Sentence examples for offensive argument from inspiring English sources

Exact(4)

I'm not sure that even Lou Dobbs could come up with a more offensive argument for a tighter border patrol.

Let's put the "comedians are supposed to be offensive" argument aside for a second to look at context.

An aide to the GOP House leadership said the claim that the details were too sensitive to share with Congress was "a flimsy and frankly offensive argument".

But by not blasting Geraldine Ferraro and firing her, Hillary Clinton is taking away the outrage against Republicans when they trot out the same seedy and offensive argument during the general election.

Similar(56)

Trigger warnings, of course, don't always shut down that kind of interrogation, but if feminist blogs are any example, they quickly become a way to short-circuit uncomfortable, unpopular or offensive arguments.

Finally, in what is clearly one of the most offensive arguments extreme ideologues have yet to present, they maintain that making this safe, reliable contraception available over-the-counter will somehow lead more men to have sex with underage girls.

As long as speech codes mandate that campus judiciaries investigate clearly protected speech, and "offensive" arguments can be and are censored on campus, the difficult process of learning through debate and discussion cannot properly take place.

On March 8, a federal appeals court panel, in a four-page opinion, summarily and soundly rejected the challenge to the rule and the industry's offensive arguments; the court wrote, "It would be a perverse system that, by design, wasted taxpayer money in order to impose crippling, credit-destroying debt on lower-income students and graduates".

I'm willing to buy into the argument that their offensive line will get better with experience, to a degree.

It is morally offensive, the argument goes, to take a huge truck on the school run or to the shopping mall.

If one contentiously identifies subjective welfare with preference satisfaction, it seems implausible to count all individual preferences as equal, some — such as the desire to do others wrong — being inadmissible on grounds of justice (the offensive taste argument).

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