
"Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice" steamrolled past records, debuting to a gargantuan $170.1 million over Easter weekend despite being pilloried by critics.
There has been heavy pressure on drug pricing in America after a series of firms, most recently Mylan, were pilloried for stratospheric rises.
Under Sullivan, the company paid $100,000 to silence the hackers, which the company was pilloried for in the public after the payment leaked.
Disney has been pilloried in local media for its prices ($1 for a single steamed bun, or about five times the street price).
Now the president is being pilloried on Twitter not just for his hurricane response, but for his "toddler-level" response to that response.
Pilloried on Russian state television as a dangerous criminal, Mr. Kross has battled for years to purge international arrest orders issued against him.
Under Sullivan, the company paid $2900,220006 to silence the hackers, which the company was pilloried for in the public after the payment leaked.
The mayor was also lambasted by prominent clerics and pilloried in social media posts falsely claiming he planned to allow hundreds more churches.
Newton famously was pilloried by a number of reputable sources (and a few disreputable ones) before the Carolina Panthers chose him first overall.
This comes after President Donald Trump and his supporters have pilloried House Democrats for not doing more of their investigatory work in public.
When Representative Ilhan Omar, one of only two Muslim congresswomen, dares to question this, she is pilloried and falsely accused of anti-Semitism.
Stephen Colbert on Thursday pilloried President Trump for continuing to insist that Democrats have exaggerated the death toll from Hurricane Maria last year.
British leaders are regularly pilloried for playing the poodle to American presidents, and Mr. Johnson's show of independence played well with British commentators.
Separately, "The Ottoman Lieutenant," a new film backed by Turkish investors, has been pilloried by critics for whitewashing Turkish actions in the genocide.
During the hearing, Democrats often pilloried Pruitt and sought to show that he has weakened pollution regulations during his first year in office.
On occasion, Basinger serves as an advocate for films that have either done poorly at the box office or been pilloried by critics.
Cotton blasted WeWork for issues like assuming 100% occupancy of its buildings and pilloried metric community-adjusted EBITDA — "whatever that means," he said.
McCabe was pilloried throughout his time leading the department and was eventually fired in 2018, just days shy of his announced retirement date.
The Buttigieg-Klobuchar one was especially biting, as Buttigieg pilloried Klobuchar over her recent failure to know the name of the Mexican president.
But Christine Blasey Ford and Deborah Ramirez are pilloried by Donald Trump as unreliable because they were possibly drunk at age 15 and 18.
Critics compared her to Keats; feminists embraced her as a martyr (and pilloried Hughes as a reckless and even sadistic agent of the patriarchy).
Rolling out to a select test audience in Australia, the feature was immediately pilloried online and in the media as an invasion of privacy.
What Clark, Hill, Lewinsky, and Clinton have in common is that they were all strong public women who were pilloried for defying gender expectations.
In speeches, debates and ads, the former secretary of State has pilloried the practice known as corporate inversions, arguing companies are exploiting a loophole.
Federal Reserve President Trump has been pilloried for his relentless criticism of Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell over the decisions to raise interest rates.
"Something that I've been pilloried for is that I've said Modernism has failed the mainstream opera establishment, at least in the U.S.A.," he said.
It's a B-movie plot that has gotten pilloried for being misogynistic and transphobic, as it toys with gender identity for sheer shock value.
The victory also brought some redemption for the forward, who had been pilloried by the Brazilian public in the early stages of the tournament.
And once celebrated startup founders like WeWork CEO Adam Neumann, have been pilloried for presiding over businesses brimming with hubris but bereft of profits.
Kraft was cheered in Patriots Nation for seeming to stare down the commissioner, who continues to be pilloried on talk radio from Foxborough, Mass.
When Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel last month raised the lack of "a value system and a moral compass"in black communities, he was pilloried.
We've learned that prominent speechwriters had initially drafted Melania Trump's convention remarks, but that she tore them up, resulting in her widely pilloried address.
The next week, after days of being pilloried in the press, Samsung issued a statement officially delaying the Galaxy Fold's planned April 26 launch.
While he's enlisting you to recover his truck, it's out of fear that he'll be pilloried by "Obama-loving libtards" for losing his truck.
When word of the show gets out, Titus is pilloried by an online group called The Forum to Advocate Respectful Asian Portrayals In Entertainment.
The UK Financial Services Authority is pilloried for failing to probe Libor despite receiving warnings up to two years before it finally opened proceedings.
Hodgson was fired and the players were pilloried, jeered by their own fans the next time they played on home turf at Wembley Stadium.
During the campaign, she also pilloried Rauner for having little success in implementing his so-called turnaround agenda to revive the state's laggard economy.
Mr. Sessions's nationalist and extremist conservatism is abhorrent to me, and I should enjoy watching him get pilloried by Mr. Trump — but I don't.
His 60th birthday soiree in 2007 was pilloried by some as an example of Wall Street excess in the time before the financial crash.
At the congressional luncheon, Mr. Trump basked in the ritualized speeches and formalized bonhomie of the city he had pilloried in his inaugural address.
The candidate who brags about having a plan for everything was pilloried for not detailing how she would pay for her most expensive proposal.
And when, in that courtyard, Christakis apologized for any pain that the memo had caused but refused to disavow its content, he was pilloried.
In July, more than 200 of these lawyers were rounded up in a nationwide sweep and pilloried by the state-run news media as swindlers.
This is no Akzo Nobel, the troubled Dutch chemicals group pilloried by Elliott Advisors for its inaction when a bid arrived from U.S. peer PPG.
The company was quickly pilloried for suspending McGowan's account, with many suggesting the social network was silencing the voice of a victim of sexual harassment.
The "Green New Deal", a utopian but implausible spending programme proposed by some Democrats, has been championed by left-leaning commentators and pilloried by conservatives.
Also, Brian, what's the toll ... I don't want to feel sorry for you as a journalist, we're all getting pilloried — but what do you do?
Earlier in 21980, Mr. Santucci had been both praised and pilloried in connection with a corruption scandal involving allegations of bribery schemes at city agencies.
But the plan has been pilloried by Democrats and panned in public opinion polls for its perceived shortcomings -- the individual cuts expire after eight years.
Rick's really bad and irresponsible behavior is par for the course; as a male, he gets away with it, but a woman would be pilloried.
Speaking of public censure, Penn State was pilloried for its overbearing football culture in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky child-rape scandal in 2011.
After he was taken to a clinic and a Moscow doctor close to Mr. Putin pronounced him fit, the doctor was pilloried on social media.
Mr. Ryan and his group are being pilloried on Twitter as #FiveWhiteGuys, although they are joined by a woman, Representative Kathleen Rice of New York.
Presidents are rarely afraid to wrangle and bully reporters, and Mr. Trump's predecessor, President Barack Obama, was pilloried by news organizations for aggressively prosecuting leakers.
Major internet companies have been pilloried for their role as sources of disinformation and for turning a blind eye to the spread of political lies.
He's already been ridiculed by Trump over his height, sidetracking Bloomberg's team into the sandbox where they pilloried the president's weight, hair and skin hue.
The prosecutors, as well as two judges who dismissed charges on Wednesday, have been pilloried on social media for allowing "Muslim extremists" to walk free.
By the time Trump used it to reverse his policy, Nielsen had been both yelled at and praised by Trump and pilloried for repeating his falsehoods.
Pundits then pilloried her for failing to disclose the illness—and for ditching the reporters who are supposed to document such anomalies for the public interest.
Steve King in Iowa, even after King was pilloried for meeting with a far-right Austrian group linked to Nazis and retweeting an avowed Nazi sympathizer.
While the aviation industry is often pilloried for pumping Arctic-melting carbon emissions into the atmosphere, single-use plastics are a growing scourge on the planet.
Trump pilloried his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton, in the 2016 presidential campaign for her use of a private email server when she was secretary of state.
Berkeley professor Ben Recht pilloried dual affiliation in a blog post titled "You Cannot Serve Two Masters" and co-authored with two other computer-science professors.
After she spoke out, she said, she was pilloried on social media, with people accusing her of making up lies in order to swing the election.
Apple's been pilloried in recent years for "courageously" removing the headphone jacks on iPhones and virtually all the third-party ports on MacBooks and MacBook Pros.
Fallon Fox, an American mixed-martial-arts fighter, was pilloried when she revealed in 2013 that she was a male who had undergone gender-reassignment surgery.
Yes, Mitt Romney was roundly pilloried when he complained that 47 percent of the people would never vote for him because they pay no federal taxes.
Mr. Clinton's camp pilloried Ken Starr, the independent counsel, much as Mr. Trump has denigrated Robert S. Mueller III, the special counsel in the Russia investigation.
El Salvador's military, backed by the Reagan administration, was being pilloried for human rights abuses, such as the torture and killing of civilians, including Catholic nuns.
On Thursday, he pilloried Senator Marco Rubio, Republican of Florida, for condemning his party's nominee without withdrawing his endorsement, arguing that Mr. Rubio was being hypocritical.
As a broadcast commentator in the 22014s, Mr. Dorenko had supported Mr. Putin and pilloried his opponents so effectively that he earned the "TV killer" nickname.
Each time she takes the stage alongside President Trump, she's alternately pilloried and praised on social media for hanging tough through his freewheeling, fact-flouting remarks.
Simply by telling it, a woman can expect to be pilloried in the press and suffer far worse on social media, if not in real life.
In Argentina, Elliott was pilloried in the local press as a "vulture" investor for waging a decade-long battle with the government over its defaulted debt.
Of course, Republicans pilloried Hillary Clinton for nearly two years for using a private email server, a bad decision, but one that didn't endanger the nation.
But if it agrees to make changes, it will undoubtedly be perceived by the right as capitulating to liberal political pressure and be pilloried for it.
The controversy over Folau's page also enveloped his wife Maria Folau, a professional netballer, who was pilloried for supporting her husband's GoFundMe campaign on social media.
The American Red Cross raised more than $600 million last year, despite being pilloried for its inept responses to Hurricane Sandy and the 2010 Haitian earthquake.
On May 31st she was pilloried for being the only party leader not to take part in a televised debate, sending her home secretary, Amber Rudd, instead.
Fallon Fox, an American mixed-martial arts fighter, was pilloried by commentators and other combatants when she revealed in 2013 that she had undergone gender-reassignment surgery.
Yet Democrats have pilloried Trump on television all summer, and without a major PAC, Trump is sure to be heavily outspent on advertising, perhaps by unprecedented margins.
The ouster of the nation's top cop prompted comparisons to Watergate, as Democrats pilloried Trump for sidelining the official overseeing a probe that could threaten his presidency.
He repeatedly took chances with potential rewards that clearly justified their risk from a statistical perspective, but for which he would have been pilloried had they failed.
Notably, those documents indicate that Trump's effective income tax rate was about 25 percent — much higher than former GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney's much-pilloried 14 percent.
Bossert's appointment also elevates a defender of the Iraq War, which Trump pilloried during his campaign for president as a mistake, to a senior White House position.
Dianne Feinstein was pilloried for not revealing earlier a letter from Christine Blasey Ford, the woman who accused Kavanaugh of sexual assault when they were both teens.
At a time when Russia was already being pilloried by the West, it made Putin look either clumsily murderous or unable to control his own trigger men.
Wells Fargo was going to be pilloried in the midst of a presidential campaign in which each side wants to ramp up criticism of the big banks.
Certainly, it is timely, given that designers on both sides of the Atlantic were pilloried for excluding black models from their shows just a few seasons ago.
As the government sued, Microsoft executives became so anxious and gun-shy that they essentially undermined their own monopoly out of terror they might be pilloried again.
Bloomberg is, after all, the mayor who opted to cheer up demoralized staffers at Goldman Sachs when a former executive pilloried the investment bank behemoth upon resigning.
" Amnesty International pilloried the decision, calling it "a shocking abandonment of the victims" that "ultimately will be seen as a craven capitulation to Washington's bullying and threats.
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.) pilloried the administration's incapability to speak truthfully to Americans about the existential threat from radical Islamist terror to Western civilization.
But after years of pro-pot activists being pilloried as hippies and druggies, even opponents of legalized marijuana say supporters have made gains by changing their image.
Pushback is emerging among conservative Republicans over President Donald Trump's apparent support for the Export-Import Bank, an institution they have pilloried as a giveaway to big businesses.
While Microsoft is rightly being pilloried for its anemic first-party software efforts, the Xbox One actually now has more to play on it than any other console.
Derided by some (Piers Morgan pilloried Greggs for being "PC-ravaged clowns") the company said the publicity had boosted sales of its other "iconic sausage rolls" and food.
Andy Harris was pilloried at a town-hall-style meeting in his district on Friday, facing an onslaught from a crowd eager to express their disapproval and frustration.
But a recent set of interviews, which were quickly pilloried across cable news, prompted increased concerns about both Trump's legal exposure and the effectiveness of his vocal attorney.
One government official was pilloried after he told fans to leave the Olympic venues earlier to ensure they made it to the subway before it closed at midnight.
He said that Ms. Nielsen "should be pilloried in Lafayette Square naked and whipped by passersby" and that Ms. Sanders's children should perhaps be taken away from her.
When he previously tried to ease land acquisition rules, he found himself pilloried as the "suit boot" prime minister, or guardian of the corporate class, the experts noted.
This exposure that requires risk is not skin-baring: It's emotional luggage, exiting the strongbox of the psyche even at the risk of being pilloried by misogynists and trolls.
The dual letters are the latest in a series of political headaches for the bank and its top executives, who have already been pilloried by lawmakers in both parties.
You either love him and are to be looked after and defended for that position or you hate him and are to be pilloried and castigated at every turn.
It is not hard to imagine how this happened: In the course of his reform crusade, McCain has been pilloried by Republicans and praised by Democrats and liberal journalists.
Democratic lawmakers, who have pilloried the Republican nominee and incessantly declared him unfit for office, would be hard-pressed not to follow suit and vote to impeach that individual.
For this, I have, at different times, been pilloried by both sides and admired by both sides depending on whether my neutral principles hurt or help their partisan causes.
The backdrop: Trump has been pilloried from all sides following today's press conference for seeming side with Russia, rather than the U.S. intelligence community, over election meddling in 2016.
With wit and irony, Ms. Ham pilloried this tradition by stealing hundreds of mundane objects from museums around the world, including forks, saucers, knives, vases, salt and pepper shakers.
Meanwhile, Mr. de Blasio was in Gracie Mansion being pilloried by Bronx elected officials for his handling of an unrelated decision to situate a jail in the South Bronx.
Republicans pilloried Hillary Clinton for what they claimed was her inadequate attention to security as secretary of state in the months before the deadly 250 attacks in Benghazi, Libya.
But Warren has pilloried high-dollar fundraising events as part of a corrupt campaign finance system, and she and rival Sanders have declined to host these closed-door receptions.
Four years later, Mr. Ross was pilloried after an explosion at the Sago Mine in West Virginia, which his company had bought a few weeks earlier, killed 20133 miners.
Social media firms have been pilloried relentlessly over the past two-plus year over issues around illegal and harmful content, moderation failures, and the spread of misinformation and propaganda.
NYT reporters have the right to express their opinions on Twitter and speak the truth about Trump, and should be applauded for doing so, not pilloried on Fox News.
There's also the reality that Clinton was pilloried as focusing too much on identity politics -- and, several Democratic strategists noted, Winfrey's Sunday night speech was all about identity politics.
The party announced last Monday that he was under investigation for violations of "discipline" — usually a euphemism for corruption — and Mr. Sun has since been pilloried in official media.
And they pilloried Gates, an admitted thief and liar, as a sketchy underling who had his "hand in the cookie jar," and lied to cover for his own crimes.
On top of the healthcare debacle, Trump came under fire for banning transgender people from the military, and was pilloried for politicizing a speech he made to the Boy Scouts.
" Speaking aboard Air Force One on a trip to Montana, Trump said he believed he forged a personal connection with the young autocrat he once pilloried as "Little Rocket Man.
Then there's Kasich, the Ohio governor who Cruz repeatedly pilloried for declining to drop out of the GOP race even though he had the narrowest of paths to the nomination.
In court, Manafort was pilloried as a serial liar with an addiction to fine things, who bamboozled his way into millions by using his decades of political experience for crime.
Now sacked as head of the FBI and with a book to promote, Mr Comey pilloried Mr Trump in a TV interview, saying he was "morally unfit" to be president.
In the last week alone, Facebook was pilloried on social media for sponsoring the Republican National Convention — despite calls from progressive groups to withhold support from the Trump-led event.
Even though developers tend to get pilloried in the public process, it is the land owners that get egged on by local brokers to sell at the absolute highest price.
Lawmakers in the U.S. Congress pilloried Uber on Tuesday for initially failing to inform regulators and customers about a 2016 security breach that affected about 57 million drivers and riders.
I detest Donald Trump and the damage he is doing to all of us, and it does my heart immeasurable good to see him and his minions pilloried without mercy.
"I certainly know that many women have and often want to forget how much they have gone through for shame, for reticence and for fear of being pilloried," she wrote.
However, after being pilloried over her support for "Medicare for All" (and subsequent decision to backtrack from it), she was unable to translate that into support at the ballot box.
They include a who's who of right-wing commentators who have pilloried Clinton and her family over the years: Rush Limbaugh, Mark Levin, Glenn Beck, Ben Shapiro, and Sean Hannity.
He only took the stage after a parade of prominent endorsers, including Scott Walker, Carly Fiorina, and influential conservative talk-radio host Charlie Sykes, sung his praises and pilloried Trump.
Sanders, meanwhile, countered by pointing to legislation spearheaded by Biden that he has frequently pilloried, including the North American Free Trade Agreement, the 1990s crime bill and the Iraq War.
Mr. Sanders, 78, was pilloried during Tuesday night's debate in Charleston, S.C., for his remarks on "60 Minutes" on Sunday, when he complimented the literacy programs Mr. Castro had enacted.
But he also pilloried the Supreme Court for carving out so-called sovereign immunity — a right-wing shibboleth — which empowered states to discriminate, pollute or otherwise conflict with congressional mandates.
A character named Adreena Schneeweiss (she will resemble, to some readers, Barbra Streisand) is pilloried for sitting on the film rights to Lemish's play about the disease for many years.
Rather than say what he wants to see changed about a system he has pilloried, Mr. Trump has simply told executive agencies to recommend reforms in the H-103B program.
Cardinal Pell was pilloried for accompanying a priest to trial rather than the victims, who were so broken by the abuse they had suffered that many of them committed suicide.
On Monday, he was being pilloried on social media with the hashtag #MassacreMitch — a twist on #MoscowMitch, the moniker that critics used to assail him for blocking election security legislation.
On Monday, he was being pilloried on social media with the hashtag #MassacreMitch — a twist on #MoscowMitch, the moniker that critics used to assail him for blocking election security legislation.
She also sidestepped demands from progressives that the panel be specifically tasked with fleshing out the details of the Green New Deal, a move that Ms. Ocasio-Cortez publicly pilloried.
Pellegrini, 62, was pilloried last weekend for leaving out most of his key players in a 5-1 thrashing at Chelsea as City effectively sacrificed its chances in the F.A. Cup.
It's a balancing act, but both aspects ultimately pay off when The Room is pilloried — giving Wiseau the comeuppance he so richly deserves — and then embraced as a comedic cult classic.
The survey was pilloried as "almost inconceivably bad" in execution, and Business Insider's tweet publicizing the study was deleted within hours, a move that some attributed to the furor it generated.
The largest single invoice, $470,417, is also the most recent: it's from El Paso, Texas, where officials have publicly pilloried the Trump campaign for not covering costs associated with Trump's Feb.
The survey shows Republicans' view of the agencies sank during the time President Donald Trump pilloried them, their leadership and the probe that turned into the Robert Mueller special counsel investigation.
Washington (CNN)Donald Trump pilloried Mitt Romney on his home turf on Friday, making his best appeal to the state's majority Mormon population and questioning whether Romney truly represented their faith.
Although that response has itself been pilloried — as likely to further exacerbate the filter bubble problem of social media users being algorithmically stewed inside a feed of only their own views.
Critics from the right and left pilloried him and the network for keeping a bureau open to continue to pump out sanitized, or as some would even call it, "fake" news.
Trump had been pilloried by critics for saying on ABC's "This Week" on Sunday that Putin would not invade Russia's neighbor in Ukraine, despite having done just that two years ago.
This is not the man portrayed in Tom Wolfe's 21960 book From Bauhaus to Our House, which pilloried Gropius as a bore, concerned only with the elitist project of modern architecture.
Presidential candidates Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton have both pilloried hedge fund managers, and some large investors, especially those tied to public workers unions, have been openly critical of the industry.
It is notable that the same Office of Legal Counsel provided the president with the widely pilloried legal opinion about instituting a travel ban against persons from six predominantly Muslim nations.
Whether or not our cause is popular inside the Washington beltway -- it's liable to be pilloried by those who do better the worse Washington gets -- we now know it can work.
Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace Prize winner who defied the junta that ruled Myanmar for decades, has been pilloried abroad for not speaking out more forcefully to rein in the military.
"But please be aware: if these stocks come in ahead of the quarter, that will most likely prove to be a buying opportunity, not unlike [Thursday's] much-pilloried session," Cramer added.
Beijing refused to take part in the case brought by the Philippines, and Chinese officials and state media have pilloried the decision and suggested the United States was somehow to blame.
But what's really bad is to get pilloried and have it coming, when a joke that made sense in my head turned out to be incomprehensible and awful on the screen.
In a Slate interview with Isaac Chotiner, the writer Katie Roiphe, who has expressed skepticism about what she sees as the rush to judgment of #MeToo, described being pilloried in response.
Advocates against the excesses of the drug war have pilloried the UN for its dealings with Iran, which kills hundreds of people every year, including foreign nationals, over drug-related charges.
"I was very disappointed when she voted for the war, so easily, especially as I was suffering so much, and my family was suffering"—pilloried for their opposition to the war.
Ms. Abramson was pilloried on Twitter by sources and other journalists this year for mistakes in her book "Merchants of Truth" and for failing to cite source material from other writers.
If you think back to the immediate years following the financial crisis of 2008, Mr. Bharara, who took office in 2009, was pilloried for coming down far too lightly on bankers.
In February, Shulkin was pilloried by an inspector general's report for accepting tickets to the Wimbledon tennis tournament and allowing his wife to fly with him to Europe using taxpayer money.
The feeling of being scrutinized and judged — not to mention hauled before congressional panels and pilloried in the press — leads Clinton to go to greater lengths to protect herself from prying.
The Today Show host was almost instantly pilloried for failing to fact-check the candidates and for posing superficial questions to both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump during the NBC News forum.
" Speaking aboard Air Force One on his trip to the Montana rally, Trump said he believed he forged a personal connection with the young autocrat he once pilloried as "Little Rocket Man.
The reports provoked widespread outrage and fierce criticism globally, and the Haitian demonstrators participating in the first major street protest in the Caribbean nation since Trump's alleged remarks pilloried the U.S. president.
I am fairly sure that had I been born 15 years after, I would have been pilloried online if I had posted my thoughts in a blog instead of in my diary.
Even Trump, who over the summer had pilloried Baltimore, a majority-black part of Cummings' district, as a "disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess," found some kind words for the late congressman.
The 12-nation Pan-Pacific trade deal championed by President Barack Obama has been pilloried by both major-party nominees in the U.S. presidential race, Democrat Hilary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump.
He was pilloried by those groups in 2017, for instance, after voting with Republicans against a symbolic amendment supporting pharmaceutical drug imports from Canada, which would lower the cost of some medicines.
ET Washington (CNN)Donald Trump mocked Hillary Clinton on Tuesday for barking like a dog and vowed he would never do so because he said he would be pilloried in the media.
They face the very real prospect of being pilloried by conservative, old-school media clans that are obliged to fear-monger on drugs in order to appeal to their increasingly aging readerships.
On the other hand, a turbulent first 100 days for Democratic President Jimmy Carter pointed to clumsy dealings with Congress that haunted him for the rest of a much-pilloried single term.
At the time, hedge fund investors like him were pilloried, and the Securities and Exchange Commission even imposed a short-term ban on betting against companies in the midst of the crisis.
In the context of this week — when Labour figures have been pilloried for skipping formal events — Mr. Johnson's decision could be read as a choice to distance himself from the American president.
Mr. Mnuchin's comments contrasted starkly with his boss, President Trump, who pilloried the estate tax in a speech in Indiana last month by saying it is a drag on the working class.
Cordell: My whole team, we were a group of women who were feminists who have been fighting for criminal justice reform for years, we're liberals, and we're getting pilloried by the left.
Republicans rightly pilloried its deeply unserious elements — including plans to retrofit every single structure in the U.S. and guaranteed "economic security" to those "unable or unwilling to work" (why is this green?).
The Bauhaus, which, according to MacCarthy, was "regarded by many as a Jewish-Bolshevik enclave, artistically crazy and racially impure," was harassed by local Nazis and pilloried in the right-leaning press.
The National Security Guard (NSG), a force of commandos that was pilloried for taking ten agonising hours to get to Mumbai from its New Delhi headquarters, set up hubs in six other cities.
Trump pilloried Senate Republicans - as a group and by name - after their failure this summer to repeal and replace the 2010 healthcare law known as Obamacare, one of his top presidential campaign promises.
He leaves for the audition, leaving Hannah to wait for the father of her child to call her back while contending with a narcissistic famous person currently being pilloried by the press. Great.
Shkreli was pilloried in 406 for raising the price on a drug used by AIDS and cancer patients from $13.50 to $750 per pill after his company, Turing Pharmaceuticals, bought the drug's rights.
He frequently pilloried Carrier for planning to move production to Mexico as he appealed to blue-collar voters in the Midwest, including in Indiana, whose governor, Mike Pence, is the vice president-elect.
Strzok, who was briefly on Mueller's team, was pilloried last month in an inspector general report that uncovered dozens of anti-Trump messages he sent to his mistress and FBI lawyer, Lisa Page.
From the Golden Globes to the Tony Awards, and from late-night comedy shows to game shows like The Match Game, Trump has been pilloried, cursed, and mocked like no president in history.
This week, Obama was pilloried by some government leakers and Republicans following comments seeming to dismiss concerns about Clinton's emails, while also suggesting that some classified information is not worthy of rigorous protection.
Trump, who had pilloried opponents for being beholden to industry interests during his campaign, came under fire from his frequent sparring partner, Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren, for including lobbyists on his transition team.
I want to put the sonic versions of the feeling of taking crack and that sort of dead, crazy, wild, rabid, funky, smelly, pungent, completely underground and pilloried by the outside world [sound].
His government has also been pilloried for relying on draconian measures, including silencing and punishing a young doctor and whistleblower who alerted a small group of friends and family about the coronavirus's existence.
But as Anne Harrington reminds us, it wasn't all that long ago when psychiatrists were pilloried as a bunch of woolly Freudians in thrall to specious ideas about absent fathers and smothering mothers.
As he pilloried the special counsel, Trump echoed the salvos against the investigation recently launched by right-wing conspiracy monger Jerome Corsi, who claimed Monday that he rejected a plea deal offered by Mueller.
Democrats pilloried him for influencing the final days of an already vitriolic campaign and Republicans accused him of caving to political pressure and questioned how the bureau could review thousands of emails so quickly.
"If I can't figure it out, the average teenager who's getting pilloried on Facebook or Twitter or whatever has no hope of being able to deal with this except to sign off," she said.
"If I can't figure it out, the average teenager who's getting pilloried on Facebook or Twitter or whatever has no hope of being able to deal with this except to sign off," she says.
World number 88 Tomic, who has been in and out of the Davis Cup team for years, pilloried Hewitt in his post-match media conference after bowing out in the first round on Monday.
While the proponent of Europe has guided one of the world's largest economies for the past eight years, he has also been pilloried in countries such as Greece for being an architect of austerity.
Big Pharma has been pilloried for decades but still flourished, not least because it keeps producing life-saving innovations needed by Americans, who are in aggregate getting fatter, older and sicker by the year.
MELBOURNE, March 16 (Reuters) - Australia's National Rugby League has been pilloried by fans and media pundits for making a public plea for government funding as it grapples with the fall-out from the coronavirus.
Success is already elusive enough for the 473 franchises in what has been pilloried as the Leastern Conference going back almost as far as Michael Jordan's second retirement from the Chicago Bulls in 1998.
We also learn that he has been pilloried by campus feminists for having an affair with a college janitor, an illiterate 34-year-old woman who has a history of being victimized by men.
Then, to lead the Treasury Department, Mr. Trump named Steven Mnuchin, a former banker at Goldman Sachs, the Wall Street firm he pilloried during his campaign as the epitome of a rigged financial system.
While Mr. Trump was pilloried during the campaign for suggesting that the United States murder the families of terrorists, that has long been standard practice in Russia, along with "disappearing" and extrajudicially killing suspects.
On the new podcast, Rich had plenty to say about the current political landscape, including why he underestimated Bernie Sanders and why Hillary Clinton is pilloried for gaffes while Donald Trump revels in them.
The device's release was reportedly delayed for several months in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal, in which Facebook was pilloried for failing to put strict controls on data shared with third-party developers.
After asking for suggestions on Twitter this weekend of how to approach Trump later this week on the ban, they are getting pilloried on social media for even being affiliated with the whole sorry mess.
Black congressional leaders, along with Clinton's campaign, pilloried Trump's brief statement on Obama's birthplace -- which was not an apology, an explanation or even an admission that he was the loudest promoter of the birther movement.
Some see him as a traitor who "crumbled under pressure", after he backed down from contested parts of Indiana's RFRA, a bill which was pilloried by activists, media pundits and Democratic politicians as anti-LGBT.
Neighbors and friends bring over cookies and meet him for lunch in an effort to lift his spirits after he was pilloried by his former boss, the parents of slain children and President Donald Trump.
Mr. Mallya is now widely pilloried by the news media and by some politicians in India as one of the worst examples from a corporate borrowing binge that has mired the country in bad debt.
In 2012, when the mayor proposed a limit of 16 fluid ounces on sugary drinks sold in New York, he was pilloried by opponents and ridiculed by late-night comedians as a fun-hating scold.
He was widely pilloried in the Brazilian press, for example, for visiting CIA headquarters, a step no Brazilian president has ever taken—for good reason, considering the CIA's role in Latin America since the 1950s.
" She was immediately pilloried on social media, and Jimmy Kimmel, on his late-night show on ABC, quipped, "Only on ABC is getting your show picked up the worst thing that can happen to you.
In a 2014 piece supporting Michael Sam, a commentary that received national attention and landed him on Ellen DeGeneres's television show, Hansen pilloried N.F.L. teams and fans for what he saw as a double standard.
Court said Peloton was one such company, which it invested in at a later stage, despite the exercise bike&aposs recent issues including a wobbly IPO and cringe-inducing Christmas advert which was widely pilloried.
But it's extremely telling for a president to suffer no consistent drop in the polls even after being impeached, pilloried in the news media on an hourly basis, and reflexively blamed for just about everything.
At a debate in Miami last week, on the day after his Michigan victory, he pilloried Clinton for delivering a speech to an audience at Goldman Sachs for two hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars.
Trump would later be pilloried for saying there was blame to go around "on many sides," an equivocal response to the racially charged violence that is widely viewed as a low point of his presidency.
Though a Roosevelt leftist, Wood eventually alienated the eastern art establishment so thoroughly that, leading up to and during WWII, his work was pilloried as too similar to neo-realist Fascist esthetics to represent America.
Kirstjen Nielsen is a lying bleep that she&aposd be put in a cage and poked at by passersby, the bleep should be pilloried in Lafayette Square naked, whipped by passerby while being filmed for posterity.
In addition to his position on DACA, Rubio also is open to a path to citizenship for those who came here illegally, a stance pilloried by GOP rival Ted Cruz in a series of attack ads.
Opposition leaders have echoed many of Navarro and Giordani's criticism but also have pilloried them for helping create and maintain the state-led economic model that is now struggling with soaring inflation and chronic product shortages.
Mr. Trump has said he wants to bar entry to refugees from certain countries, and his campaign has defended a widely pilloried Twitter message by his son, Donald Trump Jr., comparing Syrian refugees to poisoned Skittles.
The ranking system itself was pilloried and she was criticized for playing too many tournaments that affected her play at Grand Slams, while her tenure also coincided with serious injuries to all-time great Serena Williams.
In the past week, Trump once again pilloried his own attorney general, calling Jeff Sessions "disgraceful" for his handling of the DOJ investigation into potential surveillance abuses as part of special counsel Robert Mueller's Russia probe.
It was panned on the right as a retreat from full repeal, pilloried on the left as a tax giveaway to the rich, and criticized from the center as potentially stripping insurance from millions of people.
" In his book "So You've Been Publicly Shamed," Jon Ronson explains what's next for people who have been publicly pilloried -- such as former IAC public relations representative Justine Sacco, who facetiously tweeted in 2013, "Going to Africa.
The film, which had its red carpet premiere last week, has been widely celebrated by critics — much unlike the heavily pilloried "Batman v Superman," which has pulled in more than $800 million globally despite its poor reviews.
When Bernard Salt, a partner with KPMG, an accounting firm, suggested in a newspaper column last year that young buyers simply needed to cut back on breakfasts at fancy cafés to afford their deposit, he was pilloried.
Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott said he doesn't regret saying it's not the right time or place for NFL players to kneel in protest during the national anthem — after being pilloried as a sellout on social media.
Politicians leading the charge would also go out of their way to draw a sharp line between Trump's policy preferences and Trump himself, so as to avoid reproducing the snide elitism Trump pilloried on the campaign trail.
Yet at the same time, the Obama administration has been pilloried for its poor responsiveness under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), with requests that can take years to fulfill and record levels of agencies withholding documents.
Last week, Trump was pilloried by some of the groups who supported him most strongly during the campaign after he authorized a targeted missile strike on a Syrian airbase following a chemical attack which originated from there.
But right now, the political will to do anything is nearly zero except for someone like Alexandria Ocasio who gets pilloried for saying we really have to slow it down rather dramatically, who gets made fun of.
In fact, one of the indelible moments of the series will be the pivotal Game 23, when the Red Sox pummeled the Yankees and Boone was pilloried for his reluctance to pull the struggling starter Luis Severino.
"No one can figure out how he did that," said one source, noting that Burns is a particularly big get for Uber, which has been justly pilloried for its treatment of women and its lack of diversity.
But the industry can be put on the defensive when it releases this sort of high-profile exploitation fare, which critics have pilloried, giving the movie a dismal 15% approval rating on the movie-review site Rottentomatoes.
They shaped the fate of the Central Park Five, who share at least one thing in common with Jewell: They didn't commit the crimes for which they were pilloried in the media (including, infamously, by Donald Trump).
While Mr. Abbas pilloried the Trump administration for actions that he said had stripped Palestinians of their rights, Mr. Netanyahu thanked President Trump and Nikki R. Haley, the American ambassador to the United Nations, for their support.
On Tuesday, lawmakers on the House Energy and Commerce Committee pilloried Equifax's since-departed chief executive, Richard Smith, for failing to secure his company's data and providing confusing information to consumers shortly after the security incident. Rep.
Though they were pilloried when Kardashian filed for divorce 72 days into the lucrative marriage, they set the stage for reality stars and celebrities to directly brand and monetize aspects of their personal lives for years to come.
Nevertheless, Carlos Beltran, a bilingual teammate, was upset that Pineda did not have an interpreter to help him communicate that night, and Pineda was roundly pilloried in the media afterward for using pine tar for a second time.
That helped spur the coup in which Mr Rudd was deposed by his deputy, Julia Gillard, who instituted a carbon tax in 2011, only to be pilloried by the right for levying "a great big tax on everything".
The incident also bears resemblance to the swift closure of Kooks Burritos in May, a concept pilloried by critics who were unenthused by two white women opening a burrito shop while nominally honoring a Mexican culture they loved.
This is the classic reaction to the lopsided incentives FDA faces; if it approves a drug that later shows undesirable side effects, the victims are visible and its officials get dragged before Congress and pilloried in the press.
Similar price rises for old drugs have sparked outrage in the United States, where former hedge fund manager Martin Shkreli was pilloried in 2015 for increasing the cost of an anti-parasitic medicine by more than 5,000 percent.
On Sunday, "Joy" actress and winner Jennifer Lawrence, 25, was pilloried for her $52 million paycheck and Gervais talked of keeping his own Golden Globe statuette for "The Office" by his bed to use as a sex toy.
The process of trying to reconcile his anti-globalist sentiments with his America First message actually began Monday during his meeting on UN reform, where he struck a more conciliatory line toward an organization he'd mocked and pilloried.
It is, on some level, as much a response to this particular moment in history as, say, Steven Spielberg's The Post, another movie that was pilloried in some corners for being too obvious in its anti-Trump messaging.
This lays down a challenge for European governments, pilloried by US President Donald Trump for slashing military spending after the Cold War, to remedy long-running problems with helicopters and jets that are grounded for lack of parts.
We know what happened when a few black football players of good character took a knee to protest police violence against black Americans: They were pilloried by the president of the United States and received no standing ovations.
Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, helped create the subway crisis by failing to adequately support the system — his administration even diverted transit funding to ski resorts — and he has been pilloried by subway advocates for prioritizing aesthetics over maintenance.
He was immediately pilloried by Sydneysiders who have become frustrated with his government's refusal to actively address climate change through sharper emissions cuts, and more firefighting help here in a country where volunteers do most of that work.
That lays down a challenge for European governments, pilloried by U.S. President Donald Trump for slashing military spending after the Cold War, to remedy long-running problems with helicopters and jets that are grounded for lack of parts.
Ripley has previously pilloried "opt out parents" in a series of exchanges on Twitter, suggesting if they also believe their kids should opt out of lice checks—in case they feel hurt and stigmatized by that process as well.
"The Halo Effect" (2007), a book on management delusions by Phil Rosenzweig, argued that great performance by a business often leads to managers being feted for their brilliance, just as poor performance sees them pilloried for their bad decisions.
Obama has been pilloried in the liberal press, with media outlet Vox's Matthew Yglesias declaring that the payday "will undermine everything he believes in" and should be rejected as part of the fight against "populist demagogues" such as Trump.
He remembered being "pilloried for weeks on end as a traitor and a communist," in the local media after telling reporters he opposed the war, and being called into the principal's office because he refused to cut his hair.
He has presented the arrests as a campaign against corruption, but his targets call it a shakedown, and he has turned for advice to a former Egyptian security chief who has been pilloried at home for brutality and graft.
But he should be just as alarmed by leading congressional Republicans who pilloried President Barack Obama for his alleged abuses of executive power, but now look the other way as Mr. Trump makes mincemeat of the rule of law.
In those conversations, he admitted that he did violate Facebook's developer policy by harvesting user data and transferring it to a third party — but said that he was being unfairly pilloried as just one of many people who did this.
There is one tech behemoth whose workers have stayed oddly quiet, even as it has been pilloried by outsiders for everything from its privacy practices to its effect on democratic elections to its role in ethnic violence around the world.
Kaepernick is being pilloried on social media for being unpatriotic -- an ironic allegation considering the national mourning over the recent passing of Muhammad Ali, who was convicted of draft evasion after he decided, on religious principle, not to serve in Vietnam.
If he refuses to provide a full version of the report to the congressional intelligence committees, he will be pilloried for hiding classified or other sensitive information from entities that are responsible for handling such information and maintaining its confidentiality.
President Enrique Pena Nieto, pilloried at home for meeting Trump in August after the New York businessman called Mexican migrants rapists and murderers, said on Twitter he would defend the interests of Mexico and its people in a "respectful" dialogue.
" His contempt for Richard is palpable, but the brunt of his crusader's fury is aimed at law enforcement: "There were credible reports of tampered and destroyed evidence, unethical cash deals, an epidemic of sexual assaults in the jail, whistle-blowers pilloried.
The latest example of this what's-the-big-deal approach came Tuesday morning when, already being pilloried for their inability to report the vote count, Iowa Democrats announced that they would release the majority of the votes by 5 p.m.
He was pilloried online and at the December debate in Los Angeles for headlining a fundraiser at Hall Wines, a winery owned by Kathryn Hall, who was the US ambassador to Austria from 1998 to 2001, and her husband, Craig.
A former journalist who pilloried the workings of Brussels, he was a leading pro-Brexit campaigner in the 2016 referendum and is regarded in continental Europe as Britain's least successful recent foreign secretary when he held the post from 2016-18.
A former journalist who pilloried the workings of Brussels, he was a leading pro-Brexit campaigner in the 2016 referendum and is regarded in continental Europe as Britain's least successful recent foreign secretary when he held the post from 2016-18.
Heather Bresch, the chief executive of Mylan and a former chairwoman of the generics trade group, has been pilloried on social media for her role in hiking the price of EpiPens, even though EpiPens sold as branded drugs, not generics.
The great mystery of "Rogue One" — the big payoff, the thing people like me would be pilloried for divulging, the puzzle you will congratulate yourself for solving — is where it fits in with the rest of the "Star Wars" cycle.
He has been a longtime adviser to Goldman Sachs and other Wall Street firms, which were pilloried by Mr. Trump during the campaign but now have strong representation on his team, as an editorial in The New York Times recently noted.
The president's ardent defense of the U.S.-Turkey partnership came after the White House late Sunday announced that Trump had spoken by phone with Erdogan about the planned Turkish incursion into northern Syria, which prominent lawmakers of both parties pilloried Monday.
Over the summer, Trump pilloried Senate Republicans - as a group and some by name - after they failed to generate sufficient votes to repeal and replace the 2010 Affordable Care Act, popularly known as Obamacare, one of his top presidential campaign promises.
Around the turn of the last century, it faced quite a backlash, as perfectly good books were pilloried for their prints and modest single volumes expanded to sets of eight or ten to accommodate all the prints injudiciously thrown in.
But it's been widely pilloried by critics like Slate's Josh Voorhees, who have been quick to point out that Clinton has also admitted to carrying around an "iPad, a mini iPad, an iPhone and a Blackberry" in her purse at any given time.
In an unusual move, Bush first listed some things he liked about Trump -- the fact that he embraces his financial success and combats political correctness -- but still pilloried the candidate for what he describes as "disparaging" Hispanics, Muslims, women, and people with disabilities.
"It's a really good thing for progressives that there are two transformative candidates speaking for the values of our movement," said Joe Dinkin, a spokesman for the left-wing Working Families Party, which was pilloried by some on the left for endorsing Warren.
Three months later, as Harresh Mehta's company was being pilloried in the Indian press for the evictions and alleged fraud in Golibar, Bloomberg reported that Trump was going to "alter Mumbai's luxury landscape" by partnering with Rohan to build India's first Trump Tower.
But by the time press outlets picked up on his invention in November of 2015, Ketchup Leather was pilloried in some corners as emblematic of the excesses of food hackery, a proposed solution to a problem that barely existed in the first place.
In Portland, Robert McCullough, an energy economist who describes himself as a "liberal Republican," was struck by Judge Kavanaugh's emotional tone as he pilloried Democrats on the committee and cried as he talked about how the charges had affected his family and children.
This makes it a bit surprising—and a bit of a tragedy—that the game is being pilloried by its target audience, and, based on its already declining player base, is on a direct path to an embarrassing free-to-play resuscitation.
In 2016, those racks featured covers of The National Enquirer as it pilloried Hillary Clinton with false allegations that she had covered up a "child sex scandal," committed treason and was hiding a deadly illness (from which she seems to have miraculously recovered).
Ms. Abrams hopes to become the first black woman elected governor of any American state, and Mr. Kemp, who is white, has been pilloried by liberals for what they say have been voter suppression tactics on his watch that disproportionately affected minority voters.
Welteroth interviewed with Amy Astley, then Teen Vogue's editor in chief; the two women talked about Gabby Douglas, the teenage American gymnast who was being pilloried in the news for her ''unkempt'' appearance, and how often black hair was read as messy.
They've pilloried companies that threaten to move operations in order to extract favors from state legislatures; they've attacked the Koch-funded American Legislative Exchange Council for its role in drafting a slew of pro-business state laws; they've called for overturning Citizens United.
Mr. Vidrine was pilloried in the 2016 movie "Deepwater Horizon," in which he was portrayed by John Malkovich as a strutting, fast-talking manager with a Louisiana accent as thick as gumbo who was in a rush to complete the ill-fated well.
But Republican Governor Bruce Rauner offered no sign of supporting the measure for Monetary Award Program recipients after members of his party pilloried the funding package as a "farce" because it did not identify a specific revenue stream to pay for it.
WASHINGTON — Democrats pilloried Republicans for irresponsibly shutting down the government when Barack Obama was president, but as a minority party struggling to show resistance in the era of President Trump, they are now ready to let the lights of government go dark.
The first lady, Melania Trump, whose fashion choices have been scrutinized, pilloried and praised throughout her first year in the White House, stoked no more ire on both sides of the political spectrum than with a pair of Manolo Blahnik classic pumps.
He has been pilloried on a variety of issues, from running off accomplished coaches and meddling in football decisions (the Redskins have made the playoffs only five times since he bought the team in 3653) to refusing to change the team name, which offends many.
Abrams' friends and advisers are fearful of the fraught racial dynamics and the cultural optics of an association with Biden, who is being pilloried for alleged misdeeds he's yet to fully account for, and what they could mean for the rest of her career.
Since they published their first damning revision of the government's investigation, the experts have complained that their personal reputations and work have been consistently pilloried by well-known columnists in the media who have a tendency to give voice to interest groups within the government.
To pick just two examples, when Yale professor Erika Christakis took issue with an email from the administration warning students not to wear "offensive" Halloween costumes, she and her husband were pilloried by students who accused them of "fostering violence" and creating an "unsafe" environment.
But the newspapers also pilloried professional women for the social and political views they espoused: one print, originally published in Harper's Weekly, portrays Woodhull as the Devil for her rejection of marriage and embrace of sexual freedom, as part of the "Free Love" movement.
There were the turbans on the runway at the Gucci fall 2018 show, which, in their resemblance to Sikh turbans, upset many viewers, who felt the importance of the head wrap as a sign of a belief system had been thoughtlessly pilloried for pictures.
The press pilloried her for describing England, in the run-up to the Brexit vote, as a "cake-filled, misery-laden gray old island," and gloated when an irate farmer came close to drenching her with manure during an anti-fracking protest in 2016.
WASHINGTON — The pharmaceutical industry, pilloried by President Trump for the last two years, is war-gaming for the possibility that its worst fear is realized: that Democrats, if they flip control of the House, find common ground with the president to rein in drug prices.
I thought of that time, and that current of righteous anger, as I watched Dave Chappelle's latest Netflix stand-up special, Sticks & Stones, which came out this week and has been predictably pilloried for its dismissal of sexual assault victims and anti-trans jokes.
As he tries to persuade moderate Republicans to support a deeply flawed, broadly unpopular and ridiculously secrecy-shrouded health care bill, he can and will point to the outcome of the Georgia race, in which Handel sided with him and Ossoff pilloried her for it.
Since its earliest days, the Rock Hall has been pilloried as unnecessary or even contrary to the spirit of rock 'n' roll — an elite museum for a youthful and rebellious art form — and attacked for which artists its voters decide to include or exclude.
I wasn't convinced, but I wanted to know more: So I asked Recode editor-at-large Kara Swisher to talk to me about it, For a long time, tech has been really pilloried for the impact it's had on democracy ... especially Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube.
Warren's slide closely correlates to the October 15 presidential debate in which she was pilloried by, among others, South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg and Biden for her support of "Medicare for All" and her lack of specifics about how she would pay for it.
The lack of evidence of foreign hacking in the server logs will come as a relief for Clinton, who has been pilloried by Republicans and many security experts for using a private email account and server during her four years as secretary of state.
But in practice climate change has been the subject of a never-ending political knife-fight, in which any government that attempts to enact meaningful curbs is so pilloried that it either loses the next election or is toppled by a rebellion among its own MPs.
HONG KONG (Reuters) - U.S. Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump has been pilloried in many ways, over his bouffant hair, orange skin and supposedly small hands, but a British artist has now used raw pig and sheep parts to sculpt him for a Hong Kong art show.
There was the notorious show of March 14th, when Maddow pitched two pages of Trump's 2005 tax return that had come her way—"Breaking news"; "The world is getting its first look"—and was all-around pilloried for producing nothing much except a stir about herself.
It is not ideal, then, when referees are so much in focus that they are seen, heard, talked about, pilloried and — in at least one instance — criticized for how they left the stadium after a game (before enduring, oddly, a public discussion about their taste in music).
The massive investment in the fossil fuel infrastructure after the bank bailout could just as easily have gone to renewable technologies, like wind and solar projects, which, in an ironic twist, have been pilloried for their reliance on subsidies and inability to turn a freestanding profit.
JEREMY DRIESEN New York To the Editor: During the election campaign, when Donald Trump was asked if he would accept the election results, he said "I'll keep you in suspense," and for this he was pilloried mercilessly by The Times and the rest of the liberal media.
Every time one or two women come forward with such stories, willing to go on the record no matter how horribly they'll be pilloried for doing so, others inevitably follow to say that just the same thing happened to them—the same mode, the same approach.
His fourth studio album, last year's Views, was rightly pilloried by fans and critics alike for being too long, too inconsistent, and too, well, Drake-y; despite this, it did Adele-level sales numbers in a year where he was literally competing with Adele in the marketplace.
Given that the yolk of one large egg contains up to 200 milligrams of cholesterol, and dietary cholesterol can raise blood levels of artery-damaging LDL-cholesterol in some people, it is not the first time eggs have been pilloried as a hazard to the heart.
" Buttigieg, who is running television ads against "Medicare for All" in South Carolina ahead of next week's primary there, pilloried Sanders' signature single-payer health insurance legislation, warning again that its passage would draw every American into a public plan, "whether they want it or not.
But they are pilloried in other forms, like a dystopian love letter from future Seattle, a bevy of hilarious comics depicting I-survived-to-tell-the-tale stories of working for the behemoth, and a satirical anti-Amazon newsletter that periodically appears pasted on light poles around Capitol Hill.
Although Clinton leads by a wide margin in the RealClearPolitics polling average — most recently clocking in at a 28500 percentage point advantage over Trump — she's still being pilloried by the media for not being even more dominantly ahead, like President-Lyndon-Johnson-squashing-6900-Republican-nominee-Barry-Goldwater ahead.
There is some irony here—both Barack Obama and George W. Bush pledged to have friendlier relations with Russia and were both pilloried for it—but in Trump's case, the point is to implant the idea that he is an aspiring autocrat, not your father or grandfather's Republican.
And while the state has been pilloried from the left, it is not at all clear who will be the ultimate winner in the battle set in motion by the law, which restricts transgender bathroom use and pre-empts local governments from creating their own anti-discrimination policies.
In recent months, the company has taken steps to emerge from its struggles, getting rid of its chief executive, J. Michael Pearson, who had led Valeant since 2008 and was the mastermind of the company's now-pilloried practice of buying up companies, slashing costs and raising drug prices.
Read more: Hundreds of Googlers are urging the company not to bid on a contract with the US Customs and Border Protection that they say would facilitate 'human rights abuses'Google has been called unpatrioticConservative-leaning critics have pilloried Google for not embracing opportunities to work with federal agencies.
Shepherd is the left-leaning graduate student pilloried by the left as transphobic for exposing students to Jordan Peterson's argument against the use of gender-neutral pronouns, alongside arguments in favor, in order to introduce her students at Wilfrid Laurier University, in Ontario, to both sides of the controversy.
Schiano's hiring had leaked before it was announced, and the decision was swiftly pilloried because Schiano had allegedly — and this is a whopper of an allegedly — failed to report sexual assault while an assistant coach at Penn State under Joe Paterno and alongside the convicted child molester Jerry Sandusky.
BEIJING — After President Trump pilloried China in 48 tweeted words over the weekend, accusing it of failing to tame its neighbor and longtime ally North Korea, Beijing issued its own rebuke to Mr. Trump — in a cutting editorial of 1,000 Chinese characters from Xinhua, the official news agency.
A SIGAR audit of how U.S. agencies measured the progress of Afghan women was pilloried by USAID and State officials who said that because of the way their programs are structured — often benefiting boys and girls at the same time — SIGAR's demands for more detailed assessments were unrealistic.
"Joy" actress and winner Jennifer Lawrence, 25, was pilloried for her $52 million paycheck, Golden Globes organizers the Hollywood Foreign Press Association saw their trophy tarnished and Sean Penn took a hit when Gervais dubbed him a "snitch" for his secret interview of Mexican drug kingpin Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman.
Yet while critics have rightly pilloried the proposed Burr-Feinstein bill as being both impractical and imprudent, a fairly simple amendment would make it a viable proposal that could bring both sides of the crypto war closer to a much-needed detente and prevent a continued escalation of the fight.
For all his Scranton blue-collar beginnings, Biden will be pilloried as a faithful servant of the Party of Davos that secured impunity for the financiers behind the 2008 meltdown, a heady growth in inequality, China appeasement and the arrogance of money-wooed Democrats estranged from their working-class constituency.
Despite openly supporting, for example, Alabama's abortion ban, French is nonetheless being pilloried on Twitter and elsewhere by others on the right for being inadequately "realistic" about the culture war and contributing to the "surrender of the public square ... to the pagans and the perverts" (for liking Game of Thrones, for example).
Obama's parting shots in the final days of his administration included a nasty speech by Secretary of State John Kerry after the U.S. abstained in a UN Security Council vote on a resolution on settlements that pilloried Israel without even mentioning continued Palestinian terrorism, advocacy of violence, and sabotage of the peace process.
In the past week, the Republican presidential nominee has been pilloried for his comments expressing openness to Russia's annexation of Crimea, has called on the Russian government to share emails it possibly hacked from Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton and drawn rebukes from critics who say he's soft on a traditional US adversary.
This video—which, almost comically, illustrates both the predicament of celebrity access to privacy and the crushing weight of its ensuing voyeurism—returned to me recently, as theaters filled with the images of celebrities who, while alive, were pilloried by the press: Celebrities whose public destructions became entertainment industries in and of themselves.
It covered everything from Paul Ryan insisting that Trump just needs time to figure out what he's actually doing, to Republican hypocrisy on dismissing Comey as a liar when they pilloried Hillary Clinton's campaign for doing the same last fall, to the idea that the Trump administration has shattered our shared capacity for shock.
But the biggest surprise today is the prosecutors indicated they are not going to call Manafort&aposs partner to the witness stand, Rick Gates, who is the star witness, the snitch who they now realize will be pilloried as a liar and a crook and an embezzler and bribed by the government for leniency.
In the 30-second video spot that was posted Friday to YouTube and is set to air in Iowa, Warren does not mention Buttigieg by name but prominently criticized "big-dollar fundraisers," a reference to a Buttigieg fundraiser in a wine cave that was pilloried by Warren and others during the sixth Democratic debate.
Editorial For a moment there it looked as if Russia had finally fessed up about its gigantic sports doping operation, even though a senior official's acknowledgment of an "institutional conspiracy" in an interview with Rebecca Ruiz of The Times was coupled with the usual whining about how Russia was being pilloried for what everybody does.
I'd rather try to get it right and help people, which is why I come out here every night, including tonight, and tell you the truth as I see it, even when it causes me to get pilloried on social media, and even when I get it wrong, either through a lack of understanding or simple bad luck.
Yet Grove, known at times as combative and vindictive to those who crossed him, was also pilloried for his role in one of the biggest missteps in Intel's history: the company's intransigence after a major calculating flaw was discovered in 1994 in Intel's flagship Pentium microprocessor, an error that Intel had known about but deemed too insignificant too fix.
The Duchess of Sussex is not the first new royal to be criticized by the tabloid press for, in their eyes, not getting it right: Her husband's late mother, Diana, was both adored and pilloried by newspapers; her sister-in-law, Sarah, Duchess of York, is to this day portrayed as apparently not quite fitting in.
So unless Ryan feels comfortable waging a fight over multiple ballots (past speakers have been extremely averse to this), or unless he makes a deal with Democrats (he'd be pilloried for that), he could end up essentially the hostage of his party's most extreme dozen or so Congress members, depending on how big his majority ends up being.
Then, last week, Prada was pilloried for its decision to include in its Pradamalia collection, a menagerie of quirky bag charms that look like cartoony sci-fi animals, one that resembled nothing so much as a Little Black Sambo figure, complete with giant puffy red lips — and to fill the windows of its SoHo store with said imagery.
Steve KingSteven (Steve) Arnold KingThe Hill's Morning Report - Trump on defense over economic jitters Steve King says 'left-wing media' and GOP leadership owe him apology after rape, incest comments 11 Essential reads you missed this week MORE (R-Iowa) has been pilloried, urged to resign and officially punished by GOP colleagues for his objectionable comments about white supremacy.
WASHINGTON — In his first, rocky week as President Trump's press secretary, Sean M. Spicer was scolded by his boss, pilloried as a liar, hammered by journalists, mocked by Stephen Colbert, taunted by the flash-frozen ice cream brand Dippin' Dots and held up as the poster child for an administration that can play fast and loose with the facts.
For many, the concern is that the appointment of Bolton -- exactly the kind of advocate for US overseas intervention that Trump pilloried on the campaign trail -- marks a belligerent turn for the Trump administration that could doom attempts to save the Iran nuclear deal, increase the possibility of a clash with North Korea and ratchet up tensions with Moscow.
It worked particularly because it was Michelle Obama, a first lady who was pilloried by the right during the 2008 election cycle for expressing mixed emotions, shared by most African-Americans, about a country that made slaves build the White House and only allowed in families like hers -- whose roots stretch to a plantation in South Carolina -- to clean up the place.
Headley has been unfailingly accountable and available to the news media in his tenure in New York, be it last season when he was pilloried by fans during a dreadful April; or earlier this season, when he lost his job at third base to Todd Frazier and then his spot at first base to Greg Bird despite solid batting numbers.
"I wanted to see this happen so that the N.Y.P.D. would have to take a public stance in support of survivors, so that there would be a public statement that would make it clear that it was safe and beneficial for survivors to come forward to the police, and that they would not be attacked or pilloried by the police," she said.
Yet the intellectual terror that has much of the American left in its grip today, not only in regard to Israel and Zionism but relating to a wide variety of issues on which one can be pilloried for being a millimeter out of step, strongly suggests that Stalinism, though it lost its political battle with liberalism, is winning the cultural one.
It's not difficult in the sense that the material is particularly graphic or disturbing, though some works, along with Wojnarowicz himself, were pilloried by certain Republicans and members of the religious right for offending hysterical homophobes during the early years of the AIDS crisis in the US. This exhibit is difficult because it's a catalogue of expression that refuses to easily cohere.
As Tur looked back on her coverage of countless Trump rallies — where supporters, emboldened by the man himself, chanted things like "Obama is Muslim," wore shirts that wished for Hillary Clinton's violent death, and pilloried the media with a fervor so intense that on one occasion Tur required Secret Service protection after Trump attacked her by name at an event — she reflected that maybe something was over.
Recently, the federal district court in Nebraska rightly pilloried a party's use of the phrase "undocumented persons", saying it was unspecific "because many persons possessing certain documentation may nonetheless be 'illegal aliens' as a matter of law"—To its credit, the Library of Congress recognizes this problem, although their new chosen alternative, "noncitizen", seems to combine illegal with legal alien and be even less specific.
The fundraising contest comes just days after Buttigeig faced heat from his fellow Democrats onstage at Thursday's Democratic debate over a fundraiser in a wine cave, which was pilloried by rivals such as Andrew YangAndrew YangPoll: Biden remains ahead of Sanders by 10 points Comedian who predicted Trump's rise names Yang, Gabbard as top 2020 contenders Reproductive revolution: Ending black maternal health inequities in 85033 MORE and Sen.
Keep in mind that two decades after the establishment of national organic standards, organic food — which was similarly pilloried as "elitist" and too expensive — accounts for less than 245 percent of total food sales in the US. The cultural divide over food actually began a decade before Michael Jacobson's culinary insurrection at the White House, as an offshoot of the new environmental movement that took shape in the 21976s.
Think about it: If you'd been accused of murdering a close friend of yours who killed himself, accused of corruption because you lost money in a real estate deal that went south, pilloried for nepotism when you were really trying to clean up a White House office where the FBI had found financial improprieties, and on and on and on, wouldn't you feel like there was nothing you could do to prevent the media and Republicans from attacking you?
Trump has decried the court rulings blocking the decision to rescind DACA and has argued that they halted the political momentum to pass legislation that could have offered so-called Dreamers long-term residency in the U.S. Democrats contend that a legislative deal faltered early last year not because of the court decisions, but because conservative lawmakers and talk-show hosts pilloried the proposed compromise, prompting Trump to back away from the outlines of a package he had previously agreed to.
Pilloried by 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 and many Congressional Republicans for his "not prosecute" decision that was completely reasonable to anyone with a law degree, Comey seems now to have instinctively jumped at the chance to demonstrate his GOP bona fides, and to save himself from very unpleasant hearings (or worse) were he to have held back his empty revelation until after Nov.
But we know what will happen next: Mr. Langendorff and Mr. Willeford will have their 15 minutes of fame, and then we will move on to the next mass shooting in another state where any number of people will die because no one can be bothered to go up against the N.R.A. But before the two men get exploited for their bravery — and before I get pilloried for politicizing a disaster — I would like to say that there is nothing particularly Texan about a mass killing these days.
Every time Ratner's name came up over the decade that has passed since Morris's video — as the man rumored to have been fought over by Jessica Simpson and Lindsay Lohan at an L.A. bar in 2006; as the would-be producer of the 2012 Academy Awards, a position from which he resigned after being pilloried for making homophobic and sexist comments; as, more recently and much less controversially, an executive producer of "The Revenant" — I thought with some fondness of that scene in the limo, and the ways in which Ratner worked overtime to create his own mythology.
" (The same figure did not appear to feel the same way about the previous president, saying in 2014 that Obama should be "arrested" for treason.) There are myriad other examples of left-wing speech under threat just on college campuses, like the case of George Ciccariello-Maher, who was placed on leave at Drexel University because of tweets and his argument that mass shootings were the result of "white supremacist patriarchy"; or Randa Jarrar, a professor at California State University Fresno who criticized former first lady Barbara Bush on Twitter and got pilloried for it, with some demanding she be punished or even fired by the university for her "hateful remarks.
And that's why Trump administration officials and staffers, even before Waters' statements, have recently been: Heckled by protesters at restaurants (Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen and White House adviser Stephen Miller) Publicly rebuked by members of their church (Attorney General Jeff Sessions)Pilloried on social media for posting photos with their children (Ivanka Trump)Targeted by protesters playing audio of children separated from their parents outside their house (Nielsen)Had protest messages slipped into reunion materials by the liberal alumni at their Ivy League college (Jared Kushner) Complained to Politico they can't find dates in a city that is overwhelmingly against them (anonymous staffers) There's obviously a big difference between not being able to get a date and being publicly called out by members of your church.

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