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6->''"If [the number of pacifists] is large enough [to cripple the state as a belligerent], then you have handed over the state which does tolerate Pacifists to its totalitarian neighbour who does not. Pacifism of this kind is taking the straight road to a world in which there will be no Pacifists."''
7-->-- '''Creator/CSLewis''', "Why I Am Not a Pacifist"
8
9A character insists on not exacting violence.... and they end up causing more violence in the long run than was at first avoided.
10
11Perhaps they are an [[WideEyedIdealist idealistic]] and forgiving person who [[GoAndSinNoMore just tells bad guys to go away after the baddie is stopped.]] Perhaps they are a PrinciplesZealot, believing that no end justifies the means of violence, including that of preventing worse violence. Perhaps s/he is a HorribleJudgeOfCharacter, not realizing that avoiding such a fight would cause more of it. Or maybe they are a DirtyCoward who just wants to wash their hands of the situation.
12
13A downplayed variant of this is when someone who is willing to fight but [[ThouShaltNotKill unwilling to kill]] refuses to kill someone no matter how dangerous they are. That someone [[TheFarmerAndTheViper ends up causing more trouble later]].
14
15Indeed, the moral is that ViolenceReallyIsTheAnswer. [[HardTruthAesop Not exactly a really idealistic moral]] but even ''UsefulNotes/MahatmaGandhi'' believed pacifism would sometimes backfire and that sometimes violence was acceptable and necessary, once stating "My non-violence does not admit of running away from danger and leaving dear ones unprotected. Between violence and cowardly flight, I can only prefer violence to cowardice."
16
17A common (but not always) telltale of this trope is when someone says "I should've killed/stopped him when I had the chance/back then."
18
19Naturally, this trope serves as a frequent [[DeconstructedTrope deconstruction]] of trying to lay out a NoHarmRequirement. Often, the mandate, necessity, or even desire to resolve a situation without causing or allowing excessive (or even ''any'') harm just leads to things [[FromBadToWorse getting worse]].
20
21One of the many ways to CreateYourOwnVillain. May stem from GoodCannotComprehendEvil. Compare HeadInTheSandManagement, which sometimes overlaps with this, and TheFarmerAndTheViper (aka "Hospitality Backfire"). Compare also WeHaveBecomeComplacent when a community that has never experienced war for a long time is forced into a war situation and they are unable to fight back. See also NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished, NiceJobBreakingItHero, SuicidalPacifism, MediationBackfire and NeutralityBacklash. SurrenderBackfire is similar, where one who willingly gives up to the enemy has worse results than fighting back.
22
23Contrast BadassPacifist when a pacifist manages to stop the conflict/help others using entirely non-violent means, and the MartialPacifist, who's willing to get their hands dirty to avert this.
24
25There may be real-life examples, [[Administrivia/NoRealLifeExamplesPlease but perhaps it's best if we don't go there]]. [[noreallife]] Even if it does mean that this page — and our statement — is a SelfDemonstratingArticle.
26----
27!!Examples:
28
29[[foldercontrol]]
30
31[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
32* ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'':
33** Just before the start of the [[Anime/DigimonAdventure02 Digimon World Tour]], the digidestined are attacked by group known as the Daemon Corps. While they initially try to talk to them, thinking them as lost digimon similar to others, this notion is immediately dashed, with the opposing forces attacking the city with gleeful abandon. While Yolei and Cody still try to talk them down, the other digidestined realize that they have no choice but to put them down, much to the former's horror. Thus learning that sometimes lethal force is necessary.
34** Henry Wong of ''Anime/DigimonTamers'' has his ardent refusal to have his partner Terriermon fight (caused by a traumatic event in their shared past where Henry's choices got Terriermon nearly fatally hurt) nearly get both of them plus Takato and Guilmon killed. And it ''still'' takes him a while to get comfortable with the idea of fighting sometimes being necessary. Episode 45 (The dub anyway) reveals that this is due to using his martial arts to hurt a neighborhood kid (it's never revealed whether it was justified or not), which scared him so much he decided that fighting at all was never good.
35** Also in ''Tamers'', the group fights over whether or not to allow their partners to use their CannibalismSuperpower and [[ExperiencePoints absorb the data of defeated Digimon]], eventually deciding not to in the hopes that the ones too violent to be spared would be [[BornAgainImmortality reborn elsewhere]]. It's eventually revealed at the [=MudFrigimon=] village that this is ''not'' the case, and they've only weakened themselves for the battles ahead.
36** In ''Anime/DigimonGhostGame'', when Gammamon first awakens to his SuperpoweredEvilSide [=GulusGammamon=] he looks to his AllLovingHero partner Hiro for the order to finish off the KnightOfCerebus, [[SerialKiller Sealsdramon]]. Hiro refuses, so [=GulusGammamon=] goes rogue and kills it himself before turning on the others [[VirtueIsWeakness over Hiro's weakness]]. Hiro and his friends are later called out for their tendency towards SuicidalPacifism by several Digimon.
37** Again in ''Ghost Game'', early on the group defeated the [[AlwaysChaoticEvil Virus-attribute]] Rookie Dracmon, who swore to undo the damage he caused and not cause any more trouble in exchange for his life. TheStinger revealed he was pulling an ISurrenderSuckers, [[spoiler:and he returns over 20 episodes later as a {{mook}} for [[OurVampiresAreDifferent Myotismon]]]].
38* ''Anime/DragonBallZ'':
39** During the Saiyan Saga, Goku gives in to Raditz's [[VillainsWantMercy pleas for mercy]] and lets go of his tail, only for Raditz to [[ISurrenderSuckers knock him down]] and mercilessly break his ribs all while openly mocking him for falling for such a trick. When he manages to restrain Raditz again for Piccolo to finish him, Raditz tries begging for mercy again, but Goku doesn't fall for the same trick twice.
40** Much later, during the Frieza Saga, despite having every reason in the world to just kill Frieza and be done with it, he spares Frieza's life not once, but twice, and both times, Frieza just keeps trying to kill him when his back is turned. Of course, to be fair, Goku's attempts to spare him were more out of CruelMercy than pacifism, and he obliterates Freeza the ''second'' [[GoodIsNotSoft he betrays his last chance]].
41** In the Cell Saga, Gohan refuses to fight Cell and insists on talking to him and trying to convince him to stand down. Cell refuses and though Gohan is eventually motivated to fight, his hesitation leads to everyone getting beaten up and Goku's death.
42* ''Manga/GunsmithCats'': BountyHunter Rally Vincent doesn't like to shoot to kill unless there is absolutely no other choice, preferring to shoot to wound (which includes doing such things as ''blowing people's thumbs off'' to make them unable to handle a gun). This is a decision that has allowed a couple of [[ArcVillain Arc Villains]] to return later seeking revenge (and become even more psychotic in their tactics because of the rage at being maimed) and Rally herself implies once that explaining it to the police is a bureaucratic nightmare and has sometimes cut down on the amount of money the bounty rewards.
43* Happens almost constantly in ''Manga/{{Naruto}}''
44** Hashirama spares Madara, Madara becomes a villain.
45** Sarutobi spares Orochimaru, many people die including Sarutobi himself. [[spoiler:Subverted with Naruto sparing Orochimaru when he becomes Hokage. A few arcs of ''Boruto'' revolve around Orochimaru's past sins coming back to haunt the village but the man himself has not done anything to break his HeelFaceTurn]].
46** Naruto lets Sasuke go, Sasuke ends up helping the BigBad.
47** Naruto and [[spoiler:Minato spares Obito]], [[spoiler:Madara]] gets revived.
48* ''Franchise/OnePiece'':
49** In Law's flashback, when Rocinante, after being beaten to near death, revealed his true nature to his boss and big brother Doflamingo that [[spoiler:he's a Marine who's going to stop him]], the two pointed their guns at each other. Doflamingo pointed out that Rocinante is too kind to actually pull the trigger [[note]]played with in that, while Roci is known for being violent himself, he still views his big brother as special[[/note]] and then the former killed the latter. And then Doflamingo went on to conquer the island of Dressrosa (something that Roci wanted to prevent) and caused a reign of sugarcoated terror there.
50** As revealed in a flashback, Arlong and Jimbei were once part of the same crew. When Jimbei became a member of the Shichibukai, Arlong saw it as an insult to Fisher Tiger's memory, accepting sanction from the people who orchestrated their former captain's demise. Arlong intended to become the "rage of the Fishmen" against humanity and explicitly told Jimbei that [[KillMeNowOrForeverStayYourHand the only way he could stop him was to kill him]]. Jimbei beats Arlong senseless but ultimately couldn't bring himself to kill him; in doing so, Jimbei was indirectly responsible for, among other things, Arlong enslaving Nami's hometown and making her childhood a living hell. [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone Jimbei is rightfully horrified when he discovers this]].
51** Princess Shirahoshi shocks everyone by revealing [[spoiler: she has known for ''years'' that Hody Jones masterminded her mother's assassination, but refrained from exposing him out of respect for her mother's pacifistic ideals. Unfortunately, Hody is a [[TheSociopath sociopathic]] KnightTemplar [[FantasticRacism racist]] and goes on to wreak a ''horrific'' amount of damage to the kingdom, nearly destroying it altogether. He even laughs in her face at her reveal, pointing out that she could have prevented everything he's done, but didn't.]]
52* ''Manga/RurouniKenshin'' and ''Anime/{{Grenadier}}''. The main character subscribes to a ThouShaltNotKill mentality backed up by impressive combat skills, and the BigBad(s) sends outrageously powerful enemies that have absolutely no problem in killing anybody that gets in the way of their fight with the main character, and actually do so in order to [[TheyWereHoldingYouBack unlock the full combat capability of the main character]] via UnstoppableRage, while gloating that the pacifism and using non-lethal attacks (which require more finesse than simply slashing/shooting someone dead) has "made them weak".
53* In ''Manga/{{Trigun}}'', Vash the Stampede will ''not'' kill his enemies, nor hurt them in any major way... yet the manga takes great pains to show that it's a noble calling, but debately misguided considering the CrapsackWorld circumstances. As a result, Vash's body is a [[DentedIron mass of scars]], the sixty billion double dollar bounty means that anybody with a gun and a desperate need of money (which is practically the whole planet) is out to get him (and even then, after the bounty is canceled, due to limited communications not everyone will know the bounty is off), he's constantly arguing with his companions (especially [[AntiHero Wolfwood]]) about the usefulness/futility of his ThouShaltNotKill code, and the QuirkyMinibossSquad along with the BigBad are out to make Vash suffer by any means possible — which usually involves [[OmnicidalManiac killing everything that moves]] and [[AndYourLittleDogToo going the extra mile]] with [[TargetedToHurtTheHero anybody that Vash so much as gave the time of the day to]], increasing in cruelty/kill count up to ApocalypseHow levels as the series goes on.
54** The anime version is just as brutal. In one episode, Vash managed to blow up a city [[NoEndorHolocaust without killing the people living in it]] and treated it as a victory. That is, until he was later told that [[SubvertedTrope everybody from that city died of starvation and dehydration]], which is [[SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome what happens when you blow up a town and leave its people to fend for themselves on a barren, hostile desert planet without any supplies]].\
55And in another episode, [[BigBad Legato]] manages to [[PeoplePuppets take control of an entire town’s worth of people]] using his abilities, forcing them to murder Meryl and Milly while they could do nothing to stop themselves, and the two women had no means of disabling them. Vash, however, could stop them non-lethally and save the two women... [[SadisticChoice by shooting Legato in the head and ending his life]], thus cutting off his mind control powers, [[ThanatosGambit which is what he wanted Vash to do in order to torment him]] and force him to break his [[TechnicalPacifist “no killing” creed]]. With Vash unable to figure out a way to stop the mind controlled townspeople without killing them, and being unwilling to sacrifice Meryl and Milly for his pacifist way of life, he somberly chooses to kill Legato and end his sadism, all the while [[TheBadGuyWins Legato couldn’t help but smile]] in his last moments of life. [[HeroicBSOD Vash didn’t take this well afterwards]].
56[[/folder]]
57
58[[folder:Comic Books]]
59* DependingOnTheAuthor, this is one of ''Franchise/{{Batman}}'''s biggest problems, ''especially'' because his refusal to kill is one of the biggest reasons that JokerImmunity exists, and ComicBook/TheJoker ''loves'' to commit atrocities for the sake of rubbing this in Batman's face [[HannibalLecture where he points this out]], and other characters will eventually commit some time to an AuthorFilibuster speech about this.
60* In the ''ComicBook/InhumansVsXMen'' event, Storm doesn't destroy the Terrigen Clouds or let anyone else do so because the Cloud is so vital to Inhuman culture [[note]]''not'' life[[/note]] that destroying it could trigger war between their species. In the meantime, the Clouds continue to drift around Earth, gassing every mutant in their paths to death, and even after ''months'' of research, neither side has found a cure for the afflicted. Eventually, a splinter faction of X-Men get so sick of watching fellow mutants die that they disobey Storm's orders and destroy one of the clouds. So war breaks out anyway: all Storm's diplomacy "accomplished" was to enable the meaningless slaughter of hundreds of mutants and significantly weaken her side. To add additional insult to injury, in one following issue of ''ComicBook/{{Deadpool}} and the Mercs for Money'', Deadpool travels to an AlternateUniverse in which a mutant managed ([[HeroicSacrifice at the cost of her life]]) to convert the Terigen Clouds back into Terigen crystals, with the Terigen in perfect condition and ready to be used by the Inhumans the way they have done for thousands of years with no muss and no fuss and hopefully no more M-Pox. So it looks like JustEatGilligan has been accomplished, right? Nope. [[NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished The Inhumans got so outraged over this]] that they declared war on mutantkind ''[[MortonsFork anyway]]''.
61* ''ComicBook/NewGods'': Highfather of New Genesis has become so averted to violence that he is generally unwilling to do anything about Darkseid or evil in the universe in general unless New Genesis itself is directly threatened. This has backfired on him repeatedly. He does little to protect the universe from Darkseid terrorizing it and has been blind to threats besides Darkseid. This has allowed Darkseid to amass enough power or put plans in place that allow him to destroy New Genesis with ease whenever he wants. In fairness, Highfather came around to this way of thinking after the war had already raged for years and years, destroying countless lives and wreaking cataclysmic damage without seeming to accomplish much of anything. Shortly after -- and after communing with the Source -- he and Darkseid arranged The Pact, wherein the war was put on hold while Highfather and Darkseid raised one another's sons (Darkseid knew Highfather's son would inevitably escape one day, ending the truce, but this bought him some time to prepare more evil stuff, and Highfather was just glad to stop the hideous war for a while).
62* ''ComicBook/{{Saga}}'': Marko declares himself a pacifist in the opening issues of the series, though he backslides a few times. He and other protagonists occasionally argue about whether pacifism really is the best solution, pointing out how it has come back to bite them. It backfires particularly badly at the end of the first arc, in which [[spoiler: The Will finally kills him, just after Marko showed him mercy]].
63* ''ComicBook/SonicTheHedgehogIDW'': Sonic is willing to let an [[AmnesiacsAreInnocent amnesiac Eggman]] be free to do some good, and even reactivates Metal Sonic to offer a truce and let him go free. Both bite him in the ass when Eggman regains his memory thanks to Metal's return and goes back to his old tricks, leading directly to the [[UnwillingRoboticisation Metal]] [[ZombieApocalypse Virus]] outbreak. Both Shadow ''and'' Espio give Sonic a WhatTheHellHero at different points, holding him responsible for the disaster, and come issue 23, Sonic [[ItsAllMyFault outright kicks himself over it]], bitterly remarking that he put his faith in the idea that Eggman had a tiny bit of good in his heart, and now the entire world is paying the price.
64* ''ComicBook/WonderWoman1987'': ComicBook/{{Artemis}} calls Diana out on this during "ComicBook/TheContest," saying she will regret her refusal to kill or use any more force than the bare necessity. Later Artemis comes to decide Diana's way is better outside of war. Of course they're Amazons so interdimensional monsters and gods are fair game regardless.
65[[/folder]]
66
67[[folder:Fan Works]]
68* This trope applies to Adrien Agreste in many ''WesternAnimation/MiraculousLadybug'' "[[AccusationFic Salt fics]]" following the events of "Chameleon", where he asks Marinette not to expose Lila's BlatantLies about [[CelebrityLie knowing various celebrities]] and [[ObfuscatingDisability being disabled]] to their clueless classmates, as he doesn't want to risk the liar getting akumatized. Various writers [[DependingOnTheWriter interpret his advice differently]].
69** Some regard him as a DirtyCoward who [[BetrayalByInaction betrays Marinette and his friends with his inaction]], insisting that Lila's falsehoods "aren't actually hurting anyone" despite seeing firsthand how Marinette is being ostracized. Frequently, these stories end with Adrien suffering LaserGuidedKarma, such as being ostracized himself, stripped of his Miraculous, returned to homeschooling, and/or being rejected by Marinette/Ladybug and all of his other {{Love Interest}}s aside from Lila. Examples of this type of story include ''Fanfic/BurningBridgesBuildingConfidence'', ''Fanfic/TheKarmaOfLies'', and ''Fanfic/RaiseYourVoiceAgainstLiars''.
70** Other authors take a more sympathetic stance, attributing his choices to being sheltered and raised by an [[AbusiveParents emotionally abusive]] ControlFreak. They also tend to point out that Marinette didn't inform him of Lila's threats, having him realize and recognize his mistakes by seeing firsthand just how awful Lila is (or by having Marinette tell the full story to Chat Noir), triggering a MyGodWhatHaveIDone moment where he works to redeem himself by attempting to take down Lila. Examples of this type include ''Fanfic/JerkInSheepsClothing'', ''Fanfic/MarinetteDupainChengsSpitePlaylist'', and ''Fanfic/TellingLiesNoMama''.
71** A good illustration of the difference is ''Fanfic/{{the high road|MiraculousLadybug}}'' and ''Fanfic/LongCon'', a {{Recursive Fanfic|tion}} of the former. Both stories follow the same concept of Marinette dealing with Lila via BotheringByTheBook, pretending to be taken in by her lies and forcing the whole class to cater to the ConArtist's fake disabilities. In ''the high road'', this is presented as pure LaserGuidedKarma; Adrien refused to take the problems Lila was causing seriously until ''he'' was personally affected, and Marinette draws catharsis from how he and her classmates struggle. In the latter, however, Marinette realizes that Adrien has never actually dealt with bullying firsthand before, and finds no pleasure in her plan's success, sympathizing with him, Alya and the others.
72* ''Fanfic/ANorthernDragoness'': Baelor's particular interpretation of the Faith of the Seven has led him to refuse to appoint a Master Of Laws (despite the fact that the Father's domain includes justice), refuse to wage war for any reason, no matter how justified (despite the Warrior emphasizing strength in battle and protecting the innocent), and to apologize to Dorne and bribe them to make peace after they broke hospitality and killed his brother and several of his bannermen. This has undermined the already fragile Targaryen authority and is threatening to plunge the realm back into civil war.
73* Invoked in the ''Manga/OnePiece'' fanfic, ''Fanfic/ThisBites''. Having seen how badly this went for Fishman Island in "canon", protagonist Jeremiah Cross uses his knowledge of how things ''would'' have been to coax Shirahoshi's pet shark to back up his revelation of Hody Jones' true role in the death of Queen Otohime. He even lampshades this trope, noting that whilst Otohime and Shirahoshi's goals were noble, their way of pursuing those goals was ridiculously ''stupid''.
74* ''Fanfic/StarWarsTheOneCanon'': The New Republic’s steadfast devotion to drastically downsizing its armed forces after the end of each conflict, in an attempt to differentiate themselves from the hated Imperial Military-Industrial Complex, leaves the Republic chronically under defended. The Yuuzhan Vong and the First Order both capitalize on this.
75* Discussed in ''Fanfic/WithThisRing'' in relation to The Joker, whom Paul believes should have "fallen down some stairs" in custody years ago; he habitually escapes from prison and goes on another killing spree, and Paul believes that there comes a point where continuing to let him live means that Batman is responsible for the deaths. In the Renegade timeline, although Paul is still bound by Justice League rules of engagement and thus isn't allowed to kill him, he crushes the Joker's arms to stop it from happening again.
76[[/folder]]
77
78[[folder:Film — Animated]]
79* In ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheDarkKnightReturns'', the mayor of Gotham insists on using pacifism and diplomacy in dealing with the Mutant Gang, to the point he tries to sit down with their leader and talk out a peaceful resolution. Courageous, but foolish: the Mutant Leader tears him apart with hands and teeth in mere seconds [[ForTheEvulz just for the hell of it]]. Batman then ends up disbanding the gang and dethroning its leader by [[ViolenceReallyIsTheAnswer beating the complete man-Jesus out of him in a mud-field]].
80* In the MirrorUniverse of ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeagueCrisisOnTwoEarths'', the ComicBook/JusticeLeague's EvilDoppelganger the Crime Syndicate unofficially ran the world through bribes and intimidation and the public have been reduced to ApatheticCitizens who believe that [[HopeIsScary if they just keep their heads down]] they'll be left alone, with the U.S. government using the threat of MutuallyAssuredDestruction to keep them in check. After Mirror Lex Luthor and ComicBook/{{Superman}} defeat Ultraman, President [[Characters/{{Deathstroke}} Slade Wilson]] has him released from prison, [[JerkassHasAPoint arguing]] that if [[ThouShaltNotKill the League won't kill them]] then it's pointless since [[HeKnowsTooMuch nobody would be left alive to testify against them]] and the League obviously couldn't abandon their own world to protect them forever. Ultraman almost immediately flies to the White House, bitch-slaps President Wilson so hard he spits blood, and threatens to kill his daughter.
81* ''WesternAnimation/TheLionKing1994'': Simba decides not to execute Scar, because "I'm not like you," and banishes him instead. Scar uses it as an opportunity to ambush him and nearly kill him. Thankfully, it doesn't work.
82[[/folder]]
83
84[[folder:Film — Live-Action]]
85* In ''Film/TheCobbler'', the hero impersonates a mobster boss and saves another criminal from being killed. His kindness is not being repaid as later the mobster turns out to be an UngratefulBastard who kidnaps the hero (disguised as the mobster boss) in order to off him and pities him for his poor choice.
86* ''Film/KingdomOfHeaven'': Balian refuses to betray and kill his prospective liege, the warmongering Guy de Lusignan because of chivalric HonourBeforeReason. Had he done so, he'd be free to marry his LoveInterest, Guy's wife Sibylla and with her, they might've negotiated a peaceful settlement with the Saracens. Instead, Guy seizes power and declares war, leading to many more deaths at the disastrous [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Hattin Battle of Hattin]] and the following [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Jerusalem_(1187) Siege of Jerusalem]].
87* In ''Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheTwoTowers'', King Théoden's first impulse upon being freed from Saruman's magical influence is to kill Gríma Wormtongue, the treacherous adviser responsible for Saruman's influence. Aragorn stays his hand, saying "Enough blood has been spilled on his account." But Wormtongue rejects the offer of absolution for his crimes and flees to Saruman. There, Wormtongue provides intelligence to Saruman (the path that the people of Rohan will take to reach Helm's Deep, and the weakest point of the walls at Helm's Deep), enabling Saruman's army to kill many more than they otherwise would have.
88* ''Film/MarsAttacks''. The U.S. tries twice to make peaceful contact with the Martians. The first time, the Martian ambassador and his soldiers [[CurbStompBattle wipe out the U.S. Army forces at the meeting site]]. The second time the Martian ambassador asks to address Congress. While he's doing so he and his soldiers destroy everyone there. Later on, the French government tries the diplomatic approach: not surprisingly, [[RuleOfThree it ends in a bloodbath]].
89* In ''Franchise/StarWars'', a thousand years before the events of the prequel trilogy TheRepublic underwent the Ruusan Reformation, in which they dissolved their military after [[RuleOfTwo seemingly]] destroying the Sith and basically forced the Jedi to dissolve theirs as well. As a result, they came to rely more heavily on TheOrder and local Planetary Security Forces (which were unfit for expeditionary warfare) for keeping peace in the galaxy. Because of their naivete, [[WeHaveBecomeComplacent they're caught with their pants down]] when the Sith start the Clone Wars and Darth Sidious RunningBothSides [[Film/RevengeOfTheSith allows him to completely topple the Republic]].
90[[/folder]]
91
92[[folder:Literature]]
93* ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'':
94** Erek and the other Chee are pacifist robots, created by Pemalites, an insanely advanced alien race that knew only of peace and playfulness. Because they were pacifists, the Pemalites were unable to fight back when a less advanced but far more violent species attacked them and drove them to extinction.
95** Elfangor knocked out Alloran so that he wouldn't drain the Yeerk Pool into space. Knocking him out allowed Esplin to infest him.
96** When Cassie elects to sentence [[spoiler:David]] to a filthy, maddening existence in a rat body instead of simply killing him, Ax notes grimly that "the [[FriendToAllLivingThings Cassies]] of this world are infinitely more dangerous than the [[BloodKnight Rachels]]". This later comes back to threaten the team when [[spoiler:David]] returns for revenge with the help of Crayak.
97* In the ''Series/BabylonFive'' novel ''Clark's Law'', the station security officers try and break up a fight between the Narns and the Tuchanq using stun guns. Unfortunately, the Tuchanq's brains are wired such that any interruption in consciousness causes them to lose all their long-term and short-term memory and revert to base survival instinct, essentially making them AxCrazy. Fixing this problem requires even more violence, and of course, one of the still-crazy ones gets loose and accidentally kills a human, which sets the real plot of the book in motion.
98* The protagonists of ''Literature/TheDailyGrind'' are accustomed to killing strange dungeon Life, but reluctant to kill humans, so after they defeat [[spoiler:Status Quo]], they let their prisoners go after destroying their base of operations. [[spoiler:Several weeks later, the remnants of Status Quo have hired a group of mercenary assassins, and launch a devastating assault on the Order's headquarters, with many casualties.]]
99* In the Thomas Dixon novel ''Fall of a Nation'', a combined suffragette/pacifist movement not only keeps the United States out of UsefulNotes/WorldWarI but also slashes its military. The war ends in a negotiated stalemate... and then the combined armies of Europe invade the United States! Mind you, this ''is'' the author of ''[[Film/TheBirthOfANation1915 The Clansman,]]'' so ValuesDissonance may apply.
100* ''Literature/HarryPotter'': Harry refuses to allow Peter Pettigrew to be killed, resulting in [[spoiler:the return of Lord Voldemort]]. Downplayed because it is actually an act of CruelMercy and he expects Pettigrew to be put into [[HellholePrison Azkaban]] instead -- plus, he needs him alive to prove [[spoiler:his godfather is innocent of the crimes he is accused of]]. Although Harry's mercy does get rewarded later, when Pettigrew [[spoiler:remembers it and hesitates to attack Harry, giving Harry a crucial chance to escape]] -- but that wouldn't have been needed if Peter were out of the picture to begin with.
101* ''Literature/HonorHarrington:''
102** The Conservative, Liberal, and Progressive parties of Manticore's Parliament. The first are opposed to anything that may threaten their precious privileges and ignored all signs that the [[PeoplesRepublicOfTyranny People's Republic of Haven]] was gunning for Manticore. The second opposes any measure they believe may incite war with Haven. The latter think any military expenditure is wasted money that should have gone into something else. All three of them oppose the war with Haven from the beginning to the end, never mind that their country is pretty much fighting for its ''survival''. And pretty much all of their leaders hate Honor because she has proven them wrong again and again.
103** Case in point: Liberal [[AssInAmbassador Reginald]] [[ObstructiveBureaucrat Houseman]] in ''The Honor of the Queen''. On the matter of the Grayson-Masada War - which has been going on for centuries, and where the latter is led by, and full of, [[TheFundamentalist ultra-fundamentalist]] HeManWomanHater [[JerkAss jerkasses]] who would have no problem in nuking Grayson's cities to ruins - he thinks that putting an end to it should be as easy as getting both planetary governments together and cobble out trade agreements - pretty much TalkingTheMonsterToDeath in diplomatic form. And when he finds that Masada is going to attack and he is now the man in charge of the delegation, he attempts to order Honor to evacuate all Manticorans and leave Grayson to die. Is it any wonder that, when Honor lays a brutal TheReasonYouSuckSpeech and an equally brutal punch, ''no one'' complains about it?
104* An important theme in Creator/RobertMerle's novel ''The Island'', which is based on the story of the mutiny on the Bounty. British mutineers and Tahitians start a settlement on an island, but tensions quickly build up between them, because some of the British treat the Tahitians as inferior. The protagonist, Purcell doesn't allow his friends to kill the main troublemaker because of his pacifistic Christian beliefs. Eventually war breaks out, and all men on the island die, except for Purcell and a Tahitian. Purcell ends up blaming himself.
105* In ''Literature/IslandInTheSeaOfTime'', Pamela Lisketter and her followers aid William Walker's betrayal in the hopes that his plot will hobble the Republic of Nantucket so that it can't intervene in the Alban War. Unfortunately, their plan is incredibly stupid (amounting to kidnapping the Chief's wife and shooting Marian Alston, the de facto commander of the navy) and is executed incompetently (the bullet grazes Alston), and their getaway plan involved travelling down to Mexico and hoping that the locals are friendly. Not only do they fail to prevent the Republic from going to war, but they also manage to start a war between the Republic and the People of the Jaguar God. And on top of that, Lisketter and her followers all die, but not before spreading mumps throughout Mesoamerica. NiceJobBreakingItHero, indeed.
106* Creator/HarryTurtledove once wrote a short story ("The Last Article" — so called because of a quote by Gandhi ("Nonviolence is the first article of my faith. It is also the last article of my creed")) about Gandhi attempting to use the same peaceful protest tactics that had won significant gains against the British on the invading forces of Nazi Germany. That ends in rather spectacular (and highly violent) failure, with Gandhi lamenting the fact (before his execution) that his tactics worked against the British because deep down only the most insanely virulently racist wouldn't feel bad about violating people's rights, while Nazis... well... what did you expect from people who believe in the employment of the FinalSolution as a standard procedure?[[note]]Critics of this story have pointed out that Gandhi was a ''lot'' more wise than this in real life... although they are '''also''' ignoring the fact that Gandhi is on record saying that A: the Allies should have surrendered rather than fighting in [=WW2=] in the first place, and B: the Jews should have either committed suicide, engaged in non-violent protest or just allowed themselves to be slaughtered rather than fighting back. And also that Hitler himself said that the best way to deal with Gandhi's protesting was to JustShootHim.[[/note]]
107* ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'': In the books (in contrast to the films), after the siege of [[spoiler:Orthanc]], [[spoiler:Saruman]] is permitted to go free. This allows him to make his way to [[spoiler:the Shire]] and take it over. [[spoiler: His ''eventual'' fate (murdered by Gríma) is still the same, though -- he just causes a lot more damage first.]]
108* ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire''.
109** Eddard Stark refused to arrest Queen Cersei and her illegitimate children because he didn't want them to get hurt. This decision is one of the main causes of the War of Five Kings (along with Eddard's own death).
110** Daenerys in ''Literature/ADanceWithDragons'' decides to build peace in Meereen by conciliating the Wise Maesters and the Yunkishmen so as to stave an oncoming war. But her efforts involve horrible compromises that amount to a near-reversal of SlaveLiberation and the selling of slaves in front of her walls. By the end of the book, she states that her way is "Fire and Blood".
111* In the second book of ''Literature/TalesOfTheMagicLand'', the heroes decide not to hunt down the traitor Ruf Bilan. In the next book, he very nearly causes a global war between the Emerald City and the Underground Kings.
112** The lesser traitors are, too, all spared and given their positions and titles back. Guess what, in book four all of them turn their cloaks again.
113** The same could arguably be said for the second book's BigBad Urfin Jus, spared and released unharmed at the main heroine's insistence. But although he does come back with a fresh evil plan in the fourth book, in the fifth one he does a HeelFaceTurn and his new invention saves the day.
114[[/folder]]
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116[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
117* In the ''Series/BabylonFive'' episode "The Fall of Night", a representative of Earth's Ministry of Peace visits the station to finalize a non-aggression pact between Earth Alliance and the Centauri--right after the latter use illegal weapons of mass destruction (mass drivers) to bombard the Narn homeworld back to the stone age and show evidence of being on a dangerously aggressive footing in the galaxy. The minister even uses the phrase [[UsefulNotes/NevilleChamberlain "peace in our time"]]. Shortly thereafter, the Centauri begin conquests in the territories of many other races.
118* ''Series/BattlestarGalactica1978''. In the pilot episode, the Council of Twelve takes all of the Battlestars to a peace conference with the Cylons, leaving the Twelve Colonies completely undefended. Naturally the Cylons decide to use AggressiveNegotiations: they take the opportunity to ambush not only the Battlestars, destroying all but the ''Galactica'', but almost entirely wiping out the colonies as well. In a later episode, it's stated that the colonies had planetary defenses, which were sabotaged by a confederate of Baltar's.
119* In ''Series/BreakingBad'', this formed Mike's StartOfDarkness. Back when he was a cop, there was one particular guy whom he visited over and over on domestic violence calls. Eventually, he became so convinced that the guy was eventually going to murder his girlfriend that he kidnapped him to a deserted place to kill him. However, he backed out at the last minute, merely threatening the guy instead. Only a short time later, the guy did indeed beat his wife to death. He regretted his action ever since.
120* In ''Series/TheBoys2019'', NaiveNewcomer Hughie ends up being promoted to TheLeader after the Boys officially become government agents in Season 3. However, his distaste for violence leads to him and by extension the rest of the team being easily manipulated by the MoleInCharge and playing right into [[EvilInc Vought]]'s hands.
121* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
122** If the Doctor had just killed the [[BigBad Daleks]] before they made it off the planet Skaro when he had the chance, he could have avoided [[TheGreatOffScreenWar the Time War]] and [[spoiler:seemingly]] becoming TheLastOfHisKind.
123** Had the Fifth Doctor aided the humans in defending themselves from the Silurians and Sea Devils in ''[[Recap/DoctorWhoS21E1WarriorsOfTheDeep Warriors of the Deep]]'', he could have prevented all three sides being slaughtered. It's made clear he knew this was the only solution from the start, but put off making the decision in the hope he'd find another way, and didn't.
124** The Tenth Doctor acknowledged this is a problem with him being a TechnicalPacifist in ''[[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E17E18TheEndOfTime The End of Time]]''. His attempts not to hurt anyone may not directly have ''him'' going against his morals, but he "got clever" and has indirectly caused his friends and companions to fight pretty nasty battles for him or manipulated villains into killing themselves.
125** Had the Doctor not toppled the regime of Harriet Jones as revenge for her blowing up alien invaders in [[Recap/DoctorWho2005CSTheChristmasInvasion "The Christmas Invasion"]], she would have been still been Prime Minister and the Master wouldn't have been able to rise to power as Prime Minister Harold Saxon and assassinate the U.S. president or cause worldwide devastation in The Year That Never Was. The ''Series/TorchwoodChildrenOfEarth'' crisis would have also gone differently.
126** In [[Recap/DoctorWhoS37E1TheWomanWhoFellToEarth "The Woman Who Fell to Earth"]], the Thirteenth Doctor [[spoiler:shows mercy to the villain, Tzim-Sha, by returning his recall device to teleport him back to his homeworld]]. In [[Recap/DoctorWhoS37E10TheBattleOfRanskoorAvKolos "The Battle of Ranskoor Av Kolos"]], this decision turns out to have been a mistake, as [[spoiler:the Doctor accidentally corrupted the teleport, leading to "Tim Shaw" landing on the titular planet, where he could manipulate the naïve Ux, two ''very'' powerful {{Reality Warper}}s, into doing his bidding.]]
127* The main characters of the first season of ''Series/JessicaJones2015'' spend the entire first season trying to hunt down and capture Kilgrave -- a mind-controlling rapist -- without killing him, in large part because he forced his most recent victim to murder her parents and they want to bring him in and prove that she was mind-controlled. At one point they actually capture him, and keep him alive and imprisoned despite the urging of an ally that they [[WhyDontYaJustShootHim just kill him]]. This ally feels strongly enough about it that he winds up going AxeCrazy, and they have to take care of him before they can return their attention to Kilgrave, who, naturally, escapes and goes on a minor rampage. In the process, the girl they were trying to protect [[ShootTheShaggyDog kills herself]] before they can make any progress in proving that she's not guilty. Which means by the time Jessica finally [[spoiler:snaps his neck at the end of the season]], the only thing they did by sparing Kilgrave was to allow him to destroy even more lives. Plus, since Jessica had to [[spoiler:kill him in public to save the crowd of people he was forcing to kill each other]], she gets arrested herself. [[spoiler: Thankfully she's soon released when everything gets explained]].
128* Parodied in the pilot of ''Series/{{Jessie}}''. In the first scene we see with the kids, Emma and Luke are fighting, with Ravi pleading with them to stop[[note]]which may be slightly reminiscent of [[UsefulNotes/MahatmaGandhi Gandhi]][[/note]].
129-->'''Ravi:''' Luke, Emma, please! Violence is never the answer.\
130'''Emma:''' ''[whacks Ravi with a pillow]''\
131''[[[LaughTrack laughter]]]''\
132'''Ravi:''' To heck with the nonviolence! I am on you like stripes on a tiger! ''[attacks Emma]''
133* ''Series/OnceUponATime'' has a knack for this. In a show where the heroes prove they're the good guys by [[ThouShallNotKill choosing not to kill their enemies]], the villains manage to rub it in their faces and, as one villain said, "make them wish they ''did'' kill them when they had the chance". The heroes actually put one of the villains through a SecretTestOfCharacter exploiting this trope. The failure resulted in them being unable to harm the main target or anyone related.
134* ''Franchise/StarTrek''
135** In the [[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries original series]] episode "City on the Edge of Forever", [=McCoy=] accidentally gets sent back in time, and his actions cause the Federation to never have existed, so Kirk and Spock have to go back in time themselves to SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong. They discover that [=McCoy=] saved a social worker from being fatally hit by a car; this social worker turned out to be an extreme pacifist who would go on to lead a massive peace movement, and this movement's influence delayed the United States' entry into World War II, allowing Germany to develop the first atomic bomb and conquer the earth. As Spock points out, she ultimately had the right idea, but at exactly the wrong point in time.
136** In the [[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries original series]] episode "The Galileo Seven", Spock tries to scare away the natives by firing a phaser barrage near but not directly at them. When they return and attack the shuttle, [=McCoy=] points out that the attempt to repel the creatures without harming them has only made them angry.
137** In the original series episode "The Savage Curtain", Surak insists on going alone to negotiate with the "Evil" team, despite Kirk trying to warn him that they are threacherous. Surak quickly gets himself killed.
138** In the Mirror Universe stories, started in the original series and continued in ''[[Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine Deep Space Nine]]'', Kirk manages to convince Mirror-Spock to get the Terran Empire to eschew its warlike ways... and it promptly gets overthrown by the Klingons and Cardassians.
139** In the ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' episode "The Survivors", the crew comes across a Douwd, a near Q-level race. He just wanted to live in peace with his human wife, so he retired to a small colony planet. A group of Husnock (another alien race) attacked but the Douwd are all pacifists so he didn't join the fight. The attacking Husnocks killed everyone else on the planet, including his wife, so in retaliation, he killed every member of the Husnock ''everywhere in the universe''.
140* In one episode of ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'', the brothers find themselves trapped in a building with a small number of survivors and a huge number of demons trying to enter and kill them all. Ruby arrives and tells them about a spell that would save them all, but it requires a human sacrifice. Sam and Dean refuse to do it, insisting that they must find another way. However, while the two of them end up escaping just fine, after they leave, the demons return and all of the survivors, including the intended sacrifice, are killed. [[ColdBloodedTorture And they didn't die quickly...]]
141* In ''Series/TheWhispers'' they refuse to kill Drill because it will also kill a child. Drill ends up [[spoiler: killing a woman, possesses and kills the president's daughter, makes a horde of zombie adults ready to do his bidding, and kidnaps thousands of children.]]
142* In ''Series/XenaWarriorPrincess'', Gabrielle picks up the IdiotBall more than a few times due to her commitment to not killing people.
143** After her "innocence" is sacrificed by forcing her to stab a woman in self-defense (because apparently bashing in people's faces and throats doesn't count), she gives birth to a FetusTerrible that grows to term in a matter of days, and then strangles the KnightTemplar who was watching it within hours of being born. Gabrielle refuses to believe a baby could be evil and fakes out Xena to make her think it's dead.
144** When Xena goes to assassinate a tyrant king, Gabrielle decides that this is somehow unacceptable. She goes to the king, warns him, gets Xena captured, imprisoned, and sentenced to death, all to find out that the king is a matricidal dictator.
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147[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
148* ''TabletopGame/{{Starfire}}'', ''Nexus'' magazine #7 article "The Drolian Conquest". After Khanate of Orion warships attacked several Drolian ships, the Drolian "peaceful expansion" lobby prevented the Drolian government from expanding its space navy. Six months later the Khanate of Orion invaded in force and quickly conquered the Drolians. During the invasion, the "peaceful expansion" lobby was lynched by other Drolians.
149* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'':
150** Due to the ForeverWar nature of the setting, this is pretty much the status quo. Anytime a world is isolated enough from the current conflicts to be at peace just means it'll attract the attention of Ork and Eldar raiders (for the plunder), Chaos (for their souls), Necrons (for being alive), or the Tyranids (for the biomass), and unable to defend itself.
151** In the backstory, the Emperor of Mankind could not bring himself to actually strike down Horus after the latter slew Sanguinius during the Heresy. Horus took advantage of his father's mercy and tore him apart. Even then, the Emperor refused to fight back. Actually witnessing Horus casually flay alive a soldier who tried to defend the Emperor -- one that posed absolutely no threat to him -- finally convinced the Emperor that Horus was beyond redemption and needed to be stopped. This rare moment of pacifism doomed the Emperor to waste away in the Golden Throne, helpless to do anything to prevent the gradual decay of the Imperium.
152[[/folder]]
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154[[folder:Theatre]]
155* Similarly in ''West Side Story's'' inspiration, ''Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet'', Mercutio is fatally stabbed when Romeo comes between him and Tybalt, trying to break up their fight because he wants to make peace with the Capulets because of his love for Juliet. Romeo's guilt over this directly or indirectly causes every single other death in the play.
156* Tony suffers this in ''Theatre/WestSideStory''. He goes to the rumble to stop it from happening and tries to resist Bernardo's baiting, but it backfires horribly. The rumble, which was supposed to be a simple fistfight, turns into a knife battle between Bernardo and Riff. Tony ends up knifing Bernardo, who has stabbed Riff.
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159[[folder:Video Games]]
160* ''Videogame/AssassinsCreedBrotherhood'' shows that Ezio sparing Rodrigo Borgia (primarily due to to the fact that [[PlotArmor the real Alexander VI didn't die that year]]) at the end of ''Videogame/AssassinsCreedII'' backfires horribly since the Borgia and the Templars are still in power and the game starts off with the other Borgias besieging his town and killing his uncle. As such, he not only vows to actually finish the job this time but the game is centered around pushing the Borgias out of power. This is actually a subversion to some extent, however, as Rodrigo actually wanted nothing more to do with the Assassins, but Cesare was much more aggressive.
161* ''VideoGame/BatmanArkhamOrigins'' shows us that Bane caused Joker to fall down a skyscraper, only to be rescued by Batman. Just minutes later, he turns his own gun to his head and taunts Batman, only to be taken down and arrested. Had Batman allowed Joker to die in either of these moments, so many lives would have been spared, such as over 100 employees of [[VideoGame/BatmanArkhamAsylum Arkham Asylum]] and [[MyGreatestFailure Jason Todd]]. On a more personal note, this moment caused the Joker (who until now had just been interested in causing mayhem and chaos ''in general'') to develop an obsession with the man who saved his life after he'd done nothing but hurt people. All of the twisted, ''personal'' interest The Joker had for Batman came from this rescue.
162* In ''Videogame/Fallout2'', the [[BigGood Brotherhood of Steel]] was well on its way to demilitarizing and becoming a simple research group when they got blindsided by [[TheRemnant the Enclave]] - technologically advanced remnants of the U.S government that were trying to kill ''[[AbsoluteXenophobe everything and everyone, everywhere]],'' nearly wiping them out and forcing them to [[GuiltFreeExterminationWar take action or die]]. Ever since then, the Brotherhood has expanded its mandate to include [[PrinciplesZealot aggressively destroying any advanced tech they think they can't control]] and in ''VideoGame/Fallout3'' & ''VideoGame/Fallout4'' they're not interested in taking prisoners.
163* ''VideoGame/FireEmblemRadiantDawn'':
164** Micaiah lets the enemy commander go after another soldier [[HeroicSacrifice gives his life to save him]]. The commander then rallies his remaining troops for a LastVillainStand that destroys much of the capital city and very likely kills a lot of civilians. [[AllForNothing ...And then she has to kill him anyway.]]
165** When Elincia first ascends to the throne of Crimea, she insists on non-violent and StupidGood measures in everything she does. This results in a rebellion ''that she was aware of'' gaining enough momentum to seriously threaten her rule because she was unwilling to use force to quell it. She learns her lesson after this, but [[BadassPacifist not in the sense that she abandons pacifism]].
166* ''VideoGame/HeroesOfMightAndMagic'': In the ''Heroes Chronicles'' addon missions, the barbarian warlord Tarnum is granted CompleteImmortality by the [[{{Precursors}} Ancestors]] so he can atone for the horrible things he did in his life. In the eighth and final campaign, Tarnum is racing for the Sword of Frost to stop an end-of-the-world prophecy. As the final key in his redemption, he spares the life of [[BloodKnight Kilgor]]'s wife Kija, proving that he will no longer commit murder to achieve his goals. Unfortunately, [[NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished this allows Kija to reach the Sword of Frost first and leads to Kilgor and Gelu destroying the world]].
167* This is how Alan "Spam" Webster's mercenary career with A.I.M. ended in the ''VideoGame/JaggedAlliance'' series. Coming from the UN peacekeeping forces background, his MO was to negotiate enemy surrender first and only shoot if that fails. One of such failures led to the death of fellow A.I.M. member Johnny "Snake" Edwards, leading to Spam's dishonorable discharge.
168* ''VideoGame/MegaMan7''. Perhaps justified in that he's still a ThreeLawsCompliant robot, but still, in the end of the game, when Mega Man finally has Wily at his mercy, he points his Mega Buster at him and charges it, but he hesitates long enough for Bass to take Wily out of his castle. And of course, it leads to Wily being the BigBad for the games after it.
169* In ''VideoGame/{{Miitopia}}'', heroes with a Kind personality will sometimes attempt to persuade an enemy to leave the fight peacefully. Sometimes, this backfires by getting the hero attacked--since his or her guard is down, that strengthens the attack. It also results in annoyance from one of the other team members, and if it happens too often, it will cause them to dislike each other.
170* In ''VideoGame/PathfinderKingmaker'', some enemies, if you take the pacifist route and spare them, can be encountered later. Several of them have reformed, though some of them have not. In one particular instance, [[spoiler:Ekun can be convinced to spare the children of [[CrusadingWidow a troll who killed his wife and family]]. If you do, the trolls will show up later, having joined Irovetti's army and killed more people in the process. Ekun will sourly note that he was right all along as you put them down.]]
171* In ''VideoGame/SpiderManMilesMorales'', Miles forcibly invokes ThouShaltNotKill and stops his EvilFormerFriend the Tinkerer from killing Rhino ([[AdaptationalVillainy who by all accounts deserved it]]). Not only does this ruin their chance at gathering evidence against the GreaterScopeVillain [[EvilInc Roxxon]], but it worsens the PoorCommunicationKills between them even further, causing [[GenderFlip her]] to hand Miles a NoHoldsBarredBeatdown before he can explain that her EvilPlan would destroy the city and forcing them into a [[FinalBoss final confrontation]] [[spoiler:that ultimately [[HoistByTheirOwnPetard gets her killed]] and forces Miles to live with the guilt of being unable to save her]].
172* In ''VideoGame/StarWarsKnightsOfTheOldRepublic'', CoolOldGuy Jolee Bindo was a rebellious Jedi Padawan who in his youth married a Force-sensitive woman and trained her to be a Jedi himself against the Council's wishes. In what he regards as MyGreatestFailure, she got caught up in [[TheParagonAlwaysRebels Exar Kun]]'s Sith propaganda and tried to kill Jolee for refusing to convert with her. Jolee couldn't bring himself to kill the woman he loved and let her go, upon which she killed many other Jedi in the war before being slain herself. The Council put Jolee on trial but decided that he had learned his lesson and even promoted him to Knight, but [[DecliningPromotion he couldn't forgive himself and left]] TheOrder.
173* In ''VideoGame/{{Undertale}}'''s Genocide Route, Papyrus will attempt to get the VillainProtagonist to change using this trope, saying that they can become a better person if they just try. A battle with Papyrus starts in which Papyrus [[ZeroEffortBoss won't even attack the protagonist]], allowing him to be spared instantly. If the player attacks, it's a OneHitKO. Though in a {{Subver|tedTrope}}sion of this trope, a lot of players attempting Genocide runs report stopping the genocide when made to mercilessly kill such a harmless, innocent NiceGuy like Papyrus. In a way, Papyrus was more effective at stopping the player's rampage than [[ThatOneBoss Undyne or]] [[spoiler:[[ThatOneBoss Sans the skeleton]]]].
174* In the ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' tie-in novel Prince Anduin ends up saving Warchief Garrosh from a poisoning attempt while he's imprisoned awaiting trial. Anduin believes that he's convincing Garrosh to change, and according to the writers, he would have succeeded... if it wasn't for a rogue time-travelling dragon offering Garrosh a second chance at world domination and more importantly not having to face up to his crimes.
175** What's [[FromBadToWorse worse]], [[StupidGood he doesn't learn from this mistake]]. In the tie-in novel ''Before the Storm'' he tries to pull the same stunt after [[YouAreInCommandNow becoming]] [[YoungAndInCharge King]] with [[OmnicidalManiac Sylvanas Windrunner]] - a woman who has [[CardCarryingVillain explicitly stated]] that she wants to bring an end to all life on Azeroth so that they can join her in Undeath - and also because of her prevailing philosophy of BewareTheLiving. An attempted truce [[ItSeemedLikeAGoodIdeaAtTheTime (which was initially started with good intentions from both sides)]] looked like it was working, and then [[GoneHorriblyWrong goes completely]] awry thanks to Sylvanas's [[ProperlyParanoid paranoia]] and [[ItsAllAboutMe self-centred perspective]].
176** All of this culminates in the [[WhamEpisode War of the Thorns]], the [[WatchingTroyBurn Burning of Teldrassil]] and the [[HereWeGoAgain resumption of hostilities]] between the Alliance and Horde, marking the beginning of the Fourth War. Credit where it's due, [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone he realizes this]] [[CharacterDevelopment and resolves]] to not be so stupid next time, but it's too little, too late.
177[[/folder]]
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179[[folder:Web Original]]
180* [[http://www.snopes.com/college/homework/writing.asp There's a piece of Internet humor floating around]] where a StrawFeminist and a StrawMisogynist are partnered up for a school project and tasked with taking turns writing segments for a tandem story. The girl is focused on writing a bad, PurpleProse-laden ChickFlick, the boy on a cheesy, juvenile sci-fi action movie, and each segment of their "story" spitefully derails the previous one's plot. When the girl abruptly ends the boy's AlienInvasion plot with peace talks (and kills off his overly-macho MartyStu in an undignified way), the boy retaliates by writing in a ''second'' AlienInvasion that the now-demilitarized Earth is powerless to resist, ending the "story" as both sides degenerate into complaining and name-calling.
181[[/folder]]
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183[[folder:Web Videos]]
184* WebVideo/PartyCrashers: In "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hxujITAsWKY Mario Party 3 broke us all...]]", Vernias tries to not anger anyone by either doing a gameshow or choosing random whenever he visits the Boo, as to make sure he doesn't have a target on his back... [[EpicFail only to end up infuriating everyone in the process]]:
185-->'''Sophist:''' In Vern's quest to make no enemies, he's pissed off everyone! It's insane.\
186'''Vernias:''' I don't understand! How is being the pacifist the most endangering thing?!
187[[/folder]]
188
189[[folder:Western Animation]]
190* ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime''
191** In the episode "His Hero", the great hero Billy inspires Finn and Jake to practice non-violence at every cost... and of course, everything goes wrong.
192** In a later episode, "Crystals Have Power", Jake gets a flashback to when he was a kid, and his dad told him that he would hurt everybody if he got out of control. Jake vows to practice non-violence, which gets problematic when Finn gets kidnapped.
193* In ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'', it was eventually shown that the good Avatar Roku and world-conquering Fire Lord Sozin had been best friends. Roku's spirit tells Aang that he was too easy on his friend when he discovered his ambitions and that his aversion to violence in the matter allowed for 100 years of war to reign. Made even worse because Roku had previously smashed into Sozin's castle and threatened to kill him if he continued his imperialist ambitions, but couldn't go through with it when Sozin did it anyway.
194* This pops up, surprisingly enough, a couple of times in ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'':
195** In ''One Bad Apple'' the Cutie Mark Crusaders attempt this to deal with the bully Babs Seed, but she's just so hell-bent on spending every waking moment bullying them that it doesn't work. They decide ViolenceReallyIsTheAnswer and that they're going to bait her into stealing a rigged parade float that will crash in the mud, and eventually learn they [[CouldHaveAvoidedThisPlot should have just gone to an adult for help instead]].
196** At the end of ''To Where And Back Again'' Starlight attempts the same pacifist EasilyForgiven treatment she got from Twilight Sparkle on Queen Chrysalis. [[RedemptionRejection It's soundly rebuked]] and Chrysalis escapes, swearing to come back later for revenge (which she does).
197** In ''To Change A Changeling'', Thorax as the new king of the changelings tries to invert their formerly antagonistic ways and live in peace but ends up taking it to ExtremeDoormat levels. Under normal circumstances, it likely would have worked, but it's not a very hot plan when there's a [[AttackOfTheFiftyFootWhatever gigantic apex predator actively hunting you]]. This along with Starlight's blundering would have led to the thing destroying their hive have had his brother [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Pharynx]], the only changeling who [[BlackShirt preferred their old ways]], been keen on using force instead and inadvertently inspires the entire hive to rise up and attack. In the end, they meet somewhere in the middle, with Pharynx learning to [[TookALevelInKindness lighten up a little]] while everyone else [[TookALevelInBadAss learns they have to stand up and fight sometimes]].
198* This popped up in three "WesternAnimation/TreehouseOfHorror" episodes of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons''.
199** In "Monkey's Paw", Lisa wishes for world peace. This made Earth susceptible to aliens armed only with wooden sticks.
200** Once Lisa found the tombstone of a young man who wished for a world without guns. This inspires Springfield to ban guns, and then the young man (who in reality was Billy the Kid) and his fellow outlaws rise from the grave to take over the town.
201** Another ''Treehouse'' episode has Bart and Lisa going to Marge and telling her that [[IAmAHumanitarian the teachers at Springfield Elementary are eating the students]] and treating them like cattle to fatten and slaughter, and Marge's only proposed solution to the problem [[TalkingTheMonsterToDeath is for the kids to look at the teachers straight in the eye and tell them "Don't eat me"]]. They are both killed the following day. [[spoiler:[[AllJustADream It turned out to be a crazy nightmare Bart was having]].]]
202** In the short "Untitled Robot Parody" (a parody of ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers''), Marge managed to nag the Expies of the Autobots and the Deceptions into ending their ages-long war. Cut to Earth after a short TimeSkip and it turns out that they banded together to ''conquer the planet''.
203* ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars'':
204** In the backstory of the modern [[ProudWarriorRace Mandalorians]], Duke Adonai Kryze ushered Mandalore into an age of the New Mandalorians, who follow {{Actual Pacifist}} ideology (with exceptions such as self-defense). After his death in the recent civil war that took place over ten years before the present, his eldest daughter Duchess Satine continues his ideals by having Mandalore lead the neutral side of the Clone Wars, albeit struggles to do so with pressures from the war as well as internal pressures from nationalist-extremists who are upset over their loss of culture, which causes Mandalore to be stepped on by the Republic, the Separatists, and Death Watch on numerous occasions. This conflict eventually leads to another civil war that leaves Mandalore vulnerable, which ultimately ends with the planet being occupied by the Republic and later made into a colony for several decades after the Republic transitioned into the Galactic Empire. As some viewers have pointed out, this might've been less of a problem if Satine had chosen to let Mandalorian principles continue in some way while establishing other rules that could keep the troublemakers in check, instead of doing things like exiling anyone who wants to preserve the warrior culture.
205** There's also the two part episode, "Defenders of Peace", which revolves around a society of [[IntelligentGerbil Alien Lemurs]] who are nearly exterminated when the Separatists decide to test a new weapon on them and the refusal of their village elder to fight back even in self-defense because of his staunch pacifism.
206* In early episodes of ''WesternAnimation/TimeSquad'' Otto tries to convince Tuddrussel throughout various missions that he'd have better luck getting historical figures to go back on the right path if he'd just show some patience, and use his words instead of violent beatings. While this worked some of the time, it backfired in most instances because some of the historical figures in question were just too stupid or stubborn for anything else but a punch to the face.
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