Sentence examples for immoral implications from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

How do I get people to do things they don't want to do?" Taken aback by the directness and potentially immoral implications of his question, my gut reaction was to say, "You can't and shouldn't!" To which his response was, "I have to; it's my job".

To let the budget process break down so badly, with such immoral implications for so many, is a stain on our country and a bludgeon to our future.

Similar(10)

Brown's stance that nuclear weapons in general were immoral was, by implication, threatening "an essential part of French strategic identity", they complained.

It's even better to stop [education]." Woman 18 years, not accessed VCT, FGD The fear of being seen as a living corpse, as a person on fire, and as a person with immoral conduct naturally had implications for perceptions of VCT centres.

Being located in the immoral category may have devastating implications for one's reputation and in terms of loss of status, leading to discrimination and marginalisation.

Clearly, the most obvious, and I think the most interesting category is that described by Williams with the term "violence" (though that has the contentious, and I think unfortunate implication that all violence is immoral).

There follows a dance of gaudy melancholy, a masque of hearty and falsely cheerful military nostalgia that reveals the implicit horrors of patriotic gore as forthrightly as archival battlefield footage — and does so with the fierce, ongoing implication of Ozu's contemporaries in the immoral, conventional attitudes that resulted in those horrors.

Horton says he received a "very aggressive" phone call calling him "immoral" and threatening him that if he published the paper it would "have implications for his personal position" as editor.

But that is an implication of the view as described: because rationality does not rule out immoral options, yet the structure of God's desires precludes God from taking those options, God is unable to take seriously options that there are perfectly sufficient reasons to carry out.

But if coercion is necessarily immoral action, then it is hard to explain how an act of coercion could count as justified.[26] Among other implications, this view is in apparent contradiction with the traditional approach to coercion which treats states as paradigmatically, even necessarily users of coercion.

Immoral, no".

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