Nessie wrote: ↑Sun Jun 22, 2025 6:19 pm
It is likely he did not expect to lose the war, so the future of the buildings was to be crematoriums, in a Birkenau that was also planned to be expanded, with the addition of "Mexico".
If they did not expect to lose, the feeble postulate proposed of Nazis not defending the extermination claims at the time is asinine.
He did not expect to lose the war, in 1942, as the planning began. He would have known it was inevitable in 1944, when they were at their busiest with the Hungarian and Lodz ghetto arrivals.
Nessie wrote: ↑Sun Jun 22, 2025 6:19 pm
It is likely he did not expect to lose the war, so the future of the buildings was to be crematoriums, in a Birkenau that was also planned to be expanded, with the addition of "Mexico".
If they did not expect to lose, the feeble postulate proposed of Nazis not defending the extermination claims at the time is asinine.
He did not expect to lose the war, in 1942, as the planning began. He would have known it was inevitable in 1944, when they were at their busiest with the Hungarian and Lodz ghetto arrivals.
Nessie:
The Nazis were not trying to magically disappear the corpses and the graves, as they knew that is impossible.
All the mass graves dug by the Nazis, and the corpses they cremated, are still at the AR camps and Chelmno.
Mass graves are proven.
By all normal standards of evidencing, they are proven.
I can point to them in the ground.
Nessie, of the 100 alleged "scientifically proven huge mass graves" of Belzec, Chelmno, Ponary, Sobibor and Treblinka II, how many have actually been proven to exist, currently contain at least an iota of human remains and that you can literally point to.