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This is confusing to me. Americans seem, and this seems to have been true from the beginning, to be an especially religious group of people. Protestants may be on the back foot in America, but European Christians would love to have something so well organised at the grassroots level (the Catholic Church is obviously well organised, but their moral authority in daily life or at the governmental policy level has all but collapsed). To give an example, in Ireland's referendum on abortion in 2018 the pro-life campaign depended greatly on donations from pro-life Americans.
As someone who takes great inspiration from American ideals I'll try to steelman this and say that the origin of your country cannot be disentangled from its present state because the norms, laws and values of today are merely developments on those of the past. If people who honestly believed in the values of the American revolution sanctioned genocide, then, insofar as there is continuity between the society of the present and the past, that should worry you, as it shows that the values of the American revolution are no guarantee that your society won't sanction genocide.
To stereotype, it's like the German's authoritarian streak, or the Russian society's susceptibility to tyrants, it's not going to go away just by ignoring it, and even attempts to have a deep reckoning (like the Germans' relationship to their authoritarianism) often miss the mark. To give another example of how problems persist through the centuries, I don't think sectarianism has gone away in Ireland just because people no longer go to church, and I fear that because of this a united Ireland might end being used as a means of crude cultural victory rather than of coexistence.
What's the Anglo version of this (to lump you in with that other North American colony)? What ugly trait is likely to resurface eventually if it is not rooted out? I'll have a go (this is far easier with the Germans): Willful blindness when the time calls for it.
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