Talk:Warmonger

Having seen the recent comments on the history for this page, I agree that a list of notorious warmongers is POV, but perhaps, for the sake of example, it would be worth reinstating the list as a list of people who are often cited as examples of warmongers, and perhaps even to say something to the effect of, "the word has become ubiquitous in recent years as it is often used to describe current US President George W. Bush by opponents of his administration's foreign policy." To be fair, I admit I am no fan of Bush, but I think this is perfectly acceptable in that light, particularly because, whether or not one would characterize him as a warmonger, we can probably agree that the criticism of President Bush and his political allies is far and away the most common use of the word. DougOfDoom  talk  14:24, 21 May 2006 (UTC)

No disambiguation?
As much of a Doctor Who fan that I am, I still feel the re-direct to the novel Warmonger (Doctor Who) is a little short-handed, unless nothing else shares the name which I doubt. Agree or disagree?--DrWho42 (talk) 20:52, 1 August 2008 (UTC)

Pejorative?
What is the other not pejorative word? Is the word pejorative or the concept ? If no other word exist it is not pejorative word. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.90.197.87 (talk) 00:27, 4 February 2012 (UTC)

http://www.thefreedictionary.com/warmonger do not list it as pejorative. Word rooted (XVIc) in english "Or a warmonger to be basely nempt" Spenser's T Queen. Pejorative is insustained and radiculed POV since someone of some origin take it group atribute. (as cited in The New republic, Volume 26 By William White p12). Quite probably pejorative is peculiar usage. Wamonger antonim pacyfist. If pejorative then as much as antonym payfist.

Paceniek is pejorative but not warmonger here.

in "Makers of American diplomacy, from Benjamin Franklin to Henry Kissinger" is: "brought the pejorative phrase "massive retaliation" into the speeches of Dulles's critics" but nothing pejorative about "of "the president as a man of peace, a Life article by James Shepley in early 1956 lent more substance to charges that Dulles was a warmonger"; just a word. The pejorative connotation is virtualy not existent before 1990 and begin show up around 2000 in injures claimed by neoconservatives as pejorative. In One ref from 1944 "G. & C. Merriam Company., 1944 - Language Arts & Disciplines" google give "And from the 16th century on, compounds formed with monger as the second element have "nearly always" had pejorative meaning (NED). Familiar examples like warmonger, hate- monger, rumormonger, scandalmonger" But when reading the text show oposite - this has to be dismissed as 'google skewed error' the text in image is:: from year 1514 '..monger come down to us usually whithouth pejorative conotations". — Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.90.197.87 (talk • contribs) 15:29, February 4, 2012 (UTC)‎

Article lacks a list of warmongers and writeups of the theresaid . ..
...for instance British Secretary of War, 1937 – 1940, Hore-Belisha and Henry Kissinger, and Tony Blair could all be listed as examples of warmongers with bywords or more.

The wiki warlord article is quite happy to name and shame all those 'ethnic' and Serbian 'warlords' and other playbook of Western 'bogeymanology'. Shame this wiki warmonger article is an empty censored shell, all in the name of protecting the untold warmongering Zionists and other warmongering forces loyal to Jewish supremacism, such as may be seen in the Western media, NGOs and Hollywood.

I note the word: supremacism is needlessly redflagged by the wiki's chosen spellchecker, hmmm? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2A02:C7D:490:A600:75A4:3B1C:509B:C883 (talk) 21:46, 8 December 2016 (UTC)