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94 Sentences With "unconscionably"

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

She was looking for a job and she was unconscionably assaulted.
" Reading the full riot act, Frasier also called the stunt "unconscionably stupid.
Bear trophy hunting on the edges of Yellowstone is now unconscionably allowed.
Voting machine breakdowns caused unconscionably long lines in Georgia, Maryland, and elsewhere.
First, the human cost of maintaining the status quo is unconscionably high.
Globalization left many behind, and made some unconscionably wealthy, others disgracefully poor.
"It's unconscionably excessive to threaten someone with twenty years to life for candy," he argued.
The problem is that these programs still leave the rate of childhood poverty unconscionably high.
The wait at some polling places is unconscionably long (witness these half-mile lines in Cincinnati).
Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) condemned the "seemingly inadequate, unconscionably delayed, and historically hollow result," while Sen.
The Department of Defense has unconscionably committed to assisting in the prosecution and internment of asylum seekers.
Meanwhile, providers of abortion and family planning are dwindling and the maternal mortality rate remains unconscionably high.
Unconscionably, Ryan is failing to act, and attempting to block others from crafting a DACA solution as well.
Prurient, futile and unconscionably long, his darkly comic portrait of teen life has an unusually high body count.
Scholarships for underprivileged students are being unconscionably delayed, leading many to skip meals or drop out of college.
Perhaps the thought is that the average worker bears an unconscionably heavy tax burden, once payroll taxes are considered.
In contrast, if Democrats win in November, they are prepared to pass legislation to lower our unconscionably high drug prices.
Abolitionists argued that slavery was unconscionably cruel and pointed, specifically, to separating families as a violation of religious principles, Appelbaum explained.
The normal interpretation is that people are willing to behave unconscionably if they can tell themselves they were merely "following orders".
Others have tried to negotiate with all involved, however, expecting the unconscionably greedy to negotiate in good faith is rather naïve.
Molly winds up married to a yokel played by Harve Presnell, who's as unconscionably strapping as his voice is outrageously strong.
When banks and payday lenders charge these unconscionably high interest rates, they are not engaged in the business of making credit available.
Among the House committee's gripes over apparent corruption within the agency was also the unconscionably long lines they regularly subject passengers to.
The office added that the law would address the "unconscionably high" per capita rates of firearm deaths and suicide in the state.
Unconscionably, the Republican-controlled Congress refused to allow large numbers of Syrian refugees into America because of bigoted fears of domestic extremism.
Vincent has herself used opioids and lost a daughter to an overdose at a rehab that unconscionably failed to stock the antidote, naloxone.
First, he said "the unconscionably long periods of time that prisoners often spend on death row awaiting execution" may present a constitutional problem.
Physicians will hesitate in how to care for complex health situations -- and Alabama is already a state with an unconscionably high maternal mortality rate.
Another book that made me boil was Steven Brill's "America's Bitter Pill," about pharmaceutical companies getting away with charging unconscionably high prices for medicines.
"The current Zesco tariffs fully disincentivise this as they are unconscionably high," Gladston said, referring to the tariff charged by the state-owned power firm.
Unconscionably, nearly half of these countries still require sterilization for legal recognition of a transgender person's self-identified gender, according to the organization Transgender Europe.
Abolitionists of the era argued that slavery was unconscionably cruel; in particular, they pointed to the forcible separation of families as running counter to God's law.
I think if that's pulled off the table as a route for vehicles and trucks, the already unconscionably horrible overcrowding on Metropolitan Avenue will get even worse.
Any reasonable American should applaud President Obama's decision to commute the sentences of another 102 men and women serving unconscionably long sentences in the nation's federal prisons.
To say "see you in a year" to my (unconscionably supportive) partner, my friends and the routines I've developed here in New York is going to hurt.
But older dishes are honored, too, like cups of bitter melon stuffed with pork, dried shrimp and dried scallop, the first bite unconscionably bitter, the second almost sweet.
Still bratty, still unconscionably loud, still impossibly fun: This California rock band has been igniting mosh pits and crowd-surfing sprees across the country for nearly 10 years.
Don't watch this one for the historicity; do bask in its sensory delights, including Academy Award–winning costume design and the irresistible charm of an unconscionably powerful Kirsten Dunst.
The initial maternity leave policy — just two weeks at full pay plus one week at half — seemed unconscionably meager for a company promoting its feminist, body-positive bona fides.
The CBC reported that during the sentencing Judge Bruce Fraser called Boria's stunt "dumb and dangerous" and "unconscionably stupid" and said there was "no precedent" for a stunt like this.
For far too long, under several mayors, City Hall was unconscionably stingy, providing as little as $100 million or so a year to capital spending on infrastructure maintenance and improvement.
Some of the suit's complaints were still dismissed; at this point, Taylor is just arguing that Twitter violated California's Unfair Competition Law with misleading statements and an unconscionably restrictive banning policy.
The point, in case you forgot, is that an employee of the White House made an unconscionably heartless and cruel comment about someone who has spent a lifetime serving his country.
The extreme generosity of the DREAM Act of 2628 is unfair to the American citizens and Lawful Permanent Residents who have unconscionably long waits to be reunited with alien family members.
What all the talk of cutting "impractical" majors in favor of teaching job skills covers up is the fact that a university education in the United States is wildly, unconscionably expensive.
Yet, incredibly, unconscionably, Ali was exploited by managers and promoters who should have protected him; his doomed career continued until 1981 with a devastating final loss, to the much-younger Trevor Berbick.
Between 220 and 20163, new H.I.V. diagnoses among African-American women plummeted 22016 percent, though the number of new infections remains unconscionably high — 22016 times as high as that of white women.
At that point behaviour which seemed reasonable and responsible will start to look like folly, the "crazy projects" of the world will seem unconscionably reckless, and the world will be in trouble again.
After all, paying 13-year-olds to gain access to their mobile app usage and browser traffic is, on its face, an unconscionably creepy way for a business to gather intelligence about its competitors.
Despite being convicted of three felony counts of sexual assault, a crime that carried a potential sentence of 14 years in prison, Persky sentenced Turner to what many felt was an unconscionably short sentence.
Unconscionably long lines in the 2012 election led to an investigation by the bipartisan Presidential Commission on Election Administration, whose report contained recommendations on cutting a voter's wait to no more than 30 minutes.
I had the tools of the music, and the projection and the writing, so that the audience should never feel they're stuck in the same place geographically or psychologically for an unconscionably long time.
Then some five hundred and fifty New York State Police troopers, augmented by more than two hundred sheriff's deputies—and with the Attica correction officers unconscionably mixed in—entered the prison and mounted the catwalks.
This should come as no surprise: his teammates' unconscionably lazy tendency to switch damn near every screen has left the seven-foot-three Porzingis matched up against the best guards in the league throughout the season.
Over the week leading up to a visit here by Mr. Trump on Friday, a sentiment burned that the flooding, which has left thousands of people in shelters, has been unconscionably overlooked on the national level.
Mauritian Prime Minister Pravind Jugnauth said it was "a historic moment for Mauritius and all its people, including the Chagossians who were unconscionably removed from their homeland and prevented from returning for the last half century".
"Trump has unconscionably turned a blind eye to some of the worst anti-LGBTQ atrocities in a generation, including monstrous attacks on gay and bisexual men in Chechnya," Ty Cobb, director of HRC Global, told the crowd.
Some good news, though this "Lady" run is unconscionably brief: Those on a Weill high can look forward to a production of his "Street Scene," with a text by Langston Hughes and Elmer Rice, at Mannes Opera next weekend.
"It has long been a pattern of practice throughout this nation and the state of South Carolina that school districts have unconscionably and impermissibly shifted operating costs of the classrooms directly on the financial backs of our Teachers," the lawsuit reads.
Given the fact that Michael Bloomberg is worth more than sixty thousand million dollars, and because he has been so impossibly, unconscionably rich for decades, it stands to reason that his presidential campaign would be as psychedelically strange as it was.
Hard to fault him for this when he served under an attorney general, Loretta Lynch, who elected not to recuse herself entirely from oversight of the emails case following an unconscionably questionable encounter with Bill Clinton on a Phoenix tarmac in June 2016.
USMCA's "improvements will not be enough to overhaul the entrenched system in Mexico that denies workers their rights, keeps wages unconscionably low and, consequently, incentivizes companies to ship jobs to Mexico — and out of our communities, like mine in Southeast Michigan," Rep.
Like many good bad action movies, the first half of Cradle 2 the Grave is unconscionably boring, but that's fine because eventually you get to watch Jet Li fighting like five MMA guys interspersed with shots of DMX evading cops on a four-wheeler.
What's worse is that this decision sets a precedent for other tech giants and for other nations — and if everyone follows suit, the only thing that would result is a slightly increased income from companies that would still be paying unconscionably low tax rates.
"Put simply, California's costly 'administration of the death penalty' likely embodies three fundamental defects about which I have previously written: '(1) serious unreliability, (2) arbitrariness in application, and (3) unconscionably long delays that undermine the death penalty's penological purpose,' " Breyer wrote in the order Monday.
As The Hill, CNN and other news organizations reported last week, Democrats on the Senate Intelligence Committee are calling on President Obama to declassify information about covert Russian attempts to influence the American elections that the Obama administration continues to keep secret, in my opinion unconscionably.
Former Stanford University student Brock Turner was just sentenced to six months in county jail for sexually assaulting an unconscious woman behind a dumpster, an unconscionably lenient sentence that the judge, Aaron Persky, delivered in fear that a prison sentence would have a "severe impact" on 20-year-old Turner.
Last weekend, the New York Times wrote a piece about Matt and Noah Colvin, the Tennessee brothers who drove 1,300 miles across two states to buy thousands of bottles of hand sanitizer and thousands of packages of antibacterial wipes so they could resell them online at unconscionably inflated price points.
But in the age of our great common internet living room, it's kind of striking how that Greek chorus of disapproving curmudgeons stands ready to tell you clearly and absolutely that you're dangerously overindulgent, criminally underinvolved, cruel in your adherence to traditions, or unconscionably cavalier in your willingness to let them go.
"Such a policy would harm U.S. economic interests on an already suspicious world stage, as well as unconscionably undermine those trying to defend our digital environments in every industry," said Mr. Yoran, who was the cybersecurity czar at the Department of Homeland Security for a little more than a year, ending in 2004.
While Judge Oetken expressed "[s]ympathy" that Monnin "is suffering from her poor choice of counsel" and agreed that her lawyer acted "unconscionably," he declined to vacate the judgment because the arbitrator relied on evidence to support his decision and the "apparent inequity" of the default judgment was not enough for the federal court vacate the judgment under the very protective rules for arbitration awards.
I'm honestly not even that mad about missing the party itself, since I'm not really a party person, but I feel like it was unconscionably rude to give out more invitations than there was space and then abandon us in the street outside, to find our way home at just shy of midnight in a city where public transit basically shuts down at 11 on Sunday.
Breyer went along with the majority's decision not to take up the cases on this round, but he used the occasion to highlight his worries about "unconscionably long delays that capital defendants must endure as they await execution," as well as concerns about when rulings that favor defendants apply to past cases and the roles of jury and judge in the decision to sentence a convict to death.
The dramatis personae in the story are so unconscionably wealthy and so reflexively accustomed to getting their way that they are more like private islands than actual human beings; Sandy Weill, a 2010 New York Times profile reveals, has a four-foot hunk of wood "etched with his portrait and the words 'The Shatterer of Glass-Steagall'" hanging in his office, and this guy just plays the role of bystander.
However, it transpired that Liverpool Victoria was under no legal obligation to renew. The claimants argued that Liverpool Victoria should be estopped from not renewing, based on their reliance. In response, Liverpool Victoria argued that estoppel was not relevant because they had not acted unconscionably but simply by mistake.
Spence never called a witness for the defense. He relied only on contradictions and holes in the prosecution's story. Spence later wrote that he rejected Weaver's anti-Semitic beliefs, but took the case because he believed Weaver had been entrapped into committing a crime and furthermore that federal agents had behaved unconscionably in shooting Weaver's wife and children.Spence, Gerry (1996).
Traditionally, the explanation was this was to prevent people acting "unconscionably" (i.e. inequitably or unjustly). Modern authors increasingly prefer to categorise resulting and constructive trusts more precisely, as responding to wrongs, unjust enrichments, sometimes consent or contributions in family home cases. In these contexts, the word "trust" still denotes the proprietary remedy, but resulting and constructive trusts usually do not come from complete agreements.
After that, a brief extract of news footage of the funeral of Palmiro Togliatti, the long-time leader of the Italian Communist Party. Then, after having met a prostitute, they end up killing and eating the Crow, whom they found to be unconscionably boring. Pasolini declared that Uccellacci e uccellini was his favourite film, as it was the only one that did not disappoint his expectations. Ennio Morricone's opening theme music features Domenico Modugno singing the movie's credits.
Whilst fighting in Greece in May 1941, Ralph was captured and sent to Stalag 306 POW camp in Maribor, Slovenia with 100 other POWs. Determined to escape, he began mastering the German language. Each day prisoners were taken to a work site, assigned to the job of re-laying train tracks destroyed by Allied bombers. Watching his fellow soldiers die of starvation and disease, in unconscionably grim conditions, hardened Ralph's resolve to devise of a large- scale escape plan.
Ngāi Tahu was not involved in settling this claim until after the legislation had been passed. Much of the income from this source was used by Ngāi Tahu to take their claim to the Waitangi Tribunal in 1986. The tribunal heard the claim for two years—throughout 1987 and 1988—and issued its report in 1991. One of the core findings was that "the Crown [had] acted unconscionably and in repeated breach of the Treaty of Waitangi", and it recommended compensation.
Decades of litigation followed, marked by a series of legal defeats based on technical aspects of the law surrounding the Indian Claims Commission. This was reversed on May 26, 1980, however, when the United States Congress passed legislation paving the way for a lawsuit against the government on the basis that the amount paid by the federal government for tribal lands was unconscionably low. On December 29, 1982, an act of Congress granted the Cow Creek Band formal tribal recognition.
Rabin commended the fact that Michael's bad-idea-for-the-right- reason made him likable. Furthermore, he noted that both Michael and the kids engaged in "mutually beneficial self-deception"; the former thought he could save those in need, and the latter had something to look forward to. Rabin also enjoyed the subplot involving Jim and Dwight, noting that it "afforded [actor Rainn Wilson] an opportunity to do surprisingly accurate, unconscionably mean impersonations of Stanley and Toby". Several critics, on the other hand, felt that the main plot was too mean to be humorous.
In the Lindbergh case, fencing what he could as hot money and being very careful with what he did personally pass, the perpetrator had been caught through the ransom money nonetheless, with identification and handwriting evidence brought in only at the trial. Although unconscionably perilous by the high safety, training and equipment standards of skydivers, whether Cooper's jump was virtually suicidal is a matter of dispute. The author of an overview and comparison of World War II aircrew bail-outs with Cooper's drop asserts a probability for his survival, and suggests that like copycat Martin McNally, Cooper lost the ransom during descent.
In a survey of leading economists, only 8 percent agreed with a proposal to prohibit "unconscionably excessive" price gouging during natural disasters in Connecticut. 51 percent disagreed with the proposal, 15 percent were uncertain and 8 percent had no opinion. The economists opposing the proposal argued that such legislation would lead to a misallocation of resources and lead to lower supply and greater scarcity of the resources, or argued that the proposal in question was vague. Libertarian economists Thomas Sowell and Walter E. Williams, among others, argue against laws that interfere with large or exorbitant price changes.
He enters into painful introspection about his stance toward others and interpretations of their behavior. We learn that Leventhal's mother was institutionalized for mental illness, that Leventhal's 'nerves' are shot, and thus despite Allbee's alarming behavior the reader accepts Leventhal's doubts about his own assessments of people's motives. Interwoven with his struggles with Allbee are Leventhal's uneasy interactions with the family of his brother Max. After his initial visit to their lowly apartment, Leventhal is convinced that Max has neglected his young wife and children unconscionably and he resolves to give Max a piece of his mind.
Fine's third book, Too High to Fail: Cannabis and the New Green Economic Revolution, was published by Gotham Books, an imprint of Penguin Group, on August 2, 2012. Pre-publication reviews included a starred Kirkus Reviews review reading in part, "Fine examines how the American people have borne the massive economic and social expenditures of the failed Drug War, which is "as unconscionably wrong for America as segregation and DDT." A captivating, solidly documented work rendered with wit and humor." Fine began promoting the book with an appearance on the Conan O'Brien show on July 25, 2012.
The High Court held that to avoid detriment through Waltons' unconscionable behaviour, Waltons was estopped from denying the contract. Whilst the mere exercise of legal right not to exchange contracts was not unconscionable, there were two additional elements which made Waltons' conduct unconscionable: a) element of urgency, b) Maher executed and forwarded on 11/11 and assumed execution by Walton was a formality. The award (though very similar to an expectation interest, as if it were a contract that was enforced) was only meant to cover reliance. Because Maher had acted to his detriment, in reliance on the encouragement of Walton Stores, which had acted unconscionably, equity would intervene.
An account of profits is another potential remedy.. It is usually used where the breach of duty was ongoing or when the gain is hard to identify. The idea of an account of profits is that the fiduciary profited unconscionably by virtue of the fiduciary position, so any profit made should be transferred to the principal. It may sound like a constructive trust at first, but it is not. An account of profits is the appropriate remedy when, for example, a senior employee has taken advantage of his fiduciary position by conducting his own company on the side and has run up quite a lot of profits over a period of time, profits which he wouldn't have been able to make otherwise.
The film was retitled as Holiday in Spain and re- released, but without the odors, by Cinerama, which needed new product for its specially equipped theaters. The film was converted into three-strip prints that could be exhibited on the very wide, deeply curved screens in the special theaters. However, having been converted from Smell-O-Vision, as The Daily Telegraph described it, "... the film acquired a baffling, almost surreal quality, since there was no reason why, for example, a loaf of bread should be lifted from the oven and thrust into the camera for what seemed to be an unconscionably long time." Scent of Mystery was aired once on television by MTV and syndicated on local TV stations in the 1980s.
Similar environmental concerns have been raised for wind turbines on Otago's mountain ranges. The Alcoholic Liquor Advisory Council (ALAC)) was formed in 1976. Beer went on sale in supermarkets in 1999, and the drinking age was lowered from 20 to 18. Ngāi Tahu's claim from the late 1840s was recognised by the Waitangi Tribunal in 1991 and negotiations between the Crown and Ngāi Tahu followed that same year in response. The Tribunal stated that they "cannot avoid the conclusion that in acquiring from Ngāi Tahu 34.5 million acres, more than half the land mass of New Zealand, for £14,750 pounds, and leaving them with only 35,757 acres, the Crown acted unconscionably and in repeated breach of the Treaty of Waitangi".
In May 2012, California's prison system faced a lawsuit from the Center for Constitutional Rights, Legal Services for inmates with Children, and other California attorneys on behalf of ten men incarcerated in the SHU. The plaintiffs were all housed in the SHU for 11 to 22 years, some having been transferred directly from other SHUs. The suit claims that the inmates "have been incarcerated California’s Pelican Bay State Prison's Security Housing Unit ("SHU") for an unconscionably long period of time without meaningful review of their placement", that "California's uniquely harsh regime of prolonged solitary confinement at Pelican Bay is inhumane and debilitating", and that "[t]he solitary confinement regime at Pelican Bay violates the United States Constitution's requirement of due process and prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment". In August, 2015, as a result of the aforementioned class-action lawsuit, California agreed to end its unlimited isolation policy.
" Harrison's Reports agreed, calling the film "a quality production" but "extremely slow-moving, and the morals and manners of the period, as presented, may prove much too stately for today's mass audiences." Richard L. Coe of The Washington Post declared the film "an excellent remake of an old favorite" with a "chilling, memorable performance" by Gielgud. A generally positive review in The New Yorker by John McCarten called the script a "fair and literate adaptation" of the play and Mr. Barrett "an impressive figure" as played by Gielgud, "but I'm afraid I can't say as much for Jennifer Jones, who plays the invalid Elizabeth as if she'd just completed a lively hay ride, or for Bill Travers, whose Browning is unconscionably ebullient." The Monthly Film Bulletin remarked that the decision to remake the film seemed "rather odd," given that to modern viewers it "must appear a little tame and lacking in spirit.
Racine referred to Trump's actions as that of a "tyrannical president", saying: "The entire country watched as Donald Trump ordered federal law enforcement and military police to assault peaceful protesters and clergy exercising their constitutional rights—unconscionably, for a photo opportunity." Hours after police were used to clear Lafayette Square, neighboring Arlington County ordered its officers in D.C. (where they were supplied as part of a mutual aid agreement) to immediately withdraw; all Arlington County Police Department had left D.C. by 8:30p.m. Arlington County Board Chair Libby Garvey said she was "appalled" that the agreement was abused "for a photo op". In a statement the next day, the Board said "This unprecedented decision by the County was a necessary response to an unprecedented situation" and said its action was to ensure its officers were "never again put in a situation where they are asked to take action that is inconsistent with our values".
Rabbi Jonathan Skolnick was the associate principal of Judaic Studies, until he was arrested by the FBI in September of 2019 for the production of child pornography, on charges of "charges of child enticement; production, receipt, and possession of child pornography; and sending extortionate communications" with the students of SAR. US Attorney Geoffrey Berman of the Department of Justice wrote: > “As an associate principal of a Bronx private school, one of Jonathan > Skolnick’s primary responsibilities was the well-being and education of > students. Instead, Skolnick allegedly preyed on his underage victims in a > heinous plot to fool them into sending him nude photos of themselves. > Skolnick allegedly falsely identified himself as several different teenage > girls – and when his victims refused to continue to send more photos, he > unconscionably threatened to publicly release the ones they had already > sent. This arrest exemplifies law enforcement’s ability to detect those > attempting to use the ‘anonymity’ of the internet to prey on young > children.” The current FBI investigation has revealed some evidence that Skolnick had a known pattern of such behavior prior to his appointment at SAR.

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