Hatred
in sentence
643 examples of Hatred in a sentence
In the Leave vote, a minority have peddled the politics of fear and hatred, creating lies and mistrust around, for instance, the idea that the vote on Europe could reduce the number of refugees and asylum-seekers coming to Europe, when the vote on leaving had nothing to do with immigration from outside the European Union.
Revenge, or the expression of
hatred
towards those who have done us injustice may feel like a human instinct in the face of wrong, but we need to break out of these cycles if we are to hope to transform negative events of injustice into positive social change.
You can not build further walls by fighting injustice with more prejudice, more
hatred.
So my plea today to everyone, especially those who sincerely believe in Islamist jihadism ... refuse dogmatic authority; let go of anger,
hatred
and violence; learn to right wrongs without even attempting to justify cruel, unjust and futile behavior.
I guess we've all become so numb to the
hatred
that we couldn't have ever imagined it turning into fatal violence.
The least we can do is talk about it, because violence and
hatred
doesn't just happen in a vacuum.
Can we find a way to reject
hatred
and heal the divisions between us?
In the face of so much
hatred
and ignorance against those in the Middle East, every moment on site felt like a protest for peace.
My self-worth was buried under a soul-crushing load of silence that isolated me from everyone that I cared about, and I was consumed with misplaced
hatred
and anger that I took out on myself.
But had I not found a way out of the
hatred
and anger, I'm not sure I'd be standing here today.
Jeffrey Alan Carnegie: I've tried to convince progressive friends that they need to understand what motivates Trump supporters, yet many of them have given up trying to understand in the face of what they perceive as lies, selfishness and
hatred.
We must dissent from the
hatred
and from the mistrust.
What if we stop to think about the consequence of the information that we pass on and its potential to incite violence or
hatred?
It was distrust, it was hatred, and it was also the urge to kill.
And for days, I was planning, trying to find the right moment, the right way to do it, filled with hatred, filled with fear.
But I have to keep reminding myself that when I was over there, I was able to see humanity over
hatred
in my enemy's eyes.
This could be the eccentric leader of a marginal political party somewhere in Europe, or an Islamist extremist imam preaching dogma and hatred, or it could be a white supremacist Nazi-admiring orator somewhere else.
But as I was thinking about this TED Talk, I realized one thing: I have never had the courage to say in a public space that I was bisexual myself, because I so feared the slander and the stigma and the ridicule and the
hatred
that was sure to follow.
Now, this
hatred
stems not from a dislike of cavities, nor was it a lifetime in the making.
Rather, this
hatred
stems from a particular incident that happened nine years ago.
And then finally, my grandmother said, a good Samaritan came by, saw the man on the side of the road and looked and saw not centuries of
hatred
between Jews and Samaritans, looked and saw not his fears reflected, not economic anxiety, not "what's going to happen to me because things are changing."
It feels to me that the platforms that we use to inhabit these online spaces have been designed either ignorantly or willfully to allow for harassment and abuse, to propagate misinformation, to enable
hatred
and hate speech and the violence that comes from it, and it feels like none of our current platforms are doing enough to address and to fix that.
It was an act of clenched teeth and
hatred.
It can't distinguish satire from propaganda or irony from hatred, and so on and so forth.
Millions of people have already been infected with
hatred
and anger, and they either become active online, by spreading or amplifying hatred, or they take to the streets and take up arms.
For those of you who think that new media of the Internet could somehow help us avert genocide, should look no further than Rwanda, where in the '90s it was actually two radio stations which were responsible for fueling much of the ethnic
hatred
in the first place.
Because with a few wonderful exceptions, very often when religious people come together, religious leaders come together, they're arguing about abstruse doctrines or uttering a council of
hatred
or inveighing against homosexuality or something of that sort.
And the rabbis and the early fathers of the church who said that any interpretation of scripture that bred
hatred
and disdain was illegitimate.
And one reason is because of something I call the "growing lethality of hatred."
More and more, it's possible for grassroots
hatred
abroad to manifest itself in the form of organized violence on American soil.
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