Ok, I’ll bite. Let’s see some sources here for what you are saying.
Well, start with John Calvin’s execution of Michael Servetus, the Spanish physician and theologian. He had him burned at the stake and presided at the trial. (Now to be fair, he was an anti-Trinitarian, and the Inquisition had condemned his writings as well). I should also mention that John Calvin personally endorsed and utilized torture as a legitimate institution. Here’s a reference.
Hans J. Hillerbrand, editor, The Reformation, A Narrative History Related by Contemporary Observers and Participants. Baker Book House, Ann Arbor, MI, 1985. pp. 174 (quoting Beza’s Life of Calvin), 169, 274, 203.
If you’re actually going to read these, I can do the research and provide much more.
Then we can look at the German Peasant’s Revolt, and Luther’s role in the deaths of 75,000 - 100,000 people. I’d try reading the work of Steven Ozment for that. I’m not going to type in pages of passages, but here’s a sample:
“Luther and his followers sympathized with the peasants. Indeed, for several years Lutheran pamphleteers made Karsthans, the burly, honest peasant who earned his bread by the sweat of his brow and sacrificed his own comfort and well-being for others, a symbol of the simple life that God desired all people to live. The Lutherans, however, were not social revolutionaries. When the peasants revolted against their masters in 1524-1525, Luther, not surprisingly, condemned them in the strongest possible terms as “un-Christian” and urged the princes to crush their revolt without mercy. Tens of thousands of peasants (estimates run between 70,000 and 100,000) died by the time the revolt was put down.”
From The Western Heritage, Ch. 12, pg. 361