Montegriffo wrote:True enough, but genocide. We were just as bad with our smallpox blankets. Humans is shit.
Tales of genocide in North America have been greatly exaggerated. There were not that many people living here. This wasn't like Mexico, Peru, or the Amazon. The places with an indigenous civilization were run by those same people only a few hundred years after Spanish conquest. Mexico is the Latinization of the name the Aztecs called their nation, for example. Their name for themselves was Mexica. Their coat of arms you see on some of their currency is also an Aztec symbol. Aztecs are still running the place.
You even can see a difference between southern Mexicans (who are more like short Mayans) and the northerners (who are like the taller Aztecs).
Bolivia, last I read, was majority indigenous. Not just Quecha with some European blood mixed in, but full-on Quecha. Because of the medicine, science, and agricultural technology brought by Europeans, the indigenous people in the Andes surpassed what it supported before contact.
A cursory search for population estimates in North America gives us a really tentative guestimate of around 10 million prior to first contact. The number of indigenous people just in the United States right now is about 5.2 million. Another 1.4 million live in Canada. Almost 7 million right now. And probably growing.
And they can feasibly grow in population to numbers far exceeding what could possibly have existed here before contact.
Personally, I remain unconvinced there were even 10 million indigenous people in North America (not including Mesoamerica). Maybe if you dial it back a few more centuries to around 1000 AD you could argue that, when there existed an extensive culture throughout the middle of what is now the United States, building cities and whatnot. But they went extinct before we got here, and I am pretty sure the Vikings didn't do it.