Confront in a sentence as a verb

Very few people, left or right, seem to want to confront this fact.

Clearly if there is serious, immediate physical danger, we confront the bully first.

"Together they flew to New York City to confront the executive officers of Citicorp with the dilemma.

It's a toxic environment to have to continuously confront your management to do their job properly.

I have never seen a project anywhere make so many mistakes and then confront such simple, straightforward, observations as "SHA1 is by itself not a MAC" with fierce arguments.

People with made-up numbers confront people with unreliable anecdotes.

It facilitates communication because it forces you to confront and think about how difficult it is to communicate certain things clearly.

This all compounds to make this issue hard to solve unless people are willing to vocally confront these incidents as they happen, when they happen, and take responsibility for treating people with respect and equality.

Airbnb regularly sets up situations, as in the recently reported incidents, in which the wrongdoer doesn't even have to confront the victim while stealing movable property, stealing identities, and destroying real property.

Reminds me of one of my favorite quotes from Admiral Stockdale:"You must never confuse faith that you will prevail in the end, which you can never afford to lose, with the discipline to confront the most brutal facts of your current reality, whatever they might be."

Why should Google engage with an evil, bribery-based, rent-seeking competitor, and their bought politicians, until they run out of relatively easier conquests, and have the revenue from those conquests funding further expansion, and their relationships with independent content creators at a much higher value from a larger customer base?Particularly when those competitors are not seeking to confront Google, and are preferring to play rent-seeking games with anti-neutrality in their networks, thus making their end game even more brittle?

Confront definitions

verb

oppose, as in hostility or a competition; "You must confront your opponent"; "Jackson faced Smith in the boxing ring"; "The two enemies finally confronted each other"

See also: face

verb

deal with (something unpleasant) head on; "You must confront your problems"; "He faced the terrible consequences of his mistakes"

See also: face

verb

present somebody with something, usually to accuse or criticize; "We confronted him with the evidence"; "He was faced with all the evidence and could no longer deny his actions"; "An enormous dilemma faces us"

See also: face present

verb

be face to face with; "The child screamed when he confronted the man in the Halloween costume"