Trampling in a sentence as a noun

And mobs love trampling over the freedoms of minorities.

But, how about trampling all over everyone else --without recourse-- while trying to get the few bad guys?

I'm sorry you feel that the rules of basic human decency are trampling on your first amendment rights.

Andreesen's no saint however, he supports government spying and trampling of civil rights for his personal gain.

The US government trampling all over your rights, digital and RL is very much a concern for everyone, hackers included.

It is the judge's job to figure out how to get them the evidence they need to prove their claim while not trampling on any Americans' rights in the process.

They're reacting to companies trampling over settled expectations and compromises.

I found it somewhat ironic that the villagers standing around cutting meat off the elephant seemed to do more damage by trampling the crops than the elephants did.

The question is whether the security goals can be achieved by less-intrusive or sweeping means, without trampling on democratic freedoms and basic rights.

One thing that always surprises me is how many people take offense to the suggestion to make their software/websites more accessible, as if it's trampling on their artistic freedom.

This damage, apparently, completely outweighs and potential damage to our liberties occasioned by trampling on rights that we won by painful and bloody struggles.

This is simply a huge corporation with vast legal resources doing whatever is necessary to prevent theft of their IP rights, even if that involves trampling people that committed no crimes.

Without this sort of counter-balance, the numbers will always be in favour of trampling on the little guy, and if there's one industry that runs on the numbers more than anything else, it's financial services.

"I reject and oppose this monopoly that was never for the creators, but always for the distributors: a guild whose time is up and obsolete, and which has no business trampling on our civil liberties.

When the situation changes dramatically, either because of technological or sociological changes, it is a political challenge to accommodate that change without trampling over those settled expectations.

Trampling definitions

noun

the sound of heavy treading or stomping; "he heard the trample of many feet"

See also: trample