Extremist
in sentence
352 examples of Extremist in a sentence
There are
extremist
acts perpetrated against Muslims because of their religion, and today there are fanatical Christians, Jews, Hindus, and Buddhists who disfigure the true nature of their faith.
Nigeria’s radical gender inequality reflects a widespread tolerance of discrimination against girls, which facilitates the brutal actions of
extremist
groups like Boko Haram and creates fertile ground for traffickers.
The former Fox News host Bill O’Reilly described Soros in 2007 as “off-the-chart dangerous,” and “an
extremist
who wants open borders, a one-world foreign policy, legalized drugs, euthanasia, and on and on.”
The region in and around Syria is also populated by
extremist
Islamist groups that are attempting to expand their spheres of influence - and that are quick to capitalize on instability in any country.
The incitement against Syrian religious minorities promulgated by
extremist
TV stations, and by people like the Chief Justice of Saudi Arabia's Supreme Judicial Council, coupled with equally damaging behavior by Iran, if left unchecked, could result in an even worse bloodbath, with Syria's people drawn into a war of all against all.
Tellingly, the alliance includes all of the world’s main sponsors of
extremist
and terrorist groups, from Qatar to Pakistan.
To name one example, the British government recently attempted to recruit National Health Service mental-health professionals to report those suspected of being psychiatrically vulnerable to
extremist
ideology.
This means working to stop the religious-industrial complexes in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and elsewhere in the Gulf from using their abundant petrodollars to fund the spread of
extremist
ideology.
In Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad, and Niger, the
extremist
group Boko Haram – famous for its kidnapping of 276 school girls in 2014 – has inflicted thousands of casualties with suicide bombings and assaults on civilians.
He also won the backing of a small group of
extremist
rabbis who declared that selling or renting apartments to non-Jews is forbidden and treasonous (one of the rabbis is under investigation for these and other statements).
One consequence has been the rise of
extremist
groups in Europe.
Moreover, in the current grim economic conditions across Europe, voters who do turn out are all too likely to take the opportunity to punish the major parties and vote for fringe and even
extremist
politicians.
In Pakistan, the
extremist
now wears Islamic garb, and stands for the Creator, for faith, and for a theocratic order.
But other European leaders, faced with the rise of extremist, anti-immigrant parties, have not endorsed Merkel’s view; and the refugees still have to get to Germany through countries like Hungary, which are erecting walls and other border defenses to keep them out.
Retweeting anti-Muslim videos posted by a British
extremist
is just the latest of his outrages.
We should never allow
extremist
groups to be treated as sovereign political bodies beyond the reach of elected governments – in Peru, Colombia, or anywhere else.
In either scenario, Brazil would end up with an
extremist
president who has praised the military dictatorship of the 1960s and 1970s, because the only candidate who could have beaten him was struck from the ballot.
For years, the Wahhabis of Arabia have been the fountainhead of Islamist radicalism and the primary backer and facilitator of
extremist
groups throughout the region.
Theirs is a politics of fear and dog-whistle incitement of the
extremist
forces that exist in every society.
As a result, they have gravitated towards underground
extremist
movements.
The Turkish government’s reluctance to join the United States-led coalition against the Islamic State’s
extremist
Sunni fighters has isolated it from other Sunni Arab powers, such as Saudi Arabia, that have joined the coalition.
True, America’s intervention in the Middle East also strengthened
extremist
Islam, breeding on the resentment that the US presence arouses.
If Yemen’s humanitarian catastrophe leads to a total collapse, millions of desperate people might flee the country, enabling AQAP and other
extremist
organizations to profit from disorder and despair.
But it is a tribute to the American two-party system’s capacity for political integration that
extremist
forces remain marginalized, despite the rhetoric of the Tea Party.
But it also reveals a newly developed – and highly potent – asset, one that Turkey’s neighbors should also seek to cultivate: a strong middle class willing and able to mobilize against
extremist
threats.
Denying refugee children an education will deprive them of these benefits and the skills they will need to rebuild their lives, robbing them of hope for the future and increasing the risk of recruitment by
extremist
groups.
These Islamic religious schools, which lack oversight, could become vehicles for transmitting
extremist
views, as they have elsewhere.
Nonetheless,
extremist
forces are dangerously close to taking political power in some European states, and are gaining traction even in formerly liberal bastions.
Security authorities are responsible for monitoring the more visible signs of radicalization, and other state agencies can help potential terrorism recruits to leave
extremist
environments and become reintegrated into society.
Or he could post further inflammatory tweets about the evils of Islam, thereby driving disturbed and marginalized individuals into the arms of the Islamic State (ISIS) or other
extremist
groups.
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