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Originally Posted by LegioXXXUlpiaVictrix
Yes, the Indians are of course one of the few exceptions. No rules are without exceptions.
Exception? Really? See the Spanish genocide of Native Americans. See the Canadian extermination of the Beothuk. See Australia's Black War. See King Leopold's genocide in the Congo. See the British policy of mass starvation in Ireland.
Heck, check out the Iliad while you're at it.
My dear Menelaus, why are you so chary of taking men's lives? Did the Trojans treat you as handsomely as that when they stayed in your house? No; we are not going to leave a single one of them alive, down to the babies in their mothers' wombs—not even they must live. The whole people must be wiped out of existence, and none be let to think of...
One might also wonder what the Carthaginians think of the idea that all genocides are promptly punished.
What's this talk about "exceptions"? Any serious examination of world history will tell you that mass murder and genocide are the oldest tools in the book. I am not arguing that genocide is justified in any way; I am arguing that it is one of the oldest human sins, and if the Nazis did nothing else, they made it unfashionable and unpalatable to a large part of humanity, which is a good thing.
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Originally Posted by LegioXXXUlpiaVictrix
Or a sign of mankind finally recovering from the dark age of murder, slavery, war and genocide between 10,000 BC and 2007 AD.
War and murder are still with us, and it would be the brave futurologist who predicted when (if) they would disappear.