0 too much or many, or more than is usual or reasonable:
The politics of full presence is rendered impossible by problems of sheer size and immoderate diversity.
That is the animal instinct that is found in every human being and which lures people's body and mind to immoderate search for worldly pleasures.
But in circumstances of immoderate diversity, that requires the physical presence of too many people for the representative assembly to remain a genuinely deliberative one.
Given the immoderate atmosphere of the time, failure to cooperate with the government forces would have probably led to accusations of complicity in the rebellion.
Amid all the other symptoms of this downward spiral the key problem was immoderate ambition, or hubris.
Local authorities felt keenly the limitations of their resources - but saw the threat to them as being the immoderate behaviour of others.
That would indeed be an immoderate conclusion.
Here is a classic example of immoderate, ill-thought out and incorrect change.