Xenophobia
in sentence
92 examples of Xenophobia in a sentence
It is unemployment and economic insecurity that breed
xenophobia
and support for extreme rightist movements across the continent.
The
xenophobia
and chauvinism that some of the defensive strategies can awaken may end up doing more harm than the threats from which they were intended to protect us.
To do so, however, requires understanding the
xenophobia
that reigns in Syria.
Today’s populism advances a toxic new xenophobia, one that threatens to fracture our societies.
That is why it is so important to combat the new
xenophobia.
This is why the new
xenophobia
has largely been resisted in Europe’s most diverse cities.
A second way to combat the new
xenophobia
is to reinforce the protection of civil liberties.
A third way to fight the new
xenophobia
is through innovation.
The threat posed by the new
xenophobia
should not be underestimated.
Democrats are so infuriated by his misogyny and
xenophobia
that they fail to understand how he connects with many of their former supporters.
The Delusions of China's Growing NationalismBEJING: China has recently seen an upsurge of ultra-nationalism, all the more disturbing because of the way in which Party, state and military leaders have, by insisting that "hostile foreign forces" are arrayed against them, charged this nationalism with a
xenophobia
that is never far beneath the surface in modern Chinese history.
The country is now hurtling toward an isolated state of provincialism and xenophobia, but its leaders keep telling the public that Britain will be better off on its own.
For Europe’s task is to maintain and strengthen structures of cooperation that retain the advantages of diversity and independence without reviving the old curse of the European nation state: xenophobia, bloodshed, and war.
Just as importantly, such a ruling would send a powerful signal that racism and
xenophobia
have no place in the new Europe.
It is repelled -- as are most Western intellectuals -- by the
xenophobia
of the party of territoriality.
Sonia's victory, indeed, was a near-unanimous verdict for the politics of inclusiveness - economic, social and cultural - over the divisiveness and
xenophobia
of the BJP.
In Italy, Silvio Berlusconi’s government also appears tainted with right-wing populism and
xenophobia.
Just as both empathy and
xenophobia
can be explained by natural selection, both can be modulated by cultural factors.
Efforts to limit or manage migration are not necessarily based on racism or
xenophobia.
An initiative confined to migrants would merely reinforce the growing
xenophobia
and extremism in Greece.
Alas, such divisiveness already exists: public opinion opposing the veil is strident, but it appears to be less about religion than about racist xenophobia, anti-immigrant feelings, and resistance to multiculturalism.
Similarly, on immigration, Tuck claims that, despite the insufferable
xenophobia
dominating the Leave campaign, the only way to overcome racism is to let Britain’s people “feel” sovereign again by returning control of their borders to London.
And perhaps the loss of control over immigration from Europe inspired greater
xenophobia.
But their
xenophobia
is directed against poor Mexican immigrants, blacks, or Middle Eastern refugees, who are perceived as freeloaders depriving honest (read white) Americans of their rightful place in the social pecking order.
The alternative – already gaining traction – is the resurgence of naked power politics and dangerous
xenophobia.
Mass migration from poor countries has created fear and
xenophobia
in richer countries, especially among the working class.
Economic stagnation and widening inequality have contributed to a surge in
xenophobia
and nationalism in the advanced countries, exemplified by the United Kingdom’s vote to exit the European Union and the election of US President Donald Trump – and now his decision to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement.
Economist Andy Xie, formerly with Morgan Stanley, proposed last week that China trade its dollar assets for shares in US companies on a grand scale, challenging America to overcome its financial
xenophobia
in order to avert a disaster of undercapitalization.
National and cultural identities are mixed;
xenophobia
and rage mirror
xenophobia
and rage.
And yet what ultimately unites Europe’s far-right parties is similar to what underlies the Tea Party’s rise within America’s Republican Party: covert racism and
xenophobia.
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