Since we're on it, in what way is farming the cause of ANY thing on your list?
I can easily see a strong argument being made for industrial-level farming of grains as a major factor in many of the items on your list, but the question didn't distinguish between large-scale corporate farming and small family vegetable farms, and neither did your answer.
I don't see how a backyard farm (or early hunter-gatherers who made the first timid steps into farming by clearing out more aggressive plants [grasses, etc.]) could in any way be linked to labor, genocide, governments & gov corruption, disease, fanatical religions, and the like.
Ah, thanks for the opportunity to blabber on in one of my areas of interest, SkinnyDevil.
I call the sort of backyard farming you're talking about "horticulture" and "permaculture," not "agriculture." Horticulture and permaculture were the common way of dealing with plants before agriculture. The article that the thread was motivated by was talking about agriculture, not horticulture or permaculture (I recommend reading it if you want to understand better where I'm coming from). This subject was discussed much at another Paleo Diet forum I participated in. There is even a mini revival of horticulture and permaculture. One town in North Carolina is even paying homeowners to rip up their water-hogging, nonnative, monoculture grass lawns and replace them with native and wild plants.
Plus, the problems of agriculture began LONG before industrial agriculture (if by that you mean the use of mechanized machinery and chemical pesticides and fertilizers). The vegheads spread claim that organic agriculture is all sweetness and goodness, but just like the 100% veggie diet, it's a lie. Don't believe the hype. It's a small step in the right direction, but it has major problems of its own.
There are a bazillion books on these subjects if you're interested. Ishmael by Daniel Quinn is a good starting point. Jared Diamond's writings are a tougher read, but contain lots of good info. There are many books on pre-agricultural cultures (I found the writings of paleoanthropologist Richard Leakey to be quite readable, for example) and modern hunter-gatherer and horticultural cultures, as well as many books on doing your own horticulture/permaculture, hunting, wild food gathering and eating, etc.
Unfortunately, as Quinn, Diamond and numerous others have pointed out, the genie is out of the bottle. We are stuck with totalitarian monoculture agriculture in our lifetimes. Even though organic agriculture is only a small step back in the right direction, the dark secret is that a major reduction in output would likely result from a complete rollback to it (and there are already millions of severely malnourished and starving people in some areas). Even if it could feed the world, it wouldn't come close to being a real solution.
So yes, if by farming we mean agriculture (not horticulture or permaculture), which is what the article was discussing, then farming is the root of much of the world's evil (nothing is the root of ALL evil, of course--these sorts of exaggerations are just meant to shock and stir up conversation and debate and garner readership, of course).
BTW, I don't consider farmers themselves to be evil. My own grandfather did some small-scale farming. People have to make a living in this evil world and there aren't many ways to do it that don't involve some evil, unfortunately. No one's hands are clean in this dirty world that humanity has re-created to serve what it thought were its own interests, but turned out to be much less in humanity's long-term interests than the creation that existed at the dawn of humanity.
So I just focus on doing the best I can in a practical way and learn and share. Are these views controversial? Yes. Are they unheard of or disregarded and disrespected in all prestigious circles? No. Quinn, Diamond and others have won awards, accolades, sold millions of books, and are highly respected even by many academics who disagree with them. Do they inspire the hatred of people like the Wahabists, Archer Daniels Midland bigwigs and slick politicians? Sure. So they can't be all bad.
The raw Paleo diet is really just one small part of the picture. It's not the only thing from the ancient past that turns out to be better for people than the modern diet that replaced it. Some time ago it occurred to me, "If modern people got diet and exercise so terribly wrong, what else did we get wrong?" It turns out there's a lot! Way more than I have time to delve into, unfortunately. So I recommend doing your own investigations into this question yourself, if you haven't already. You may be amazed at what you learn.