Homicidal Death

 Homicide is the act of one person murdering another. Homicide requires only one other person's volitional act resulting in death, and so a homicide can result from accidental murder, or incompetent actions even though there is no intention to inflict injury. Homicides may be classified into several different legal definitions, including suicide, manslaughter, justifiable manslaughter, war killing (either due to military rules or as a war crime), euthanasia, and death penalty, based on the circumstances of death. In human societies these different types of homicides are often treated very differently; some are considered crimes, while others are permitted or even ordered by the legal system. United States history and its people's character include a violent component in which the taking on of human life has played an important role. In the North American continent violence was normal well before the nation was founded. The deliberate devastation by Europeans who arrived in the Modern World of Native American societies represents the idea that would allow the correct thing. From all sides of the fight, the Civil War took a fatal toll. The Civil War provides yet another example of extreme and megadeath violence.  

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