Iniquitous in a sentence as an adjective

Their problem is that what’s keeping him trapped there is not so much the iniquitous actions of world powers, but pride.

There are times when it truly is virtuous to, for example, break someone's nose, and times when it truly is iniquitous.

It can give you any number of reasons for the former to seem virtuous even though the latter is iniquitous.

I hope you'd agree that it's iniquitous for one group to be left out of the protection of the law.[1] This was changed in 2006 with the controversial Racial and Religious Hatred Act. Blasphemy was later repealed.

Do you think the old practice, that ‘they should take who have the power, and they should keep who can,’ is less iniquitous, when the power has become power of brains instead of fist?” - John Ruskin

I understand the iniquitous history of the Opium wars, but not the economics especially switching from silver to gold

Hmm, so the Victorians were " Selfish, oppressive, iniquitous, abusive, racist, hypocritical, and worse".

A similar argument can be made for socialized medicine, a highly privatized system like the American one ends up being: more expensive, more iniquitous and less effective.

I stopped reading at “James Damore, who was sacked after he circulated the misogynist iniquitous 33,000-word memo” as it reveals this journalist has an overt agenda and doesn’t mind lying to achieve it.

The culture that was so iniquitous it gave rise to the backlash of Marxism and totalitarian communism which had such a disastrous impact on humanity in the 20th century.

Selfish, oppressive, iniquitous, abusive, racist, hypocritical, and worse.

I strongly believe that this kind of technique was inevitable as networks became ubiquitous, and getting the government involved in granting a monopoly on the technique is iniquitous and harmful to innovation.

And seeing, as I did, that in quite a short time they made the former government seem by comparison something precious as gold-for among other things they tried to send a friend of mine, the aged Socrates, whom I should scarcely scruple to describe as the most upright man of that day, with some other persons to carry off one of the citizens by force to execution, in order that, whether he wished it, or not, he might share the guilt of their conduct; but he would not obey them, risking all consequences in preference to becoming a partner in their iniquitous deeds-seeing all these things and others of the same kind on a considerable scale, I disapproved of their proceedings, and withdrew from any connection with the abuses of the time.

Iniquitous definitions

adjective

characterized by iniquity; wicked because it is believed to be a sin; "iniquitous deeds"; "he said it was sinful to wear lipstick"; "ungodly acts"

See also: sinful ungodly