I agree that racism is still with us today and it is a bad. thing. You go right ahead and study its past. I'd rather look for ways to reduce its influence today. Capitalism is still with us today. What's your point? Other than your beloved H-Gs, what active economic system isn't just as unfair and detrimental to people? It's fine you want to do away with capitalism; what is your replacement?
The replacement for capitalism is democracy, also called socialism. Democracy works a lot better if your goal is a world where people have dignity and rights and stuff. Not so well if you want a lot of iPhones I guess.
Sure, blame the system and not the people who run it. I'd rather place the responsibility for what we do on the people who do them. Capitalism caused the great recession! Not the bankers who did the deals to make a buck. Bad people bend systems for their personal gain. All systems. i disagree with your unwillingness to blame perpetrators.
You're creating a false dichotomy. Bad systems make it easier for bad actors to act badly. The worst systems create a filter effect where success is proportionate to the willingness to do bad things. Capitalism, or at least the version of it that exists today, is one of those.
System change is not incompatible with holding people accountable for specific abuses. Unfortunately the response to the financial crisis did not involve system change or holding people accountable.
You are clueless. It is a fact that many of those in poverty do not have the skills to do living wage jobs.
No, you are clueless. You are deceived by neoclassical economic dogma that says the primary determinant of a person's wage is their actual contribution to production.
This is nonsense. People are unemployed involuntarily not because they have no useful or valuable skills but because capitalists cannot derive a profit from employing them.
I do believe that your view of history distorts your conclusions. History is far more nuanced than you allow. As far as disease vs violence in the New World, disease killed many many more than the violence. In fact, as you say, the death by disease often preceded the arrival of the foreigners, so most of the deaths were not state sponsored violence.
Well, imagine that: I think
your view of history distorts
your conclusions!

I would suggest reading Karl Polanyi's
The Great Transformation (not a Marxist work at all, in case you're wondering!) for a good overview of what I'm talking about. Certainly in the context of European imperialism of the modern and early modern period, there were essentially no people (none of which I'm aware) encountered who willingly adopted the ways of the Europeans.
Overall, I think we are very far apart on the fundamentals of how to view the world. I see little overlap where beneficial discourse can happen. I do understand that you need to paint me as some old school reactionary because I do not agree with you and to acknowledge any substance to my point of view would somehow diminish yours. You seem to be playing a zero sum game as it were.
Actually I think our base assumptions regarding human dignity and so on are probably pretty compatible. You have tried to paint me as a dogmatic Marxist but that is not true at all. While many aspects of Marxism were never useful and others are outdated, capital accumulation is one concept that definitely has validity.
As for my "need" to paint you in any particular way, I framed what I said about you defending capitalism and so on as impressions for a reason. Consider the possibility that I simply find some of what you've said appalling and/or factually incorrect. I also find that it disturbingly echoes 18th- and 19th-century ideas that I believe contributed to some of the atrocities we've been discussing.
Meh. The idea doesn't hold up that well the more I've thought about it. And anyway it applies (or would apply, if it applied to anything) to people far more gung-ho about Progress than anyone in this thread has been.