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Moral equivalence: Revision history


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  • curprev 15:0515:05, 13 December 2017 173.10.131.57 talk 7,833 bytes −501 The selective use of the edited out phrase "because civilians were not directly responsible of atrocities." This was applied to the atomic bombings but not to the bombings of Coventry and Dresden when civilians were clearly targeted in those raids. undo

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  • curprev 17:1117:11, 17 August 2017 Deefed123 talk contribs 8,317 bytes −713 Clear anti-American bias hindered the objectivity of historical examples. Certain facts that were included such as the line on the United Fruit Company are express moral equivalence. Use of the word "recast" indicates some form of conspiratorial thinking. undo

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  • curprev 17:4517:45, 31 May 2016 Ruetenik talk contribs m 8,499 bytes −526 Deleted the sentence claiming the origin was James' Essay "Moral Equivalent of War." James' use of 'equivalence' was more mechanical than political, and the essays deals mostly with general human psychology and not international politics. undo

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