Disturbing in a sentence as an adjective

Does anyone else find it disturbing that google employees are bending over for pg/hn?

What's particularly disturbing is the sheer greed being shown in pursuit of these profits.

Probably a disturbing the peace ticket, unsure if the soon to be ex-wifey had a restraining order or not at that time.

"Especially disturbing given that today is the anniversary of the First Amendment.

"Regardless,, the destruction of Chomsky's CIA file raises an even more disturbing question: Who else's file has evaporated from Langley's archives?

While I'm not claiming that the US is currently close to totalitarianism, there are some comparisons that have become quite disturbing:1. A regime that justifies itself by claiming to protect the populace from a vague but grave danger.

I don't want to seem like I'm implying something here, so I will instead say overtly that I find the way you've singled out certain populations for skepticism with regards to whether they should be helped disturbing.

If he indeed suffers no significant professional fallout from what he did - and as of this moment there are no signs that he will - then the Valley is truly a disturbing place with priorities that are completely out of sync with the rest of humanity.

I think you're supposed to exploit the vulnerability in relatively innocuous but deeply disturbing ways, get banned, then complain about how you only meant well, then be lauded on Hacker News as a martyr who should have been embraced by the hacked company.

The shantytowns that the author found so disturbing are actually a side-effect of India's weak property rights laws, which themselves are a result of democratic pressure from the poor to continue living where their families have lived for generations.

I'd recommend any who haven't to watch this interview with the Guardian editors explaining the process in a bit more detail[2].I find the disturbing allegations of unregulated, widespread, and deep surveillance used for economic and political ends far more important than Snowden's role in all of this, and I think he'd agree with that.

Disturbing definitions

adjective

causing distress or worry or anxiety; "distressing (or disturbing) news"; "lived in heroic if something distressful isolation"; "a disturbing amount of crime"; "a revelation that was most perturbing"; "a new and troubling thought"; "in a particularly worrisome predicament"; "a worrying situation"; "a worrying time"

See also: distressing distressful perturbing troubling worrisome worrying