Sentences with phrase «the infamy»

But compared to the infamy visited upon those named above, how many of us recall all the GOP / Conservative Scandals?
An employee had vaulted himself to worldwide infamy when his weekend behaviour was captured on video and posted online; people furious with his conduct had figured out where he worked.
Amazon Prime Day: On a day that lives in retail infamy, Amazon will offer its Prime shoppers massive deals in a show of force for the e-commerce giant.
Why it's hot: Carl's Jr. and Hardee's achieved advertising fame — and infamy — with its racy ads starring scantily clad women.
This Columbian city rose to infamy as the home of Pablo Escobar's violent drug cartel, but the city has changed a lot since the Medellin Cartel fell in the early 1990s.
In a series of speeches and articles, eventually collected in a justly famous book, he argued that nonvoting stock was the «crowning infamy» in a series of developments designed to disenfranchise public investors.
Let them all come together and take their stand; they will be brought down to terror and infamy.
LaVey played up the Satan angle for exposure and infamy, and never took that aspect of it seriously.
That's exactly how George Carlin rose to infamy: through his outlandishly offensive routine called «The 7 Words You Can Never Say On Television.»
«Whatever insults human dignity, such as subhuman living conditions, arbitrary imprisonment, deportation, slavery... the selling of women and children; as well as disgraceful working conditions, where men are treated as mere tools for profit, rather than as free and responsible persons; all these things and others of their like are infamies indeed... they are a supreme dishonour to the Creator.»
Infamy is one way for your memory to last long after your death.
He saw women staggering under the loads of bricks to build Pharaoh's treasure cities, until he could tolerate the infamy no longer.
In one of my posts of infamy, I mentioned that I knew my thinking was changing because I started agreeing with authors I used to despise.
The social principles of Christianity transfer the consistorial councillor's adjustment of all infamies to heaven and thus justify the further existence of those infamies on earth.
Well, conservatives warmed to that message, McCaskill got Todd Akin (of «legitimate rape» infamy) as her opponent, and the rest is history.
If we fail to acknowledge the infamy of the Hitler - Stalin pact, which consigned these countries to the meat - grinder, and fail to note that most of the casualties and destruction of World War II involved these countries» peoples and their territories, then our picture of the Soviet Union is incomplete — and so is our understanding of what happened in 1989 — 91.
His later works show him implacable to the whole system of official values: the ignobility of fashionable life; the infamies of empire; the spuriousness of the church, the vain conceit of the professions; the meannesses and cruelties that go with great success; and every other pompous crime and lying institution of this world.
That's an interesting question, especially since both of our current worship experiences take place in spaces that have a bit of local infamy.
Strong drink and games of chance and idols and divining arrows are only an infamy of Satan's handiwork.
It was due to the action of Nero, that Emperor whose name has become a synonym for infamy, and who to pagan and Christian alike seemed an unholy monster.
But when, in his worldly strivings he sets out like a madman in a desperate attempt to despise himself, and in the face of this is brazen about it and lauds himself for his infamy, then one can undertake no disputing with him.
After his release of the list of infamy and his role in the Stokes trial, Cardinal Keeler is receiving very favorable reviews in the press.
The awful discretion which a court of impeachments must necessarily have to doom to honor or to infamy the most confidential and the most distinguished characters of the community forbids the commitment of the trust to a small number of persons.
Accounts of these infamies were retold in texts used for the instruction of children in grammar, rhetoric, and poetry in the schools of that era, as pointed out by Christian apologists in their epoch.
The second challenge to what many commentators are now calling America's «holiday from history» came, of course, on September 11, 2001 — a day of infamy that, in a very real sense, marked the beginning of a new century and a new millennium.
By making the two apostles that offer, Simon projected his name into the vocabulary of infamy.
Muslims now have to define themselves in relation to the day of infamy.
As though that knowledge were anything but infamy in any person who in a cowardly and traitorous and envious and empty puffed - up manner dares to make such a comment!
She was tied under the placard of infamy: a miter placed on her head with the words» «Heretic, backslider, apostate, idolater...» (Ibid., p. 120.)
In the end, I came home from work, the lovely maintenance man fixed the disposal, the kitchen was cleaned, and Chef Ayers Chilijack will live on in kitchen infamy.
Maybe you can find some kind of symbolic spokesperson, like the cows who vandalize Chic - fil - A billboards, or, um, Jared of Subway fame / infamy.
(I think your correspondent is referencing the fact that infamy means «famous because of a bad quality,» like Pearl Harbor Day.
Most notably, the 2002 Western Conference Finals featuring the Kings and Los Angeles Lakers will go down in infamy thanks to the conspiracy theories that suggest the NBA rigged the series for the Lakers as they attempted to three - peat as champions.
It was a game created by infamy, played by men for whom helmets and bombs and ground attacks would soon have a very different meaning.
I'm not sure RG3 should make this a permanent look, but you can guarantee this picture will live on in Internet infamy.
Lin finished with 45 points in the game, but no one will remember that or care, and this dunk will live on in Internet infamy.
Call it a day that will live in infamy, the black mark on Cantona's career, or merely the «kung fu kick heard around the world».
A day which will live in infamy for all Arsenal supporters.
I'm sure the NFL and its teams are thrilled that this photo will live on in infamy.
We'll see which ones will live on in infamy.
The End of Infamy To the delight of the Dolphins» success - starved fans, wide receiver Greg Camarillo scored on a 64 - yard reception in overtime on Sunday to defeat the Ravens 22 — 16 and snap a 16 - game losing streak.
In a mad, mad final match, Italy rode its stalwart defense to a fourth championship, while the greatest player of his generation left the field in infamy after a shocking moment of mindless rage
if wenger fails to see the merit to be had by ushering in a new youthful management era he will suffer the indignity of vented humiliation (by fans) and worse «his legacy» will be one of infamy.
If Franklin Roosevelt was a Big Ten fan, he'd refer to Sept. 15, 2007, as the «day that will live in infamy
A lot of things have happened since 28 December, when Nicolas Anelka ran into space behind the West Ham defence, tucked the ball home, peeled away in celebration and gestured his way into infamy.
Next comes Billy Cundiff's induction into infamy.
The closest the Wainstein report got to providing America with the ammo it needed to keep UNC in the national spotlight of infamy was an email sent by a member of the North Carolina academic support staff to a director of football operations.
It seems like the whole world is on the Hawks... Making my decision among a few others to Ride the Kings into Infamy on their history making season!!
He declared that this sort of thing went on in Uruguay all the time; fans even sent him, perversely, a trophy to commemorate his infamy.
Idrissa Traore is a name already largely forgotten but the Malian midfielder will always have a position of some infamy in the history of the African Champions League.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z