@YouTube Taking away people's ability to search by date and every other sneaky corpo dogshit move that removes people's abilities to search for what they want on your platform is such an obvious censorship move. It never fails to amaze me how hard you work to make things worse...
List of Nobel Peace Prize Winners with Speculated Death Tolls-
• Henry Kissinger (1973): Estimated 3–4 million deaths. Linked to U.S. policies during the Vietnam War (including Cambodia and Laos bombing campaigns), and support for coups in Chile and Argentina. Sources cite these figures from historian Greg Grandin and others, covering civilian deaths and human rights violations.
• Yasser Arafat (1994): Approximately 50,000 deaths. Associated with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict post-Oslo Accords, as leader of the PLO. His earlier actions with Fatah included violence criticized as terrorism, but responsibility is shared with other actors.
• Le Duc Tho (1973): No specific death toll attributed solely to him, but as a key figure in North Vietnam’s leadership during the Vietnam War, he’s linked to millions of deaths (combined military and civilian casualties, estimated 1–3 million total). He declined the prize, citing ongoing conflict.
• Theodore Roosevelt (1906): No precise death toll, but tied to thousands of deaths during the Spanish-American War and Philippine-American War (1899–1902, estimated 200,000–250,000 civilian and military deaths). His Nobel was for mediating the Russo-Japanese War, not these conflicts.
• Woodrow Wilson (1919): No specific death toll directly attributed, but associated with World War I (millions of deaths globally, 1914–1918) and U.S. interventions in Latin America (e.g., Haiti, Dominican Republic, with thousands of deaths). Awarded for founding the League of Nations.
• Menachem Begin (1978): No precise estimate, but linked to deaths during his leadership of the Irgun (1940s, hundreds of deaths in attacks like the King David Hotel bombing) and as Israeli Prime Minister during the Lebanon War (1982, estimated 17,000–20,000 deaths). Shared prize for Camp David Accords.
• Anwar Sadat (1978): No specific death toll, but as Egyptian President, involved in the Yom Kippur War (1973, estimated 20,000 deaths). Awarded for Camp David Accords with Begin. Responsibility is shared in the broader conflict.
• Barack Obama (2009): No precise death toll tied to his Nobel, but criticized for drone strikes in Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia (estimated hundreds to thousands of civilian deaths) and escalating conflict in Afghanistan. Awarded for diplomacy and nuclear nonproliferation efforts.
• Shimon Peres (1994): No specific estimate, but linked to deaths in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as part of the Oslo Accords trio with Arafat and Rabin. As Israeli Prime Minister, involved in military actions (e.g., 1996 Lebanon operation, hundreds of deaths).
• Yitzhak Rabin (1994): Similarly, no precise toll, but associated with deaths in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. As Prime Minister, oversaw military responses to the First Intifada (1987–1993, ~2,000 deaths). Shared prize for Oslo Accords.
• Cordell Hull (1945): No direct death toll, but as U.S. Secretary of State (1933–1944), linked to policies during World War II and earlier Latin American interventions. Awarded for co-founding the United Nations. No specific estimates available.
• George C. Marshall (1953): No precise toll, but as U.S. Secretary of State, oversaw post-World War II policies and the Chinese Civil War’s escalation (millions of deaths, 1945–1949). Awarded for the Marshall Plan.
• Abiy Ahmed (2019): No firm estimate, but as Ethiopian Prime Minister, linked to the Tigray War (2020–2022, estimated 300,000–600,000 deaths, including civilian casualties). Awarded for peace with Eritrea.