A councillor has been found guilty of bringing Bolton Council into disrepute by making a racist remark. |
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Surely it is the politicians that have brought politics into disrepute with their spin culture, deceit, half-truths and underhand dealings? |
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It will surely cause violence and bring our province into disrepute at a national and international level. |
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All this action does is muddle the faithful and bring the faith into needless disrepute. |
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Religions come into disrepute when manipulated by unscrupulous politicians. |
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By the fifteenth century the practice of uroscopy was falling into disrepute and the uroscopy flask became a symbol of ridicule. |
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Haruspication was at first adopted by the Romans but later fell into disrepute. |
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But he goes too far when he claims that he has never brought motor racing into disrepute. |
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Using this ancient parliamentary procedure brings Parliament into disrepute, what's going on here? |
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Now its politicians are being brought into disrepute by incompetence, arrogance and ambition. |
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In those pre-Watergate years, a certain air of roughish disrepute still clung to journalists as a species. |
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Ministers used to be appointed to their parishes for life unless they committed a grave sin which brought their office into disrepute. |
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Incentives have a role, but when it is possible for even a few individuals to avoid any obligation to the state, they fall into disrepute. |
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This would adversely affect the election and bring the results into disrepute. |
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It was bound to attract adverse publicity and bring the profession into disrepute. |
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He denied any allegation of race fixing but is due to face a Jockey Club charge of bringing racing into disrepute next month, which he denies. |
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He also was charged with giving misleading evidence to stewards and bringing racing into disrepute. |
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Does perhaps the ridiculing of an area of academia bring the whole intellectual community into disrepute? |
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In my heart of hearts, I think unenforceable laws such as these are abominations that bring the entire legal system into disrepute. |
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It just takes one incident like this to bring the whole force into disrepute, especially when police fine other drivers who do that. |
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The humble dagwood dog fell into such disrepute yesterday that the newspaper ran a readers' poll. |
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I think that's all part of player and supporter interaction and acceptable as long as the game is not brought into disrepute. |
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The inability of the regulators to prevent scams and swindles has also brought the private pension industry into disrepute. |
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It's widely despised and held in disrepute by a large segment of the Saudi population. |
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They face possible suspension for discreditable conduct and bringing the Police Service into disrepute. |
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This type of attack brings politics into disrepute and goes some way to accounting for the lack of interest in local elections. |
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The myth that the good partisans founded a new, decent Italy all on their own, has been in disrepute for a long time now. |
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He said the solicitors' code of conduct indicated that they should behave with dignity and not bring the profession into disrepute. |
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So is it any wonder that our system of so-called justice, like our politics, is falling into disrepute? |
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This indicates a desire to preserve the old mechanisms of the international order, even as these have been cast into disrepute. |
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We don't know yet whether he is guilty, but he has brought double-barrelled names into disrepute. |
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But have we really got to the stage where a single joke, however cack-handed, brings a whole profession into disrepute? |
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Many climbers, including Hillary and the legendary Reinhold Messner, have mourned the disrepute brought on Everest by some fee-paying guided groups. |
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The international community should be rightly frustrated by this institutionalized inertia which, frankly, brings all of us into disrepute. |
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Saturday's events bring to a close a nine-year presidency during which Mr. Mbeki accrued both celebration and disrepute. |
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The evidence was critical in relation to a serious charge and the administration of justice would be held in disrepute if the evidence was not admitted. |
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That sort of horse-trading, if it is true, brings both the European Union as a whole and the Council in particular into disrepute. |
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These inferior products on the market are cheating consumers and bringing herbal medicines into disrepute. |
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Dialer fell into disrepute because some such programs may bring about high telephone costs if the user is not aware it is being utilised. |
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Custom and tradition which united them as a people had fallen into disrepute even with their chief and clan leaders. |
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We need first to investigate whether corruption accusation to the parliamentarians is of real or just a ploy to disrepute parliamentarians. |
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The use of evidence obtained in violation of the right to professional secrecy is deemed to bring the administration of justice into disrepute. |
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This may bring a seemingly well-intentioned and effective CCM initiative into disrepute. |
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His heretical views on creation brought him into some disrepute. |
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When a system is brought into disrepute, doubt is cast on all. |
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Without public support, the new laws will quickly fall into disrepute. |
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It has brought the game, in footballing parlance, into disrepute. |
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Livingstone still faces a charge of bringing his office into disrepute. |
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The administration of justice is being dragged into disrepute. |
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Having been told that she was a scarlet woman who had brought the name of the House of Windsor into disrepute, Margaret decided to behave like one. |
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This must of necessity bring her office and the judiciary into disrepute. |
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After a period of disrepute, palmistry flourished again in the Renaissance. |
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Undoubtedly, the existence of the 'Defence' brings the government and the courts into disrepute in the minds of my students, many of whom are young women. |
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Counsel shall take all necessary steps to ensure that his or her actions or those of counsel's assistants or staff are not prejudicial to the ongoing proceedings and do not bring the Court into disrepute. |
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When departments find rules impractical, but allow them to stand, it can eventually result in all the rules falling into disrepute and an overall lack of control. |
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These deficiencies can only serve to undermine the credibility of the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal, and to bring the administration of the human rights process at the federal level into disrepute. |
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They must comport themselves in a seemly and responsible way, avoiding any conduct that would bring them or the Agency or its government clients into disrepute. |
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His comment about the allegation that the Conservatives cut income tax is a very good illustration of why politicians in our country are in such disrepute in public opinion. |
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Source Of Property: The Foundation also reserves the right to refuse to accept property the origin of which may bring the Foundation into disrepute. |
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The adjudicator found that the grievors had used the employer's electronic network to engage in activity that was in violation of the employer's policy and that would tend to bring the employer into disrepute. |
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Central bankers in many countries may be in disrepute, but the Bank of Spain has won praise for bolstering banks' capital through counter-cyclical loan-loss provisioning. |
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If it can simply be disregarded, if those Canadians cannot claim and do not receive the protections that the law provides, our system of government falls into disrepute. |
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During the 1980s and 1990s, as the number of Conservative MPs for Welsh constituencies dwindled almost to zero, the office fell into disrepute. |
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The gardai are not there to wetnurse people and what's happening is bringing the whole legal system into disrepute. |
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That is bad enough in itself, but when they do not have the basic honesty and decency to admit it, then I believe they have put all politicians into disrepute. |
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And as far as the FA itself is concerned, charges of improper conduct and of bringing the game into disrepute will inevitably and swiftly follow tonight's events. |
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Why did bishops, who were not monsters and who presumably believed themselves to be exemplars of goodness, choose to send child rapists out into parishes rather than bring the institution into disrepute? |
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The three-man panel imposed a 12-month transfer embargo on Rangers on account of the club bringing the game into disrepute during Whyte's time as chairman. |
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Our view is that a great deal of the disrepute of the European Union is related to its inability to fight effectively against the ravages of all-pervading neo-liberalism. |
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She and a colleague, Dominic Kane, were among 20 people accused of spreading false news, bringing Egypt into disrepute, and conspiring with terrorists. |
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Every competitor must at all times observe such conduct which reflects the ideals of good sportsmanship and avoid any conduct which may bring himself or the sport of trials into disrepute. |
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Every rider must at all times observe such conduct as reflects the ideals of good sportsmanship and avoid any conduct which may bring himself or the sport of BMX into disrepute. |
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With negation and abstention, nihilism and invective and derision, DIKO is led to complete untrustworthiness and disrepute. |
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Equating them under the umbrella of conscription risks erasing relevant distinctions and compromising the ultimate analysis of systemic disrepute. |
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If orders of duly constituted tribunals and courts are not enforced, the administration of justice is brought into disrepute and with it our democratic values and our commitment to the rule of law. |
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The charge of bringing the game into disrepute was subsequently dropped. |
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Theatre, at the time Gilbert began writing, had fallen into disrepute. |
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Priapic, croquet-swaggering Prezza brought the whole game of government pleasure pads into disrepute, and ministers won't touch them with a barge pole. |
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The priest's unholy behaviour brought the church into disrepute. |
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