Jacob

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America’s default way of war—honed in the imperial encounter with native peoples and lasting into the twentieth century across the globe—recognized no limits. There was no protection for noncombatants, since the people were the enemy; prisoners, if captured instead of killed by choice, were entitled to no respect; and torture, eventually the most important taboo in an age of more humane war, was rampant.
Humane: How the United States Abandoned Peace and Reinvented War
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