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  2. There Are No Guilty People - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/There_Are_No_Guilty_People

    According to the Cambridge Companion on Tolstoy, the work is directed against the death penalty. It was incomplete, and when published after Tolstoy's death, resulted in a flood of letters, the reaction mixed. The government tried to censor the work, sentencing one person distributing copies of it to prison. [2]

  3. Capital punishment by the United States military - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_by_the...

    Nidal Hasan when he was still in the military.. The United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces ruled in 1983 that the military death penalty was unconstitutional, and after new standards intended to rectify the Armed Forces Court of Appeals' objections, the military death penalty was reinstated by an executive order of President Ronald Reagan the following year.

  4. Opinion - Should we allow prisoners on death row to volunteer ...

    www.aol.com/opinion-allow-prisoners-death-row...

    A gruesome crime, a cruel penalty. Some might think justice was done. But was it?

  5. Capital punishment in Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_in_Germany

    Until 1990, some "criminal actions against the Allied Occupating Powers' interests" remained capital offenses in West Berlin, being under Allied jurisdiction without complete force of the Basic Law. However, no capital sentences under this authority were carried out. In 2018 the state of Hesse voted in a Referendum on the Death Penalty.

  6. Capital punishment debate in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_debate...

    The anti-death penalty movement began to pick up pace in the 1830s and many Americans called for abolition of the death penalty. Anti-death penalty sentiment rose as a result of the Jacksonian era, which condemned gallows and advocated for better treatment of orphans, criminals, poor people, and the mentally ill.

  7. Moral Injury - The Huffington Post

    projects.huffingtonpost.com/projects/moral...

    After 90 days, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, then the top allied war commander, admitted Marjah had become a “bleeding ulcer.” It would be 10 months before the Marines could declare victory. Charlie One-Six was in the thick of it. They started taking casualties even before the battle officially began. “There was a lot of death. They lost close ...

  8. Moral Injury: The Grunts - The ... - The Huffington Post

    projects.huffingtonpost.com/moral-injury/the-grunts

    Morally devastating experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan have been common. A study conducted early in the Iraq war, for instance, found that two-thirds of deployed Marines had killed an enemy combatant, more than half had handled human remains, and 28 percent felt responsible for the death of an Iraqi civilian.

  9. German atrocities committed against Soviet prisoners of war

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_atrocities...

    Deaths among these Soviet prisoners of war have been called "one of the greatest crimes in military history", [3] second in number only to those of civilian Jews but far less studied. Although the Soviet Union announced the death penalty for surrender early in the war, most former prisoners were reintegrated into Soviet society.