As ever, it's our pastimes' deepest virtues that incite the most venomous evangelical slander. |
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It's called slander, and if your trashing is a tissue of lies that ends up harming your competitor's business, you can be sued successfully. |
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These latter included wills, churches and churchyards, religious obligations, tithes, marriage, slander, and sorcery. |
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In the hope that the professor has since repented of such vicious slander, I do not mention the name. |
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The court system is used to resolve land disputes and slander cases, but problems are usually settled within the family or village. |
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They must avoid bad tactics of slander, dirty tricks, smear campaign and hate speeches that discourage citizens to participate in politics. |
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But most did not slander their comrades using language that mirrored Soviet or Vietnamese Communist propaganda. |
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He stood up courageously for his view and withstood slander and charges of spying. |
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A slander case with global connections has been simmering in Chinatown since November. |
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And he said he would not be discouraged by such groundless slander and unreasonable allegations and would ignore them. |
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You may be a victim of malice, spite and slander as friends and associates indulge in negative gossip. |
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Hamlet as a play is similarly preoccupied by slander, misrepresentation and selves fabricated from the nothings of rhetorical tropes. |
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There will be tribulation and people will revile you and slander you, but he has overcome and that we live for that. |
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It is vain to urge that truth will prevail, and that slander, when detected, recoils on the calumniator. |
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The slander cases in the years between 1870 and 1890 bear out this assertion. |
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People were invited and encouraged to sail close to the winds of slander as the show and the presenter sought out audience share. |
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Despite the recommendations of the Faulks Committee, the law of defamation still distinguishes between libel and slander. |
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All of this can be had without the malicious slander or the scandalous headlines. |
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They have indulged in character assassination, slander and libel, and the sloppiest, least scientific thinking imaginable. |
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Not long ago, however, the vice president filed a slander suit against some members of the Taiwan media. |
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The defendant is entitled to particulars of where and when the slander was alleged to have been uttered. |
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The defendants are further entitled to know who allegedly uttered the slander, what was said and to whom. |
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In 426 he attacked the Babylonians of Aristophanes as a slander on the state. |
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They never use profane language, bear false witness, engage in slander, gossip or backbiting, or even listen to such debasing talk. |
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I expect the acrimony and sexualized slander to reach a new pitch next year in an attempt to dethrone Palin. |
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Libel and slander laws are commonly used to punish unacceptable speech. |
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I cannot tell you how much of this is truth or malicious slander. |
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There is therefore no basis for a cause of action of slander of title. |
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She is still facing slander charges against the Perugia police who she says hit her. |
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Mass arrests and a slander campaign have been the rule ever since. |
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That doesn't mean that it is OK to slander and libel people. |
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Obviously, a federal judge so inclined could very easily find that the offensive name constitutes fighting words or slander. |
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Alinejad spoke with IranWire about the slander and how she plans to fight it. |
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But in this day and age, with so many mercenary lawyers around, talking libel and slander, you cannot even speak ill of the living without caution. |
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I've let this slander pass, because I think the audience realizes he's just yanking my chain, and because he was also kind enough to invite me to guest host the show. |
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It is slander if it takes the form of spoken words, gestures or mimicry. |
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He held a grudge against me, and so he made up lies to slander me. |
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Similarly, don't use profanity, obscenity, slander or libel. |
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Each blogger is capable of bias and slander, but, taken as a group, bloggers offer the searcher after truth boundless material to chew over. |
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But now you must rid yourselves of all such things as these: anger, rage, malice, slander, and filthy language from your lips. |
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Whispering campaigns can be organized to slander a department head or an executive. |
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Insult, vicious verbal abuses or slander. Somali oral literature is replete with poems, maxims and proverbs warning against such offences. |
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Lies and rumours come from who-knows-where, and sometimes imply slander and even suspicion of pedophilia. |
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Blest are you when they insult you and persecute you and utter every kind of slander against you because of me. |
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It says that if people slander one of the great provinces as a hellhole, they get to stay in cabinet. |
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I would also note to Foreign Minister Zahar that casual slander is an inauspicious way to begin. |
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Misery, illness, slander, and dishonor are very bitter chalices from which many must drink, not only sinners. |
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I assign the representation of the bad intentions to reptiles that as well as slander, slither smoothly and silently. |
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For nearly 30 years it has worked to deliberately confuse the public, slander scientists, and sabotage science. |
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Prosecutors have asked for an 18-month suspended sentence against Mr de Villepin for complicity in slander, and jail terms for two others. |
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Two rabid parliamentary secretaries then slander the opposition as harbour for terrorists, which is also totally wrong. |
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All countries have defamation laws, although a range of terms are used to describe these, including libel, slander, insult, 'desacato' and so on. |
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We can fight for our ideas, but we do not have the right to slander anyone, persecute them or throw them into jail. |
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What action is being taken to prevent that the strict application of slander laws discourages victims from reporting such acts? |
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Presumably this slander is in purpose of his thesis that hard communist cadre like Cannon were just Zinovievite hacks. |
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Since then, your government has launched a virulent slander campaign against Thich Quang Do in the state-controlled media. |
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The Journal's modus operandi included slander and character assassination. |
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This type of hostility can range from hurtful slander to physical attacks. |
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I don't know why newspapers and magazines gravitate towards slander. |
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That Stone would slander the democratic, pro-Western, EuroMaidan revolution as a CIA coup is no surprise. |
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Achakzai regretted how it has become easier for yellow journalists to get away with slander and defamation. |
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False charges of slander are used as intimidation. |
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Anonymous did not invent the spread of slander posing as news. |
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But none of this stops Kennedy from trafficking in slander and nonsense. |
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There are a number of individual journalists who, on what are dubious grounds to say the least, are waiting to be tried, accused of slander by the president. |
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Although he received a large amount of slander and ridicule during his forty years at the head of revival, he never gave up his positions. |
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If those statements had been made outside of this chamber, I would have ample grounds to seek redress in the courts for libel, slander and defamation of character. |
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The courts are clear that damages in a wrongful dismissal action will be restricted to those flowing from the failure to give reasonable notice, unless there is a separate, actionable wrong, such as slander. |
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The case was a charge of slander against a Mr Denny, the Vicar of Northlinham and Coke's client. |
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Most cases to date had involved journalists accused of slander. |
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Descriptions of actual human behavior refute tendentiousness and slander. |
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In light of the proposed amendment to the Penal Code, under which the penalty for slander will now include the restriction rather than the deprivation of liberty, please elaborate on the exact scope of this penalty. |
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It is insensitive and imbecilic to have published such slander. |
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According to the bill, media criticism, such as public slander of state officials, is included in the definition of extremist activity It is punishable by up to three years' imprisonment. |
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In Mexico, legislation had recently been agreed by the senate and the lower house to change the legal code to decriminalise defamation and slander. |
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Examples of this include statutes on occupier's liability that codify common-law principles of negligence, and statutes on libel and slander that codify common law principles of defamation. |
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Given that judges may draw from their own views of circumstances, this provision opens the way to slander and rumormongering. |
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Suetonius described Antony's accusation of an affair with Octavian as political slander. |
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This form of slander was popular during this time in the Roman Republic to demean and discredit political opponents. |
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The plea arose in local courts for slander, breach of contract, or interference with land, goods, or persons. |
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No action for slander or libel shall be brought in respect of spoken or written statements made or presented before the courts in good faith and within the limits of the right of legal defence. |
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Having failed to find any other excuse to regurgitate their slander of the Cuban people, they remembered the anniversary of the decisions by the courts which sentenced agents of US imperialism and decided to celebrate it. |
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Last month authorities in Oman clamped down on a number of Netizens for slander against Sultan Qaboos Bin Saeed. |
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Experts say the questions are being daftly posed so that slander charges may be avoided. |
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The city has a tradition of political graffiti depicting everything from outrageous slander to witty banter and limericks, caricatures, and propaganda. |
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Slander offers a relentless and voyeurisitc gaze on uncongeniality. |
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Slander is spoken defamation and libel is printed or broadcast defamation. |
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