And if anything, the British didn't kill nearly as much of the native population in India or Africa (even though there were many avoidable famines in British India) as Europeans of any sort in the Americas for the simple reason that the populations there were already exposed pre-colonization to the same diseases the British brought with them.zompist wrote: ↑Mon Dec 15, 2025 5:46 pmIt's not a matter of nationalities, but of density.Torco wrote: ↑Mon Dec 15, 2025 4:46 pm countries colonized by the spanish have big chunks of their populations made up of mestizos, whereas there ended up being much less mestizaje north of mexico: i know it's complicated cause a lof of the southern us used to be mexico, but i think the pattern is quite clear. where anglos colonized they seem to have mostly killed and displaced, engaging in a lot of segregation, whereas where iberians colonized there are now populations mostly descended from both enslaved people groups and their enslavers. they seem to have mostly enslaved and interbred.
The Spanish
-- exterminated like mofos in the Caribbean and in Patagonia
-- took over large dense native empires in Mexico and Peru
The English
-- exterminated like mofos in the North America
-- took over large dense native kingdoms in India and Africa
In both cases with an asterisk on "exterminated"; many natives survived the guns and germs.
Also disease did kill a very good percentage of the population of Mexico and Peru; it just happens that the population was dense enough pre-colonization that there were still plenty of survivors in terms of absolute numbers such that they didn't get displaced by the colonizers afterwards.