You haven't read the Bible, then, because it's all over the place. Someone mentioned the flood already, but read about the land of Canaan--the so-called "promised land". The Israelites had to wipe out tribe after tribe, city after city in Canaan in order to inhabit it. That's genocide.

You wanted specific verses. See below. It's really a small sampling of the total violence--including genocide--that exists in the bible. The final source includes many more examples.

One famous instance is the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah. How is it not genocide to utterly destroy two cities?

Your justifications for genocide are funny. You might argue that people killed in the flood were "evil" or that the people in Sodom and Gomorrah were, but the people who were killed in Canaan were simply people who had a different religion from that of the Israelites; they weren't said to be evil. Basically, by your reasoning, you could come and kill my family, and justify it by saying that my wife and I are evil because we don't worship your god, and my innocent daughter will go to heaven, so it's okay if you kill her, too.

You also said something utterly ridiculous: "The children that God killed felt NO PAIN and where [sic] instantly taken to a paradise FOREVER." Um...how do you know they didn't feel pain? I assume this statement was in reaction to the taking of the first born in Egypt, but there's no mention of them dying painlessly. By the way, why would the angel of death need a mark on the doors of houses occupied by your god's chosen people? Wouldn't your god, being omnipotent, know which houses belonged to people faithful to him? Weird.

Anyway, justify and rationalize all you want; any mass taking of life like that described in the Bible is genocide, whether you judge the people to be evil or not. From the perspective of someone who doesn't buy into your myths, these killings were horrible atrocities, not the purging of evil you're saying they were.