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Culture War Roundup for the week of May 22, 2023

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I even cited the relevant passages from Arad at the time to refresh your memory, multiple passages, but this one suffices

Arad does not say "every last body at Treblinka was cremated," so it's not a walk-back. It's also not a walk-back because I explicitly referred to Kola's results in that previous discussion as a justification for my suggestion regarding uncremated bodies at Treblinka. I said "I read Arad's book a while ago, but if he indeed claims that 800,000 people were fully cremated between March 1943 and August 1943 using nothing but dry branches then yes he is wrong, you win," because at the time I didn't feel like going and checking, but Arad doesn't actually say that. Arad saying "800,000 people were cremated" doesn't mean "every single last body at Treblinka was cremated" anymore than saying "Dresden was destroyed by firebombing" means "every single last building in Dresden was destroyed by firebombing."

There is no scientific source describing the technical operation and results of the pyres at Dresden. Available evidence in terms of empirical results for using gasoline in mass cremation shows it is not feasible.

This photograph shows a heap of ashes on the ground next to a currently burning pyre, so apparently it worked fine for the purposes of the Germans in 1945. Whether it was safe, or clean, or even particularly efficient doesn't matter if it successfully reduced the corpses to something like ash (which does not even have to be "ash" in the technical sense.) The photographic evidence of cremations at Dresden in the exact same conditions that would have obtained at Belzec is empirical evidence that it is possible to cremate corpses in that fashion. The fact that this cremation was not carried out by scientists does not matter when there are photographs of the process and the results. Corpses that have been buried in the ground for months will also have less water in them than fresh ones.

As a side note, strange that "agitated peasants" spreading rumors (as you have put it before) managed to hit upon precisely the method of cremation--corpses piled up on grids made out of railroad ties--that it is known the Germans used elsewhere.

If it was possible in Dresden to cremate 500 bodies a day on open air pyres made from railroad ties and fueled by gasoline, then it was possible for the several-hundred-strong staff of Belzec to cremate 2 or 3 thousand a day (3,161 per day assuming the operation started on November 15th and lasted through March and every single last body was cremated) on several Dresden-equivalent pyres using liquid fuel and wood. The lack of documentation should not bother anyone, since there is no documentation period on the daily operation of a camp which operated for more than a year.

This is nonsense- if hundreds of thousands of corpses were at Belzec they would have been found by the core sampling. It is utterly impossible that hundreds of thousands of bodies were in the ground that were missed by Kola.

I didn't say there were. I'm sure it's much less than that. Maybe hundreds or thousands.

The cremation of the bodies of the dead constitutes in and of itself neither proof nor evidence in favor of the official theses, because this was the practice in all concentration camps and had a well-established hygienic function.

It does, because even if you assume a ridiculously high "natural" mortality rate of say 20% for the deportees to Belzec, that would have produced roughly 430,000 x 0.2 x 0.0421667 = 3,626 cubic meters of human ash, which could have been easily accommodated in two or maybe three of the pits Kola found. There is no plausible non-sinister reason for the established volume of the graves.

With no attempt to quantify the amount of human remains

To establish a grave of X volume with a layer of "homogenous crematory contents" of Y volume is quantification, and Kola did this.

(do you have a source for the November 1942 start of cremation at Belzec by the way? I can't find an account that says this)

SS man Heinrich Gley said the cremations started in November. Another SS man named Fritz Tauscher even said October. These are cited on page 441 of the HC controversies Aktion Reinhardt 'white paper.'

Assuming a revised/lower death toll than what historians and courts estimated, and what witnesses said.

The 'downward revision' isn't some sort of desperate last-ditch attempt to save the official story, it's merely taking the Nazis' own documents on the matter at face value. The Höfle telegram, which was not available to any witnesses or to Polish courts in the 40s or to any historians prior to the 21st century, says 430,000 deportees to Belzec by the end of 1942, and after that the camp mostly ceased operations, therefore that's how many people were deported to Belzec.

I actually don't know what the revisionist explanation for intact corpses in the ground at Belzec is. If Belzec was a transit camp then the camp authorities would have been dealing with a few thousand, maybe in the low tens of thousands of corpses over the space of more than a year. Taking the above (absurdly high) estimate of a 20% mortality rate that would have been some 86,000 corpses over the time of Belzec's operation. Should have been quite easy to cremate every one of those, and no reason for any to be left unburnt. Taking Mattogno's estimate of a 5% mortality rate (in turn taken from Dieter Pohl), barely 20,000 bodies. Assuming the same cremation period from November to March, the camp staff would have had to cremate a mere 150 bodies per day. The fact that there are unburnt bodies at all is evidence a greater scale to the operation.

I could tell you were weasel-wording so I provided clarifications at the time. Here is what you initially said:

You're right that it's infeasible to completely cremate several hundred thousand corpses on open air pyres in the space of a few months.

Well here we are with Belzec where the claim is... several hundreds thousand corpses were completely cremated on open air pyres in the space of a few months. Kola's results don't leave room for you to speculate on incomplete state of cremation for any significant portion of the alleged victims like you did for Treblinka.

I could tell you were weasel-wording at the time so I asked for clarification:

That's a vague concession. Can you instead concede specifically that the cremation operation claimed by Yitzhak Arad: Late February/March 1943 - August 1943 cremation of 800,000 people, was not possible as described?

To which you responded with more weasel words you are now using to walk-back your position:

I read Arad's book a while ago, but if he indeed claims that 800,000 people were fully cremated between March 1943 and August 1943 using nothing but dry branches then yes he is wrong, you win.

I could tell you were still weasel-wording with qualifiers that nobody asserted so I provided the exact text from Arad to refresh your memory and give you the opportunity to assess the plausibility of exactly what Arad claimed. At the time, it was not convenient in that argument for you to dwell on Arad's claims of 800,000 corpses cremated between March and August 1943 (such a claim ought to raise the eyebrows of people here to appreciate the sheer implausibility of what the "history" claims), so you distanced yourself from it, but in this conversation you can't distance yourself from it without hurting the mainstream orthodox case for Belzec.

Do you still maintain that:

You're right that it's infeasible to completely cremate several hundred thousand corpses on open air pyres in the space of a few months.

Or are you walking that back, too?

Assuming you maintain this position, we can dismiss the claims of the Zamość prosecutor in the 1946 investigatory report as impossible, and likewise the testimony of key witnesses as impossible. The HC paper cited testimony from Gley to argue for a November 1942 start of cremation, but I noticed that they did not acknowledge Gley's statement form his 1961 interrogation, which said "I say that I am sure no corpses were as yet being cremated when I arrived" and placed the start of cremation operations at January 1943 at the earliest. So Gley's accounts are inconsistent, and his first interrogation can likewise be dismissed as infeasible.

Of course the next question is, if it's infeasible to "completely cremate several hundred thousand corpses on open air pyres in the space of a few months" then why is four months any more plausible? It isn't.

I'm reminded of a criminal interrogation YouTube video I watched last week where a teenage girl confessed to tragically murdering a 9 year-old neighboring girl. The suspect claimed it was an accident, and she panicked and burned the body and scattered the ashes in the river (!). As you can imagine, the investigators didn't buy that for a second, frequently remarking how difficult it is to cremate a body. The girl didn't want the body to be found because the autopsy would contradict her story. They immediately knew she was lying and she couldn't provide plausible details for how she conducted the cremation. This is the problem the Holocaust "witnesses" run into: they have no concept for what would be involved in cremating 800,000 or 430,000 people on open-air pyres so the accounts they give are infeasible and completely void of the details that would be most important to describe the operation if it actually happened. So they say things like, little or no fuel was used, or fatter bodies were used as kindling and burned on their own. It's the marker of people making up a story with no conception of what would actually be involved in what they are claiming.

This photograph shows a heap of ashes on the ground next to a currently burning pyre

I said "a picture of uncremated bodies in Dresden provides nothing in the way of scientific evidence" and you respond with a picture of uncremated bodies. There were ashes everywhere in Dresden, we have no scientific knowledge whatsoever of what those ashes are, their quantity, how they were cremated (or even if they were cremated or just dumped from a pile of rubble for a photo-op), how the pyre was setup and the type and quantity of fuel used... we have no information about any of this. Your picture as a source base for the Dresden pyres is inadequate for a technical analysis. The technical analysis we do have refutes the feasibility of using gasoline for mass cremation.

I actually don't know what the revisionist explanation for intact corpses in the ground at Belzec is.

IIRC The Belzec camp was in the vicinity of labor camps in the area since 1940 for building fortifications and the like, and Belzec was built on one. They could be from before the camps operation as a transit camp, or during, or after. Without excavations and forensic analysis it's just speculation. I will point out that mass graves of intact skeletons found at Sobibor were widely speculated to have been Holocaust victims, and they were excavated and forensically studied- the only intact corpses to have ever have been at any of these "extermination camps." The December 2021 paper recently published concluded that they were indeed Jewish and most likely victims of... the NKVD! And that they were executed after the Soviets conquered the area of the camp! Historians had widely speculated that these were prisoners from Treblinka who were transferred to Sobibor to dismantle the camp. That hypothesis was rejected by the study. This story shows the importance of excavation and not just speculating based on what appears to be in the ground.

There is no plausible non-sinister reason for the established volume of the graves.

Without any attempt whatsoever to quantify the number of victims in the graves, this statement is moot. If the Belzec graves had the same victim density as the Katyn mass graves in the Soviet report, that would imply ~20,000 deaths.

What we can do is acknowledge the maximum volume of possible burial space, which is 21,310 cubic meters. We can then apply a theoretical maximum burial density of 8 corpses per cubic meter and see there is only space in theory for a maximum of 170,000 corpses, not even volume enough for half of what is claimed to have been buried at that site.

This is an example where Revisionists prove the strength of their argument by taking the most unfavorable assumptions possible and proving the official story does not check out. They will for argument's sake assume 100% capacity of absolute maximum burial density and show that the story is still contradicted by the evidence. Whereas the mainstream story is always desperate to make the most favorable estimates along every dimension to try to bring their claims closer to the realm of possibility...

I made a conditional statement, that if Arad said what you said he said, you were right, but he didn't say what you said he said. No weaseling, no walking back. There's no contradiction or hypocrisy in saying that it would be much more difficult to cremate 700,000 or 800,000 corpses than it would be to cremate 430,000 in a similar timeframe.

why is four months any more plausible? It isn't.

Because 430,000 is less than 800,000 by almost half. If there are uncremated corpses at Belzec (and there are obviously at least a few or else Kola wouldn't have found them) then it's a very small fraction of the total.

There were ashes everywhere in Dresden, we have no scientific knowledge whatsoever of what those ashes are

What does "scientific knowledge of what those ashes are" mean? It's possible the authorities at Dresden dumped a random unrelated heap of ashes in a neat little pile right next to a burning cremation pyre for no reason but that strikes me as pretty implausible. Seems more likely they are the results of previous cremations in the same spot. Which also dovetails with the statements of the people who carried out the cremations, who said the bodies were reduced to ash. Unless they were also lying. The fact that it wasn't carried out in a lab doesn't matter.

So if it was possible to reduce corpses to the state of those piles of 'ash' in those photos (or whatever you want to call it maybe it wouldn't pass muster as 'ash' in a commercial crematorium), then it was possible to do the same on a larger scale at Belzec, and hence the Belzec cremations were also possible.

The cite from the UK foot-and-mouth report by way of Jansson's blog is not technical analysis either. No indication anyone carried out any experiments, nor does it even claim gasoline (well, napalm) wouldn't serve, merely that it wouldn't "improve on" burning with wood and coal, and of course all this refers to the fresh corpses of livestock with their full water content and not desiccated corpses in the earth for a year.

I don't know what you're referring to with regard to the Sobibor skeletons. The only recent paper I'm familiar with is this one which does not conclude that these people were shot by the NKVD.

Based on the character of the discovery, the case was taken over by the Institute of National Remembrance in Lublin at the end of 2013. Initially, two possible hypotheses were articulated as to whom those remains may belong. One connected the burials with the executions of the last prisoners from Treblinka, who came to Sobibór to liquidate the camp in 1943 (hypothesis rejected). The second hypothesis explained the rush of the execution and burying the bodies by connecting it to the activities of The People’s Commissariat for Internal Affairs (abbreviated NKVD), which was the interior ministry of the Soviet Union. There was a report on NKVD activity after the war in the area of the former camp. Residents of the villages in the area surrounding the extermination camp witnessed shots. The archaeological analyses of the burial sites suggested that the graves were rather connected to the crimes committed by NKVD between 1945 and 1956... These observations suggest that the execution of people, whose remains were discovered in grave 16, but also in graves 12–14, occurred after the end of the criminal activity of the German Nazi extermination camp.