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55 Sentences With "jeremiads"

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

It will be about an emphasis on joviality over jeremiads.
I asked Costello if the Never Trumpers' jeremiads had swayed any congressional Republicans.
But as a campaign tactic, the old jeremiads against Democrats have lost their force.
Contrary to the overblown jeremiads against them, the bikes have not caused mass chaos.
At center stage, they placed the desk where Beale delivers his increasingly unhinged jeremiads.
If the jeremiads lead to Sessions deciding to quit on his own, all the better.
It is present in both jeremiads against America's gun culture and macho celebrations of it.
Millions, meanwhile, have rallied behind his presidential campaign, cheering his jeremiads against consumerism and political corruption.
In learned but vitriolic jeremiads, Mr. Abdel Rahman denounced Egypt's secularist leaders as corrupt pharaohs and infidels.
A lurching Australian named Angus—whose on-stage jeremiads belied a gentle, thoughtful in-person nature—fronted Liars.
But they were jeremiads about America's declension rather than heralds of its rendezvous with a destiny of progress.
In striking unison, several of the country's leading thinkers published jeremiads on the state of Mexican democracy last month.
His bilious speeches are issued like jeremiads; he doesn't deliver the dialogue so much as bite it off in chunks.
They filled the air with angry jeremiads about how badly things were going and how much they needed to change.
Transmuting astringent economics into compassion, promising tolerance without a cost, wreathing jeremiads in sunshine, the story might even do the trick.
When it was Kavanaugh's turn to testify, the senators quickly discarded Mitchell's probing inquiries in favor of delivering jeremiads about the injustice of the allegations.
Mr. Gondelman is a writer for "Last Week Tonight" with John Oliver, but his endearing stand-up is nothing like the scathing jeremiads of that weekly show.
But it was nice in a very, very small way to see that Trump could avoid off-topic jeremiads when forced to deliver a formal address to Congress.
Father Nachev, one of the interrogated priests, said that he had seen the pamphlet but that it contained nothing subversive, just the usual jeremiads that dominate Orthodox feuds.
And they will likely have less of a shot at these valued slots if they're running around launching jeremiads against a power structure controlled by Pelosi, congressional experts say.
But The News still swings for the fences, with jeremiads against political hypocrisy and a renaissance of the sassy front-page headlines that had long been its calling card.
The country was built amid a wail of jeremiads: Providence assigned us a mission to serve the whole planet, but we, in our greed and sin, are blowing it!
In case that short letter is not clear enough, Norquist has penned a few jeremiads — see here and here — spelling out his opposition to carbon taxes at greater length.
Trump's jeremiads over free trade deals were one of the most effective strategies that he adopted in his primary campaign and helped attract blue collar voters especially in rust belt states.
One that has received less attention than his pledges to "drain the swamp" and his jeremiads against illegal immigration, is his administration's systematic attempts to discredit objective analysis of policy problems.
In the Republican primaries, he proved a master of nationalizing the political debate, appealing to voters across regional lines with jeremiads about immigration and crime that captivated an almost uniformly white primary electorate.
The nominee, who has electrified audiences with jeremiads against Hispanics and Muslims, has disregarded the former president's effort to create a durable Republican majority by broadening the party's appeal to a rapidly changing country.
" As is the case in many such jeremiads, Perkins starts with the great perfidious court rulings of the 1960s—the ones that supposedly saw to it that the Bible was "taken out of school.
I heard the same jeremiads in South Africa at the time of the World Cup in 2010: the crime that would ruin things, the poverty that was shameful and the inefficiency that would plague visitors.
MIKE GOODMAN BROOKLYN, NY ♦ To the Editor: The list of "Trump-era jeremiads" in Peter Beinart's review of Jason Stanley's "How Fascism Works" neglects to mention what may have been one of the first.
" Her focus on today's anxious, micromanaging parents, who "worry too much and provide their children with too little space to grow," places her book squarely among familiar jeremiads, like Hara Estroff Marano's "A Nation of Wimps.
Mr. Rispone is a millionaire business executive from Baton Rouge, Louisiana's second-largest city, but he has run a campaign linking himself to President Trump with jeremiads against illegal immigration aimed at stirring rural Trump voters.
Mr. Bloomberg's positions highlight tensions likely to arise between an activist wing eager to energize voters and an establishment wary of turning off moderates and independents who dislike President Trump but are alarmed by jeremiads about wealth.
He is the author of a series of jeremiads, including a 2012 documentary film, "Death by China," in which an animation of a Chinese knife stabs a map of the United States and causes blood to run freely.
We're keenly suspicious of big corporations — just look at how many voters thrilled to Bernie Sanders's jeremiads about a corrupt oligarchy, or at polls that show a growing antipathy to capitalism — and yet we're ever more reliant on them.
The American consciousness can be formed only by the lab reports we give one another about that experiment — the jeremiads, speeches, songs and conversations that describe what the experiment is for, where it has failed and how it should proceed now.
This book would be yet another contribution to the literature of pro- and antidrug jeremiads except that it is so careful and measured and fair, and at times even candidly self-doubting, in its presentation, that it can't be classified as such.
But Mr. Sanders elevated the issue of campaign finance in his 2016 race, and his jeremiads against the billionaire class have all but made super PACs verboten in this race; he and Ms. Warren are refusing to hold high-dollar fund-raisers.
While Mr. Trump retains a strong grip on many red states and working-class white voters, his jeremiads against immigrants and penchant for ridicule have proved destabilizing, with the party losing more affluent whites and moderates in metropolitan areas key to control of the House.
Mr. Sanders's jeremiads about the political system's favoring the rich over the poor have the potential to resonate in a place like Orangeburg County, perhaps best known as the site of a 1968 massacre in which state troopers fired on a civil rights demonstration, killing three and injuring 28.
In the same hour, Roy Moore, a former State Supreme Court chief justice, welcomed the former White House senior adviser Stephen K. Bannon to a barn in this community along the Mobile Bay for a rally that mixed praise for Jesus Christ with jeremiads against the Republican establishment.
As a rule, once Hitler is slipped into any conversation, it's time to back away and pour yourself a drink, but Moore's jeremiads are as contagious as ever, and you feel the eagerness—at once amused and horrified—with which he lays out the parallels between the Nazi era and ours.
Browse the Facebook pages where young Corbynistas hang out and you do not find hymns of praise to the workers' control of the means of production, but laments for the indignities of modern metropolitan life and jeremiads against baby boomers who grabbed all the cheap houses and got free university education into the bargain.
"If the president were to simply calm down the rhetoric on China, rather than taking them on like some kind of trash-talking wide receiver, the bears would lose their biggest crutch," said the host, who blamed fears about the bond market on "angry rhetoric and frightening jeremiads from supposed experts" who should listen to conference calls.
"If the president were to simply calm down the rhetoric on China, rather than taking them on like some kind of trash-talking wide receiver, the bears would lose their biggest crutch," said the "Mad Money" host, who blamed fears about the bond market on "angry rhetoric and frightening jeremiads from supposed experts" who should listen to conference calls.
"Chief Justices of the United States in Maine," vol. 19, no. 3 Green Bag 2d 241 (Spring 2016). "Beatitudes and Jeremiads," vol.
In Roger Ebert's book Scorsese by Ebert, the critic wrote that of the reaction to The Last Temptation of Christ describing that "...Scorsese was targeted by death threats and the jeremiads of TV evangelists". The threats were significant enough that Scorsese had to use bodyguards during public appearances for a few years.
Simon Schama in his book Dead Certainties characterizes the city of Boston during this time period as being in "trouble," and Mayor Bigelow as being "much given to jeremiads about the decay of morals and collapsing of good order occasioned by the new unwashed in his city".Schama, Simon. Dead Certainties. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1991.
With Dana Beal and the New Yippie Book Collective, Conliff published the 733-page anthology Blacklisted News: Secret Histories from Chicago 1968 to 1984, forward by William Kunstler. Steve Conliff wrote over half of this volume, a detailed chronicle of specific Yippie actions all over the world (in the middle section titled "The Dreaded Yippie Curse") and a colorful collection of underground posters, jeremiads, essays, news clippings, comics, photos, articles, reviews and other counter-cultural history.
The header for the dual review was "Jeremiads at Half-Mast". The following summer of 1969, Glaze returned to the Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, this time as a guest faculty member. In 1974, with the assistance of producer Joseph Papp, Glaze had a play, Kleinhoff Demonstrates tonight, produced at the Cricket Theatre in Minneapolis. Seven theatre groups performed the play between 1971—1988, and The Public Theater/New York Shakespeare Festival did a production with the rock star, Meat Loaf, in a leading role. A second play, The Man-Tree, had a staged reading in 1974 by Joseph Papp's The Public Theater.
The Green Bag has published "Beatitudes and Jeremiads" as well as several chapters of Hornby's "Fables in Law: Legal Lessons from Field, Forest, and Glen," Aesopian legal fables for lawyers, judges, and law professors. Judicature has published three "imagined conversations" among fictitious former law school classmates now well along in their careers, on the topics of judicial opinion writing, the decline in federal civil trials, and public attention to federal judges. Hornby uses his characters, including the federal trial lawyer Talagud Storey and the general counsel Manny G. Risk, to canvas the major issues surrounding these topics. Hornby has also written about criminal sentencing and summary judgment.
Other churches went beyond the Half-Way Covenant, opening baptism to all infants whether or not their parents or grandparents had been baptized. Other churches, citing the belief that baptism and the Lord's Supper were "converting ordinances" capable of helping the unconverted achieve salvation, allowed the unconverted to receive the Lord's Supper as well. The decline of conversions and the division over the Half-Way Covenant were part of a larger loss of confidence experienced by Puritans in the latter half of the 17th century. In the 1660s and 1670s, Puritans began noting signs of moral decline in New England, and ministers began preaching jeremiads calling people to account for their sins.
Kennedy's directive is another example of the "law of unintended consequences." Had Kennedy stayed out of GE contract matters, there would have been no Governor or President Reagan. This statement by Michael Reagan is unsupported by any evidence, not even a reference to a conversation with Ronald Reagan, which is the only possible source of this information. Reagan biographies and autobiographies tell a rather different story, and none mention Robert F. Kennedy. From Reagan: The Life, H.W. Brands, Anchor Books, New York 2015 pg 124–125 Reagan's jeremiads against encroaching government cited the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) as a case in point – until he got wind that TVA executives were listening and wondering to General Electric's boss, Ralph Cordiner, why they shouldn't shift their purchases to a more appreciative company.
Although the position of the Sierra Club has generally been favorable towards immigration, some critics of the Sierra Club have charged that the efforts of some club members to restrain immigration, are a continuation of aspects of human population control and the eugenics movement. In 1969, the Sierra Club published Paul R. Ehrlich's book, The Population Bomb, in which he said that population growth was responsible for environmental decline and advocated coercive measures to reduce it. Some observers have argued that the book had a "racial dimension" in the tradition of the Eugenics movement, and that it "reiterated many of Osborn's jeremiads." During the 1980s, some Sierra Club members, including Paul Ehrlich's wife Anne, wanted to take the Club into the contentious field of immigration to the United States.
" In a review for Reason, Nick Gillespie described the book as, "a nuanced map to the latest 'place' to inspire grand utopian thinking: the Internet, that ethereal and increasingly important worldwide network of computer networks." Gillespie wrote positively of the author's breadth of knowledge and experience about the subject matter, "An American journalist living in London, Grossman brings a wealth of professional and personal experience to the material—and a clarity of style and analysis that is a welcome relief from both the hyperbolic prose of many Net boosters and the overwrought jeremiads of cyberphobes." His review concluded, "the great virtue of net.wars is its recognition that cyberspace's utopian potential—its ability to enrich existing real communities while creating new, virtual ones—is directly tied to its ability to change, grow, and make itself useful to its inhabitants.

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