So, Steve, basically what you're saying is "Cap killed before '85 and after '95".
Yeah, the no-kill thing's pretty much an exception to the rule. We're talking majority here.
The article very clearly lays out a whoe bunch of instances, oldschool, newsschool, and everything in between where the guy does. Let's not cherrypick a single writer here, he's outnumbered by just about everyone else who's ever written the guy.
Also not sure how the guy killing somehow makes him "lesser than" in your view. Soldiers, cops, many other types of people who're out there putting their lives on the line for others, kill. It's only an out-of-character issue if he's doing it when there's obviously a way around it. Which...yeah, I'm betting you'll be struggling for examples of when Steve - MCU Steve or comics Steve alike - has just wasted a guy intentionally and it could be argued he didn't have to.
Steve's not The Punisher. He's also not Batman, there's an in-between where all good sane people inhabit. Those two guys have it completely morally wrong, Steve's got the right idea.
No, we were not talking majority, quit moving the goalpost. You started jumping all over someone for saying that modern Steve is depicted a bit more brutally than yesteryear and I pointed out that there is justifiable cause for someone to feel that way re:Gruenwald (Gruenwald wasn't the only Cap writer with a no kill clause, btw). Which I've proven. And then you picked a fight with me about it, embarrassing yourself because it's clear you've not read the Gruenwald years, which are kind of essential to any Cap fan.
Gruenwald's, btw, influence is still felt today. He wasn't just 'one Cap writer', he was editor-in-chief of Marvel Comics from 1987-1996, and this while he was writing Cap. He invented Cap!Wolf (something Spencer recently revisited). He invented John Walker/US Agent. He fleshed out the Serpent Society and created most of their more renown members, some of whom have been featured prominently in the Luke Cage Netflix show. He created: Cottonmouth, Crossbones, Americop, Songbird, and Jack Flag, to name a few of his characters through the years. The list of his creations is very, very long:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Characters_created_by_Mark_Gruenwald
When he died he was cremated and they put his ashes in the ink of some comics ran that month. To try and pass off his influence as minor in the grand scheme of things just proves you know little about Marvel.
Steve is my favorite character. I love him enough that I have followed his comics for
decades. Even through Loeb/Liefeld. Even through Spencer. Both of which were terrible runs. If that's not love then nothing is. I don't 'think less of him', particular since, I, unlike you, actually read his comics, and I know that Steve respects life and does not take a life without it a) weighing on his conscience and b) not having any other choice (with the exception of Rieber, who was mad about 9-11 and wrote a revenge plot, which was out-of-character for Steve).
But, essentially, it comes down to this, everyone is entitled to their opinion. The first Cap comic was released in 1941, with some lull time in the 50's, Steve was brought back in the 1960's and has been going steady ever since. According to Marvel's counting system that's over 700 comics. ANY stance or opinion on Steve's tactics and personality, including use of force, is defensible because it can be backed up somewhere. Each writer who has written Steve has brought their own politics to him. For example, DeMatteis, who wrote Cap prior to Gruenwald, also presented Steve as someone who did not kill and who preached pacifism. And while I don't agree that Steve is a pacifist, if one was introduced to Cap through DeMatteis, then any Cap that came afterward would feel weird to them because DeMatteis was their first intro. And writer Chuck Austen, yes,
that Chuck Austen, the writer we do not speak of because he was so terrible, wrote a plot where the government put Steve in the ice intentionally because they knew he wouldn't approve of dropping the nukes on Japan and they didn't want to deal with his protests. So, you know, maybe don't jump on people for voicing an opinion??? Especially if your own knowledge of Cap is limited to recent comics.