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"disparage" Definitions
  1. disparage somebody/something to suggest that somebody/something is not important or valuable

648 Sentences With "disparage"

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

And not to disparage that sport, but the concussion studies ... You can just disparage it, it's fine.
" More highlights from Schiff: "I think part of what the President is trying to do is disparage the Congressional investigations, disparage Bob Mueller, disparage all of you in the free press, so no matter what is produced, he can say it's a fake.
They reviewed the tape containing the questionable statement and found that Naomi Judd did not, in fact, disparage people of color—but she does indeed disparage grits.
I used to disparage goji berries as raisins with pretensions.
His supporters admire his determination; his enemies disparage his stubbornness.
Julie embraces the Travelers while her countrymen openly disparage them.
The intention here is not to disparage Bellator's middleweight fighters.
Smith chose to jokingly disparage Lamar for a having a disease.
Nobody's trying to disparage anybody in the cast of Friends here.
He also agreed he will not disparage, slander or libel Byrd.
He tells them they can't disparage the city they don't love.
This isn't to disparage Evans — he's a proper all-American celebrity.
This is not meant to disparage your efforts—you're doing great!
" The campaign worker also agrees not to disparage or demean "Mr.
But what the label says matters – it must inform, not disparage.
The team also claims that the term "disparage" is unconstitutionally vague.
Since its origination, "e-girl" has been used to disparage women.
She used confidential information to disparage his current and former employees.
They are, for instance, quick to disparage the China trade deal.
I suppose they disparage Muslims over well-done burgers and Coke.
"; we disparage and deport those Appiah calls "the confessors of ambivalence.
This sports documentary series focuses on something many would disparage: losing.
I don&apost mean to disparage her when I call her Pocahontas.
In their first attempt they had changed the wording to disparage China.
The Organic Trade Association's marketing campaigns disparage conventional methods for growing food.
That's not to say that the book is to disparage the state.
To say so is not to undermine or disparage Pressley's significant achievement.
And Trump himself has taken to Twitter to disparage the FCC's policy.
His remarks disparage the experience of racial minorities and women in America.
But the Democrats are doing everything possible to disparage what we do.
I'm not trying to disparage anybody in the cast of Friends here.
I would never use that kind of language ... to disparage a minority.
The point here isn't to disparage any of these dedicated public servants.
If they fall where they fall, I can't disparage them for that.
By bashing her, they also get to disparage the current field of Democrats.
I am not looking to disparage Matt or give him a bad name.
In any event, the band said, it did not mean to disparage anyone.
He said that unlike some people his age, he doesn't disparage today's music.
"It's all sound bites," he said at one point, meaning to disparage Mrs.
"I don't mean to say anything to disparage Marco," Mr. Kasich told reporters.
Escapism is actually not something we should disparage; it's something we can celebrate.
Asked about Rivian's rivalry with Tesla, Mr. Scaringe would not disparage the competition.
Amazon confirmed it won&apost allow employees to &apospublicly disparage&apos the company.
They tend to disparage regulators, while I view these officials as unsung heroes.
Giuliani most likely resurrected it as a tool to disparage Mueller's resulting report.
Though rebukes are rare, some Republicans do speak out against politicians who disparage Islam.
You may disparage this practice as a cheap bribe, grease or even hush money.
I'm not trying disparage what Cities: Skylines was already doing in the transit arena.
Officials in Myanmar have used it to disparage international coverage of the Rohingya crisis.
These days, when politics looms large, it's easy to disparage all else as trivial.
In thousands of messages, Strzok and Page disparage the president and other political figures.
But the president continued to disparage the refugee deal, calling it "embarrassing" for him.
You may find these are not happy prophecies, but please don't disparage the messenger.
Nick did not verbally assault, taunt, mock, harass, disparage or threaten Phillips in any way.
In the messages, Strzok and Page disparage Trump in messages sent on government issued cellphones.
On the flight back, he once again turned to Twitter to disparage a Democratic rival.
Supporters continue to cheer on their candidate and disparage the other, according to the data.
So did Trump disparage Comey's handling of the Russia investigation to Sessions before the firing?
How do you win at the national level by just trying to disparage federal employees?
CollegeAmerica regarded the emails as a breach of Potts' promise not to disparage the school.
I don't want to disparage each of their individual skills, because they are all different.
But I also don't disparage abortions as some societal or personal failure to a woman.
" Issler went on to disparage Zarrabi and her comments, saying Zarrabi was "not mentally healthy.
Our new energy policies should encourage and celebrate – not disparage – American energy production at home.
We constantly judge and disparage other people's bodies, both in and out of gender contexts.
These same Russian bots are promoting Fox News links that disparage the Russia investigation. 12.
Both agreed they wouldn't disparage each other in front of their kids or on RHOC.
Beverly didn't disparage Delta, nor did she ask me to do anything about her situation.
In the current economic environment, they expect even less from Moscow, and disparage it more.
They disparage challengers of traditional hierarchy, including women, racial and ethnic minorities, and LGBTQ people.
As part of Ms. Huddy's confidential agreement with 21st Century Fox, she agreed not to "disparage, malign or defame" the parties; the company, on its behalf and on the behalf of Mr. O'Reilly and Mr. Abernethy, agreed not to "disparage, malign or defame" Ms. Huddy.
His main source of income is from comics, so he's not one to disparage them entirely.
He responded by referencing a meme used to disparage Syrian refugees and other groups of people.
They tended to support Bernie Sanders, disparage Hillary Clinton, and their activities spiked on Oct 6.
His aim, he said, was not to disparage Chinese martial arts, but to expose deceitful practitioners.
It's the mirror image of the rhetoric he's used to disparage unauthorized immigrants throughout his campaign.
Trump expressed disappointment that women from Fox News have come forward to disparage their former CEO.
BUSH: ... So, you know... (BELL RINGING) BUSH: ... This is the standard operating procedure, to disparage me.
He just entered into a case where he promised not to disparage her and now this.
He just entered into a case where he promised not to disparage her, and now this.
Alternatively, Italian pioneers in Virginia used their word for aubergine to disparage the Melungeons' skin colour.
His foes have failed to condemn the candidate's rhetoric without also seeming to disparage his supporters.
To the extent that Mr. Trump mentions the bloc at all, he tends to disparage it.
He stuck to the plainspoken approach that serves him well electorally, even as pundits disparage it.
By now it's not news that Trump likes to promote Fox News and disparage its rivals.
Nor did he disparage the space into which Apple competitors Google and Samsung are plowing resources.
Those same CVS workers are also trained not to disparage doctors whose prescriptions they refuse to fill.
There's no room in our hearts to disparage anyone for their childhood crushes or current-day fantasies.
Kim's quest reveals why you must own all of you, even and especially the parts others disparage.
The ruling recites a litany of tweets since Mr Trump took office that disparage Muslims and Islam.
Some critics have been quick to disparage real efforts to create digital voting with strictly theoretical worries.
Critics have derided Allred as media-obsessed, in an effort to disparage her work along political lines.
I'm not going to let them disparage me, embarrass me personally and professionally and not defend myself….
At first, he kept quiet, in line with an agreement he signed to not disparage his employer.
And that doesn't disparage her early work because it's fantastic, but it is incredibly produced – there's product.
"Real religion's a sham," she cries, going on to disparage each and every one of the congregation.
Republicans disparage the impeachment inquiry run by majority Democrats in the House as a bogus partisan show.
Mr. Huang began writing during high school as a reaction to hearing other students disparage hip-hop.
This was made up by the Washington Post only in order to demean and disparage - FAKE NEWS!
In interview after interview, she uses her official capacity to disparage announced candidates, which is not allowed.
Teachers must not disparage community speech, but they must teach standard English, the language of the marketplace.
Another possibility is that Trump will leave the data alone but continue to disregard or disparage it.
They&aposre going to play dirty, they&aposre going to do everything they can to disparage the person.
An Idaho neo-Nazi is robocalling Florida residents to disparage a black candidate for governor using racist stereotypes.
I was never a part of any campaign to disparage or dislodge her, and I regretted her departure.
These false allegations are part of a smear campaign to disparage me during a divorce and custody battle.
Mike Pence isn't covered by the nondisclosure agreement, so volunteers are free to disparage him all they want.
And yet, they disparage people on the base of class and we are reaping the whirlwind of that.
What we disparage as cheap and pandering in Beats headphones is actually the thing that makes them appealing.
Dark money groups disparage the records and reputations of respected judges who don't march lockstep with their agendas.
I don't want to disparage all fried trout, of course, so I'll blame the chef, not the preparation.
Certain sources, such as Wikipedia, say it's pejorative, and it's not my goal to disparage or hurt anyone.
Mr. Trump said on Fox he was right to disparage the former Miss Universe because of her weight.
Will The Times only recommend items that can be bought through affiliate sites and disparage those that can't?
Trump went on to disparage Kelly's tenure after the former general publicly criticized the president's policies and demeanor.
He says he does not mean to disparage those who do, but he has a lousy poker face.
They even disparage legal immigration, ignoring the fact that nearly all Americans are immigrants or descendants of immigrants.
He knows that stars dominate the industry, but has not been the least bit reluctant to disparage them.
As the movement against Mashrou' Leila picked up steam, detractors highlighted Sinno's sexuality to disparage the band further.
A handful of Republicans — more than Mr. McConnell can afford to lose — were quick to disparage the measure.
He continues to disparage the NBA, saying that he hopes they see the video and they fine him.
Democrats took every opportunity to disparage Kavanaugh about things that had little to do with the alleged assault.
"The last thing I would want to do is disparage him (Bryant) at this particular time," she added.
During the House's impeachment inquiry, Mr. Trump used Twitter to disparage witnesses as they were testifying against him.
LeGarie and Hall are careful not to disparage their competition — the much smaller summer leagues in Orlando, Fla.
From childhood, we are conditioned to think of age as something to fear, avoid, and, at times, disparage.
NTV is known for pseudo-documentaries that disparage opposition figures and hint at all manner of foreign conspiracies.
The frequent criticism of Trump from mayors -- including Landrieu -- focuses on the President's efforts to disparage American cities.
But after the meeting, Trump apparently saw Rand Paul on Fox News disparage Abrams as a Never Trumper.
Trump took to Twitter to disparage the 193-member world body after the United States abstained in a Dec.
"You have no clue what a NYPD officer does yet target us and disparage our integrity," the SBA said.
Trump used a portion of his interview to disparage the organization, saying he might have to rethink his membership.
You cant fix society and its endless need to diminish, disparage, or degrade that which they know is good.
These vile efforts to degrade and disparage others are contrary to the highest ideals of our state and country.
Simmons and the intended target "consider themselves rappers and used social media to disparage the other," Dallas police allege.
The world is short enough of occasions for joy that to disparage such a blameless one may seem harsh.
That case involved a law blocking federal trademarks for messages that may disparage people, institutions, beliefs or national symbols.
Beyond that, McQueary -- "out of respect" -- did not want to needlessly disparage the deceased Paterno, the third source said.
Did you know there's a coordinated network of special interests waging a campaign to disparage manufacturers in the US?
Jack doesn't design custom cakes that celebrate divorce, disparage LGBT individuals, celebrate Halloween, or contain sexual images or messages.
KlearGear, a federal lawsuit in which KlearGear, an e-commerce site, stipulated that customers may not disparage it online.
We'll start to take these things for granted, and disparage these forms of AI for not being perfectly human.
"They're our guys, we can disparage them all we want to, and talk about their shooting is" Casey said.
The American dream was never a perfect vision, insofar as it tended to exclude minorities and disparage the poor.
"A lot of companies will tell you that you can't disparage the company or its employees," Ms. Grossman said.
If the killer is a Muslim, he's a terrorist, execute him, close the borders and disparage the justice system.
On Twitter and in speeches, Mr. Trump has frequently seemed to find ways to disparage his West Coast target.
"The ad was not meant to disparage Hindu customs or traditions in any way," said the chairman, Jacey Jetton.
Those who cynically and cruelly dismiss, disparage and spread disinformation about these young leaders are the poorer for it.
But because he has those physical attributes, some people try to discount or disparage his desire, and it's unfortunate.
Mr. Trump and his senior aides routinely disparage individual reporters and entire news organizations for coverage they deem unfavorable.
As it stands, however, those who disparage the VA for publishing this information could deter women from seeking support.
The Republican memo's attempt to disparage the intelligence agencies by highlighting their use of the Steele dossier is disingenuous.
Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg admitted that she received emails about the PR firm Facebook hired to disparage its critics.
Wednesday's comment was not the first time the president appeared to disparage Soros in the wake of the attempted bombing.
It's tragic and untimely and the last thing I would want to do is disparage him at this particular time.
The impetus to disparage the new is strong in us – our minds our conservative while our hearts are all-encompassing.
He claims Jenni throws that fact in his face, threatening to edit the footage and using it to disparage him.
The term "bunny boiler" has been used to disparage women who appear to be clingy or emotionally unstable ever since.
For example, in the election, a lot of it was to disparage Hillary [Clinton] and to build up Donald Trump.
When Mr. Seabrook took the stage — often to disparage those previous speakers to their faces — they were on their feet.
She has faced criticism, in part, because of her husband's frequent use of Twitter to disparage and insult his critics.
If the label was meant to disparage, Ms. Williamson said women shrugged and turned it into a badge of honor.
Susan Lontine, a Democratic state representative in Colorado, knows well how some use the term "illegal alien" to disparage migrants.
Elected officials who have an obligation to lead instead now often dismiss or disparage scientists with whose conclusions they disagree.
The notion that because you live the American dream and get lucky and that is something to disparage is puzzling.
The Democrats need to sell why our platform is best, and not try to disparage those who disagree with it.
Last year, Trump took to Twitter to disparage the 193-member world body after the United States abstained in a Dec.
But how long can Trump continue to alienate and disparage various groups without harming his own brand and broader business deals?
Tam unanimously struck down another law allowing the USPTO to reject registration for marks that "disparage" individuals and groups of people.
Since then, even more memes and photoshops are cropping up to try to disparage and troll student leaders of the movement.
It's a case of 'I believe my idol is perfect, so who do you think you are to disparage my belief?
Worse, in its evasion, Facebook hired toxic political operators that sought to mislead the public and disparage critics of the company.
In some cases this trait has shown itself in mere words, as he has attempted to humiliate, disparage and marginalize others.
You can&apost disparage them and the president they voted for every day and then expect gratitude and cordiality in return.
Some of the ads disparage Hillary Clinton and Bill Clinton, or promote divisive trends like anti-muslim or anti-immigration sentiment.
The Slants rock band, whose members are Asian-American, chose the name specifically to reclaim a term used to disparage Asians.
Or for a private citizen to set up a web of blogs and posts that promote particular candidates or disparage others?
Although the nation has become effectively desensitized to Trump's bullying, it was still jarring to hear him disparage some undocumented immigrants.
There has been a tendency, which I've shared, to disparage the late work as a slackening of the artist's halcyon intensity.
Her campaign has been marred by missteps, such as when she appeared to disparage American Indians by making a whooping noise.
Tam, No. 43-1293, which asks whether the government may deny federal protection to a trademark said to disparage Asian-Americans.
" Smith, though, said that his personal beliefs don't make it inside the classroom and he doesn't "disparage any child's personal faith.
But this isn't "maternal gatekeeping," the theory that men want to help but women disparage their capabilities and push them out.
Prosecutors say the propaganda operation was designed to help support President Donald Trump's 2016 campaign and disparage Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.
Trump and people like him then disparage contemporary activists, as Trump has repeatedly done to Black Lives Matter and protesting athletes.
But Wilson did not disparage the Education secretary and said that she should not be "diminished or dismissed" for her remark.
And we took a look at "le booing," a cherished tradition at the festival, sometimes not meant to disparage a film.
While working as a coder, if she expressed ignorance of any concept, no matter how trivial, male colleagues would disparage her.
It was clear the Russians wanted to try and discredit our election process and wanted to try and disparage Hillary Clinton.
Do not disparage the tools we have created as a show of intellectual bravado, then claim our success as your own.
Double D: Putin wants to deny and disparage Russian attacks on the US In your meeting, Putin will likely want to pre-emptively raise Russia's ongoing cyber and information warfare attacks on the United States and make them a priority agenda item so he can deny involvement and disparage others -- especially Democrats -- for making them a bilateral irritant.
The core of any e-reader experience is the screen Now, that isn't to disparage the screen, which I'm sure is lovely.
The tribunal relied on a provision of the 1946 Lanham Act that prevents the registration of marks that may disparage certain people.
Few appeared eager to discuss the ideas of Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee, except to disparage the now-defunct Trump University.
And Oklahomans are proud to be called Okies, a term coined by Californians to disparage people who were fleeing the Dust Bowl.
"Unlike some of the other moderators — I'm not going to disparage them — but I have a different approach," he said in 2013.
It is one thing to disparage law enforcement in your thoughts and speech after an instance of police violence makes the news.
You don't disparage generals, gold star families, prisoners of war and other heroes who had the courage to fight for this country.
On Friday, Trump used his personal Twitter account to disparage the former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine, Marie Yovanovitch, while she was testifying.
"Stories like these attempt to make insinuating connections that do not exist to disparage the financial institutions and companies involved," she said.
Beyond the circumstances of the alleged sexual relationship, the agreement barred her from doing anything, even indirectly, to "publicly disparage" Mr. Trump.
Instead, he would use what would likely be a party-line vote to further disparage the inquiry as a partisan hit job.
All while taking to Twitter to attack, yet again, a female TV host, whine about CNN, and disparage the New York Times.
When Murray and others offer misleading assertions about choice, they disparage places like Detroit Merit Charter Academy and Northridge Academy in Flint.
Trump and his backers, who attack, smear and disparage, testing defensive theories and strategies that range from wild conspiracies to outright lies.
While Champagne snobs who confuse scarcity with quality love to disparage Dom Pérignon, it's an astoundingly great wine despite the quantity made.
"Unlike some of the other moderators -- I'm not going to disparage them -- but I have a different approach," he said in 2013.
The indictments released Friday allege, in part, that the Russians sought to disparage Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and help Trump win.
She doesn't disparage the moderate position, as Sanders would a few moments later, but she makes a pocketbook case for ambitious reform.
Mr. Clapper largely repeated the conclusions of last week's report, including that the goal of the Russian effort was to disparage Mrs.
He's even gone so far as to publicly disparage the US law enforcement and intelligence agencies and deride their analysis as wrong.
I had a GREAT meeting with Putin and the Fake News used every bit of their energy to try and disparage it.
" The statement continued: "The efforts being made to disparage our business and negatively impact its hardworking employees is both disturbing and uncalled for.
But the Bannonites essentially use the term to disparage anyone in politics who's less hardline on immigration restrictionism and protectionism than they are.
" He said he was sorry to see Yovanovitch pulled from her post and distanced himself from "any campaign to disparage or dislodge her.
" He went on to say, "These false allegations are part of a smear campaign to disparage me during a divorce and custody battle.
They did not want to disparage Mr Kosslick's work, but demand a voice in the appointment of his successor to avoid political wrangling.
It was believed to be done through the use of campaign hacking, dissemination of propaganda, and social media use to disparage Clinton's campaign.
If the stereotypical F is a G, by disparaging F's, perhaps one can disparage, or at least appeal to audiences who dislike, G's.
" Bernie Sanders On Trump: "I hate to say this, because I hate to disparage public officials, but Donald Trump is a pathological liar.
Washington (CNN)The Supreme Court struck down part of a federal law that denies trademark protection of terms that disparage living or dead.
"I hesitate to say this because I really don't like to disparage public officials, but Donald Trump is a pathological liar," Sanders said.
Quinn, of course, said it didn't mean to disparage class counsel but only to highlight the strength of the case against forex defendants.
This video is different from the slowed and distorted "drunk" one, but it serves the same purpose, by attempting to disparage Speaker Pelosi.
"Those who want a Muslim ban, those who will disparage individuals or groups — yes, we ought to, we need to," Mr. Flake said.
" It reads, "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.
It was actually part of the tradition to disparage the turkey and the cranberry sauce which was extruded from the can and sliced.
We tend to disparage comfort food, but the fact is that food can sometimes be comforting — and comfort is a legitimate need, too.
The company also said it was expanding its policies on "dehumanizing speech" to include tweets that disparage those who have contracted the coronavirus.
She has had the harder task of trying not to disparage a fellow progressive while still making a strong enough case for herself.
"That negative thing often ends up being an association with categories of identity we disparage and marginalize in society," according to Dr. Schalk.
But two other people briefed on the matter said in interviews that Mr. Orban used the opportunity to disparage Ukraine with the president.
"  Fake News CNN and NBC are going out of their way to disparage our great First Responders as a way to "get Trump.
According to police, Simmons traveled to Roseland Townhomes to confront a rival rapper after the pair had used social media to disparage each other.
We're not ones to disparage our darling avocados, but getting out the pits can be difficult and something we would love to live without.
Bush, Sr. was reportedly affable and diplomatic; he certainly did not use dehumanizing language in 280 characters to disparage his enemies while in office.
This following would rage at you if you dared disparage the tablet and lived inside its own little death cult of forums and websites.
"I don't want to disparage them because I think that they do just express the values that our cultures tend to have," Jones said.
"I had a GREAT meeting with Putin and the Fake News used every bit of their energy to try and disparage it," he said.
However, he may have made matters worse for himself when he continued to disparage a Miss Universe pageant winner, Alicia Machado, for gaining weight.
Butler told me that he felt pressure from Darren not to disparage Katya, but that he also felt an imperative to tell the truth.
Since 9/11, Billy Ed has become more and more Islamaphobic and, since America elected Donald Trump, he's felt even freer to disparage immigrants.
The police have continued to arrest critics without warrants and have detained citizens who disparage her government in Facebook posts or in media interviews.
Mr. Trump has said he has no plans to fire Mr. Mueller, but he and his allies have repeatedly tried to disparage his investigation.
My purpose for writing this article was not to complain about stress, or disparage the opportunities that I have been fortunate enough to receive.
And America's allies celebrate the generosity of their social welfare systems and disparage ours, while spending less than America does to defend their countries.
Ben Terris at the Washington Post in 2018 profiled their relationship, including one instance where Kellyanne Conway attempted, on background, to disparage her husband.
The Washington Post was quick to disparage Navarro's report, asking whether such social ills necessarily result from poor trade deals and lost manufacturing jobs.
"I try not to disparage people who I&aposve never met and know next to nothing about, but that&aposs me," Lorance told Insider.
Glenn Greenwald even said that "Bernie Bro" might be a term made up by Clinton to disparage the cause Sanders is trying to advance.
Others advocate for "punching up" versus "punching down," or taking care not to disparage groups of people who are traditionally less privileged than themselves.
But the indictment also determined that by 2016 the effort had evolved into a deliberate attempt to support Mr. Trump and disparage Mrs. Clinton.
Political leaders in France and Germany now treat the union as essentially an inter-governmental organisation and openly disparage the European Commission and European Parliament.
Reuters reports that Falwell has been known to disparage students at Liberty University, referring to them as "physically retarded" and "social misfits" in leaked emails.
British papers that disparage the "unelected" Michel Barnier, the EU's lead Brexit negotiator, would struggle to find a country that has an elected trade representative.
McKinsey says the accusations are "baseless and anti-competitive", and an attempt to disparage the firm; it also denies having promised to exit the business.
Ricardo Rosselló and his inner circle make light of the casualties caused by Hurricane Maria and disparage political opponents using vulgar, homophobic, and sexist language.
Rex Tillerson, America's secretary of state, tried to improve relations with Africa, two months after Donald Trump reportedly used foul language to disparage African countries.
The provision in the law prohibited the PTO from registering trademarks that may disparage or bring into contempt or disrepute any persons, living or dead.
" Finaldi added, "It is sad that she had chosen to disparage a victim of child sexual assault and his family in order to do so.
The intention here is not to disparage Rogan's character, but he is the UFC's carnival barker, and so we must take what he says lightly.
We still disparage the outsider, we still rant against invisible enemies, and we still keep our friends close and fear what lies beyond our door.
Rather than contemplate this possibility and grapple with it, Mr. Erickson, Mr. Gerson and others simply disparage and deny it — while also condemning political tribalism.
I remember hearing a male theater director, years ago, disparage her in glaringly misogynistic language — a tipoff that his judgment reflected him more than her.
"You can't disparage socialism in this primary and come back six months from now and ask us to vote-blue-no-matter-who," he said.
"Fake News CNN and NBC are going out of their way to disparage our great First Responders as a way to 'get Trump,'" he wrote.
The airlines disparage this as "no-shows," but in fact these are bona fide needs to revise travel times, usually hours or days in advance.
But when users—engineers and data scientists, almost all of them men—encountered problems, they would level accusations and disparage the company on social media.
Julie Roginsky, a current Fox News contributor, above left, said she faced retaliation for rebuffing his sexual advances and for refusing to disparage another accuser.
Make no mistake, one of the main Russian goals in its 2016 attack against our elections was to elect Donald Trump and disparage Hillary Clinton.
The Justice Department alleges the defendants shared information and organized political activities to sow discord, support Trump's campaign and disparage his 2016 rival Hillary Clinton.
The fourth page of the 85033-page indictment accuses the charged individuals and organizations of carrying out efforts to promote Trump's campaign and "disparage" Clinton.
Justin Bieber has had it with fans clinging on to his past relationship with Selena Gomez, and using that to disparage his marriage to Hailey Baldwin.
The 36-year-old social media star, of all people, has reason to disparage 2016, because, if you'll recall, she was robbed at gunpoint in October.
" Kaling replied that she thinks "it would be more cowardly to be his friend and not come to his defense when people disparage him in public.
Weiss, of Carnegie, noted that the IRA was originally established to disparage the Kremlin's internal enemies but has also been used to trash Prigozhin's business rivals.
The account puts further emphasis on the argument that administration officials were using their positions to pressure a foreign government to disparage a domestic political opponent.
Not to disparage working-class gratitude, but the image in that context-free tweet was from a piece of satire on some comedy site called Aboveaverage.com.
But his jurisprudence puts a premium on the value of human dignity and takes strong issue with government acts that disparage people based on their identity.
For most people, the stereotypical welfare recipient is black, and so politicians can disparage black people, or appeal to anti-black racists, by disparaging welfare recipients.
" When Trump declared that Bush was the weakest candidate on immigration, Bush responded: "If you want to talk about weakness, it s weak to disparage women.
"However, his statements and actions since that service disparage thousands of men and women who have also served the Army admirably and honorably," the officers continued.
Here are three specific examples of what teams can't do on social media anymore, per MacMahon: Disparage, belittle or embarrass an individual opponent or game official.
Agency lawyers would be unlikely to approve any proposed or final rule that OIRA might disparage (or already did), fearing legal challenges from the rule's opponents.
" She called McCain a "friend" and said she will "never disparage someone who has served our country and made a lot of sacrifices as a vet.
Ciccariello-Maher's critics also find it, we might say, impolite to disparage a soldier who is possibly about to sacrifice his life to serving his country.
Your friends may be too expensive for you if you're getting into credit card debt to spend time with them, or they disparage your material possessions.
" O'Brien distills the attraction of such insults, writing, "A woman with a good plane and a bold plan was impossible to ignore — and easy to disparage.
Later in the evening, Trump used much more severe terms to disparage Democrats for focusing too much on his impeachment to act on the coronavirus outbreak.
Nobody could miss the real-world parallels: Giants of industry in addition to being literal giants, the Jutuls take every opportunity to disparage Edda's greener residents.
James Lankford (R-Okla.) said there are questions remaining about Vindman's testimony including his alleged interactions with the whistleblower, but sees no reason to disparage him.
The vow of a vigorous investigation may be reassuring to some, but in Mr. Conaway's district, many dismiss it as an effort to disparage Mr. Trump.
No President or President-elect has ever before bypassed the media and spoken directly to large numbers of his followers to disparage individual citizens who criticize him.
Do we threaten and disparage those of other sizes who make reportedly unhealthy choices — who never exercise, imbibe socially, drink more than 400 milligrams of caffeine daily?
"I grew up in this chamber and in no way would I want to disparage anyone here," Chabert told fellow senators on Wednesday, according to the paper.
He added that he reached a settlement with Uber after his firing, and that he has agreed not to disparage the company in the press or public.
The Republican nominee for president spoke to USA Today columnist Kirsten Powers and expressed disappointment that women from Fox News have come forward to disparage Roger Ailes.
Will you continue to disparage a man in charge of a team that, like it or not, would be relegation contenders with Alex Ferguson at the helm?
It was notable, at a recent Economist conference in Addis, that virtually no businessman, Ethiopian or foreign, had the nerve to disparage any of the government's policies.
They agreed to take one counseling co-parenting class per month together, and said they wouldn't disparage each other in front of their kids or on RHOC.
"Fake News CNN and NBC are going out of their way to disparage our great First Responders as a way to 'get Trump,'" he tweeted in one.
" The indictment also alleges that the Russians staged political rallies and posed as U.S. grass-roots entities to encourage "real U.S. persons to promote or disparage candidates.
And how, in the face of clear evidence of domestic violence, can the president of the United States defend a wife beater and disparage the women accusers?
It will be de rigueur to question an opponent's motives before his arguments, to sneer at experts, prefer volume to accuracy and disparage concession, compromise and moderation.
I am appalled that Donald Trump would disparage them and that he had the gall to compare his own sacrifices to those of a Gold Star family.
The money would be used to fund research into carbon emission reduction technologies, a plan that environmental groups and experts disparage and that puzzles some political analysts.
Early in his coaching career, Straub said, he heard a rival coach disparage the Huskers by saying that they weren't that good — they just don't miss spares.
"Unlike some of the other moderators — I'm not going to disparage them — but I have a different approach," he said in a 85033 interview with The Hill.
"For example, in colleges there have been incidents when male students would secretly take pictures of female students or disparage women sexually in group chats," Park said.
Much was said during the event to disparage Mr. de Blasio, who, according to all who spoke, has put New York on a potholed road to ruin.
He attacked Novak at the Davis Cup in Geneva (in 2006), he realized that he was his successor and was trying to disparage him in every way.
This is part of the Art of the Scam: Denigrate and disparage the country now so that he, and he alone, can take credit for transforming it.
When Madeleine Albright and Gloria Steinem seemed to disparage young women for supporting Sanders, and not the woman in the race, they did no one any good.
The Trump-supporting small-business man in Louisiana who silently clenches his fists in rage as guests at a dinner party disparage his whole way of life.
After Trump won, he continued to disparage the idea that Russia may have tried to help him out, claiming to disbelieve the consensus judgment of US intelligence agencies.
"There are voices out there that disparage our diversity -- that question whether America should welcome people of all races, religions, and creeds," she said at Florida International University.
Trump frequently touts his connections to and advocacy for retired service members, but he seemed to disparage some prisoners of war when he suggested last year that Sen.
However, she doesn't begin the campaign with a fully unified Democratic Party, as many Bernie Sanders supporters routinely disparage Clinton as a war-mongering tool of Wall Street.
At the very he is not permitted to bother you for more money, disparage you or sue -- so long as you comply with your obligations in the agreement.
Some of Dingell's earlier Twitter home runs include a post about Sharknado, excellent usage of the hashtag and term "YOLO," and taking an internet meme to disparage himself.
But the line gives Republicans yet another way to disparage Clinton's handling of Benghazi, a terrorist attack that has been an albatross hanging around Clinton's neck since 2012.
"This Committee has repeatedly interviewed witnesses in secret, only to selectively leak from the interviews to disparage those witnesses and promulgate a patently false narrative," the lawyers wrote.
That latter category includes allowing unnamed government officials to use the press as a megaphone, to float politically sensitive trial balloons, or to disparage their enemies without accountability.
As the years went by, Keane's relationship with manager Alex Ferguson soured; today they do not speak, except to disparage each other in the press or in autobiography.
Cecilia Muñoz, a longtime immigrant rights advocate who served as Mr. Obama's domestic policy adviser, argues that the left should embrace talk of good immigrants, not disparage it.
Those who seek to disparage her by cherry-picking three or four supposedly damning aspects of her candidacy are looking for easy excuses and hiding their gender bias.
But when we disparage our reality TV viewing habits, for example, we typically aren't describing a behavior we hope to change, nor are we saying we're terrible people.
"In making the leap to disparage news media generally — without specifics — Sinclair has diminished trust in the news media overall," the letter obtained by the Poynter Institute reads.
Trump on Wednesday decried the furor over the call as the "single greatest witch hunt in American history," a descriptor he regularly used to disparage the Mueller probe.
" The letter claims the "Committee has repeatedly interviewed witnesses in secret, only to selectively leak from the interviews to disparage those witnesses and promulgate a patently false narrative.
That would free up his forces to go on the offensive against the insurgents, Jubbouri said in a statement, dismissing what he described as efforts to disparage the army.
Or maybe he's doing a bad imitation of his recent roadshow buddy Bernie Sanders, who certainly shouts a lot but doesn't typically disparage Republicans in such broad, boorish terms.
Or perhaps she accepts his definition of her worthlessness and his right to disparage her, so she's not even angry, just miserable because she believes in her own inferiority.
And it was disappointing to see him immediately head back out on the campaign trail, as he did on Saturday, to disparage his opponents and critics all over again.
They had to disparage Porzingis as an agitator, a maverick, as if the constant organizational turmoil throughout his time in New York had been nothing to be unhappy about.
Through it all, they tried to wave aside reports of a disintegrating relationship that had included the president's repeated use of tweets to publicly disparage Mr. McConnell's legislative leadership.
And yet, his organizational power-tripping aside, James has been everything Cleveland desperately wanted back after his 2010 departure prompted Dan Gilbert, the Cavaliers' owner, to publicly disparage him.
The case centered on an Asian-American band called the Slants that had lost its trademark protection, even though it said the name was not intended to disparage anyone.
In his follow-up apology Killer Mike encouraged the student activists to continue their work and said he was sorry his video had been used to disparage the march.
Op-Ed Contributor CHICAGO — Imagine that a senior government official takes to Twitter, makes a call to a national news outlet or goes on national television to disparage you.
Under Tribe's influencer guidelines, participating influencers are obligated not to "parody, disparage, give any adverse comment or make fun of" the brand they're employed by — in this case, Bloomberg.
While Henderson said she would not disparage purpose's effect on camaraderie, she added, "If you really want outperformance, the data strongly suggests you need it linked to the strategy."
"This is the first time we've seen her complain about Roy to Jim to disparage her relationship I'm pretty sure, and then it's 27 seconds of silence," Fischer recalled.
For nearly 50 years, opponents of public aid — which they dub "parochiaid" to disparage Catholic schooling — have wielded this amendment to thwart attempts at giving parents greater educational choice.
They are more likely to rudely call others out for not being virtuous enough, systematically disparage entire groups of people, and hijack important conversations to serve their own purposes.
She says she had been bothered by Mr. Klein's attempts since her allegation "to disparage me and manipulate public perception," but stopped short of asking him to step down.
Rubin agreed not to work for rivals or disparage Google publicly, the Times reports, and Google made his departure look amicable by issuing a public statement from founder Larry Page.
I think maybe, I don't want to disparage anyone, but I think maybe your own publication reported that you were being bought by Axel Springer and then that didn't happen.
In speeches across Kentucky, McConnell didn't disparage Trump and returned to Washington ready to work with a partner whose style was the antithesis of McConnell's say-less, focus-more approach.
"While I have received assurances from Tennis Australia that I will be nominated for the Olympic team, the AOC has chosen to publicly and privately disparage me," Kyrgios's statement continued.
"I look at her and other leadership on the Hill that continually disparage the Ford as a program, and I get a little upset," he said, referring to Democratic Rep.
They retaliated against the students who came forward, the plaintiffs said, and called a department meeting in October 2018, as the lawsuit was about to be filed, to disparage them.
He also discussed "fake news," a phrase that originally referred to intentionally false information but was co-opted by Trump during his presidential campaign to disparage the legitimate news media.
" It also states that the named individuals staged political rallies in the United States, and while posing as U.S. grassroots entities "compensated real U.S. persons to promote or disparage candidates.
But even if some in NFL management don't agree with Kaepernick's response, fans aren't making it easy for them to openly disparage the quarterback, because it's simply bad for business.
"She is in violation of her contract and continues to disparage the campaign with falsehoods, which, in addition to doing a terrible job, is why she was terminated weeks ago."
"There are voices out there that disparage our diversity -- that question whether America should welcome people of all races, religions, and creeds," Rice said during commencement remarks at Florida International University.
Now, the Moon gets blamed for a lot of things that it really has nothing to do with (births, werewolves, murderous rages), and we're not trying to disparage Earth's nearest neighbor.
We know it is hard, he loves people and that should be shown on national news, but they don&apost do that because they like to disrespect him and disparage him.
In the other case, the Washington Redskins organization has long trademarked its name and objected when the trademark office sought to cancel it because it was deemed to disparage Native Americans.
Trump and many of his fellow Republicans in Congress deny wrongdoing and disparage the probe as a partisan "witch hunt" seeking to overturn the real estate developer's surprise 2016 election victory.
But in letters and public statements, he repeatedly blamed airline unions and competitors, saying they tried to "demean and disparage our collective success," a charge he has renewed in recent weeks.
"Unwilling to pay fair value for Bumble, Match tried to poison Bumble in the investment market by filing bogus intellectual property claims to wrongfully disparage the Bumble platform," the lawsuit reads.
How effectively could Democrats disparage Trump as a political novice who got in over his head if they were backing another novice, no matter how much more serious-minded she was?
Matthew Boyle, Washington political editor of the right-wing website Breitbart, showed up to Union Pub to digitally disparage the crowd of "Washington elites" who had gathered to watch the hearing.
For those who disparage the trillions of dollars spent on safety-net programmes as a well-intentioned but quixotic endeavour, the case of Martin County would seem a clear cautionary tale.
"This has been a constant disinformation war amongst a legion of conservative media sites that has sought to disparage transgender people and to fear-monger about our health care," she said.
The bigger picture: We have reports of Trump using either vulgar or racist language to disparage immigration from predominantly black or Muslim countries in the Oval Office — in two separate instances.
Paradoxically, even as women's contributions to the war effort proved indispensable, an overwhelming number of their male counterparts did their absolute damnedest to discredit, disparage, and thwart women's progress at every turn.
U.S. intelligence agencies and Special Counsel Robert Mueller concluded that Russia interfered in the 2016 election using hacking and propaganda to boost Republican Trump's candidacy and disparage his Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton.
He didn't disparage the military or the United States and he went out of his way to say he respected the cadets and was not trying to make a statement about anything.
Trump has frequently sought to disparage Warren by calling her "Pocahontas," a reference to her claim that she is part Native American, citing "family stories" passed down through generations of her family.
He exhorted his colleagues at scientific conferences to embrace the theory, published review articles on Einstein's mysterious concept of curved space-time, and defended the work when critics tried to disparage it.
"While outside agitators disparage this office and falsely attack us, we have kept our head down and remained focused on ensuring secure, accessible, and fair elections for all voters," a spokesperson said.
Despite right-wing conspiracy theorists' attempts to disparage trans, Muslim, and immigrant communities by readily linking Aghdam's actions to these groups, her gender and religious identity remain irrelevant until evidence suggests otherwise.
But the fact that the president used a national tragedy to disparage the credibility of special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into whether the Trump campaign colluded with Russia is raising some eyebrows.
He helped disparage the idea, exemplified most vividly by Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal, that government had a legitimate, and often indispensable, role to play in advancing economic development and protecting the vulnerable.
What frustrates Guzman and Gramley is that Shadow's mistakes are being used to disparage the very concept of using mobile apps for elections, and InterKnowlogy's success in 2016 has largely been erased.
" In its statement, McKinsey called Mr. Alix's accusations "the latest attempt by Jay Alix and AlixPartners to harass and disparage McKinsey, using baseless and anti-competitive litigation, which courts have consistently rejected.
The President should have learned by now that when he acts based on prejudice and hate, when he invents false reasons to demean and disparage, we will challenge him at every turn.
There is often some implication of unscrupulousness in descriptions of female candidates as "ambitious" — an adjective that could apply to any person running for president but is rarely used to disparage men.
Mueller in February charged three Russian companies as part of a criminal and espionage conspiracy to tamper in the election to support Trump's presidential campaign and disparage his Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton.
What our argument is with the mayor of Dallas, he does not have the right to weigh in on this to disparage our church and to directly or indirectly influence the billboard company.
If I feel the urge to disparage Trump supporters as a group, I have to reconcile that urge with what I know about the Trump voters with whom I work, eat and pray.
In February he charged 13 Russians and three Russian companies as part of a criminal and espionage conspiracy to tamper in the election to support Trump and disparage his Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton.
Mueller in February charged three Russian companies as part of a criminal and espionage conspiracy to tamper in the election to support Republican President Donald Trump and disparage his Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton.
In the tech world, Nellie Bowles has suggested that executives and investors will disparage any story that paints them in an unflattering light as "clickbait" — something that plenty of TechCrunch writers have experienced.
And while the FDA might disparage that sort of hastiness, it's tough to blankly tell chronic pain patients with few options to suck it up and wait for a laminated seal of approval.
Jackson's family has attacked the film and the "Thriller" singer's estate last week filed a lawsuit against HBO saying the documentary breached a 53 agreement that the cable channel would not disparage him.
Democrats slam alleged politicization of Trump State Department after IG report MORE (D-Md.), who represents the city, and reflects a consistent effort from Trump to disparage large cities that are Democratic strongholds.
"The ad was not meant to disparage Hindu customs or traditions in any way," the chairman of the Fort Bend County Republican Party, Jacey Jetton, said in a statement to CNN on Thursday.
Saturday's headliner, Lil Wayne, was recently under fire for comments he made during a Nightline interview that appeared to disparage, or at least dismiss the need for organizing groups like Black Lives Matter.
What we found is that regardless of the type of group that you're talking about, you can feel fondly about your in-group but not necessarily want to disparage the relevant out-group.
As an adopted New Yorker, I felt stabbed by the word "elite," which has become a catchword by which conservatives dismiss and disparage everything that folks in this great city think and feel.
In it, Gillis and co-host Matt McCusker disparage Chinatown, Chinese people, and Chinese food, and Gillis can be seen and heard mocking Chinese accents and at one point using a racial slur.
To dodge homophobic epithets, which were more about being girlie than gay, we would retell dirty jokes we didn't understand, disparage girls we liked and feign more interest in sports than we felt.
" He said the network had "breached its agreement not to disparage Michael Jackson by producing and selling to the public a one-sided marathon of unvetted propaganda to shamelessly exploit an innocent man.
A U.S. indictment released on Friday said that a Russian propaganda arm oversaw a criminal and espionage conspiracy to tamper in the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign to support Donald Trump and disparage Hillary Clinton.
When Oracle chairman Larry Ellison announced his company's new autonomous database product at the Oracle OpenWorld conference keynote, he took several minutes to disparage AWS, one of his chief rivals in the cloud market.
Those who disparage offshore drilling — and are eager to ban it — ignore the fact that the U.S. Energy Information Administration expects the need for oil and gas to grow through 85033, and possibly beyond.
In the week since the event, social media chatter about the GEA spiked and tens of thousands of users shared pictures of men and women mingling at the show to disparage it as distasteful.
The U.S. indictments on Friday said a Russian propaganda arm oversaw a criminal and espionage conspiracy to interfere in the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign to support Donald Trump and disparage his rival, Hillary Clinton.
Agency head Thomas Haldenwang said Hoecke's faction was "a threat to the liberal democratic principles of Germany's constitution," citing its repeated downplaying of Nazi crimes, along with its efforts to disparage and disenfranchise minorities.
After Mr. Trump was revealed to have used a vulgarity to disparage several African nations, he dispatched Mr. Tillerson on a lengthy trip to the continent last week to make it up to them.
However, why did the critic repeatedly disparage her main fan base by race and age, citing her "naïfish white-girl brand" and "white-girl affectations" and grouping her into "small white women" singers, etc.?
It did a wonderful job of showing the marketplace that if you want to disparage us by questioning whether we can support a film like this monetarily, that excuse is now out the window.
His remarks to Zelensky obviously weren't tweets crafted to disparage Democrats or fire up his supporters, but are instead part of a private phone conversation that, one assumes, he never intended to make public.
Lewandowski featured prominently in the investigatory report by special counsel Robert Mueller, which reveals that Trump directed Lewandowski to direct then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions to publicly disparage the investigation -- though Lewandowski never did.
While the former officials urged the judge to explore the possibility of political interference in the lawsuit, they stressed that they are not trying to disparage career Justice Department officials involved in the case.
"While outside agitators disparage this office and falsely attack us, we have kept our head down and remained focused on ensuring secure, accessible, and fair elections for all voters," Kemp said in a statement.
Mr. Trump's fury at those investigating him stunned even those with fresh memories of his repeated attempts over the past year to disparage intelligence agencies, the State Department and other parts of his government.
In a letter addressed to Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg and copying CEO Mark Zuckerberg along with several Facebook investors and Washington politicians, Open Society Foundations President Patrick Gaspard denounced Facebook's alleged efforts to disparage Soros.
Trump and allies in the Republican Party and conservative media have sought to disparage Mueller, a 22018-year-old former U.S. Marine Corps officer, and paint the entire Russia investigation as illegitimate and politically motivated.
Twitter at last deemed Jones went too far after he tweeted a video of himself confronting a CNN reporter, calling him an equivalent of "the Hitler Youth" and using other disturbing imagery to disparage him.
Nelson Chamisa, head of the Movement for Democratic Change party, says that "there is a lot of false news making the rounds" and that supporters of President Emmerson Mnangagwa hired "foreigners" to disparage his candidacy.
" Rhodes' attorney, Andrew Stebbins, told Motherboard that Rhodes will not tolerate "malicious personal attacks from those who seek to discredit, disparage and otherwise injure him through false statements designed to assassinate his character and reputation.
Rapper Killer Mike said Sunday that his interview on NRATV, the broadcast arm of the National Rifle Association, was misused by the network to "disparage" the "March for Our Lives," which he said he supports.
For example, if a survey shows that students tend to disbelieve and disparage women who have been assaulted, this shared culture may enable perpetrators to continue offending against their peers with little risk of consequences.
But in its most toxic (and ubiquitous) regions, cyberspace is also a virulent hub for body-shaming trolls — the faceless commenters who'll snag any chance to disparage women of every possible shape, size, and color.
Under its agreement with Dr. Harwood, who resigned in February, the university promised not to disparage the professor or disclose the agreement's existence unless someone filed an open records request or obtained a court order.
LAWRENCE B. LAMEREGO PARK, QUEENS To the Editor: So we want to bar Mexicans as "rapists" and disparage Africans in vulgar terms, but welcome the leader of a murderous regime that manipulated our national election?
The NDA appears to have included a non-disparagement clause that forbade her to "demean or disparage publicly" the campaign, the president, his family members, their companies, and the products and services of those companies.
So today you have, per Breitbart, a ''Democrat-Media Complex'' whose principal aim is to disparage everything quintessentially American, by which he really means Americana — think Norman Rockwell archetypes and whatever social conventions they imply.
By lumping in donors to these causes protected under the donor privacy bill with what they claim to be a bad influence in politics, opponents disparage true and worthy beneficence done for purposes of conscience.
Trump lawyer Michael Cohen said he negotiated an agreement with Daniels in October 2016 in which he paid her $20183,000 and required she not disclose any details of the alleged affair or otherwise disparage Trump.
And like most people, we consider it unethical, cruel and clinically pointless to disparage or judge people whose disorders — severe mental illness, cancer — are largely or entirely impossible to modify by the sheer force of will.
Former Southern Charm star Thomas Ravenel is accusing Bravo of siccing its "agents," including Andy Cohen, on him to "disparage" him publicly as he fights to keep his two young children off the network's hit show.
These are habits I often indulge in–I drop a good amount of change on Healthade each week–so I don't mean to disparage them as occasional practices, nor do I claim to know their effects.
"For people who are sort of in the Democratic establishment to disparage those young people, their sincerity and their knowledge, really is not a very smart strategy to try and build the Democratic Party," Weaver said.
"I take full responsibility for 'Scary Lucy,' though by no means was that my intent or did I wish to disparage in any way the memories of the iconic Lucy image," Poulin wrote in the letter.
In the lawsuit, filed in the Superior Court of California in San Mateo County, Lai claims Caldbeck texted her repeatedly after she left the firm, threatening her not to disparage or divulge information about the company.
Those who disparage seismic testing ignore that it has been used for many years — principally in the Gulf of Mexico but also in the Atlantic — to determine the location and size of oil and gas resources.
"While outside agitators disparage this office and falsely attack us, we have kept our head down and remained focused on ensuring secure, accessible, and fair elections for all voters," Kemp said in the statement to CNN.
Second Wave feminism's reputation, meanwhile, as a humorless group of mainstream white women is due partly to a deliberate attempt in the 1980s to disparage feminists, but also to the movement's race and class blind spots.
The first in a series of photo books about fatherhood to be edited by Ms. Price Pierre, "Fathers" serves as an important corrective, challenging a dominant culture that tends to disparage, discredit or underestimate black men.
ISIS&aposs use of social media to recruit fighters and disseminate propaganda was unprecedented, Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte&aposs government has relied on Facebook disinformation to bolster support for his drug war and disparage his enemies.
Adam Crowley/Getty Images For decades aspiring fantasy writers have been subjected to dismissive behavior from college professors who disparage genre literature, even though such professors often admit they've never actually read any fantasy or science fiction.
While I don't want to completely disparage these things — different ears will find them pleasant if not downright cool – the Crushers turn almost everything — from a drama to a bit of dubstep — into a bass-heavy party.
After the Nazis used the term in their propaganda against the Jewish, communist and foreign press, left-wing students during the protests of 1968 recycled that exact term to disparage the liberal-conservative Axel Springer publishing company.
Sometimes the reason we disparage other people [on social media] in comments, to our friends, or in our heads, is because that part of being a human being is something that we have completely repressed in ourselves.
As in the past, the new guidelines disparage an all-too-common practice of outfitting new mothers at discharge with a "gift bag" that contains samples of formula, which can suggest that the hospital endorses formula feeding.
"Yellow was not his favorite color and he did all he could to disparage the use of it, but that was strictly from a personal standpoint, and it's taken on a life of its own," Eiseman said.
In some instances, Sanders supporters are using the same lines of attack used to disparage Clinton at the Republican National Convention last week, including calls to imprison the candidate for her use of a private email server.
Nor do we share Plato's particular morality: his emphasis on austerity and the warlike virtues is foreign to our commercial democracy, and so we don't particularly care whether writers praise or disparage the virtue of self-control.
I can't understand why the President would, once again, disparage a man as exemplary as my friend John McCain: heroic, courageous, patriotic, honorable, self-effacing, self-sacrificing, empathetic, and driven by duty to family, country, and God.
Indeed, President Trump's own policies and practices — to prosecute migrants and separate families at the U.S. southern border, disparage peaceful protests, and claim journalists are "the enemy of the people" — undermine the president's credibility on rights issues.
When today's younger, socialist-leaning activists disparage older, more Establishment-oriented left-wingers as liberals, they are echoing their New Left forebears of the 1960s and 1970s, who used the term to denounce those deemed insufficiently radical.
It's also easy to disparage the one-with-the-earth sentimentality in which the natural burial ground movement tends to cloak itself: "Our bodies do not belong to us, they belong to nature," one such cemetery admonishes.
We learned from the Mueller report that the Russian government meddled in the 2016 election in a "sweeping and systematic fashion" through social media disinformation and documents aimed to sow divisions and disparage the Hillary Clinton campaign.
U.S. intelligence agencies have concluded that Russia carried out a campaign of hacking and propaganda targeting the 2016 U.S. presidential election in an attempt to sow discord, disparage Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton and aid Republican Trump's candidacy.
This is not to disparage the immense work carried out during that period of time in America, but rather to situate it in a historical lineage which Ackroyd details in the endlessly fascinating pages of Queer City.
" It was because of this that "Plaintiff was extremely uncomfortable addressing this inappropriate behavior with Defendant Conyers nor did Plaintiff wish to embarrass or disparage Defendant Conyers by sharing her concerns with other members of the office staff.
Last October, a three-judge panel of the federal court ruled against the group, saying it would be impossible to distinguish genuine issue ads that reference candidates from campaign-style ads that openly promote or disparage a candidate.
That conspiracy was promoted by former CIA analyst Larry Johnson, who's been known to spread false stories before (such as claiming he has a video of former First Lady Michelle Obama using a slur to disparage white people).
But even with all the collective outpouring of joy over Pokémon Go, I still see and hear people disparage it for being just a "kid's game" and are embarrassed when they're caught playing it in public.
It was hard to watch Hillary Clinton, a woman who has spent her life serving the public, lose out to a man who used the debate stage and the campaign podium to disparage her looks, stamina, and reputation.
"Elected representatives should work on behalf of the next generation, not disparage them, especially on an issue that is going to have much more profound consequences for young people," tweeted former Obama deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes.
Not to disparage the talent of fighters like Jansen, Held and even Chandler, but there are undoubtedly far tougher challenges for Brooks under the UFC umbrella—challenges that are sure to bring out the very best in him.
The president, who shocked lawmakers this month at an Oval Office meeting by using a vulgar term to disparage African nations, went out of his way to present himself as tolerant and appreciative of the nation's diverse people.
What the three men in Oregon understood, but the White House doesn't, is that in a healthy society, Islamophobia doesn't disparage just Muslims, racism doesn't demean blacks alone, misogyny hurts more than women, xenophobia insults more than immigrants.
Whenever he is frustrated with the way the media is covering any sort of story that he&aposs involved with, he immediately calls it fake news, and he tries to disparage the source, the entity that is reporting this.
In January 2017, two Brigham Young University political scientists designed an experiment to take advantage of the fact that, aside from a few issues like immigration, trade, and a reluctance to disparage Russia, Trump has few consistent policy ideas.
They had to pledge not only that they wouldn't share confidential information — something other campaigns have done in the past — but also that they wouldn't "demean or disparage publicly" Trump, his company, or his family members and their companies.
And we need a proven leader that has a record of solving problems, someone who doesn't cut and run; someone who could be a commander in chief to unite our country around common purposes; someone who doesn't disparage people.
The constitutional worry focuses on the First Amendment's ban on policies "respecting an establishment of religion"; discriminating against Muslims in immigration policy may disparage an entire religion and reflect official government hostility toward Muslims both abroad and at home.
His comment was likely meant to disparage the Brewers' strategy: They were trying to win via cheap disorder, rather than by good old-fashioned honest baseball, the way they played it back in Smoltz's notoriously controversy-free 90s heyday.
The Obama administration appealed after a lower court agreed with the band that part of the 1946 law governing federal trademarks that barred those that may disparage certain people ran afoul of the U.S. Constitution's guarantee of free speech.
"I can't understand why the President would, once again, disparage a man as exemplary as my friend John McCain: heroic, courageous, patriotic, honorable, self-effacing, self-sacrificing, empathetic, and driven by duty to family, country, and God," Romney wrote.
Abrams said Wednesday she does not want to disparage or take away from the "legitimate" response people had to O'Rourke's campaign, but she questioned why she and Gillum were not "lifted up" in the same way after their campaigns.
The more Trump and fellow Republicans stoke fears of immigration, of Muslims, of crime and drugs and "American carnage," and the more they disparage elites and experts, the more they are increasing attitudes that correlate to anti-democratic views.
The office of U.S. Special Counsel Robert Mueller charged 13 Russians and three firms last month with interfering in the 2016 presidential vote as part of what it called a conspiracy to support Donald Trump and disparage Hillary Clinton.
Because how can someone possibly choose to abstain from voting after witnessing Trump propose a Muslim ban, refuse to condemn the KKK, make fun of a disabled person at a rally, and disparage the parents of a Muslim soldier?
"You can't take the fight to Albany if you're from Albany," said one of the Republican operatives who attended, who spoke anonymously to not disparage the eventual nominee because so many of the current candidates are linked to Albany.
Concord is one of three entities, along with 13 Russian individuals, indicted by Mueller's office in an alleged criminal and espionage conspiracy to tamper with the 2016 U.S. election, boost Trump's candidacy and disparage his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton.
Its authors provided incorrect information to readers, using outdated figures and omitting information about dramatic changes under way in the telecommunications marketplace, all in order to disparage Ligado's proposal to deploy its spectrum to support America's critical infrastructure industries.
Late Sunday, GoDaddy said it was ditching the site after it published a story using sexist and obscene language to disparage Heather Heyer, the 32-year-old woman who was killed during a counter protest after the Charlottesville rally.
In April, Julie Roginsky, a current Fox News contributor, filed a lawsuit asserting that she faced retaliation for rebuffing Mr. Ailes's sexual advances and for refusing to disparage Gretchen Carlson, the former anchor who sued Mr. Ailes last summer.
"The Black Hebrew Israelite groups that we list also force segregation on to their members, only allowing them to socialize, marry and procreate with members of minority groups and disparage non-members who don't do the same," Beirich said.
Defendants also staged political rallies inside the United States, and while posing as U.S. grassroots entities and U.S. persons, and without revealing their Russian identities and ORGANIZATION affiliation, solicited and compensated real U.S. persons to promote or disparage candidates.
The indictment says that while the Russians began their scheme in 2014 with the goal of undermining the American democratic system, they eventually shifted their focus to trying to help elect Mr. Trump and disparage his opponent, Hillary Clinton.
The fact that my blog is no longer on the internet and reporters, unassociated with my industry, have still "found" and pursued it indicates that individuals with less than good intentions have been actively trying to disparage and slander me.
Given this reality, it's despicable that people who clearly know very little about Vindman's background, his history, and the skills and attributes that elevated him to his position would disparage his service to further and support their opinion-based narrative.
But the sad part of that impossible arrangement comes when it prompts him to disparage the lives and existence of trans people (Catholic or not), who are just as vital and integral to the LGBTQ community as any other cisgender person.
In comparison to other brands that market token "anti-aging skincare" to older women, Cusden hopes to create a positive, stigma-free YouTube space: "The beauty industry disdains and marginalizes this age group ... [but] we won't disparage you here," Cusden says.
Presumably satisfied with the excuse, Trump chose not to disparage the absentee Bushes, instead offering Twitter wishes of a "speedy recovery" to both President 41 and his wife, Barbara Bush, who had also been hospitalized with a case of bronchitis.
"I am appalled that Donald Trump would disparage them and that he had the gall to compare his own sacrifices to those of a Gold Star family," she continued, using the term for relatives of those killed in military service.
As a native of Baltimore, woman of color, former Baltimore prosecutor and friend of Elijah Cummings, it offends me that a person occupying the White House could disparage any American city and a lawmaker on account of race and racism.
Reeher noted that, while it is important not to disparage the bereaved, there is a peculiarity about a scenario in which someone is "put forward as a policy expert" on any given topic because they have undergone some viscerally traumatic event.
"When you call Haiti, whether it's a 's-house' or an 's-hole' … you disparage a lot of people that love this country that are here making a contribution and making a difference," Bush said in an interview with USA Today.
By either abandoning or neglecting commitments, or seeking to shake down allies for better deals, a Trump administration might lead us to a world without robust US security alliances -- the very foundation of the "globalist" American posture many Trump supporters disparage.
Mr. Clem, according to a legal filing by Gawker, extricated himself from the lawsuit by promising to testify, "to not disparage Mr. Bollea, and to not help us," and paid Mr. Bollea what was described as the substantial sum of $5,000.
The company is one of three entities, along with 13 Russian individuals, indicted by the special counsel's office in an alleged criminal and espionage conspiracy to tamper with the 2016 U.S. election, boost Trump and disparage his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton.
American intelligence agencies have concluded that Russia had interfered in the 2016 U.S. election with a campaign of propaganda and hacking to disparage Trump's Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton and aid Trump's candidacy, and that Moscow is now targeting the Nov.
"I can't understand why the President would, once again, disparage a man as exemplary as my friend John McCain: heroic, courageous, patriotic, honorable, self-effacing, self-sacrificing, empathetic, and driven by duty to family, country, and God," Romney tweeted. Sen.
"I did not hear that word used, no sir," Nielsen testified at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, when asked if Trump used that word or similar language to disparage African countries in the meeting with Trump and lawmakers on immigration policy.
Letters To the Editor: Re "The Man Who Knew Too Little" (Sunday Styles, March 11): I am not writing to disparage the choices made by Erik Hagerman in "taking a break" from reading the news since the election of Donald Trump.
Earlier in the day, as representatives struggled to come to an agreement on several points and President Trump continuing to disparage Canada and its trade practices, there were fears that the last-ditch talks to salvage the trade agreement could falter.
Findings could reignite calls to dismiss Mueller Details of the Republican conclusions contradict an account laid out by Mueller of a campaign by Russian entities to disparage Clinton and support Trump, shown in the indictment of 13 Russians issued last month.
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The estate of Michael Jackson filed a lawsuit on Thursday against HBO saying that its documentary about allegations of child sex abuse by the late singer breached a previous agreement by the cable channel not to disparage him.
After the article ran, Crux sent a memo to former Crux employees who had signed severance agreements telling them that the startup "will not hesitate to enforce its legal remedies" if former employees share non-public information or disparage the company.
"I did not hear that word used, no sir," Nielsen testified at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, when asked if the President had used that word or similar language to disparage African countries in the meeting with lawmakers on immigration policy.
"I can't understand why the President would, once again, disparage a man as exemplary as my friend John McCain: heroic, courageous, patriotic, honorable, self-effacing, self-sacrificing, empathetic, and driven by duty to family, country, and God," Romney tweeted on Tuesday.
"Russia, like its Soviet predecessor, has a history of conducting covert influence campaigns focused on U.S. presidential elections that have used intelligence officers and agents and press placements to disparage candidates perceived as hostile to the Kremlin," the report said.
This goes hand-in-glove with the "deep state" conspiracy, which has led President Trump to disparage the intelligence and law enforcement community, purge the State Department of expertise, urge investigations into political enemies and strip security clearances from former officials.
"Despite my efforts to handle this process confidentially, NBC News is allowing the media to run with completely false and irresponsible reports that disparage Megyn by erroneously claiming she has ever asked for more money than her contract requires," Freedman said.
Bolsonaro's tweet somehow manages to sum up why many critics see him as a threat to both democracy and human rights: He's using propaganda to attack a minority group and to disparage protesters who are fighting back against his policies.
The full indictment, released on Friday, said that a Russian propaganda arm funded by the businessman, Evgeny Prigozhin, oversaw a criminal and espionage conspiracy to tamper in the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign to support Donald Trump and disparage Hillary Clinton.
Prior to the June 19 ruling, the office had regularly dismissed applications "which may disparage … persons, living or dead, institutions, beliefs, or national symbols, or bring them into contempt, or disrepute," under Section 2(a) of the Trademark Act of 1946.
"Our pet care practices continue to be the standard of excellence in the industry and we will continue to defend against PETA's ongoing clandestine operations as they attempt to disparage our associates and company," said PetSmart's Vice President of Corporate Communications, Michelle Friedman.
Concord is one of three entities and 13 Russian individuals charged earlier this year by Mueller's office, in an alleged criminal and espionage conspiracy to meddle in the U.S. race, boost then-presidential candidate Donald Trump and disparage his Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton.
Republicans disparage Democratic progressives as wild-eyed radicals led by a 28-year-old political neophyte, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, whose take-down of senior Democratic leader and 10-term incumbent Congressman Joe Crowley in a June 26 New York contest rocked Washington.
Louie Gohmert opted not to direct questions toward Pichai, and instead used the bulk of his time to disparage Wikipedia and the Southern Poverty Law Center — two of YouTube's partners in its "Trusted Flaggers" program to spot violating content on its platform.
Uber ultimately paid Jacobs $4.5 million in cash and stock in exchange for agreeing not to disparage it in public — though that did not prevent him from testifying — and for his help in resolving the security issues he outlined in his letter.
And predictably, never missing an opportunity to disparage, the site is larded throughout with petty insults and thinly veiled aspersions about Republicans and the current administration, who from the DNC's perspective, are a malignancy that needs to be excised by any means necessary.
This is who Trump is: He elevated his political profile by claiming President Barack Obama wasn't born in America, he announced his presidential campaign by calling Mexicans rapists and murderers, and he has continued to disparage nonwhite people since entering the White House.
This is a radical departure from Obama's administration, which declined to privately discuss matters of disagreement and instead opted to publicly criticize Israel and to disparage its leader in the form of personal insults by unnamed officials fed to members of the media.
This is not to disparage the value of the works in the contemporary philosophical canon: Clearly, there is nothing intrinsically wrong with philosophy written by males of European descent; but philosophy has always become richer as it becomes increasingly diverse and pluralistic.
It is the word for the object needed to collect a bounty—literally "red skins"—ripped from dead Native American bodies and exchanged for money as proof of kill, and it is a term that is still used to disparage Native Americans today.
"What Trump has been willing to do is say terrible things about women, mock the disabled, disparage minorities, impugn the character of POWs, and go after the Gold Star parents of a fallen U.S. soldier," Flake said in a statement to The Hill.
This is not to disparage the efforts of ICAN, which has done about as much as any other organization could do in the perennially stagnant arena of international nuclear disarmament policy, and has done it without also making the world a worse place.
It should to be deeply disturbing for all Americans for a member of the armed forces to not only seem to disparage its vital importance, but to also be actually trying to suppress it in an entire class of the uniformed citizenry. Why?
"I can't understand why the President would, once again, disparage a man as exemplary as my friend John McCain: heroic, courageous, patriotic, honorable, self-effacing, self-sacrificing, empathetic, and driven by duty to family, country, and God," Mr. Romney wrote on Twitter.
The intention here is not to disparage the talent or championship quality of either De Randamie or Holm, but simply to emphasize that it was hard to take the UFC's inaugural women's featherweight title fight seriously without Cyborg in the red corner.
Dr. Nieca Goldberg, a cardiologist whose book "Women Are Not Small Men" helped start a national conversation about heart disease in women, said the research should not be used to disparage male doctors, but should instead empower patients to find doctors who listen.
Concord is one of three entities, along with 13 Russian individuals, indicted by Special Counsel Robert Mueller's office in February in an alleged criminal and espionage conspiracy to tamper with the U.S. race, boost Trump and disparage his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton.
More frequently, Ms. Warren said, he would disparage her physical appearance and speculate — sometimes in front of other employees — that her husband "must either lack a penis, or not be able to get an erection" in her presence because she was so unattractive.
The lawsuit does not seek to prevent the broadcast of the documentary but says it violates a 1992 contract for HBO's broadcast of Jackson's "Dangerous" world tour, in which the network agreed not to disparage him at that time or in the future.
The Department of Justice announced on Friday indictments against 13 Russian nationals and three Russian entities for allegedly interfering in the 2016 US election, including enlisting "unwitting" Americans to coordinate political activities and using social media to support Trump and disparage Hillary Clinton.
The war of words between Mr. Whitmire and Disney was startling, given the outward harmony of the Muppets brand and the fact that when prominent performers are fired, the two sides usually come to terms and agree not to disparage each other.
In exchange, she agreed to "not, in any way, disparage" the company or say anything to anyone "that may be considered to be derogatory or detrimental to the good name or business reputation" of Bloomberg, according to a copy of her agreement.
Mr. Wallace cut her off, calling it impolite for her to disparage the network that was giving her an hour of airtime and suggesting that she was doing so to protect her "credentials" with Democratic competitors who refused to appear on Fox.
"Ending DACA, whose participants are mostly of Mexican origin, is a culmination of President Trump's oft-stated commitments — whether personally held, stated to appease some portion of his constituency, or some combination thereof — to punish and disparage people with Mexican roots," the lawsuit states.
In 2016, Crandall and his student Mark White asked 400 Trump and Clinton supporters to rate how normal it is to disparage members of various marginalized groups — like obese people, Muslims, Mexican immigrants, and disabled people — both before the election and in the days after.
To date, Trump's favorite individual topic to talk about is a statistical tie between communications that disparage the media in some way (particularly the NY Times and CNN), and posts related to his "Thank You" rallies that occurred through a good part of December.
" Asked by Wilmore to explain Trump's colorful use of the word, which he used to disparage Hillary Clinton's 2008 presidential bid, Sanders chuckled before saying, "I think you'll have to ask Donald Trump for an explanation of that -- I don't know the answer to that.
" Trump has tried to disparage Clinton's sexual attractiveness as well, suggesting last Friday that her posterior wasn't up to his standard by telling a crowd in North Carolina that, during the second debate, "when she walked in front of me, believe me, I wasn't impressed.
Indeed, without Hillary Clinton (whom Trump was eager to bring up and disparage on Thursday, months after the campaign ended) or any of his GOP primary rivals as foils to fight back against, the Trump administration has seemed a bit adrift in its first month.
The Supreme Court ruled in favor of the band The Slants earlier in the day, finding that a clause that blocked the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) from registering trademarks that may disparage or bring into contempt or disrepute any person violated the First Amendment.
Concord Management and Consulting LLC is one of three entities and 13 Russian individuals indicted by Special Counsel Robert Mueller's office in February in an alleged criminal and espionage conspiracy to tamper in the U.S. race, boost Trump and disparage his Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton.
"In reaching the conclusion that there was no discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation in this case, I do not seek to minimise or disparage the very real problem of discrimination against gay people," president of the Supreme Court Lady Hale wrote in the decision.
Having tracked Russian intelligence for the better part of my CIA career, I would assess with a high level of confidence that the Kremlin sought, above all else, to disparage our entire political process, not just one of its political parties or a single candidate.
The office of U.S. Special Counsel Robert Mueller charged 13 Russians and three Russian companies, including the Internet Research Agency, with engaging in a criminal and espionage conspiracy to tamper with the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign to support Donald Trump and disparage Hillary Clinton.
In the videos, Mike explains that he supports the "noble" March for Our Lives protesters as an ally and that the NRA interview was conducted a week before the March, then used by the organization to disparage the student organizers without his knowledge or consent.
Even for a president who consistently uses Twitter to assail his adversaries, the morning tweet about Ms. Manigault Newman was a remarkably crude use of the presidential bully pulpit to disparage a woman who once served at the highest levels in his White House.
On Washington WASHINGTON — As they departed the now famous Oval Office meeting where President Trump used vulgar language to disparage the national origin of some potential immigrants, Senators Lindsey Graham and Richard J. Durbin found themselves in a condition unfamiliar to such veteran politicians: speechless.
The Danish firebrand bemoaned the fact that unlike Aristides, the tendency of his Copenhagen brethren was to deny that ugly feeling and disparage the person who delivers those packages of resentment and ill-will, like those cursed geezers zooming by my house on their bikes.
While there's little doubt that Russian propaganda tweets and Facebook ads swayed many in the electorate, that pales in comparison to the damage that will be done when ministers, priests, rabbis and imams gain the ability to support or disparage specific political candidates for office.
In interviews, more than a dozen people involved in influencer marketing expressed concerns over the ethics of the burgeoning industry, where brands routinely shell out well over $60,000 in exchange for one video review—or upwards of $85,000 to publicly disparage a competitor's product.
Save for an occasional update of what city he was in, the once vocal entrepreneur — who often used Twitter in the past to respond to consumers, articles and even disparage local authorities in cities where the ride-hailing startup wasn't legal — was relatively silent.
"This is our Confederate flag battle and we want these one-sided historical paintings, these paintings that glorify the white settlers and disparage the Native people, to be removed and relocated," says Anton Treuer, a professor of the Ojibwe language at Bemidji State University.
Recently Crandall and his student Mark White asked 400 Trump and Clinton supporters to rate how normal it is to disparage members people of various marginalized groups — like the obese, Muslims, Mexican immigrants, and the disabled — both before the election and in the days after.
The National Hockey League does not tolerate language or gestures that disparage anyone based upon their race, creed or sexual orientation and continues to work to ensure that our games are played in a welcoming atmosphere for all of our players, coaches, officials and fans.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Russian propaganda arm oversaw a criminal and espionage conspiracy to tamper in the 1.23 U.S. presidential campaign to support Donald Trump and disparage Hillary Clinton, said an indictment released on Friday that revealed more details than previously known about Moscow's purported effort to interfere.
He found a consistent gap, one that has widened considerably in recent years: Drutman's results were similar for feelings toward Hispanics: This meant that a candidate like Trump, someone who was willing to openly disparage minority groups and immigrants, had an opening in the Republican primary.
"Despite my efforts to handle this process confidentially, NBC News is allowing the media to run with completely false and irresponsible reports that disparage Megyn by erroneously claiming she has ever asked for more money than her contract requires," lawyer Bryan Freedman tells PEOPLE in a statement.
On Monday evening, the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting abruptly announced that it would penalize journalists who spread "fake news," the term popularized by President Trump to disparage what he has regarded as unfair coverage of his 2016 American presidential campaign and first year in office.
"Despite my efforts to handle this process confidentially, NBC News is allowing the media to run with completely false and irresponsible reports that disparage Megyn by erroneously claiming she has ever asked for more money than her contract requires," lawyer Bryan Freedman told PEOPLE in a statement.
" But after two people complained to U.K. body the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA), it ruled that the ad must not be broadcast again because it "discouraged the selection of fresh fruit" and was in breach of a rule stating advertisers must not "disparage good dietary practice.
Let me make one thing clear before we move any further: What I'm about to say is not meant to in any way disparage the Trader Joe's wine section (or, if you live in New York and shop on 14th street, the beloved Trader Joe's wine store).
Ted CruzRafael (Ted) Edward Cruz3 real problems Republicans need to address to win in 2020 The Hill's Morning Report - Trump on defense over economic jitters Democrats keen to take on Cornyn despite formidable challenges MORE (R-Texas) Wednesday for accusing him of trying to disparage Sen.
"Despite my efforts to handle this process confidentially, NBC News is allowing the media to run with completely false and irresponsible reports that disparage Megyn by erroneously claiming she has ever asked for more money than her contract requires," Freedman said in a statement reported by CNN.
The policy, put into effect on May 1, encourages employees not to disparage the paper's partners on social media, to not use social media during the workday unless vital to one's job and to contact human services if someone suspects another employee of violating the policy.
" Hatch laid the blame for the country's current political climate on both parties, recalling the rhetoric around the 2017 tax plan or Republican predictions about what would happen if Democrats won the White House, as well as attempts to "own the libs" or "disparage the deplorables.
"The concerted public campaign to disparage and, ultimately, fire Special Agent Strzok was enabled by the defendants' deliberate and unlawful disclosure to the media of texts, intended to be private, from an FBI systems of records, in violation of the Privacy Act," according to the court documents.
"As President Trump's statements about Mexico and those with Mexican roots show, the President has demonstrated a willingness to disparage Mexicans in a misguided attempt to secure support from his constituency, even when such impulses are impermissible motives for directing governmental policy," the attorneys general wrote.
Kirsten Gillibrand, considered a leader in fighting sexual assault and harassment, chose another tack when she challenged Biden directly on his past in a July debate — she focused on a 1981 op-ed in which Biden appeared to disparage parents who use daycare for their children.
I won't disparage it, in spite of its stabilized, jarred and distinctly chemical ascorbic acidity and its whipped gelatinous texture, not to mention its pink-orange hue, because I've been dipping crackers, celery stalks, carrots and cucumbers into that jar for more than 20 years quite happily.
"The Department of Defense Office of Inspector General has decided to investigate complaints we recently received that Acting Secretary Patrick Shanahan allegedly took actions to promote his former employer, Boeing, and disparage its competitors, allegedly in violation of ethics rules," DoD IG spokesperson Dwrena Allen said.
Certainly the new speaker, who has fact-checked Mr. Trump during meetings and publicly warned him not to disparage the power of her Democratic majority, seems to have gotten under the president's skin in a way that few others have during his two years in Washington.
Last year, Crandall and his student Mark White asked 400 Trump and Clinton supporters to rate how normal it is to disparage members people of various marginalized groups — like the obese, Muslims, Mexican immigrants, and the disabled — both before the election and in the days after.
This is not to disparage those who do subscribe to Amazon Prime, because I certainly recognize the wide range of advantages it provides, from the effortless convenience of restocking on basic necessities in a hurry to all the movie and music streaming perks that Amazon keeps expanding on.
"It should be beneath the dignity of the President of the United States, the person who is supposed to be the leader of the free world, to disparage and personally attack a great American city and another great American leader," Baltimore City Council President Brandon Scott told reporters Saturday.
In 2016, Russian hackers waged a multi-front war to sow discord in America and disparage Hillary Clinton: they hacked Democrat campaign emails, used social media to spread disinformation and inflame the public, and even attacked the election infrastructure of 20 states, successfully penetrating the Illinois voter roll.
Perhaps the defense was nevertheless so confident because, as the intense media coverage emphasized, Judge Sullivan had expressed doubts about the case, including claims of government misconduct, doubts about some testimony and expert evidence and a suggestion, widely taken to disparage the government's case, that the parties settle.
Among other slights, Mr. Trump questioned Mr. Cruz's eligibility for the presidency, citing his birth in Canada; seemed to disparage the appearance of Mr. Cruz's wife, Heidi, in a Twitter post; and insinuated that Mr. Cruz's father, Rafael, was involved in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
In 2016, Crandall and his student Mark White asked 400 supporters of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump to rate how normal it is to disparage members of various marginalized groups — like obese people, Muslims, Mexican immigrants, and disabled people — both before the election and in the days after.
The network continues to face sexual harassment suits, including one from Julie Roginsky, a current Fox News contributor, who has asserted that she faced retaliation for rebuffing Mr. Ailes's sexual advances and for refusing to disparage Gretchen Carlson, the former Fox News host who sued Mr. Ailes last summer.
Despite his distinguished service to the country, several Republican members of the Senate Armed Services Committee not only used the hearing to disparage Hagel personally, by distorting his record and taking many of his statements on national security issues out of context, but they attempted to filibuster the nomination.
"The Department of Defense Office of Inspector General has decided to investigate complaints that we recently received that Acting Secretary Shanahan allegedly took actions to promote his former employer, Boeing, and disparage its competitors, allegedly in violation of ethics rules," a spokesman for the office said in a statement.
Trudeau campaigned well during the last week on stump, he said, and the Conservatives' handling of a Globe and Mail report that their party had hired a political consulting firm to disparage the populist People's Party of Canada didn't help their cause the weekend before Canadians cast their ballots.
A year later, an article in Britain's Sunday Times suggested that Qatar was just as adept at those kinds of shadow campaigns: The Times's reporting showed that Qatar had hired an American public relations firm to disparage its 22022 rivals during its campaign to win the World Cup.
By the end of five bleary-eyed weeks of hanging chads and butterfly ballots, Mr. Cruz had aggressively worked his legal connections, chafed when he felt sidelined by party veterans and — even in the view of some who disparage him — helped ensure Mr. Bush's victory in the courts, to a point.
"If the media spent half as much time highlighting the work of these groups and how our veterans have been so mistreated, rather than trying to disparage Mr. Trump's generosity for a totally unsolicited gesture for which he had no obligation, we would all be better for it," Hicks said Thursday.
For a long time, we&aposve heard about all the ties between the Trump campaign and Russia, for which there is no evidence, and lo and behold, despite serious Democrat opposition, we have uncovered that the DNC was working with Russian actors to try to disparage Donald Trump&aposs reputation.
These include: charges against Stone; witness-tampering charges against Konstantin Kilimnik, a Russian associate of Trump's former campaign chairman Paul Manafort; charges against 12 Russian intelligence officers accused of hacking Democratic emails; and a Russian "troll farm" accused of flooding social media sites with propaganda to promote Trump and disparage Clinton.
We should never disparage someone's financial success, but these one-percenters shouldn't be pulling up the ladder on the 2628,28503 men and women who will be employed by the ACP, nor on those who will find jobs in the future as a result of the new supply of secure energy.
During the question-and-answer session, the President listened to Johnson go on at length about the pass-through issue -- with Johnson at one point going so far as to disparage his colleagues: "Nobody up here understands numbers," Johnson said at one point, according to multiple sources in the room.
His estate is even taking HBO to court for airing the explosive documentary ... saying the network violated a decades-old contract they signed with him back in the day, in which it agreed not to disparage MJ. Janet's latest comments come just days ahead of Michael's 10-year death anniversary.
This isn't to disparage the tireless efforts of my mum, who balanced a full-time job in mental health with raising five children, and then swapped that job to become a full-time foster carer, resulting in mealtimes when more often than not, six or seven children crowded around the table.
"Given the tenor of the media's reporting of this case, including politically-motivated innuendo no doubt intended to disparage the First Family, there is foreseeable risk of prejudice to the privacy rights and reputations of innocent private investors," Kushner Cos.' lawyers wrote in a filing, according to The Baltimore Sun.
The indivisible opposition to impeachment that Republicans displayed makes it easier for Trump to disparage the process as merely another partisan exercise -- and to find a receptive audience for that argument not only among his own base, but also among some independents who recoil from any kind of elevated partisan conflict.
"If the media spent half as much time highlighting the work of these groups and how our veterans have been so mistreated, rather than trying to disparage Mr. Trump's generosity for a totally unsolicited gesture for which he had no obligation, we would all be better for it," Hicks told CNN.
The lawsuit, filed in Florida, alleges that Pinedo — who remains a shareholder and director at FKC — became dissatisfied with the group in 2011 and began a campaign to discredit and disparage the corporation and usurp its role as the licensing agent for commercial products featuring the artist's name and likeness.
Neomi Rao — Trump's nominee for an influential seat on the D.C. Circuit Court and a potential candidate for the U.S. Supreme Court — has a history of writing articles that blame sexual assault survivors for being attacked, disparage people of color and those who are LGBTQ+, and doubt the existence of climate change.
The film unfolds as a series of low-key set pieces and conversations along the way, culminating in Jafari's encounter with an actress who was once famous before the 1979 Islamic Revolution, and now lives a quiet and secluded life in the village, away from those who disparage her for her former career.
The Democratic frontrunner once again saw her Wall Street ties — from campaign donations to speaking fees — turned into a minefield as both Senator Bernie Sanders and former Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley ganged up on her during Sunday night's NBC/YouTube debate to disparage her close ties to investment banks including Goldman Sachs.
During his 1986 confirmation hearing, he faced allegations that he had made several racist statements to his colleagues—including one comment where he managed to both jokingly praise the Ku Klux Klan and disparage marijuana users—and that he had attempted to prosecute civil rights leaders who helped elderly black citizens vote.
" In the contract, there was a non-disparagement provision, which includes this ... "HBO shall not make any disparaging remarks concerning Performer or any of his representatives, agents, or business practices or do any act that may harm or disparage or cause to lower in esteem the reputation or public image of performer.
You know, many of us are researchers, and we tend to disparage it by calling it "stalking," but if you're stalking the Romanovs, or you're stalking a subject that interests you — China — then you are doing research and reporting, and you are building a more powerful way of interacting with the world.
After hours spent with the Russian President, Trump went on to disparage the conclusions from Coats and other intelligence agencies: that Putin not only led attacks on US democracy in 2016 but continues to do so and plans further interference in US elections this fall, when Putin presumably will be Trump's guest.
Some hardcore liberals disparage compromise while remaining infuriated with the ways Republicans like President Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpFacebook releases audit on conservative bias claims Harry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Recessions happen when presidents overlook key problems MORE treated President Barack Obama.
MAHAN ESFAHANI Talented but divisive, with a tendency to disparage his fellow harpsichordists — including Jean Rondeau, who plays at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall in March — this chronology-hopping artist pairs selections from Bach's "The Well-Tempered Clavier" with works by George Lewis, Luciano Berio and Tristan Perich at the Miller Theater.
For now, Fox News is doing everything in its power to support Trump's case, relegating some of the most powerful parts of the impeachment trial to a small silent box in the corner of the screen, while his most vociferous defenders simultaneously disparage the case against him loudly during prime-time programming.
The estate argues that HBO had allegedly agreed to "not make any disparaging remarks" concerning Jackson or "any of his representatives, agents, or business practices or do any act that may harm or disparage or cause to lower in esteem the reputation or public image" of Jackson, as part of the contract.
"Let me just remind them: they are themselves under investigation by a special prosecutor in Washington, D.C., and they may soon avail themselves of the presumption of innocence beyond a reasonable doubt, so I ask that they reflect on that before they comment or disparage the results of this case," he said.
" Giuliani, who served as U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York in the 1980s, said Sunday that prosecutors had no corroborating evidence for Cohen's claims that the payments were meant to preserve Trump's candidacy, and he continued to disparage the man long considered to be the president's top loyalist. "Pathetic.
Since the settlement, the outspoken chief executive has used press interviews and his Twitter account to disparage the SEC publicly, telling 60 Minutes in the same interview in which he admitted to not letting anyone pre-approve his tweets that he doesn't respect the agency and hand-picked his replacement for chairperson of Tesla's board.
People here in Prague delicately call their political system "a young democracy," one run by a president and prime minister who are populist demagogues in a government that includes significant communist representation—a political  climate in this part of the world not entirely unlike that in Poland and Hungary, whose leaders will not disparage Putin.
"The Department of Defense Office of Inspector General has decided to investigate complaints that we recently received that Acting Secretary Shanahan allegedly took actions to promote his former employer, Boeing, and disparage its competitors, allegedly in violation of ethics rules," a spokesman for the office responded in a statement when the probe was launched.
Sessions has kept a low-profile since leaving office but Trump's anger has not cooled, as he has still been known to disparage the former attorney general in private conversations, according to a White House official and a Republican close to the West Wing who are not authorized to speak publicly about the discussions.
Earlier on Monday, Julie Roginsky, a current Fox News contributor, filed a lawsuit against Mr. Ailes, Fox News and Bill Shine, the network's co-president, asserting that she faced retaliation for rebuffing Mr. Ailes's sexual advances and for refusing to disparage Gretchen Carlson, the former Fox News host who sued Mr. Ailes last summer.
According to a new legal petition filed in Texas, where Mithril moved its headquarters from San Francisco earlier this year, McKellar has, over many months, staged a multi-pronged campaign to disparage Mithril, and Royan specifically, possibly to attract its investors to a new, separate venture firm that she has founded called Anathem Ventures.
Traub, a columnist at Foreign Policy magazine, notes correctly that Trump's upset victory in 13 was a mandate not for conservatism (conservatives don't slap tariffs on foreign goods, disparage the F.B.I. or agitate for lower interest rates) so much as for an angry, tribal anti-liberalism that echoed George Wallace's third-party candidacy in 21.
Of course, the intention here is not to disparage Kimbo Slice, who has defied the odds to make a real go of his MMA career, but we're talking about one of the most decorated fighters in MMA history, declining though he may be, throwing down with a 42-year-old with just eight fights to his name.
For the most part, as long as you're not using an online service to directly threaten anyone or disparage groups of people based on their race, ethnicity, national origin, religious affiliation, sexual orientation, sex, gender, gender identity, or serious disability or disease—policies laid out by Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube—you can get away with practically anything.
Republicans have criticized Trump for engaging in a war of words with Khizr and Ghazala Khan, parents of a soldier slain in Iraq, after the two took the stage during last week's Democratic National Convention to disparage Trump's proposed temporary ban on Muslims immigrating to the US. "You have sacrificed nothing, and no one," Khizr Khan had said.
I'm not going to let them disparage me, embarrass me personally and professionally and not defend myself… I can only hope she would respect and understand that… In fact, if I were Meg, I would probably put something out there so that there was some sort of protective mechanism in place where the family couldn't be tortured as much.
"I do know for certain in my heart — and people who know me know this, too — that I would never, ever knowingly do anything to disrespect or disparage my fellow competitors, the race organizers and volunteers, myself, my friends or — most importantly to me — my children, husband and family," she said in a written statement she provided for publication.
"If the media spent half as much time highlighting the work of these groups and how our veterans have been so mistreated, rather than trying to disparage Mr. Trump's generosity for a totally unsolicited gesture for which he had no obligation, we would all be better for it," campaign spokeswoman Hope Hicks told The Washington Post in an email.
Clinton for her criticisms of the F.B.I. "There's virtually no doubt that F.B.I. Director Comey and the great, great special agents of the F.B.I. will be able to collect more than enough evidence to garner indictments against Hillary Clinton and her inner circle, despite her effort to disparage them and discredit them," he said at a Nov.
"While all employees are welcome to engage constructively with any of the many teams inside Amazon that work on sustainability and other topics, we do enforce our external communications policy and will not allow employees to publicly disparage or misrepresent the company or the hard work of their colleagues who are developing solutions to these hard problems," he said.
Roskam joins lobbying firm Anti-corruption group hits Congress for ignoring K Street, Capitol Hill 'revolving door' MORE (R-Texas), the chairman of the House Science, Space and Technology Committee, didn't try to dispute that Trump used the word to disparage immigrants from Haiti, El Salvador and African nations compared to people from places like Norway.
In closing, I'd like to say directly to the president: We honor our veterans even in the rain, you tell the truth even when it doesn't aggrandize you, you respect the law and incredible law enforcement agents, you don't villianize them, you don't disparage generals, gold star families, prisoners of war and other heroes who had the courage to fight for this country.
In closing, I'd like to say directly to the president, we honor our veterans even in the rain, you tell the truth even when it doesn't aggrandize you, you respect the law and incredible law enforcement agents, you don't villainize them, you don't disparage generals, gold star families, prisoners of war and other heroes who had the courage to fight for this country.
"To the extent that Inhofe sees his main job as supporting Trump, then that is exactly what McCain wasn't, not only because of this particular relationship but because McCain understood checks and balances, separation of powers and the need for Congress to have some big separate strategic voices on foreign policy," he said, stressing he was not trying to disparage Inhofe.
Finally, for completeness, Mr. Putin might encourage the president to ensure that countries large and small revile America's leadership, suggesting he: disparage African nations and Haiti with a vulgarity; call Latin American migrants rapists and criminals; halt most refugee admissions; ban Muslims from several countries from entering the United States; restrict legal immigration; and separate children from their parents at the border.
"While all employees are welcome to engage constructively with any of the many teams inside Amazon that work on sustainability and other topics, we do enforce our external communications policy and will not allow employees to publicly disparage or misrepresent the company or the hard work of their colleagues who are developing solutions to these hard problems," an Amazon spokesperson told Motherboard.
"While all employees are welcome to engage constructively with any of the many teams inside Amazon that work on sustainability and other topics, we do enforce our external communications policy and will not allow employees to publicly disparage or misrepresent the company or the hard work of their colleagues who are developing solutions to these hard problems," said the spokesperson.
I await the age-old victim-blaming arguments that Cosby's lawyers will use to smear and disparage and defame her — she wanted it, she's a liar, it was consensual, she's only after his money, she chose to go to his house, she chose to take the pills, she should have known what he was going to do, it's all her fault.
While there's no question some veterans require private care options because of personal circumstances and experiences, as Anuradha Bhagwati outlined in a recent op-ed for the New York Times, there is no need to disparage the whole system, which — by every measure — is serving its constituents well, as evidenced by any number of the dozens of customer satisfaction and health outcomes reports and articles published recently.
The U.S. Attorney General Jeff SessionsJefferson (Jeff) Beauregard SessionsDOJ should take action against China's Twitter propaganda Lewandowski says he's 'happy' to testify before House panel The Hill's Morning Report — Trump and the new Israel-'squad' controversy MORE and Members of Congress who want the Trump administration to repeal DACA often demonize these young men and women as criminals, using isolated examples to disparage an entire group.
"During the term of your service, and at all times thereafter, you hereby promise and agree not to demean or disparage publicly, in any form or through any medium, the Campaign, Mr. Trump, Mr. Pence, any Trump or Pence Company, any Trump or Pence Family Member, or any Trump or Pence Family Member Company," read the contract, according to a copy obtained by NBC News.
"Despite the narrow scope of Plaintiff's battery claim arising out of alleged conduct by Mr. Trump on August 24, 2016, and her statutory pay claims against the Campaign, Plaintiff devotes a substantial portion of her Complaint on gratuitous and inflammatory allegations that have nothing to do with Plaintiff or her battery and claims, and serve no purpose but to disparage Mr. Trump," they added.
"While all employees are welcome to engage constructively with any of the many teams inside Amazon that work on sustainability and other topics, we do enforce our external communications policy and will not allow employees to publicly disparage or misrepresent the company or the hard work of their colleagues who are developing solutions to these hard problems," an Amazon spokesperson said in a statement.
"While all employees are welcome to engage constructively with any of the many teams inside Amazon that work on sustainability and other topics, we do enforce our external communications policy and will not allow employees to publicly disparage or misrepresent the company or the hard work of their colleagues who are developing solutions to these hard problems," Amazon spokesperson Jaci Anderson told CNBC in a statement.
"Neither shall themselves, or cause or permit third parties, to slander, defame, disparage, or communicate untruths, malicious statements, false and slanderous statements, information, rumors, or salacious materials of any kind against the other person, or against the other person's family, friends, employees, employers, or other close relatives and associates, whether in written form, verbally, on paper, on the Internet, on any social media application, or in any manner," the documents read.
President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE said in a tweet early Sunday that he had a "great" meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, adding that "fake news" has worked to "disparage" it.
Rob Anderson said he did not intend to disparage Romney when he told The Salt Lake Tribune that Romney would essentially be doing in Utah "what Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonTop Sanders adviser: Warren isn't competing for 'same pool of voters' Anti-Trump vets join Steyer group in pressing Democrats to impeach Trump Republicans plot comeback in New Jersey MORE did in New York" if he were to launch a bid for the Senate.
And those anti-Trump conservatives who are not employed by conservative media — Will, Gerson, Krauthammer, Douthat and David Brooks, for instance — are employed by such outlets as The Washington Post and The New York Times, both of which are foaming at the mouth in their editorial denunciations of Trump and therefore not the kind of employers who are going to give their conservative writers a hard time if they too disparage the gentleman.
Additional Reading • Pompeo Speech Lays Out Vision for Mideast, Taking Shots at Obama • Trump and Pompeo Embrace Autocrats and Disparage Opponents at Home • As U.S. Exits Syria, Mideast Faces a Post-American Era • Michael D. Cohen, President Trump's former personal lawyer, who implicated him in a hush-money scheme, will appear before Congress next month to give what he called "a full and credible account" of his work on behalf of Mr. Trump.
During the term of your service and at all times thereafter you hereby promise and agree not to demean or disparage publicly the Company, Mr. Trump, any Trump Company, any Family Member, or any Family Member Company or any asset any of the foregoing own, or product or service any of the foregoing offer, in each case by or in any of the Restricted Means and Contexts and to prevent your employees from doing so. 3.
"There are coordinated efforts to disparage what America is doing and our activity to do all the things President TrumpDonald John TrumpNorth Korea asking for aid, while denying any coronavirus cases: report Iranian official maintains Tehran has 'no knowledge' of American hostage's whereabouts Unemployment claims surge to 3.2 million as coronavirus devastates economy MORE has set into motion," the secretary said during a press briefing on the coronavirus, standing next to Trump and his coronavirus task force.
And yet, when you have a leadership in Washington and in the White House that seems to disdain collective action, even disparage cooperation with our allies, what seems to be the last thing that would occur to them is to use institutions like the United Nations or to draw on the capacity of the World Health Organization — which has its failings, but in this case, seemingly well outperform the United States government in its ability to help countries respond.
I think it's a very common story, which is a company that built a great product and had a very early lead, but also a constitution on what the product should be, and in often ... And again, I don't want to disparage anybody, but it's just more of my Monday morning quarterbacking, looking back, and being as a board member that looked to understand the history there, which is a hubris about never wanting to change.
The indictments specifically charge that among the purposes of the Russian conspiracy charge Friday were to support the presidential campaign of President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE and to disparage Democratic nominee Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonTop Sanders adviser: Warren isn't competing for 'same pool of voters' Anti-Trump vets join Steyer group in pressing Democrats to impeach Trump Republicans plot comeback in New Jersey MORE.
" As Justice Kennedy explained: "To describe a man's faith as 'one of the most despicable pieces of rhetoric that people can use' is to disparage his religion in at least two distinct ways: by describing it as despicable, and also by characterizing it as merely rhetorical --something insubstantial and even insincere....This sentiment is inappropriate for a Commission charged with the solemn responsibility of fair and neutral enforcement of Colorado's antidiscrimination law -- a law that protects discrimination on the basis of religion as well as sexual orientation...[t]he government, if it is to respect the Constitution's guarantee of free exercise, cannot impose regulations that are hostile to the religious beliefs of affected citizens and cannot act in a manner that passes judgment upon or presupposes the illegitimacy of religious beliefs and practices.
Accompanying her comments were three charts, blown up and printed on posterboard, showing:Americans do not spend an exceptional amount of time on social mediaAmericans do spend a comparatively greater amount of time playing video games, but that...Neither of those numbers are remotely proportionate with the number of gun deaths—a figure which tracks most closely with (and now might be a good time to feign shock if you've looked at the news at any point since Columbine) the number of guns people own in the U.S."As we're reminded daily, the world is full of individuals who use social media platforms to disparage others, cast false equivalencies, and question facts [...] The internet has emboldened and empowered hate by allowing individuals to develop online communities and share their warped ideas—but it is our weak gun laws here in the U.S. that allows that hate to become lethal," said Duckworth, a veteran whose time served in combat overseas left her with considerable experience with guns and resulted in the loss of her legs.

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