1. No, native-Americans, at the time of the conflicts with them were not "our people". They were their own people, who viewed us as just another competing tribe along with all the other native tribes they fought.
When did they become "your people"...was there some set date?.... or they still classed as non americans
2. We didn't "wipe out" native Americans. They are still very much here in the United States. There were plenty of ugly abuses on both sides, but the vast majority of native-American deaths came from disease which they had no protection from. No one did, but Europeans had developed immunity to those diseases.
Authors such as the Holocaust expert David Cesarani have argued that the government and policies of the United States of America against certain indigenous peoples constituted genocide. David Cesarani states that "in terms of the sheer numbers killed, the Native American Genocide exceeds that of the Holocaust". He quotes David E. Stannard, author of American Holocaust, who speaks of the "genocidal and racist horrors against the indigenous peoples that have been and are being perpetrated by many nations in the Western Hemisphere, including the United States ."
"plenty of ugly abuses on both sides".......can we say that about the jews and germans also just so it equals it out ,after all jews did kill germans
"deaths came from disease"...is that the same excuse nazis give about jewish deaths in german death camps
3. Yes, there is a scale of judgment for killing people. That Sweden may have killed some Scandinavians 100 years ago is not the same as the mass genocide that the Nazi's and the Communist inflicted on humanity as an example. Shall we start with a comparison of our respective human rights record starting 350 years ago as we have with mine? See how unfair that can be? I know it is popular here to say that America is not really a democracy, or we don't really respect human rights, but that is rubbish. Compare any statistics on law, democratic processes, human rights, and America ranks at or near the top. Now I don't say that to boast. I know, because I know my countries history, that developing democratic institutions that respect human rights is a long and painful process, but that is no excuse for simply pointing the finger at America's past and then using it as cover for ignoring what is the reality today.
20th Century
* Boxer Rebellion, 1899 - 1901
* Banana Wars:
o United States occupation of Nicaragua, 1907-1933
o United States occupation of Honduras, 1907-1933
o United States overthrow of Guatemalan Government, 1907-1933
o Intervention during Panamanian Election, 1908
o United States occupation of Cuba, 1912
o United States occupation of Veracruz, 1914
o United States occupation of Haiti, 1915-1934
o United States occupation of the Dominican Republic, 1917-1924
* Mexican Expedition, 1916 - 1917
o Battle of Ambros Nogales, 1918
* World War I, 1917 – 1918 (time span of U.S. involvement)
o European Theatre, 1917 - 1918
o First Battle of the Atlantic, 1917 - 1918
* Russian Revolution, 1918-1920 (time span of U.S. involvement)
o Polar Bear Expedition, 1918 - 1919
o American Expeditionary Force Siberia, Soviet Union, 1918 - 1920
* Yangtze Patrol, 1922-1927
* World War II, 1941 – 1945 (time span of U.S. involvement)
o Second Battle of the Atlantic, 1941 - 1945
o Pacific War, 1941 - 1945
o African Theatre, 1942 - 1943
o European Theatre, 1944 - 1945
* United States Intervention in Greek Election, 1947-1949
* Korean War, 1950 - 1953
* Operation PBFORTUNE, Guatemala, 1952
* Operation Ajax, US overthrow of Iranian Government, 1953
* Operation PBSUCCESS, Guatemala, 1954
* Operation Blue Bat, Lebanon, 1958
* Bay of Pigs Invasion, Cuba, 1961
* Operation Powerpack, Dominican Republic, 1965 - 1966
* United States Intervention at Panama Canal, 1958
* Vietnam War, 1962 - 1973 (time span of United States involvement)
o United States Occupation of Laos, 1962 - 1973
o Cambodian Civil War, 1969 - 1970
* United States Intervention at Panama Canal, 1964
* United States Overthrow of Chilean Government, 1964
* Operation Eagle Claw, Iran hostage crisis, 1980
* First Gulf of Sidra Incident, Libya, 1981
* Contra War, El Salvador, 1981-1990
* Occupation of Beirut, Lebanon, 1982-1984
* Invasion of Grenada, Grenada, 1983-1984
* Operation El Dorado Canyon, Libya, 1986
* Iran–Iraq War, 1987 - 1989
* Operation Just Cause, Panama 1989 - 1990
* Second Gulf of Sidra Incident, Libya, 1989
* Persian Gulf War, Iraq, 1991
o Operation Desert Shield, 1991
o Operation Desert Storm, 1991
* Somali Civil War, 1992 - 1994
o Operation Provide Relief, 1992
o Operation Restore Hope, 1992 - 1994
* Yugoslav wars, 1994 - 1999
o Bosnian Conflict, 1994 - 1995
o Kosovo Conflict, 1997 - 1999
21st Century
* War on Terrorism, 2001 - present
* Operation Enduring Freedom - Afghanistan 2001 - present
* Operation Enduring Freedom - Philippines 2002 - present
* Operation Enduring Freedom - Horn of Africa 2002 - present
* Operation Iraqi Freedom, 2003 - present
* Waziristan War, 2004 - present
* War in Somalia, 2006 - present
* Operation Enduring Freedom - Trans Sahara 2007 - present
How many millions killed by the US..?
Al Qaeda doesn't look so bad? Please! What a disgusting statement. The legacy of that organization is dead women and children everywhere they go.
Whats disgusting is you thinking that by not killing "your own" somehow justify killing "others" well using your logic osama cant be that bad.
Killing woman and children is an american specialty.