Originally posted by HigH ScholaR
destroyed would imply "To ruin completely; spoil: To do away with; put an end to, To subdue or defeat completely; crush. Please Its not my ignorance, it was your choice of words that caused the response. However if looking to the Native Americans or Aborigines i can see your point with the choice of the word when applied to other places.
yes, destroy
I don't know if you have come accross the term in your studies yet (which is the only reason I asked your age, not as an insult, but more how to approach this [lol, ya, like you will learn anything from me]) but, it is used very ironically these days. It is called "white man's burden". implicit to the ideologies of colonialism was the idea that these people needed to be civilized. Various colonial powers went about this to various degrees and in various places, but in Victorian times, the idea that evolution could be applied to nations, and that Europe had the burden of "evolving" these cultures, was one of the primary reasons for colonialism.
Even the best examples, where the British ruled with hands off of local tradition, resulted in the stratifying of society under "colonial black" and "other black" (I'm sure they had much more colourful terms than mine), such as what is seen in Zimbabwe and South Africa. And in the british model, the only reason they didn't try to change the culture more than they did was because they found it to be unprofitable. They still considered the people savages, but were willing to exploit the fact that they owned them.
In cases like the French colonies, it is inarguable. They very specifically wanted to replace the local "savage" culture with that of the French. The British in India also follow this mantra, in many cases outlawing traditional rituals and clothing. The extreme types of Hindu nationalism and Islamic Jihad that exist today are direct consequences of this type of cultural dominance.
EDIT: The story of the Mau Mau in Kenya might help here too
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mau_Mau_Uprising
William Polk gives it a good treatment in the book "Violent Politics", especially the cultural side (as in, how important to the conflict local culture became)