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266 Sentences With "tarred"

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

When President Trump tarred some countries, he also lauded one.
But Lee tarred his black opponents as scary and violent.
Critics also tarred and feathered Mormonism with unflattering comparisons to Islam.
Basically, a lot of people are tarred with the same brush.
But his administration was tarred by corruption scandals and stalled reforms.
Bragg has been disrespected, mocked and tarred as a quarrelsome loser.
A broader worry is that legitimate complaints are tarred as thuggish disorder.
A scandal in Bolivia has tarred the image of President Evo Morales.
Being tarred with the prefix "ultra" is only part of the problem.
"I hope we don't get tarred with the same brush," he said.
However, this vein of research has been tarred by its own crude ideology.
Odds are, it doesn't think it ever will be tarred with that brush.
You know everyone is sort of suddenly tarred in this sort of (event).
Among this year's biggest losers are firms tarred in recent months by scandal.
The ultra-Orthodox parties in the government are being tarred as the villains.
That one in particular, that was tarred and feathered for the wrong reasons.
Their bikes sound like small hovercrafts, rolling smoothly over the tarred green bike lanes.
After all, anybody who probes the question will be tarred as an unreliable narrator.
Eventually, the reformers are themselves tarred with corruption charges, and the cycle repeats itself.
"Right now the whole Democratic Party is tarred with this abolish ICE thing," Rep.
They have also been tarred for investing in avocado toast instead of real estate.
Maybe I'll be accused of siding with the alt-right or tarred as Islamophobic.
But I am asking that not all priests be tarred by the same brush.
Then it got tarred as a monopolist for the way it promoted its web browser.
Many refugees and German Muslims fear being tarred with the same brush as the offenders.
" He added: "We're going to get tarred with open borders no matter what we say.
Mr. Trump, scandal-tarred and missing his real estate life, has decided against another run.
The Democratic Party wants individuals who can't be tarred as career politicians or party insiders.
In the campaign itself, Mr Cameron's team relied heavily on what became tarred as "Project Fear".
In a tweet this month, one of these men tarred the other as an anti-Semite.
But the big picture shows that community colleges were unfairly tarred by the old graduation rates.
He made the nepotism-tarred center-right candidate, François Fillon, grin frigidly, murmuring about a lawsuit.
"No, the 'yellow vest' movement does not deserve to be tarred by these despicable acts," he said.
According to the Wall Street Journal, these rebels tarred and feathered people and even murdered a sheriff.
Those events have been pilloried by some progressive activists who have tarred Buttigieg with the hashtag #WallStreetPete.
Mr. Trump has publicly tarred reporters, like Jim Acosta of CNN, while continuing to watch their networks.
The homes are placed in corrals fenced with brushwood, far from tarred roads and the nation's power grid.
Deep down, liberals agree, but they love her appointments and don't want to be tarred as privileged reactionaries.
And that's why they maintain their static position, because any voice that asks for change gets immediately tarred.
For his part Mr Corbyn has no wish to be tarred with helping to facilitate a Tory Brexit.
"Fantastic alternative providers have been tarred by the same brush," says Alex Proudfoot of StudyUK, a lobby group.
He was trashed in the press, ridiculed by reporters and rhetorically tarred and feathered by his own colleagues.
Ever since the 2016 election, a progressive wing has tarred all Trump voters as racists, idiots and bigots.
Corruption had badly tarred his administration, just as it had that of the man at the bottom, Warren Harding.
She may have been tarred, too, by her association with 20th-century music, typically a hard sell to audiences.
" The Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation have been tarred as "embarrassment[s] to our country.
By focusing on a couple of apparently egregious cases, thousands of honest and hard-working property owners are tarred.
"Part of it was the association with him, I was just tarred by the same brush," Mr. Iger says.
Some of Brazil's most prominent politicians, tarred by scandals of their own, argue that Brazil needs an election instead.
Whatever the outcome of that process, Nordstrom should not be tarred with the same brush as other department stores.
He was so wary of being tarred as a mobster that he even chose what to wear with care.
There, you're forced to look up, standing under a white dome blackened by churning swaths of tarred and burned paper.
There is a natural inclination in politics to avoid being tarred as a candidate who failed the same way twice.
And because a leader reflects on her colleagues, her behavior has also tarred other very good DNC activists and leaders.
Bush's legacy, like that of William Horton, will always be tarred by the Willie Horton attack ad that elected him.
Indiana and Arkansas were embarrassed into retreating, changing the laws they had just passed to avoid being tarred as reactionary.
Mr. Gerry may have been unfairly tarred; there is no clear evidence that he supported the maps his party drew.
Numerous other social scientists believed that she had plagiarized their work, resulting in a scandal that tarred the book's reputation.
He tarred the nation's political class, arrayed behind him on the West Front of the Capitol, as faithless and corrupt.
One attendee criticized Republican congressional leaders, saying they should be "tarred and feathered," a person briefed on the meeting said.
Or so goes a line of argument that insists socialism's good name shouldn't be tarred by the results of experience.
A new premier might be found who is not tarred by the wiretapping scandal, such as Nikola Poposki, the foreign minister.
On the Republican side, congressmen willing to consider offering citizenship to DREAMers have in the past been tarred as favouring "amnesty".
And conscientious providers and prescribers of m-health apps risk being tarred by association with any data-misusing rogues that emerge.
Its lifting is a victory for non-violent Salafists, who say they are unfairly tarred with the jihadi brush in France.
Some Republicans openly questioned the strategy, warning the party could be tarred as obstructionist in the run-up to the elections.
If I try to defend myself with "But your post was set to public," I will probably be tarred and feathered.
For drawing attention to these men, the Anti-Defamation League was tarred as a partisan organization by an elected Jewish Republican.
Mr. Trump's response sets up a clash with Congress, where Republicans and Democrats both tarred the Saudi explanation as lacking credibility.
Set against the general opprobrium that has tarred utopia in the twentieth century, these are works of intellectual and political rehabilitation.
Instead, many doctors feared being tarred as "abortionists" by abortion opponents, and would come to fear the real potential for violence.
It was the first time a cardinal was defrocked for sexual abuse, though the scandal has tarred the church for decades.
It's unfortunate that Future Man is tarred by this familiar dynamic and this current cultural moment, because it's more middling than malevolent.
Now Mr. Kriegman's careful chronicling of Mr. Weiner's campaign is poised to prompt a much broader reassessment of a tabloid-tarred politician.
Subjecting foreign firms, over which we exercise far less control, to these same restrictions should not be tarred with the protectionist brush.
Already, she has moved to renegotiate rules the Obama administration used to target for-profit colleges after they were tarred by scandal.
The large media outlets that are tarred as "liberal" for their rigorous fact-checking and actual reporting continue to cover world affairs.
Democrats see a scapegoat tarred for doing her job and used as a distraction from an F.B.I. investigation into Mr. Trump's associates.
After the Cold War, socialism was tarred by the realities of Communism, and represented, to many, a totalitarian endangerment to personal liberty.
In contrast to many other artists who were tarred with the term, "Second Generation," Clark's paintings are not full of agitated brushstrokes.
This is not to say that these rehashed attacks can never work, or that Clinton can't be successfully tarred this time around.
Anything that risked a repeat of the euro zone's existential angst six years ago tarred all the weaker credits with the same brush.
"If a man was doing that to a woman #metoo would have him tarred and feathered, Hog-tied and fired from his job."
He details tortures inflicted on both sides—the phrase "tarred and feathered" persists as something vaguely folkloric but is revealed as unimaginably cruel.
McMaster, hired early in Trump's presidency to replace scandal-tarred Michael Flynn as national security adviser, had widely been expected to leave soon.
Some cautioned against interpretations that may unwittingly restate discredited ethnocentric or racist views that in the past have tarred the study of linguistics.
It was an act of moral bullying — to stay on campus as a white person would mean to be tarred as a racist.
But he noted that Rokita's release tarred John Hammond, Indiana's Republican national committeeman, and warned that pressing the issue too hard could backfire.
In some places the police or social services have indeed failed to act against pathologies in Muslim communities, fearful of being tarred with racism.
He thought he could convince Washington that the industry had been unfairly tarred by a few bad actors — winning them favorable treatment from regulators.
Given their well-publicised antics, it is easy to see why college students can be tarred as blinkered devotees of political correctness run amok.
"It's a shame because (soccer) is such a beautiful game and it's being tarred by people with racist thoughts and racist minds," he said.
In Canaa, having title would bring certainty of tenure, and also help to get services provided: sewerage, basic sanitation, and tarred streets, said Teixeira.
The Patriots, the term Taylor prefers to use for the supporters of the Revolution, intimidated them, tarred and feathered them and confiscated their property.
There are several state governors facing corruption charges and Pena Nieto's wife and his finance minister were tarred by a pay-to-play scandal.
Instead, a vast corruption scandal that has tarred countless national figures, combined with a devastating recession, set in motion a period of political instability.
President Donald Trump previously supported impeaching his two immediate predecessors and argued that impeachment would&aposve permanently tarred former President Barack Obama&aposs legacy.
Yet while many of the big tech companies have been hit by a change in public perception, Facebook seems uniquely tarred among young workers.
In the final gallery, the poor female figure of "Alternative Justice" is tied to a lamp post, tarred and feathered, her head slumped over.
Certainly, I know there are a lot of people with elected titles who feel that they are being tarred by a very broad brush.
And for resume-building millennials, VFA offered an entry to the business world at places that weren't tarred by the financial crisis like Goldman Sachs.
That Mrs Pelosi should be tarred by the culture of impunity sex pests have been enjoying on Capitol Hill is, in a sense, cruelly unfortunate.
"Because they failed to provide those distinctions and caveats, now trade gets tarred with all kinds of ills even when it's not deserved," he said.
"Ten years ago when I talked about school choice, I was literally tarred and feathered," Mr. Booker said at the Democratic National Convention in 2008.
Mr Hoock digs up detailed accounts of Loyalists being variously ostracised, tarred and feathered, choked with pig manure, branded with GR (for George Rex) and lynched.
It should be noted that this is just the latest in a string of misogynistic mishaps that have tarred the release of The Life of Pablo.
Arizona Jefferson Davis memorial A plaque commemorating Jefferson Davis at a state highway west of Phoenix was tarred and covered in feathers, CNN affiliate KPHO reported.
An extensive Life magazine profile of Reynolds in September 1941 noted he was "indignant" that the organization and its newsletter had been tarred as anti-Semitic.
For George H. W. Bush in 1988, he produced the sleazy and effective "Revolving Door" ad that tarred Michael Dukakis by association with murderers and rapists.
By promoting the idea that the Mueller inquiry was born from a corrupt and partisan process, his entire investigation can be tarred as a biased inquisition.
Republican leaders are privately telling members that they do not want to be tarred as Republicans who voted with Democrats to maintain the Affordable Care Act.
"Hypnosis is the oldest Western form of psychotherapy, but it's been tarred with the brush of dangling watches and purple capes," he says in a statement.
How do we create a safe space in society, especially for young people, to make a mistake and grow from it rather than be tarred and feathered?
The leading companies that produce meatless meat products have actually gone out of their way to make sure their products won't be tarred as just for vegetarians.
But the 2011 takeover was the sort of acquisition that tarred private equity firms in the public mind as corporate raiders out to make a fast dollar.
Right or wrong, Ma's comments on the caliber of counterfeits may not sit well with those trying to tackle an endemic problem that's tarred China's image abroad.
Congress has long been wary of Chinese deal makers; of late, even private companies like HNA have been tarred with the same brush as state-run concerns.
That means both the offending officials and the party will be forever tarred by their association with one of the most ethically challenged administrations in modern history.
The Office of Congressional Ethics was created in 2008, after a series of bribery and corruption scandals tarred both parties and sent three House members to jail.
Instead, the transition team let Flynn become national security adviser even though they reportedly knew he was under investigation, increasing the odds he would get tarred by scandal.
A second concern is that disclosure of settlement amounts will lead to negative publicity for harassment victims: They might be tarred with accusations of money-grubbing, for instance.
When I was a teenager working summer jobs, I didn't question gossip that tarred low-wage female workers who slept with their bosses as gold diggers or sluts.
But with "Couch" and "Untitled" (2009), an Ikea chair with a long, tarred tube going through it, the profound effect of the industrial intersecting the domestic is dissonance.
All that changed two years ago, when the AK launched a vendetta against the movement, accusing it of orchestrating a corruption scandal that had tarred senior government figures.
The potato farls, the buttermilk bread, the Flahavan's Progress Oatlets, the proper milk, the yellow butter, the smoked bacon, the warm eggs tarred and feathered with chicken shit.
During Mr. Peña Nieto's term in office, his administration and his party, the Institutional Revolutionary Party, were tarred by corruption scandals, including several that implicated powerful former governors.
But both Democrats and Republicans have tarred her as an opportunist who shed her support from Wall Street and the National Rifle Association when it suited her ambitions.
The fight was led by a young California congressman named John E. Moss, who had been tarred as a "red" himself as a as a candidate for Congress.
Giuliani doubled down on those points in a contentious interview Sunday on CNN's "State of the Union," arguing that Viktor Shokin, the former prosecutor, has been falsely tarred.
The Catalan conflict has reactivated Spanish nationalism, which had been tarred by its linkage to Franco's dictatorship, said Astrid Barrio, a politics professor at the University of Valencia.
People who urge a more proportionate, incremental and individualized response to complex problems are tarred as being some percentage — usually 100 — tolerant of the menaces that trouble us.
The government introduced the stewardship code in 2014 and the corporate governance code in 2015, after fiascos tarred the image of the country's corporate world, known as Japan Inc.
The so-called "Saffron brigade"—those cultural warriors mobilized by an emergent Hindutva media ecology—have mounted a backlash against a media and intellectual class tarred as ultra-liberal.
Donald Trump called Jeb Bush "low energy" throughout the course of the primaries, and now those who oppose Trump—who is high energy—are also tarred with that brush.
Democrats, long tarred as the party of high taxes, face a growing problem as they propose ambitious and expensive programs like Medicare for All and the Green New Deal.
Vocal gun advocates also worry about being tarred by association with fringe elements, such as those who commit massacres, and the regulatory backlash that often follows in their wake.
" Not to be outdone, one of Mr. Rokita's opponents, Luke Messer, tarred Mr. Rokita as "Lyin' Todd," an echo of Mr. Trump's epithet for Senator Ted Cruz, "Lyin' Ted.
And two of the other groups Ms. DeVos met with, Stop Abusive and Violent Environments and Families Advocating for Campus Equality, have been unfairly tarred with the extremist brush.
South Africa's head of state since 2009, Mr. Zuma has been mired in a series of personal and political scandals that have tarred Nelson Mandela's once heroic liberation movement.
It gives his comeback a sense of vagueness — and that's exactly what the men tarred by #MeToo will most likely try to create as they plot their own comebacks.
He resents that gun owners, farmers and hunters especially, could be "tarred with that dick's brush," referring to the gunman who killed 50 people at two Christchurch mosques last Friday.
Doing so ensures it is not tarred with the same brush, allowing it to attract the votes of disaffected Conservatives, who would be put off by any hint of radicalism.
Some civilians described frantically deleting from their phones photographs they had taken of themselves with Islamic State fighters, fearing they could be tarred as collaborators by the advancing security forces.
"I hope it's an open door for somebody who might say, 'I would never move to West Virginia because I would be tarred and feathered in the road,'" Croft added.
She spent decades tarred as a radical feminist, her attempt (and Republican-induced failure) to establish universal health care taken as a demonstration that she was far too left-wing.
Why it's hard to think through these accusations As more men are tarred as bad actors, and once-cherished public figures become pariahs, imposing responsibility can feel uncomfortable, even alarming.
GOP members of the House of Representatives will be tarred and tainted by the radical, extreme and cruel RyanCare bill that was drafted in secret and rammed through the House.
Minnesota tarred and feathered the Raiders, and while it was a convincing win in every way, enthusiasm gleaned from a win over Oakland doesn't carry over to the next week.
"In this time of heightened awareness of sexual predators, it is easy to remain quiet when an injustice is being perpetrated for fear of being tarred as politically incorrect," they wrote.
Zuckerberg lamented his choice in a Facebook post on Wednesday, saying that cracking down a year earlier could have helped the company avoid a privacy scandal that has tarred its reputation.
This year's election, which will take place in October, will be the first since a subsequent corruption investigation known as Lava Jato, or Carwash, which tarred much of the political elite.
More fundamentally, the "criminal alien" label tarred immigrants who were arrested and deported for possessing small amounts of marijuana, or selling phone cards out of their homes, alongside murderers and rapists.
His tenure was tarred by his affair with Monica Lewinsky, as well as broader accusations of womanizing, which could complicate Hillary Clinton's approach to women's issues like sexual assault, experts say.
While Mr. Giuliani's equal-opportunity approach to justice earned him plaudits from both right and left, his sterling reputation was gradually tarred by charges of overzealousness and a hunger for publicity.
Yet this generous forbearance doesn't seem to extend to liberals — or to use his awkward slur, "liberalocrats" — who get tarred in this book as a bunch of condescending, self-satisfied chumps.
A few weeks later, Mustapha was in one of his trucks, on his way to the big tarred road about an hour's drive from camp to attack vehicles passing with goods.
Then in mid-2019, investors started doubting whether the industry could deliver on its lofty promises when some publicly traded cannabis companies were tarred by illegal growing scandals and regulatory crackdowns.
Trump repeatedly tarred the lawyers as a band of "angry Democrats" leading a "coup" to end his presidency, giving them a prominence that has carried over into their post-Mueller lives.
New York (CNN Business)An online bank backed by Leonardo DiCaprio is luring hundreds of thousands of Wells Fargo's customers by promising to be the opposite of the scandal-tarred big bank.
That being said, in defense of the anti-globalists, White House senior adviser Stephen Miller is also Jewish, and as an anti-immigration zealot, he's never been tarred with the "globalist" line.
A whistleblower complaint alerted Congress to the scheme in September, effectively forcing Trump to release millions in military aid that he planned to withhold until Ukraine's president publicly tarred Biden as corrupt.
EVER since Donald Trump's victory emboldened the Republican Party's nativist wing, the dirtiest words with which a Republican can be tarred have not four letters, but 8 and 13: "moderate" and "establishment".
The rebar is wrapped with various materials: firehoses, electronic wires, gauzy ribbons (the sort used to wrap gifts), the cut off tips of shoes, and one of them is tarred and feathered.
Mr. Perot was a Texas businessman who ran for president twice in the 1990s on a third-party platform that idealized small-town life and tarred Washington as a hotbed of corruption.
A Republican lawmaker said it also suggested the Secret Service's security measures remain inadequate two and a half years after a series of lapses tarred the agency and led to major upheaval.
Ossoff gave his opponent Karen Handel the power to characterize him — and she successfully tarred him as an outsider, as a Democratic operative, as someone culturally out of touch with his district.
The IOC and other sporting federations were also determined to avoid being tarred with the same brush as world soccer's ruling body FIFA, which was hit by an unprecedented corruption crisis in 2015.
They're trying to split the Democratic vote and anything that might be politically useful to the Democrats that might help them change things in this country is being tarred as some intelligence op.
Tarred in the minds of many Peruvians because her father ruled as an autocrat, Ms Fujimori has played a destructive role in the country's politics, organising the censure by congress of competent ministers.
But if they could be so easily tarred by Trump—indeed, if they could be so easily convinced to serve an ignorant, incompetent commander-in-chief—perhaps their initial reputation wasn't really merited.
HERE'S THE RUNDOWN HORRIFIC SCHOOL BULLYING VIDEO AT A BILL GATES-FUNDED SCHOOLBRODY JENNER REBOUNDS AFTER EX KISSES MILEYMAMA JUNE CHOOSES HER BOYFRIEND OVER HER DAUGHTERBILLIE EILISH GETS TARRED & FEATHERED FOR MUSIC VIDEO
If New York Fashion Week is destined to be tarred with the "commercial" brush, it was cheering to remember that there are plenty of others making things devoutly weird, small and hand-crafted.
Men of action, however, were free to go where they wanted: to the market, to the tarred road outside the camp, even to other Boko Haram-controlled villages, where they could stay overnight.
And he was recruited last spring by Mike Pompeo, Mr. Trump's secretary of state to return to Kiev to replace Marie L. Yovanovitch, the ambassador tarred by Mr. Trump's camp as an adversary.
Mr. Sharif has called the inquiry into his family's finances a conspiracy and has asserted that in his three terms as prime minister he had not been tarred by a major corruption scandal.
AT A time of political crisis in South Korea, spare a thought for all the upstanding shamans, sorcerers, soothsayers, diviners, astrologers, numerologists, necromancers and fortune-tellers around Asia who risk being tarred by events.
And, as a follow-up, do you think the idea that this kind of rhetoric and policy poses a political risk to Democrats who can be tarred as "anti-business" in a meaningful way?
At independence in 1966 it was one of the world's poorest places, with "only 7km of tarred road and a capital, Gaborone, that amounted to little more than a railway station," wrote a historian.
The third-biggest gift from an American company came via scandal-tarred Wells Fargo, which issued a press release saying its foundation was "accelerating" $175 million in planned giving over the next three months.
President Obama's reelection fight in 2012 came under difficult economic conditions, yet he and his campaign tarred Romney as a plutocrat with little understanding of, or sympathy for, the challenges faced by working people.
After weeks in which House Republicans tarred House Democratic investigations of Trump as shams, Democrats in the Senate are preparing to make the same arguments about a GOP-run impeachment trial in the Senate.
"I think some of it is simply guilt by association, as McCormick gets tarred with the broader weakness in the supermarkets and the restaurants, even though we know McCormick is in good shape," Cramer said.
To Dole, McCain, and Ryan she's saying: You still have a chance to jump off the Trump train, but if you don't, then you will be forever tarred with belonging to the Party of Trump.
Even if Collins turns out to be guilty—and this is one of the strongest insider cases I&aposve ever seen—can every other House Republican running this fall really be tarred with this brush?
" Hogen and others at Purdue misjudged Marianne Skolek Perez if they thought she would abandon her search for answers if they tarred her daughter's reputation: "I told Hogen that you messed with the wrong mother.
One reason that IAG has decided to launch a new brand, rather than convert one of its existing carriers, is presumably because it does not want its full-service model tarred with the low-cost brush.
Yet for many Brazilians the privatizations of that era were tarred by scandals in the telecommunications sector, and the subject remains politically fraught even as the government has opened airports, highways and ports to private investment.
Bernstein's writing is necessarily a thing made out of pitch, the black, sticky substance of coal or wood tar: Poetry's the thing with feathers (tethers) tarred on, as in Poe's "system" of Tarr and Fethering (fathering).
LONDON (Reuters) - Russian gymnasts must be allowed to compete in the Olympic Games and not tarred with the same brush as the country's banned track and field athletes, the International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) said on Monday.
He tarred the roof during San Francisco's Fleet Week (an annual display of military might featuring the aerial acrobatics of the Blue Angels), when he correctly assumed that the Coast Guard would be a little busy.
Trump's defenders rejoiced that they finally were getting what they have wanted: a wide-ranging review of whether the counterintelligence probe that tarred Trump for two years was warranted, conducted properly or tainted by political bias.
If we don't heed these warnings, then I fear our courageous stories of abuse will be twisted by men who feel tarred and feathered in our moment of truth, and they, again, will drive us underground.
Peter, who dropped out after the right-wing media tarred him for the vehement anti-Thatcherite politics he expressed in "28 Up," was only coaxed to return when Apted agreed to help him promote his band.
The other extreme rejects any compromise on health care or immigration, and so may be tarred by a government shutdown or a default that would make the beginning of World War I look rational and benign.
Trump tarred his opponent as hopelessly corrupt, and Clinton's emails got top media billing at his rallies and in media coverage; many of Trump's supporters cited "Crooked Hillary" as a reason they were voting for him.
One of the first documented same-sex couples to openly attend prom together were two teens named Randy and Grady, who attended their Sioux Falls, South Dakota, prom under threat of being tarred and feathered in 1979.
Why it matters: Some stumbles that have tarred high-profile AI systems — like facial recognition that fails more often on darker faces, or medical AI that gives potentially harmful advice — have resulted from unanticipated real-world scenarios.
Mr. Dabash says he has faced backlash in the form of hostile phone calls and messages on Facebook and WhatsApp groups, where he's tarred as a "traitor" or a "collaborator" — epithets that carry a threat of violence.
The 2020 count already has been tarred by a ferocious battle over Republican efforts to enumerate noncitizens nationwide, a fight that is likely to depress census response next year among minorities who are mistrustful of the government.
More fundamentally, the "criminal alien" label tarred immigrants who were arrested and deported for possessing small amounts of marijuana, or selling phone cards out of their homes, alongside (and in much greater quantity than) murderers and rapists.
But I'm saying right now, which is, we have had a reaction of people feeling like they are being tarred and feathered by how the brand has been attributed in social media and I'm saying you know what?
In its place, two neat rows of identical whitewashed houses stare at each other across a newly tarred road, home to the 20 families who resisted pressure from authorities to accept compensation or relocation to nearby tower blocks.
Republicans tarred Georgia Democrat Jon Ossoff for living just a few miles outside of his district in last year's contested special election in that state's 6th District, and Republicans could do the same in Texas with Moser's residency.
Wells Fargo is searching for a new leader after its chief executive, Timothy J. Sloan, abruptly resigned on Thursday, having been hounded by politicians, regulators, customers and employees about the halting efforts to overhaul the scandal-tarred bank.
The winner faces the challenges of reuniting a party split by a bitter leadership battle and rebuilding its scandal-tarred reputation as rival new parties, both on the left and the right, upend Spain&aposs traditional bi-partisan politics.
Now of course, whenever the structure of the CFPB is questioned, those who challenge it are tarred by the left and their media acolytes as undermining the self-proclaimed protections of consumers that the CFPB is suppose to defend.
That is the price you pay, of course — just as all cyclists are vulnerable to being tarred by the sins of the past, regardless of their own guilt, so too all Russian athletes are now, unfairly, greeted with skepticism.
Yet just as Nixon's achievements in domestic and foreign policy were undone by skulduggery and paranoia, Netanyahu's legacy has been permanently tarred by his apparent corruption, his appeals (or indifference) to bigotry and his demonization of his political opponents.
Coal baron Don Blankenship, tarred by a mining accident that killed 443 people, is one of the three leading Republican contenders in the West Virginia Senate race — which is quickly becoming one of the most-watched campaigns of 2018.
His reputation for honesty was tarred when he apologized for betraying his principles and not calling for the removal of the Confederate Flag from the state house in South Carolina, because he didn&apost want to lose the primary there.
The body of the murderous husband "was tarred, placed in the iron cage and hung on a 30-ft (9-metre) pole on a hill overlooking his childhood haunts, his parent's cottage ... and the actual crime scene", the university said.
"Just as Nixon's achievements in domestic and foreign policy were undone by skulduggery and paranoia, Netanyahu's legacy has been permanently tarred by his apparent corruption, his appeals (or indifference) to bigotry and his demonization of his political opponents," he later adds.
After the end of World War II in 1945, Lithuanians, Latvians, Estonians and Ukrainians who resisted their incorporation into the Soviet Union were invariably tarred by Moscow as Nazi collaborators or their ideological heirs, no matter their record or views.
Carter may seem like a transitional figure between scandal-tarred Richard M. Nixon and venerated Reagan, but in "President Carter: The White House Years," Eizenstat makes the case that the 39th president changed the course of the country for the better.
"Using the White House and Camp David for sleepovers has tarred the presidency and cheapened institutions that should be above political advantage," a Times editorial noted in 2000, when the issue popped up to haunt Hillary Clinton's first Senate run.
The agreement was hailed as a diplomatic success by the Obama administration, an achievement now tarred by continued reports of further chemical attacks, indicating that the Syrian government may have hidden some of its chemical stocks or is still producing them.
In 2016, Trump carried the state by just five points, and in 2018, Democrat Stacey Abrams very nearly became the first black woman elected governor of any American state in an election that was tarred by allegations of voter suppression.
The allegations around Zuma, who was forced out of office last month by his ruling African National Congress (ANC) party, and the wealthy Gupta family have tarred major companies, among them, KPMG and McKinsey, and triggered the revolt against Zuma.
" Schlossberg's searing rebuttal comes after Cruz, at a campaign event in Milford, New Hampshire, on Sunday, argued that JFK would be a Republican today because "he stood for religious liberty, and he would be tarred and feathered by the modern Democratic Party.
Arda Transau was billed as a new township with tarred roads, shops and health clinics - but seven years later the villagers say they have yet to see the promised education and health facilities while their homes are crumbling and food is scarce.
"Do we run the risk of depressing our base by repudiating the guy, or do we run the risk of being tarred and feathered by independents for not repudiating him?" asked Glen Bolger, a Republican pollster working on many of this year's races.
But the same is true for some babies born to mothers who take certain antidepressants—yet they are not tarred with the addict brush, because we recognize that making life bearable for mothers with severe depression is important for both mother and child.
But it also relieves Mr. McConnell of a huge problem: having to deal with Roy S. Moore, the unpredictable Alabama Republican nominee whose candidacy was tarred by allegations that he molested a 14-year-old girl and made sexual advances toward other teenagers.
" But Mr. Bloomberg, the founder of Bloomberg News, otherwise issued a robust endorsement of press freedoms at a time when recent administrations of both parties have cracked down on leaks and Mr. Trump has regularly tarred reporters as "the enemy of the people.
Inevitably, "Trust" will be compared to "All the Money in the World," the recent Ridley Scott movie about the kidnapping of Getty's grandson that became more memorable when Christopher Plummer was enlisted as a last-minute replacement for scandal-tarred Kevin Spacey.
A former member of Trump's transition team, Nunes tarred any perception of independence, the Democrats say, by secretly meeting an unnamed source on the White House grounds the day before announcing he'd been shown evidence of incidental surveillance of President Trump's transition team.
He helped persuade the president to deliver a speech that was intended to inspirit the nation during an energy crisis and economic slump, but instead tarred Mr. Carter as a weakling who was unable to lift the country out of its malaise.
The fact that he's made an earnest attempt to express any of it goes a long way toward explaining why he's trying to distance himself from the genre and why he resents being tarred with the same brush as Colt Ford and Mikel Knight.
BRUMADINHO, Brazil, Jan 30 (Reuters) - Vale SA, the world's largest iron ore miner, vowed to sacrifice production for safety to avoid another instance of the tailings dam failures that have tarred its legacy - a move that sent metal prices and shares of rivals soaring.
But Cardinal Wuerl has been tarred by association with his predecessor in Washington, the former Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick, who recently stepped down as a cardinal after accusations that decades ago, he molested an altar boy and coerced seminary students to sleep in his bed.
The region's political shift began as the end of a commodities boom a decade ago forced governments to slash spending and as corruption scandals tarred the images of leaders who rose to power by vowing to spread the wealth in a region of stark inequality.
Continuing to watch their scandal-tarred incumbent be outspent by seven to one was not a risk national Democrats were willing to take, especially given the prospect that they could take back the Senate in 2020 if they do not lose significant ground this year.
" Although none of the witnesses were angling for cable news gigs, by the close of the last hearing on Thursday, they had become unwilling symbols of the Washington "establishment" — tarred as embedded resistors by a president who is just trying to "shake things up.
There is always going to be a small minority of drone pilots causing problems, and the debate of ownership and that of what a customer can do with their purchased product is a murky one—for drone pilots don't want to be tarred with the same brush.
In the seven months since new CEO Jay Fulcher was appointed to douse the flames at scandal-tarred Zenefits, he has fired more than 400 employees, flown to visit some of his biggest customers and even surveyed 5,000 people on whether to change his company's name.
Monday morning, President Trump warned West Virginians that a victory for Don Blankenship, a convicted coal baron tarred by the death of 29 miners in a 2010 mining accident, would be a redux of Alabama, when Democrats won a Senate seat in a special election upset.
Vale SA, the world's largest iron ore miner, has vowed to sacrifice production for safety to avoid another instance of the tailings dam failures that have tarred its legacy, including the dam that burst in the town of Brumadinho last Friday, leaving hundreds missing and presumed dead.
Republican strategy is straightforward: The victors on Tuesday heaped praise on Mr. Trump, inviting him to visit their states to campaign, and tarred opponents as "liberals," while invoking the name "Chuck Schumer," the New York senator and Democratic leader, as an epithet to hurl at opponents.
He probably doesn't even know it, which makes it worse, but for the three main (PS3) adventures we've gone on with Nathan Drake so far—626's Drake's Fortune, 2009's Among Thieves and 2011's Drake's Deception—everything he's touched has become tarred with death and destruction.
" Kathy Sullivan, former chair of the New Hampshire Democratic Party, said she didn't agree with Gabbard's vote — "You either think that Trump violated the Constitution or you don't, right?" she said — but stressed that Gabbard shouldn't be "tarred and feathered and run out of town for it, either.
Those on the Left so often lambast the GOP as the "party of no," but if Democrats simply obstruct the solutions proposed by the new president and Congress, then they will be the ones tarred as preventing progress, which will likely alienate centrist voters whose votes they will need.
If the effort fails, the party risks being tarred as feckless: in control of the House, the Senate and the White House, but unable to come through with a promise that Republicans have been making from the day Mr. Obama signed the Affordable Care Act into law in 2010.
Countless Republican candidates in 2018 will be tainted and tarred by a greed-inspired banking bill that ends many financial protections for Americans that were created after the last financial crisis, which was largely caused by policies of the previous Republican president and his GOP allies in Congress.
That happened in Wisconsin with Russ Feingold, in Indiana with Evan Bayh and in Ohio with Ted Strickland, all of whom were defeated by Republicans who couldn't be tarred as insiders or as emblems of the status quo because the Democrats had just as much mileage on them.
It's this sort of disengagement that has allowed the industry to be tarred with the narrative that it doesn't contribute its fair share of taxes, that it is sending Australians' natural resources offshore for its own profit, and that it is responsible for surging domestic prices for natural gas and electricity.
The defeat of these hard-liners, some of them closely associated with the supreme leader, was a rebuke to those who stood in the way of the nuclear deal, tarred the allies of the popular president as foreign stooges and promised to block foreign investment in the newly opening economy.
The Nick Saban Witness Protection Program also nearly included Hugh Freeze — earlier this year Saban all but confirmed he had intended to hire Freeze, the scandal-tarred former Mississippi head coach, before the Southeastern Conference blocked it — and, were it not for the public outcry, might have welcomed Durkin, too.
In 2014, a routine money laundering probe that became known as Lava Jato, or Car Wash, exposed vast kickback schemes that tarred nearly all the large political parties and crippled pillars of the economy, including the state-owned oil company Petrobras, the construction giant Odebrecht and JBS, the world's largest meatpacker.
That episode prompted Representative Jason Chaffetz, Republican of Utah and the chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, to suggest that the Secret Service's security measures were still inadequate two and a half years after a series of lapses tarred the agency and led to a major upheaval.
Its cities are freighted with dust, beaten into submission by the harsh sun, red, hard-packed earth, potholed, black-tarred roads, and sturdy but uninspired greenery, buildings, modern and traditional, crowding each other, all of it shrouded in a layer of fast change, the wider ambitioms of the region, and deep melancholy.
If the Senate passes the tax bill as written, Democrats will campaign in 2018 as the party of modern George Baileys, fighting for the large majority of Americans, while Trump Republicans will be tarred as the party of modern Mr. Potters, fighting alongside their lobbyists, donors and influence peddlers in the Washington swamp.
Bibi, the Philadelphia–reared savior of the desert sabra, has emerged after 14 years in power as the defender of the faith, if you can equate the faith with a particular authoritarian ethnostate apparatus (which Jews worldwide are increasingly told they must, if they don't want to be tarred as anti-Semitic).
The president-elect has declined most daily intelligence briefings, characterized them as painfully repetitive, re-tarred the community with its failure on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, shrugged off a high-confidence judgment on Russian election meddling as "ridiculous" and reportedly had his staff take a threat briefing from the head of Israel's Mossad.
Because people a long time ago decided to honor a man like Jackson -- who built wealth by owning black slaves and whose barbaric treatment of Native Americans stands out even among other racists in our history -- we must uphold that decision or else be tarred as revisionists or anti-Americans who want only to tear down traditions.
But Washington was deeply engaged in the same sort of speculation that absorbed the capital about "Deep Throat" and, in later eras, the anonymous author of "Primary Colors," a roman à clef about Bill Clinton's scandal-tarred 1992 presidential campaign or the White House official under Barack Obama who posted anonymous Twitter messages mocking his colleagues.
Perhaps after some moaning, and some changes to the bill through amendments, the 51 senators needed to get the bill over the line (or 50 if Vice President Mike Pence is summoned) will choose a good-enough effort over being tarred as the person who declined to make good on a seven-year promise to unravel President Barack Obama's signature domestic policy achievement.
An urge to punish myself by looking, by scouring every inch of tarred road and glittering gutter and veined dust-sprinkled leaf, in every season, at all times, for my boys—to look till I go blind or mad, till my brain revolts, staging a headache in the space where I am trying to insert the entire city by looking.
Since launching his White House bid in June last year, Trump has vowed to seal off the country behind a border wall he says Mexico will pay for, tarred its migrants as rapists and drug pushers and threatened to expel millions of them, as well as saying he will revise or tear up a trade deal with Mexico if he wins office in November.
Schwartz tarred the long-running CBS program for airing its interview with Daniels, in which she gave graphic details of the affair she said occurred a year after Trump married first lady Melania TrumpMelania TrumpEx-Melania Trump adviser raised concerns of excessive inauguration spending weeks before events: CNN The Hill's Morning Report - Trump moves green cards, citizenship away from poor, low-skilled White House seeks volunteers, musicians for Christmas celebrations MORE.
To critics of the #MeToo movement who fear that we are in the midst of a witch hunt and that blameless men are being publicly destroyed, Keillor's story became exhibit A. In the New York Times earlier this month, Daphne Merkin held him up as a contrast to "heinous sorts" like Kevin Spacey and Matt Lauer, arguing that Keillor had been unfairly tarred with the same brush as serious sexual predators.
The incumbent, former Attorney General Luther StrangeLuther Johnson StrangeGOP frets over nightmare scenario for Senate primaries Roy Moore trails Republican field in Alabama The Hill's Morning Report — US strikes approved against Iran pulled back MORE, was appointed to the seat by scandal-tarred Governor Robert Bentley (R), in what was seen by some as a quid pro quo for Strange's decision earlier not to advocate for Bentley's impeachment.
But surely, by now, so many years since the first email was sent (officially in 1971) and social media completely invaded our lives to the extent that people now buy mobile phones based on their compatibility with the most popular social networks over the basics of being able to make a call, we should have reached the situation where communication through technology isn't tarred by regular stories of discrimination, harassment, bullying, or worse.
Asquith was tarred as one of the many speculators who wanted to show that Shakespeare was "an Italian, a covert homosexual, a Jesuit, Francis Bacon, Christopher Marlowe, the Earl of Oxford ... a loyalist, a dissident, a Tudor apologist, an atheist, a Catholic, a Protestant, a Puritan, an elitist, a populist, a proto-Marxist, and the love-child of Elizabeth I." So, Asquith comes to this new book with a lot of personal baggage.
I'd want someone who could lay claim to being a trailblazer and reap some of the excitement that comes from that; someone who couldn't be tarred as a Washington insider; someone who was effortlessly fluent in, and respectful of, religion without buying into the divisively censorious strains of it; someone whose message and style weren't instantly familiar facsimiles of previously successful candidates; someone who radiated the kind of thoughtfulness that's foreign to Trump.
The brightest warning flare for the GOP came in Alabama, where Democrat Doug Jones won a Senate seat in one of the nation's most conservative states in December, defeating the Trump-backed and scandal-tarred Republican Roy MooreRoy Stewart MooreGOP Senate candidate 'pissed off' at Trump over health care for veterans Durbin says he has second thoughts about asking for Franken's resignation Alabama GOP senate candidate says 'homosexual activities' have ruined TV, country's moral core MORE.
Bernie Sander's (Vt.) supporters will simply follow suit; failing to define what her political platform is, as opposed to what it is not; failing to handle her establishment credentials and make voters believe she is not simply more of the same; becoming characterized or defined by legacy issues, or erring in tying her coattails too closely to President Obama and becoming tarred with the business-friendly transactional approach that has offended many of his constituents; and finally, yielding to the temptation to get down in the mud with presumptive Republican nominee 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 losing the name-calling battle.

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