Listen up.
"Passive voice" does not mean "any construction I think is deliberately vague".
"Palestinians died" is in the active voice, even if you think it should read "Palestinians were killed by Israeli soldiers" (which, fittingly, is a passive voice.) It's weaselly, but it's not a passive. (Or, on the flipside, "violence broke out" isn't a passive either, even if you think it should say "the Palestinians attacked the Israelis", but at least the suggested correction is also in the active voice.)
"Democrats allowed this situation [of migrant separation] to escalate" is an outright lie, but that doesn't make it a passive voice construction either.
"Don't use the passive voice!!!" is an absurd little bugaboo, but if you're going to religiously adhere to it you can at least learn how to properly identify passive and active clauses.
"Palestinians died" is in the active voice, even if you think it should read "Palestinians were killed by Israeli soldiers" (which, fittingly, is a passive voice.) It's weaselly, but it's not a passive. (Or, on the flipside, "violence broke out" isn't a passive either, even if you think it should say "the Palestinians attacked the Israelis", but at least the suggested correction is also in the active voice.)
"Democrats allowed this situation [of migrant separation] to escalate" is an outright lie, but that doesn't make it a passive voice construction either.
"Don't use the passive voice!!!" is an absurd little bugaboo, but if you're going to religiously adhere to it you can at least learn how to properly identify passive and active clauses.
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"Lee Harvey Oswald assassinated President Kennedy" is active, and also valid, but if you're more concerned about the effects of the assassination than on the volumes of "did Oswald act alone? What was his motivation?" stuff you're more likely to want Kennedy to be the subject of the sentence.
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It could be worse. Some languages also have a middle voice, which I don't even pretend to understand.
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(The so-called "agentless passive", where the "by X" part of the construction is omitted, is used a lot for responsibility-dodging of the "mistakes were made" variety, but that's the fault of the speaker, not the grammar. There are times when the identity of X is either unknown or irrelevant or both, and the agentless passive is the appropriate voice in those cases.)
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"Kennedy was assassinated" is passive voice.
"Both were injured in a police-involved shooting," is passive exonerative.
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Before that particular phrase became popular*, the ideal example of passive exonerative was "mistakes were made."
*"The phrase became popular" is technically active voice, even as it conceals all the journalists who made it popular by quoting police reports so uncritically.