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87 Sentences With "sense of outrage"

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

"The whole nation must have a sense of outrage," Rev.
And she had a sense of outrage, like Edith Bunker.
Mr. Raval effectively captures the sense of outrage surrounding the events.
"Do not give up this sense of outrage," Murphy told the rally-goers.
For her, "freedom" has meant destitution, exile, homelessness, an unceasing sense of outrage.
But people talk about their unexpected bills a lot, and with a sense of outrage.
His ability to channel a populist sense of outrage has won over some Latinos, too.
Their sense of outrage and despair, he realized, should be brought into of the dance.
The result: a vivid reflection of the community's raw trauma, pain, sense of outrage and injustice.
In Germany, there was also little sense of outrage over the claims in the state lawsuits.
It's hard to walk away from Netflix's Making a Murderer without a big sense of outrage.
Moore's sense of outrage at America's current state is palpable, from the water crisis in Flint, Mich.
And no one should bet against the president causing more chauvinist scandals to refresh Democrats' sense of outrage.
Still, there was a growing sense of outrage among the women who had gathered to observe the day.
Instead, there was a collective sense of outrage at Hariri's public humiliation in Riyadh that cut across sectarian lines.
A similar sense of outrage built in 2014, when hackers posted hundreds of photos obtained from celebrities' private accounts.
I am sorry to say that digging into the mask shortage does little to assuage one's sense of outrage.
But there's also a sense of outrage percolating that goes beyond breach of privacy and trust between Facebook and its users.
Among the forces behind the spread of populism in Europe is a sense of outrage over offshore tax avoidance and evasion.
In Ohio, she says, there's "a new sense of outrage" and a growing sense of urgency in fighting for reproductive rights.
It's difficult to maintain a sense of outrage over Android's atrocious track record of providing upgrades to users year after year.
It's particularly susceptible to emotional appeals that couple a shared sense of outrage at criminal behavior with a fear of emboldening criminals.
"Our goal is to channel that sense of outrage into political pressure," said Jamie Henn, the co-founder of climate group 350.org.
Luis Gutiérrez (D-Ill.), a tireless immigrant rights advocate, noted "a real sense of outrage and a lack of respect" among Hispanic Democrats.
The latest conventional wisdom is that Democrats stand to benefit out of the broad sense of outrage and desperation that Kavanaugh's confirmation engendered.
But journalists who've met him say Trump does have some hidden vulnerabilities and a strong sense of outrage at the attacks on his character.
Police brutality and clumsiness in dealing with the protests have stoked the sense of outrage that many Russians feel with their rulers' corruption and incompetence.
Ron Cohen, boss of Acorda Therapeutics, a drug firm, and chairman of BIO, a trade group, says the sense of outrage among patients is "understandable".
Kraft's judgments about Trump stem from his sense of outrage, but his aesthetic is noticeably more restrained than that of many of his artistic contemporaries.
"My right-wing feelings were triggered, to use a modern word, by my sense of outrage at their glutinous hypocrisy," he said, speaking of his classmates.
That the cuts were never voted on, and the people wielding the knife weren't answerable to the people of Puerto Rico, intensifies the sense of outrage.
The recent, violent death of Ingrid Escamilla in February intensified the growing sense of outrage when her body was found stabbed, partially skinned, and with organs missing.
If that description fills you with a sense of outrage, you're not alone; Koenig and Anna's defense attorney, Russ, are both clearly righteously indignant over the whole scenario.
Given the unheeded accusations and missed opportunities to stop the abuse, "At the Heart of Gold" isn't easy to watch, and its ennobling elements don't diminish that sense of outrage.
By harnessing the sense of outrage and urgency in our communities, we can make the second half of 2016 just the beginning of a progressive turning point in our politics.
"The same sense of outrage in this case should be expressed by the leaders of the police union when their officers are convicted of attempted murder, assault, and unlawful arrest against citizens."
There was a sense of outrage in Puerto Rico, where the Defense Department's move to divert more than $2000 million in funding from projects in the territory has prompted accusations of racism.
And I guess I would have felt the same sense of outrage if we had been in a cab, but I think the rating has this long-term repercussion: It shows your behavior matters.
"The novel is autobiographical insofar as I was born and bred in the west of Ireland, educated at a convent, and was full of romantic yearnings, coupled with a sense of outrage," she said.
Michael Lewis has taken on the task of rectifying that misconception, and he has done so with refreshing clarity — and a measured sense of outrage — which makes this his most ambitious and important book.
A key insight from the movement's recent history should be how it has proved resilient, adaptive and resourceful, tapping into the deep sense of outrage and injustice felt by Sunni Muslims in Iraq, Syria and beyond.
Among the people in Ms. Warren's audience, there was a sense of outrage about Mr. Trump's conduct and a sense of support for the steps taken this week by House Democrats to investigate him more aggressively.
Among the people in Ms. Warren's audience, there was a sense of outrage about Mr. Trump's conduct and a sense of support for the steps taken this week by House Democrats to investigate him more aggressively.
There are just some iconic weeks where it's hard to take but I've tried to keep a balance of being dispassionate about recording the things that are not normal and maintaining my sense of outrage and empathy.
The fact that the turmeric latte is now being served as a "trend" in so many cafes all over the world, disentangled from its Indian roots, initially registered a sense of outrage for many in the Indian diaspora.
In the days before Christmas, the Redemptorist Church of Baclaran in Manila mounted a photo exhibition of its victims, blood-soaked corpses strewn in the streets and grieving families, aimed to prick a sense of outrage among churchgoers.
I mean we are so far out of normal ethical behaviour that it&aposs just worth preserving our sense of outrage about it because so much of this stuff happens every day, we&aposre kind of inured to it.
A much larger majority, however, is ready to lash out at any company that slips outside the lines of "Indian" values and sensibilities — and India's unpredictable government has shown that it can react with the same sense of outrage.
Clinton, are spending millions of dollars to run a 60-second ad featuring a Gold Star mother recalling the day she heard her son had died in Iraq and the "sense of outrage" she felt over Mr. Trump's remarks.
Whether you're looking for art to reflect a sense of outrage and despair or to deliver flashes of joy, Arthur Jafa's momentous video installation "Love Is the Message, the Message Is Death," at Gavin Brown's Enterprise, is required viewing.
The attention-grabbing incidents exemplify the new sense of outrage over sexual assault and misconduct that has boiled over since the emergence of the #MeToo movement in the months after Cosby's first trial ended with a hung jury in June.
Many people feel a sense of outrage: There was no justification for using armed soldiers, and decades of supercharged economic growth will not wash away the stain left by that reckless decision, not until there is some sort of apology or reckoning.
That Orange manages to link these details to a historical sense of outrage at how America has treated its native people, in a manner that approaches scarifying essay without dropping over the fence into lecture or sociology, adds to this novel's smoke.
Even in the United States, where "Remember Pearl Harbor" was once a rallying cry, the sense of outrage about what was viewed as a sneaky and disreputable attack has largely dissipated, said Daniel Martinez, the chief historian at the Pearl Harbor memorial.
The Daily Listen and subscribe from your mobile device: On iPhone or iPad | On Android via RadioPublic | Via Stitcher The writers of "Saturday Night Live" captured a profound sense of outrage over last week's firing of the F.B.I. director, James Comey, in a sketch that aired on Saturday.
And the stories they have heard lately, and the images they have seen, of children being ripped from the arms of parents at the border have heightened a sense of outrage, a sense that they are experiencing an era of American history that will be looked back upon with shame.
But privately, I suspect, many of us, including many longstanding feminists, will be rolling our eyes, having had it with the reflexive and unnuanced sense of outrage that has accompanied this cause from its inception, turning a bona fide moment of moral accountability into a series of ad hoc and sometimes unproven accusations.
Bishop Mariann Budde of the Episcopal Diocese of Washington wrote in a blog post that while she shared "a sense of outrage at some of the president-elect's words and actions," she felt an obligation to welcome all people without qualification, especially those who disagree and need to find a way to work together.
As Fawaz Gerges, the author of "ISIS: A History," has argued, Islamist terrorism feeds on a deep sense of outrage and injustice that flourishes in the broken politics of the Arab and Islamic world, the clash of Sunni-dominated Saudi Arabia and Shiite-majority Iran, and the intervention of outside powers like the United States, Russia and Turkey.
"By 21997, I had lied, stolen, cheated, deceived and even killed," Ms. Pritchard said in a lecture in 21940 at the University of Michigan, where she received the Wallenberg Medal, a humanitarian award given by the university in memory of Raoul Wallenberg, the Swedish diplomat who rescued tens of thousands of Hungarian Jews during World War II. In the spring of 1942, Ms. Pritchard was a social work student who had been imbued by her father, a judge, with a strong sense of outrage about the injustices perpetrated against the Jews during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands.
Justice Wild noted that the four members of the Authority were unanimous and that the Conference's sense of outrage was not shared by the wider community.
Like 'maladministration', 'injustice' was left undefined in the Act. Crossman did not want to give the word a legalistic overtone that could exclude the sense of outrage aroused by unfair or incompetent administration, even where the complainant has suffered no actual loss.
In these Fables, she reveals a generally aristocratic point of view with a concern for justice, a sense of outrage against the mistreatment of the poor, and a respect for the social hierarchy."Marie de France." Arts and Humanities Through the Eras. Ed. Edward I. Bleiberg, et al. Vol.
In 2005 it was reissued with two extra tracks and computer accessible content titled War Is Hell Redux. In 2006 their second album was released, titled Beyond The Noise. They are now signed on to Victory Records. In 2007 they released their third album Genuine Sense of Outrage.
However, his sense of outrage that Diana will be tried at the Hague instead of executed outright gets the better of him, and he tracks her down, hoping to do the job himself. Unfortunately, Diana mortally wounds him, escaping with his last Red Dust pill and setting her jail on fire. Donovan arrives too late to save his friend.
Unfortunately, though, a sense of outrage often proved as bad a counsellor in his case as it had done in Carlyle's. His diatribes against usury and corruption were those of a man on the edge of hysteria; his anti-semitism was an illness. Despite this, his fundamental decency is never obscured for long. He hated oppression; he belonged to the world before totalitarianism.
His funeral, on 20 September 1972, turned into a massive demonstration against the military government. Also in 1969, Costa- Gavras released the film Z, based on a book by celebrated left-wing writer Vassilis Vassilikos. The film, banned in Greece, presented a lightly fictionalized account of the events surrounding the assassination of United Democratic Left MP Gregoris Lambrakis in 1963. The film captured the sense of outrage about the junta.
No 'Holy Cross II' vows DUP following loyalist protest outside school, Belfast Telegraph, 27 April 2013 In the early hours of Sunday 23 April 2017, a bomb was found by a police patrol outside the gates of Holy Cross Boys' Primary School in Ardoyne. The police said the bomb was "significant in terms of its [undisclosed] shape", and that police on foot patrol were the likely target. A sense of outrage was reported in the area.
In Too Much Heart and Not Enough Heat: The Short Life and Fractured Ego of the Empathic, Heroic Public Defender, Smith writes about how one can sustain a career in indigent criminal defense. In order to do this, Smith recommends respect for clients, passion for the professional craft of defense lawyering, and a sense of outrage about the system. Smith writes about two former Prettyman fellows who left indigent criminal defense. Smith rejects Charles Ogletree's paradigm of public defenders as empathetic heroes.
He decides he is needed far more in his own country than in China and resolves to stay in London to help the poor children ("How Am I to Know"). Unfortunately, his efforts to help only serve to stir a sense of outrage in the local populace who feel he is meddling in their affairs ("We'll Get Him"). Undaunted, Barnardo seeks the aid of Lord Shaftesbury. He accepts that his chosen mission will isolate him spiritually from those around him ("A Man on His Own").
The French attack on the Rainbow Warrior "produced a sense of outrage and a serious deterioration in relations between New Zealand and France". France demanded New Zealand release the agents captured after the attack. To enforce their demand, the French Government threatened to strain New Zealand's access to the European Economic market, and New Zealand exports to France were boycotted. Almost a year after the bombing, on 8 July 1986, United Nations Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar announced, that New Zealand would receive an apology and compensation of $13 million from France.
" The Labour MP Shahid Malik, also on the committee, wrote to Sir Ian Blair, head of the Metropolitan Police, calling for prosecutions. Tony Blair said, "There is a real sense of outrage....it is very important for our overall good relations in this country that people understand there is no political correctness that should prevent the police from taking whatever action they think is necessary". Simon Hughes, Liberal Democrat President states, "To forbid the freedom to offend is not compatible with modern multi-cultural societies. But inciting violence is always wrong and a crime.
Like Gaye and Hathaway, Rux creates supersaturated, open-ended soul music that can tend toward the programmatic, with bluesy vamps, touches of minimalism, and slide- guitar licks providing a rich backdrop for his sardonic baritone. On Behind The Curtain, Rux achieves a pop-gospel synthesis that recalls the work of Loves Arthur Lee. Black Of The Shadow features Brazilian guitarist Vinicius Cantuaria, while All The Rock Stars is a series of funk grooves that add up to an ingeniously dovetailed mutant samba. Rux sings with a sense of outrage, delivered with real passion.
This ability for the media to be able to change how the public thinks and behaves has occurred on other occasions. In mid-1970s when Betty Ford and Happy Rockefeller, wives of the then-President and then-Vice President respectively, were both diagnosed with breast cancer. J. J. Davis states that "when risks are highlighted in the media, particularly in great detail, the extent of agenda setting is likely to be based on the degree to which a public sense of outrage and threat is provoked". When wanting to set an agenda, framing can be invaluably useful to a mass media organisation.
41 This sense of outrage was to remain with Gogarty his whole life; as a senator, he made twenty-seven separate speeches on housing in a single year. John Wyse Jackson and Peter Costello have argued that Gogarty's portrayal of the Foley family was at least partially inspired by visits to the home of his friend, James Joyce. Though not tenement dwellers, the Joyces' situation was impoverished, and Gogarty was later to describe their house in Cabra as "a miserable home". Similarities can be detected between the clever, idle schemer "Stanislaus Tully" and Joyce's father, John Stanislaus Joyce.
However, it is important to note that "for a moral shock to lead to protest, it must have an explicit cognitive dimension as well as moral and emotional ones."The Art of Moral Protest, 180. Moral shocks are moral insofar as they create a sense of outrage or indignation, emotional insofar as anger or frustration accompanies this outrage, and cognitive insofar as the shock is delivered via words and symbols. For instance, the aforementioned documentary uses such cognitive devices to get its message across, but it also relies on emotional appeal and the resulting, normatively stronger, sense of moral outrage.
Lloyd, p.421 The imprisonment of Iorwerth had left a partial power vacuum in Powys, which his brother Cadwgan ap Bleddyn was unable to fill.Lloyd, p.417 Initially these were precipitated by Owain ap Cadwgan's abduction of Nest ferch Rhys in 1109, which had profound repercussions across Wales, as she was both the wife of Gerald de Windsor, the most powerful Norman baron in South Wales and the daughter of Rhys ap Tewdwr, the last Welsh ruler of Deheubarth.Lloyd, p.419 The widespread sense of outrage created a coalition of Welsh leaders against Owain and Cadygan.
This treaty was received with enormous controversy across the Arab world, where it was condemned and considered a stab in the back. The sense of outrage was particularly strong amongst Palestinians, with the leader of the Palestine Liberation Organization, Yasser Arafat, stating: "Let them sign what they like. False peace will not last".1979: Israel and Egypt shake hands on peace deal BBC News On the other hand, the treaty led both Egyptian president Anwar Sadat and Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin to share the 1978 Nobel Peace Prize for bringing peace between the two states.
It also recommended the closure of Magee College in Derry. There was a strongly-held view in Derry, a predominantly Roman Catholic area with a much larger population, that the university should be established there and the sense of outrage was exacerbated by the fact that there had been no Roman Catholic member of the committee. The resulting protest was unprecedented: on 18 February the city of Derry virtually closed down and a motorised convoy of 1,500 vehicles drove the 90 miles to the seat of government at Stormont in Belfast to protest, but the institution was established in Coleraine as recommended in the report.
In Chapter 5 of The Art of Moral Protest, Jasper defines a moral shock as "an unexpected event or piece of information [which] raises such a sense of outrage in a person that she becomes inclined toward political action, with or without the network of personal contacts emphasized in mobilization and process theories."The Art of Moral Protest, 106. For example, seeing a documentary about illicit banking practices may motivate an individual to participate in financial reform efforts. The motivation generated by a moral shock is, as the conceptual label makes plain, moral in nature; it operates at a level of normative force beyond just the purely cognitive or emotional.
Complainants had sustained a sense of outrage, had lost opportunities to make informed choices or take remedial action and had suffered distress, anxiety and uncertainty. She made five recommendations, including that the Government consider arranging for the restoration of the pensions benefits.Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman, Sixth Report 2005-06 The Government rejected the report, insisting that the case for maladministration was not found out and that it was not in the public interest to compensate the pension schemes. In response, Abraham expressed disappointment at the Government's attitude and commented that it raised doubts about the commitment of the Government to the Ombudsman scheme.
He argues that much hostility can be attributed not to trusts unethical actions, but to their relative newness. In this vein Lippmann criticizes politicians who appeal to a sense of outrage in trusts and new economic arrangements. He specifically mentions both William Jennings Bryan and Woodrow Wilson, who he believes falsely idealize the small-scale agrarian past. Lippmann states this view quite succinctly at the end of the chapter writing, > Those who cling to the village view of life may deflect the drift, may > batter the trusts around a bit, but they will never dominate business, never > humanize its machinery, and they will continue to be playthings of > industrial change.
On 15 October 1997, Kernot abruptly moved to the Australian Labor Party, resigning her Senate seat and leaving the leadership of the Democrats to her deputy, Meg Lees, in what was described by journalist Monica Attard as a "defection [that] took the country by storm". In her resignation speech, Kernot did not criticise the Democrats, saying her motivation was due to a "growing sense of outrage at the damage being done to Australia by the Howard Government" and that her position leading a minor party in the Senate meant she "had a limited capacity to help minimise that damage". She also stated that she was "well aware of the political risks in this course of action". Some derided Kernot because of her ambition; and, according to journalist Julia Baird, she "found herself at odds with the leadership of the Labor Party".
The case left an 'indelible impression' on Anthony Mason, junior counsel for Fitzpatrick and later Chief Justice of the High Court of Australia. In a 1996 paper, he wrote "The two men were convicted and imprisoned by Parliament for contempt of Parliament without being given an opportunity to address Parliament on the question of their guilt or innocence. They were convicted in absentia, in the absence of any specification in the warrant of commitment of the nature of the breach of privilege of which they were convicted, and after they were denied representation by counsel who was to appear on their behalf in the Committee of Privileges and in the House. As counsel who was refused leave to appear, my sense of outrage over Parliament's denial of due process and natural justice remains undimmed after a lapse of 40 years".
"My hope for Yeardley, and for you," said University of Virginia president John Casteen at a May 6, 2010 candlelight vigil, "is that her dying inspires an anger, a sense of outrage that engenders determination here and wherever Yeardley's name is recognized that no woman, no person in this place, this community, this state, our nation need either fear for her safety or experience violence for any reason." A funeral Mass for Love was held at the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen on May 8 with an attendance of around 2,000. On May 10, UVA women's lacrosse coach Julie Myers explained the team planned to go forward with its role in the NCAA tournament: "Let's do it the way that Yards would want us to do it." In their respective tournaments, the men's team advanced to the semifinal and the women's team advanced to the quarterfinal.
Very soon after his arrival, Gandhi's initial bafflement and indignation at racist policies turned into a growing sense of outrage and propelled him into assuming a position as a public figure at the assembly of Transvaal Indians, where he delivered his first speech urging Indians not to accept inequality but instead to unite, work hard, learn English and observe clean living habits. Although Gandhi's legal work soon start to keep him busy, he found time to read some of Tolstoy's work, which greatly influenced his understanding of peace and justice and eventually inspired him to write to Tolstoy, setting the beginning of a prolific correspondence. Both Tolstoy and Gandhi shared a philosophy of non-violence and Tolstoy's harsh critique of human society resonated with Gandhi's outrage at racism in South Africa. Both Tolstoy and Gandhi considered themselves followers of the Sermon on the Mount from the New Testament, in which Jesus Christ expressed the idea of complete self-denial for the sake of his fellow men.
751 Frankel's short 1973 book, Criminal Sentences: Law Without Order, exercised a principal influence on the sentencing reform movement that had a significant influence on American sentencing law in the late 20th century. Drawing on his experiences as a federal judge, Frankel argued that unrestrained sentencing discretion on the part of individual judges, a legacy of progressive penal policy that emphasized the rehabilitation of individual offenders and tailored sentences more to the character of the offender than the seriousness of the offense, resulted in arbitrary sentences and wide disparity between the sentences imposed on similar defendants for similar crimes. His graceful writing style, memorable anecdotes, and palpable sense of outrage made the book accessible to a wide policy-making public, and pushed his proposal for sentencing commissions empowered to create binding sentencing guidelines to restrain judicial discretion to the forefront of the criminal reform agenda of the 1970s and 1980s. Sentencing commissions and guidelines were created in a number of states, and most controversially in the federal Sentencing Reform Act of 1984.

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