Doctors are contesting the regulations as undemocratic, arbitrary and Draconian. |
|
I fear the latter, given the Draconian governmental measures over a single case, but time will tell. |
|
Reptilians generally are envisioned as half snake, half human, and they are thought to have come from the Alpha Draconian star system. |
|
Draconian punishments were meted out to supposed sinners and traitors. |
|
Thousands of immigrants have been swept up in draconian dragnets, and many have been denied access to counsel and family. |
|
We are making every effort to try and soften the edges of these draconian rules but brick walls and head butting are pretty joyless occupations. |
|
Or we could find our military, intelligence, and technical communities hog-tied by overly draconian measures for protecting information. |
|
Yet as Paymaster General she has presided over some of the most draconian taxation legislation in centuries. |
|
Some companies don't like dealing with this inspector because they say he's draconian and pedantic. |
|
The penalty imposed by law is not draconian, and serves more as a reminder to perform a commonsense action. |
|
It seems the fresco was intended as a draconian warning to potential business competitors! |
|
This enables them to avoid draconian British inheritance tax levies in favour of lower Irish rates. |
|
He feared the activities of a communist fifth column, and enacted draconian laws to restrict free expression and assembly. |
|
But one of the activists in the firing line says they're a draconian attack on shareholder democracy. |
|
Such draconian methods point to the shortcomings of a cumbersome investigative and judicial system. |
|
Self-restraint, rather than draconian laws, was key to the most civilized and crime-free society in Europe. |
|
On May 4, the government promulgated draconian security measures to cope with the crisis. |
|
The political party's descent into the gutter continues apace, with plans to further tighten already draconian anti asylum seeker legislation. |
|
Now is not the time to revert to extreme rhetoric and draconian sanctions against those who support abortion rights. |
|
This awful, draconian law has not been used to safeguard copyright, however. |
|
|
As we look through this part, the question we need to ask is whether it is draconian legislation. |
|
Of course, it won't sell over here because we have some of the most draconian censorship laws in the world. |
|
New laws are being passed, draconian laws that destroy lives and syphon happiness. |
|
No matter how draconian the laws become, Europe is not capable of shutting its borders. |
|
No amount of naval ships or coastguards or draconian laws will stop it happening. |
|
In this way such Treaty Articles are prevented from becoming too harsh or draconian in their application. |
|
Had we been caught, we could have faced two years in jail under draconian new media laws. |
|
It is madness to suggest the draconian speeding laws we have should apply here. |
|
Imposing draconian laws that restrict civil liberties will not prevent terrorist attacks. |
|
There was worrying talk about it not being possible to repeal the draconian anti-trade union laws. |
|
He has supported open prisons and opposed unnecessarily draconian anti-terrorism laws. |
|
I believe that draconian laws are always wrong and the best society is one with the least legislation. |
|
There was a time when I would have argued that our libel laws were draconian and should be amended. |
|
They have called it the most dangerous and draconian legislation ever proposed. |
|
This draconian legislation included provision for flogging, curfew, and internment. |
|
A draconian law to quell demonstrations has only galvanised public support for young Quebecois protesting tuition fee hikes. |
|
These hard facts indicate real motives behind enactment of this draconian law. |
|
It isn't, therefore, that community policing is a better way to package draconian measures, like a wolf in sheep's clothing. |
|
To have occasional draconian enforcement might provide sufficient repellence, but is hardly the way to build justice. |
|
In the immediate aftermath of the September 11 attacks, a dozen states passed draconian anti-terrorism laws. |
|
|
This made it difficult if not impossible to move in any other direction than towards ever more draconian treatment of prisoners. |
|
A simple and less draconian solution would be to install a duct in the ceiling with an extractor fan. |
|
The last two decades, however, have seen a dangerous rise in states adopting draconian right-to-work laws, especially in the South. |
|
But even this is just a Band-Aid and the spending cuts will still be draconian. |
|
Glasgow's draconian attitude towards skateboarders forces them into even more unsuccessful areas of urban architecture. |
|
In this reform, Shang Yang emphasized severe punishments, believing that draconian penalties helped to prevent crimes. |
|
I am writing to you about the draconian road traffic calming measures currently being installed in Woodmansterne Road. |
|
And he introduces the naive first offenders and two-bit nonviolent users who have received draconian punishment. |
|
Sport exists in a specialised world of brutal oppression, of draconian law, of fascist ukase. |
|
The existence of such draconian punishment is a reflection of a culture that has no time for thieves and murderers. |
|
The combination of unknowable rules and draconian penalties is already having a chilling effect. |
|
Perhaps you may think that in this case the continuation of such stringent and draconian sanctions is a regrettable but necessary consequence. |
|
Such draconian measures would be almost unthinkable in a democratic system. |
|
The government has no democratic mandate to effect such a draconian, even suicidal, change of policy. |
|
At one point, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation was regarded as a draconian measure or last option for patients in these categories. |
|
In other cases the courts have struggled against the draconian result of nullity. |
|
It's high time more draconian measures were brought in and quickly. |
|
For his part, Walters has been busy crisscrossing the nation, trying to extinguish even the slightest moves to alter the nation's draconian drug laws. |
|
This photograph is a critique of how draconian the rules of society can be. |
|
Any draconian shift on climate change policies would be most detrimental to the energy sector Sunbelt states. |
|
|
Thankfully, this draconian proposal is not a done deal and not universally supported. |
|
Whether you are subjected to the draconian structure of the military or that of our pernicious government, honest dissidence should always remain constant. |
|
Of course he exaggerates to make the point that the networks adhere to a draconian gag rule regarding the most-well-known figure in human history. |
|
Civil liberties groups have claimed the draconian rules will make Bangor like the communist dictatorship. |
|
The result was the imposition of the most draconian inspections regime in history. |
|
Mr Banks said that the legislation was draconian in its approach. |
|
The type of draconian legislation that produces such abuses is not so much designed to tackle terrorism as to manufacture an illusion of it for propagandist purposes. |
|
But the same end could be achieved by less draconian means if the magistrates' courts were empowered to work faster so that those found guilty could be jailed with dispatch. |
|
This configuration incurred a lot of overhead on each node to run any sort of application, and managing misbehaving processes was a rather draconian matter. |
|
A safeguard clause has been inserted in the Treaty of Accession providing the EU with draconian powers to seal-off one of these countries if a food safety problem occurs. |
|
It's about time we sorted a sensible compromise and not a draconian law. |
|
A number of people were booked quite unnecessarily, causing anger and disbelief that such an innocent action could result in such draconian measures. |
|
So what does the 26-page report say to reassure gun-shy men who fear they might be put through the ringer by biased child custody awards or draconian child support laws? |
|
Possibilities include draconian rationing, charging patients, reducing priorities, or limiting the workforce. |
|
The draconian measures applied to the brewing industry during the First World War had a particularly dramatic effect upon mild. |
|
Earlier historians such as Austin Poole and Richard Southern considered Henry as a cruel, draconian ruler. |
|
In 1069 local resistance in Cheshire was finally put down using draconian measures as part of the Harrying of the North. |
|
So I share the disgust of trade unionists who now face even more draconian curbs on the right to take industrial action when all else fails. |
|
He is ready to legislate a draconian, Hitlerian law to make Turkey a total police state. |
|
The dragon came low to the earth. It defied every image of a draconian being Kulp had ever seen. |
|
|
The Labour council is implementing draconian cuts in public services. |
|
I'm confused by the plethora of overpaid England footballers using draconian rulings made by overpaid woolly-minded judges to cover their tracks. |
|
It did, however, lay the groundwork for the more draconian legislation which followed, and in 1891 the Mersey and Irwell Joint Committee was formed. |
|
On 5 August 2015 the Baird state government introduced a Bill to parliament to wind back some of the more draconian aspects of their own 2012 workers compensation laws. |
|
The reaction of the European colons, a mixture of shock and fear, was to demand further draconian measures and to suspend any suggestion of new reforms. |
|
The more draconian steps include the use of political prison camps, or kwanliso, rather than regular detention facilities, as places of confinement. |
|