Unredeemable in a sentence as an adjective

There may very well be a core of unredeemable, white supremacists behind Trump.

I abandoned that source base as unredeemable and wrote a simple 10-module driver to replace it.

Maybe Employee China did not even steal anything, just took the blame for an unredeemable thief.

But to me the issue is whether OpenID is completely unredeemable.

When men do it to women to push them to sell sex, we call it "pimping", and judge it as a completely reprehensible, unredeemable act.

For the same reason - NT seems a lot like Unix, and Win9x was an unredeemable security nightmare, but somehow was wildly successful.

Outsourcing in my experience is an almost unredeemable shitshow, with far, far more misses than hits, but going the cheapest possible route is much more expensive in the long run.

[1]This carcinogenic pustule of a company is unredeemable and is unable to learn anything.

This is meant for people who are deemed unredeemable, as well as a punishment to threaten prisoners in less severe prisons with: "We have an even worse place for you, should you cause too much trouble.

>>- Eliminated all gold, and replaced it with unredeemable greenbacksThey confiscated the gold.

I'm sympathetic to ideas of reform, but they're not talking about reform, they're talking in terms like rounding up all those people and putting 'em in camps as unredeemable criminals/enemies.

Are they all morally unredeemable because they prefer a different kind of employee-employer relationship?

I could see justification for clawback on any stock awarded or exercised for the executives responsible for 737 Max problems, but I don’t see any evidence that the 737 Max is unredeemable.

Where in the "**** all women" case there might be a background of literal truth, in the "**** all men" case there is a background of wishful thinking, an idea that society is better off without men, that men are evil and unredeemable.

Look at the consequences of political vacuums in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Libya, and Somalia to see what happens when those needs aren't met: The situation can break down quickly and become unredeemable.

Unredeemable definitions

adjective

insusceptible of reform; "vicious irreclaimable boys"; "irredeemable sinners"

See also: irreclaimable irredeemable unreformable