I hadn't spent my whole seventeen years perfecting my defenses to my mother's attempts at shaming me for nothing. |
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Men convicted of incest are dragged across the village in a shaming procession. |
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What we need to do is redevelop charivaris, shaming rituals, to show them their behaviour is just not acceptable. |
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It is time to take a stand against these youngsters and start by naming and shaming them. |
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His plea during the recent recess for more grown-up behaviour in PMQs was a Speakerly form of naming and shaming. |
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Honesty about our internalised oppression builds a culture without thought policing or shaming people based on our assumptions of what is right. |
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It's shaming in one sense, but never underestimate the depth of despair supporters are prepared to endure. |
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However, body shaming and cheap, provocative attempts to increase site traffic have drowned out your pro-women message. |
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The shaming message of Bhopal is that those unvalued in life are worth just as little in death. |
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A shaming indictment of the woeful British attitude to sport at grassroots level, McKenna's story is difficult to believe. |
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Parents should not punish accidents or behaviors that are part of normal development, and they should avoid teasing, shaming, or nagging. |
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Instead of cracking down hard, the municipality took a soft approach, a combination of gentle persuasion and public shaming. |
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She always found the most cruel, shaming and hurtful way possible to attack. |
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Probation officers said naming and shaming offenders was counterproductive and would lead to more re-offending. |
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Is this kind of guilt tripping and body shaming really the best way to shift your products? |
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Bloggers have resorted to public shaming, posting photos of manspreading offenders caught in the act of indiscreet sitting. |
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Favoring a particular body type fosters body shaming, eating disorders and depression in young, impressionable women. |
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Although lately, it seems that not a day goes by without some chucklehead in the media fat shaming her. |
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Body shaming is body shaming, regardless of whether it is directed at curvy girls or skinny girls. |
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It may even inspire some trial judges to impose shaming penalties that rely on public forms of humiliation. |
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Facilitator can add experiences such as: shaming, ostracizing, name calling, physical abuse. |
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If you the Court will not do your job of naming and shaming, then we will have to do it for you. |
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Mrs Ries has also strongly continued the important process of naming and shaming toxic chemicals and seeking their eradication. |
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The sponsors of the draft resolution might examine their own records before naming and shaming countries with which they had difficult relations. |
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In a naming and shaming exercise, we have to say that the Council and the French Presidency have failed on this score. |
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You could, for example, make certain practices public in the context of a naming and shaming information campaign, to mention but an example. |
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Naming and shaming is an extremely effective way of improving food safety and quality. |
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He used the extremely efficient method of naming and shaming, and quite rightly so. |
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I wish to continue my practice of naming and shaming Member States that fail to implement EU legislation. |
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Sure, some people were grossed out, but those who reacted in disgust got a well-deserved public shaming. |
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I am not in the business of punishing or shaming because public opinion does that already. |
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Yes, she says, it is shaming, but the reasons are complex, and to do with equal pay. |
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It is quite shaming that after well over six months there are eight Member States still to ratify. |
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One of the most devastating types of emotional abuse is what I refer to as shaming behaviours. |
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The method's effectiveness therefore relies on a form of peer pressure and naming and shaming. |
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Blaming and shaming are huge contributors to mental health issues and not necessary for finding solutions. |
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The rest need to try that bit harder to keep their properties and the area around them in good order in the hope of shaming the scruffy minority into mending their ways. |
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And so the shaming of them, the public taking them down a peg or two, become moments to savor. |
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Only the greedy say that greed is good and there is no shaming of the shameless. |
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Let a shaman wave vine leaves over her and enforce a little semi-public shaming. |
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But can women like Ramadei succeed in using Internet shaming for more pointed acts of political good against male misbehavior? |
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Putting bumper stickers on people's cars, they say, is an updated way of inducing shame for social good, in this case by shaming SUV drivers about their purchase. |
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McNamara has no interest in shaming the people he worked with or himself. |
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Nothing says class like a middle-aged woman shaming two teenaged girls on social media for not being Stepford Children! |
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This incident is a disgusting display of sexism and body shaming. |
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But the mother of 6 didn't take the body shaming sitting down. |
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Jack Lemmon is the put-upon junior exec in a Manhattan insurance company, who has a shaming secret: he sycophantically tries to butter up his bosses by loaning out his apartment to them for their extra-marital liaisons. |
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The solemn undertakings given by the parties concerned have by and large remained unfulfilled, and the practice of naming and shaming offenders does not seem to have yielded the desired results. |
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The treatment of refugees and asylum seekers by Blair's government was shaming – cutting off benefit and refusing the right to work, even to people such as the Zimbabweans who could not be safely deported. |
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Thus far the Biennale has stayed relatively quiet on the matter, though last Friday tweeted: Naming and shaming corporate sponsors of cultural events and products has a long and noble history. |
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I believe that the policy of naming and shaming with regard to the implementation of Community law is very useful and that the Commission should perhaps help us to apply it more decisively. |
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Mr Miliband suggests naming and shaming those who pay less. |
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Spanking, smacking, whupping, and shaming all break the special role that parents have to protect their offspring. |
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The moral, abashing if not shaming, was that in the halls where once real men had roamed, or drank in peaceable closets, now mere jacket-fanciers wandered. |
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The shaming of unwed mothers is hardly limited to one religious tradition. |
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The mediaeval dynamics of public shaming, of gross but partial community condemnation, and of crudely emotive responses instead of considered reactions, do not seem too far away. |
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Naming and shaming can work where we are dealing with simple statistical concepts, such as who has and has not implemented the European laws that they have agreed to, but not here. |
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He might have belittled the petty offense that had occurred, so slight it was when you put it beside the betrayal of a Church and the shaming of Ireland's priesthood and the priesthood everywhere. |
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The effectiveness of peer pressure to discourage Member States from not complying with their legal obligations, in the form of naming, shaming, and, if necessary, blaming, could be enhanced. |
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He points to the relative success of Experts Panel on the Illegal Exploitation of Natural Resources and Other Forms of Wealth in the DR Congo in shaming several major companies illegally operating in the Congo. |
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Those who come to Me following from love, love my Word, for they know it corrects them without coming to wound them, and points out their defects without shaming them. |
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While callout culture raises issues of shaming and risk, it has also raised consciousness around the implications of public speech on Twitter. |
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Such an established due process would ensure adequate recourse to consequences of failure of responsibility and provide mechanisms for naming and shaming and further steps as necessary. |
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It has been seen as more productive to focus strictly on the mandate of each agency and to leave naming and shaming to the NGOS whose expertise this is. |
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As Mrs Wortmann-Kool says, we see part of the solution as an international scoreboard naming and shaming those countries that fail to respect the rights of others as far as counterfeit goods are concerned. |
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