Unrest in a sentence as a noun

Now that there is no way to pay that debt down[4], there is going to be civil unrest.

> Thousands took to the streets of London and other English towns in the UK’s worst outbreak of civil unrest in a generation.

Without redistribution, this would then cause increased poverty, and unrest, was his thinking.

It is not OK for the government to cut off citizen communications in times of civil unrest or any other time.

Personally I think this will generate some social unrest in my hometown where foxconn has a factory.

The powers that be leave them alone because if they don't, they are met with complete civil unrest in SF. Any attempt to even address the homeless issue is met with outrage and organized protest.

I'd like to live in a world where an ******* strong arm dictator can't blame "US meddling" for any unrest without being dismissed out of hand, but sadly, I don't live in that world.

>> There's a real growing unrest out there about how a few greedy people control [the movie] business - making their billionsThose greedy people understand the importance of "story.

Judging from what I can see right now, these revelations have stirred up some unrest among EU politicians[1], most noticeably among the generally US-friendly right.

Over the course of three short months, popular uprisings have toppled regimes in Tunisia and Egypt, sparked a civil war in Libya and created unrest in other parts of the Middle East.

As the article kindly submitted here reports, and as can even be confirmed from the official media in China, there are thousands of instances of local unrest each year in China.

I'm glad that in this time of unprecedented natural disasters, geopolitical unrest, and financial crisis our government still has its priorities straight.

I've always assumed bricking legislation has nothing to do with theft and everything to do with shutting down communications during civil unrest to prevent even adhoc wireless networks by completely bricking the device.

It's not simply just about "I won this factory, therefore I get all the money", as I think we're going to find out in the next 20 years, that kind of thinking leads to major civil unrest and we will probably see the replacement to unions forming in the next decade or so.

And that whole decade was immediately full of labor unrest, most famously the Haymarket riot, but including thousands of strikes, protests, and other "labor disturbances" across the country, due to a feeling that industrialists were getting rich by treating their employees as quasi indentured servants.

10 years?The government is just trying to maintain its power over the people, when federal reserve realizes there is no other alternative except to default on the US treasury, there is going to be a lot of unrest, and the internet will be a focus point of governmental rebellion, it's important everyone who accesses the internet is a felon.

> women are disallowed from attending in order to protect them from misogynistic insultsFundamentalist religious societies often use the same line of reasoning: women are not allowed to walk around unveiled or allowed to do pretty much anything because they are powerless and ostensibly have to be protected from society as much as society needs to be protected from the unrest their public presence causes.

Unrest definitions

noun

a state of agitation or turbulent change or development; "the political ferment produced new leadership"; "social unrest"

See also: agitation ferment fermentation tempestuousness

noun

a feeling of restless agitation