Kyteland
Diamond Member
- Dec 30, 2002
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Originally posted by: Arkaign
^^ Yes. The North American native tribes were never that numerous, both their culture and their pre-industrial infrastructure didn't support massive populations. 3-7 million is a good range.
This statement in no way excuses or downplays the horror of wiping out these populations, but let's not get silly with numbers. There weren't even 100 million Americans in 1908, let alone a gargantuan number of Native Americans before we came along.
Actually, It's estimated that upwards of 120 million people lived in the Americas before the Columbus expedition arrived, and that upwards of 90% of that population was wiped out due to rapidly spreading, newly introduced diseases from Europe. By 1600 the native population in the Americas was significantly reduced.
Originally posted by: 0marTheZealot
If you haven't caught on yet, I'm talking about the genocide of the Native Americans. No one really sheds a tear for the hundreds of millions of Native Americans killed to forge our nation, just like no one would have cared for the tens of millions of Jews killed had Hitler won the war. Victor's history. If Hitler won the war, we'd be talking to Jews to "get over it" like we tell African Americans to get over slavery. It's all a matter of time and perspective.
Not to diminish your point, but you're off by many orders of magnitude. America was certainly responsible for a large number of native deaths while it was expanding westward, but nothing on the order of what you're suggesting. There weren't that many natives in North and South America combined during the time period in question.