释义 |
Definition of thought police in English: thought policenoun treated as plural A group of people who aim or are seen as aiming to suppress ideas that deviate from the way of thinking that they believe to be correct. curse those politically correct thought police! Example sentencesExamples - Would you agree that there is a sort of mirror effect here, that liberalism does have its own history of intellectual coercion, and that the thought police are as likely to come from the left as from the right side of the political spectrum?
- When I became a victim of the thought police I was genuinely surprised, and now I am afraid that my case has had a chilling effect on less established academics.
- To some it's the home of an oppressive thought police bent on turning workers into politically correct dullards.
- The long reign of censorship is over: the pro-choice thought police can't continue to tell women abortion is only about cells or tissue or menstruation management.
- It's a provocative read - and, as the author notes, the kind of argument that can really get you in trouble with the conservative thought police.
- After pressure from the corporate thought police including a cease and desist letter and thousands of angry emails threatening such things as exile and eternal damnation, we decided to remove the site from the web.
- Does this bill mean, for example, that the board can still communicate directly with its employees without the Minister's thought police intervening?
- In Wales, as well as Scotland, democratic socialism survives and, thanks to devolution, there is nothing that the thought police in 10 Downing Street can do about it.
- The feminist thought police do not take kindly to persons who challenge widely-held beliefs.
- Inclusiveness for us is about setting more people free - from the thought police of political correctness and from the stranglehold of paternalistic bureaucracy.
- No, he is a hero to many but the thought police decide we must call him an extremist.
- It is happy to be the thought police when it comes to our private lives, but it now wants to pass a law that discriminates against those whom we might not like and whom we might find offensive.
- We now face a Darwinian thought police that, save for employing physical violence, is as insidious as any secret police at ensuring conformity and rooting out dissent.
- The sparkling music and inspiring words - anathema to the thought police of political correctness - can still stir any sympathetic listener.
- The thought police will probably be knocking on my door very soon.
- If you're based in Europe and say the wrong thing on the internet in the future, you could receive a visit from the thought police.
- He shows that modern liberals act as virtual thought police to suppress ideas of which they disapprove.
- The result is tyranny, thought police, and stagnation, no intellectual and moral progress.
- We can meet face to face, in public, and have an loud, strong argument about our president and no one is going to call the thought police when one of us says that our president is the anti-Christ.
- No, they are leading us towards becoming a third-world nation of thought police and mind control.
Definition of thought police in US English: thought policenounθɔt pəˈlis treated as plural A group of people who aim or are seen as aiming to suppress ideas that deviate from the way of thinking that they believe to be correct. curse those politically correct thought police! Example sentencesExamples - He shows that modern liberals act as virtual thought police to suppress ideas of which they disapprove.
- We can meet face to face, in public, and have an loud, strong argument about our president and no one is going to call the thought police when one of us says that our president is the anti-Christ.
- We now face a Darwinian thought police that, save for employing physical violence, is as insidious as any secret police at ensuring conformity and rooting out dissent.
- The long reign of censorship is over: the pro-choice thought police can't continue to tell women abortion is only about cells or tissue or menstruation management.
- The feminist thought police do not take kindly to persons who challenge widely-held beliefs.
- Does this bill mean, for example, that the board can still communicate directly with its employees without the Minister's thought police intervening?
- Would you agree that there is a sort of mirror effect here, that liberalism does have its own history of intellectual coercion, and that the thought police are as likely to come from the left as from the right side of the political spectrum?
- The thought police will probably be knocking on my door very soon.
- No, they are leading us towards becoming a third-world nation of thought police and mind control.
- It is happy to be the thought police when it comes to our private lives, but it now wants to pass a law that discriminates against those whom we might not like and whom we might find offensive.
- It's a provocative read - and, as the author notes, the kind of argument that can really get you in trouble with the conservative thought police.
- No, he is a hero to many but the thought police decide we must call him an extremist.
- If you're based in Europe and say the wrong thing on the internet in the future, you could receive a visit from the thought police.
- The result is tyranny, thought police, and stagnation, no intellectual and moral progress.
- To some it's the home of an oppressive thought police bent on turning workers into politically correct dullards.
- Inclusiveness for us is about setting more people free - from the thought police of political correctness and from the stranglehold of paternalistic bureaucracy.
- The sparkling music and inspiring words - anathema to the thought police of political correctness - can still stir any sympathetic listener.
- After pressure from the corporate thought police including a cease and desist letter and thousands of angry emails threatening such things as exile and eternal damnation, we decided to remove the site from the web.
- In Wales, as well as Scotland, democratic socialism survives and, thanks to devolution, there is nothing that the thought police in 10 Downing Street can do about it.
- When I became a victim of the thought police I was genuinely surprised, and now I am afraid that my case has had a chilling effect on less established academics.
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