Not remotely as many as holocaust museums, nor as grand as them.
Again, imagine Germany not having museums for the holocaust they committed, but instead having museums for the genocides of Native Americans and African slaves that happened way over in America.
Also imagine a law in Germany which states that denying the genocide of the Native Americans is a crime, but denying the Holocaust isn't.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_museums_focused_on_African_Americans
http://americanhistory.si.edu/chang...nd-march-washington-1963/1863/slavery-america
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/local/daily/july99/williamsburg7.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:American_Civil_War_museums_by_state
http://nmai.si.edu/visit/washington/
http://www.cnn.com/2014/04/15/travel/best-usa-indian-culture/
There are way way more museums focused on slavery, civil rights, and American Indians than the Holocaust in the United States.
There is nothing "unusual" about the holocaust, that's just a picture that Zionist controlled media and Hollywood paint, it was said there were almost 100 million natives in America before the English landed, now they're less than 0.3% of the population. Genocide of that magnitude doesn't just happen by accident, they were targeted as an ethnic group, and were killed on a much larger scale than the Holocaust. But you don't see any criminal charges against someone who denies it, nor any sob stories about a native American Anne Frank.
1) There was absolutely something unusual about the Holocaust, according to basically every professional historian across all nations, races, religions, etc. I'm sorry if you're just ignorant about that. And again, your antisemitic conspiracy theories are disgusting.
2) No one is saying the slaughter of the Native Americans was anything but awful. The US absolutely has enormous reason for shame there, and that and slavery should be central in our own history books (and usually are, at least in more recently written books than the 60s). They're not "better" than the Holocaust, because evils of that magnitude can't really be compared, but they're not the same thing either. There's plenty of museum space for us to remember multiple historical evils all at once.
2a) While the US government and citizens absolutely deserve huge blame for their treatment of the Native Americans, disease was by far the biggest killer, and that's not something you can really choose to stop even if you want to. Short of quarantining the New World until there were cures, there was no stopping a huge amount of the death.
3) You don't see anyone facing criminal charges for denying any historical thing in the US, because we believe in freedom of speech more than other countries do. Also there are very few people denying that slavery or the the horrible mistreatment of Native Americans happened, while there are actual Holocaust deniers.