Fundamentalist
in sentence
161 examples of Fundamentalist in a sentence
Well, these wiki revolutions happen so fast they create a vacuum, and politics abhors a vacuum, and unsavory forces can fill that, typically the old regime, or extremists, or
fundamentalist
forces.
"I wouldn't mind living in a
fundamentalist
Islamic state."
It was a season as described by a local paper when every Tuesday a scholar fell to the bullets of
fundamentalist
assassins.
Subsequently, Algeria's
fundamentalist
armed groups would murder as many as 200,000 civilians in what came to be known as the dark decade of the 1990s, including every single one of the women that you see here.
Some on the right think this because they view Muslim culture as inherently violent, and some on the left imagine this because they view Muslim violence,
fundamentalist
violence, solely as a product of legitimate grievances.
But what I am saying is that we must challenge these Muslim
fundamentalist
movements because they threaten human rights across Muslim-majority contexts, and they do this in a range of ways, most obviously with the direct attacks on civilians by the armed groups that carry those out.
The first that one sometimes finds on the right suggests that most Muslims are
fundamentalist
or something about Islam is inherently fundamentalist, and this is just offensive and wrong, but unfortunately on the left one sometimes encounters a discourse that is too politically correct to acknowledge the problem of Muslim fundamentalism at all or, even worse, apologizes for it, and this is unacceptable as well.
And the more
fundamentalist
I became in my worship of change and openness, the more I drove you towards the other polarity, to cling, to freeze, to close, to belong.
This is what the main Hindu
fundamentalist
organization in India looks like today at its mass rally.
It was a member of the same Hindu
fundamentalist
movement who shot dead Mahatma Gandhi.
Purportedly this is the final film of the Left Behind series which is
fundamentalist
preacher and novelist Tim LaHaye's idea of what we can expect in our future in the final days of Planet Earth.
The movie was
fundamentalist
Christian propaganda.
This is another one of those
fundamentalist
Christian movies that hit you over the head with religion like a sledgehammer.
The main character doesn't act like a
fundamentalist
at all, and how he passes for a terrorist is beyond my comprehension.
The inhuman interrogation is overseen by the Egyptian Chief of Police, himself the target of a
fundamentalist
suicide - bomb plot, thus entwining the two main plot-lines of the movie.
Anyway, this is a great flick, perhaps not for
fundamentalist
Christians but many others may enjoy it.
Interesting to watch just to run through the
fundamentalist
laundry list.
One of the most popular rentals at my local video store is not Borat or The Departed but a 2005 documentary about Jesus Christ called The God Who Wasn't There by director Brian Flemming, an ex-Christian
Fundamentalist.
Greg Davis and Bryan Daly take some crazed statements by a terrorists, add some commentary by a bunch of uber-right reactionaries, ascribe the most extreme positions of the most
fundamentalist
Moslems on the planet to everyone who calls themselves a Moslem, and presents this as the theology of Islam.
Not being familiar with US television stations, when I flicked onto this on my in-laws' cable, first I thought it was just a low-budget sci-fi film, then after a couple of minutes I started thinking it might be a clever satire on the worst excesses of Christian fundamentalist, and then it dawned on me - good grief, these people are serious!
NEXT, they encourage as many
fundamentalist
Christians as possible to purchase copies of the film so as to recoup its paltry production costs and pump up its advertising budget.
Another fantastic film from a country, where due to decades of oppression from
fundamentalist
regimes, has no problems in creating passionate subject matter.
The subtitles could be a bit better for the Non-Punjabi viewer, and i think a little more spotlight should have been put on how and why the religious
fundamentalist
gathered such momentum in a nation leaning more towards Moderate rule after Bhutto's regime.
This point that the U.S played a vital hand in strengthening Islamic
fundamentalist
organizations under Zia's rule was i think not driven home to the extent it could have been.
A brain washed enemy that is willing to die in the name of religion - The
fundamentalist
Muslims .
The story documents the era (1979) of the CIA-assisted killing of the democratically elected prime minister Bhutto and the installation of
fundamentalist
dictator General Zia ul-Haq.
I don't claim to be an expert on Carmelite nuns but somehow I can't picture
fundamentalist
Catholics participating in a voodoo ritual.
In the story, the twins have had a hard time of it, one locked up in prison for a murder ostensibly committed at the age of 14, and the other locked up in a hideously
fundamentalist
Carmelite nunnery (don't you just hate all that Catholic masochism stuff?) Carmen Maura plays a mother superior who is in love with the twin who is the nun, and she is very convincing.
The bar, operated by a
fundamentalist
American with bad taste in music, seems to be patronized by a weird mix of hillbillies and psychos.
The sexual tension among the three is palpable; the danger that the
fundamentalist
Pauline poses to her husband sits on the film like an enveloping cloud seeking to blur this lucid discussion of the difficulties posed by capital punishment cases even where the prisoner is clearly guilty of a brutal crime.
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