The romans slaughtered a lot, yes, I agree, but the pragmatist I am, I don't think it is in any way comparable to WW2 and Nazi Germany's very eager destruction-of-peoples. Jews in Europe are completely decimated, many countries lost ALL jewish population - ALL of it.
That is - if not very very morbid - an achievement. And very few, if not none, can compare to that. 60% of Peruvian genetics is still quechua, this is
not the sign of an annihilated population.
I think we're in danger of quarreling semantics now, so... let's agree that the Romans were brutal, but that very little can compare to the brutality and the focus of Hitler's Germany.
Even Japanese random slaughter of Chinese is not comparable, even if the number of Chinese victims is higher than Jewish deaths, because the method, tenacity and focus was not comparable to the nazis.
Btw, concerning amazonian tribes, it is likely that the pre-colonial amazonian populations were considerably lower than they are now, and that many of the extant tribes there are descendants of refugees from the carribean and eastern Brazilian coasts.
Anyway, as I made sure to make sure in my original reply to you, I considered your
statement rash and un-thought-through, I did not doubt your personal knowledge about the matters ;] My point stands, a nation isn't hypocritical simply for looking back at its history.
I mean, what do you expect, for a French person to renounce his Latin heritage!?
What about me!? My dad is Peruvian, my grandpa is Mestizo, and my grandma Spanish. Whom of these must I resent the most, so not to be a hypocrite?