Archie wrote: ↑Sun Dec 01, 2024 6:27 am
From another thread, an example of the sort of reasoning I was criticizing in the OP.
bombsaway wrote: ↑Sun Nov 24, 2024 6:13 am
I think it's very possible Reder was lying, creating uniform graves in order to justify a death toll (uniform graves make it easier to calculate) he legitimately believed in. Or maybe he hated the Nazis for killing his family and wanted to disparage them. Or maybe it was self-deception on his part, he wanted to believe in his death toll so he justified it to himiself. Your hypothesis, which is that this is part of some much larger confabulation is merely one possibility among many. That's why it's not rigorous proof revisionism is correct. The "mistake" Reder made no less disproves the extermination story than the mistakes witnesses on the Titanic made disprove that it sank. Witnesses are unreliable.
This line of thinking I find baffling, particularly given Reder's importance, and this demonstrates a major distinction between the skeptic vs believer viewpoints.
Revisionists look at the witnesses/testimonies as being purported accounts of things that actually happened in real time and space. Reder claims to have been at Belzec through Nov 1942. If that's true, he should have a decent idea what the mass graves were like, yet he doesn't. The testimony fails as a believable account of reality
if Reder was really there.
On the other thread, you cherrypicked a statement from Reder's testimony in 1945 to the Belzec investigation, one highlighted first by Mattogno in his original Belzec book, without acknowledging whether he said similar things in his 1944 first account or the 1946 memoir. Neither of these in fact give
any dimensions whatsoever for the size of the mass graves, while discussing the digging of pits extensively in both accounts.
1944 account
https://dawidgluck.com/wp-content/uploa ... lation.pdf
1946 memoir at the end of this file (from p.12 of the PDF)
https://www.jewishgen.org/yizkor/schind ... dendum.pdf
The question of whether a witness was really there should be tested by multiple variables, not a falsus in uno test of one variable. Note that one method of falsus in uno would mean we could throw out Reder's 1945 statement and still keep the 1944 and 1946 accounts because neither of them mentioned this supposedly crucial variable.
But common sense alone tells us that someone can get something wrong for even dubious reasons, such as supporting a deluded, exaggerated sense of the overall death toll (Reder was crudely trying to support a claim of 3 million killed), and for this to be quite separate to other elements of the testimony. The Polish Main Commission investigation ignored Reder on 3M and instead estimated a number a fifth of this figure.
Reder identified multiple Belzec SS men including senior Trawnikis, accurately. This alone would be powerful evidence he was really there, since such details were not exactly available in liberated Lviv in August 1944 when he first started identifying them.
With camp witnesses, key elements would include
1. the camp staff, identifying them by name, rank, function
2. the general behaviour of the camp staff
3. other inmates if a prisoner, but also whether a camp staff member might identify inmates by name
4. procedures for the main task of the camp (in these cases: processing incoming transports, whether they're selected, how they are taken to gas chambers; how open air cremation worked)
5. the buildings (in this case especially but not exclusively the gas chambers)
6. the general camp environment (dimensions, but in this case especially but not exclusively the mass graves)
7. memorable/unusual events
8. frequencies/totals (which are especially prone to misremembering - something as continuous when it was regular but intermittent, etc)
To advance a proper case, 'revisionism' needs to stop trying to throw out entire testimonies but needs to highlight where witnesses who were demonstrably in the camps, especially Auschwitz, added on the allegedly false elements. That applies both to the camp staff (and key visitors) as well as the inmates. The incessant grunting suspicion of 'something must be wrong' does not endear you guys to others, including some who might be otherwise persuadable.
A reminder of the kind of advice and rules of thumb used in conventional fact-finding regarding testimony
Foibles of witness recollections are commonly regarded as typical among judicial authorities as well. In their legal handbook, German experts Nack and Bender list several subjects by reliability as they are often recalled in witness statements. They write:
The reliability of recollection also depends on the kind of object that the informing person is to remember.
The sequence (with increasingly weaker recollection) is the following:
(1) Persons and their actions, especially towards and with the informing person
(2) The (mere) presence of objects, especially such that play a central part in the course of the action
(3) The number of persons participating, if it is smaller than 7
(4) The spatial conditions, especially insofar as they are important for the fitting-together of the actions
(5) The state of objects, especially insofar as important for the fitting-together of the actions
(6) The sequence of events
(7) Colors
(8) Magnitudes and quantities
(9) Sounds
(10) Duration
[From item 6 onward the reliability of recollection is especially diminished.] (Emphases in original)30
Bender and Nack, Tatsachenfeststellung vor Gericht), Randnummer 137.
It is remarkable that the areas of testimony whose reliability is deemed “especially diminished” by legal authorities Nack and Bender are precisely the areas that MGK and otherRevisionists most criticize; this simply highlights their flawed and disingenuous approach to witnesses.
(HC white paper, pp.351-2)
The breakdown also fits with our common sense understanding that people recall and remember variables with differing levels of accuracy: people can be bad at names, but good with faces, or vice versa, they will not necessarily remember dimensions in the same way as they might durations, and both can easily be misremembered.
As was given the Parodie treatment by The Onion in Our Dumb Century, regarding a massively witnessed assassination which was still recalled with all kinds of nonsensical details or inaccurately by many witnesses within days and weeks of the highly memorable and consequential event.
https://theonion.com/november-22-1963-1819587981/
So there really is a shrug factor in response to 'Reder claimed an incorrect length of mass grave in one statement' when he wasn't really too fussed over such matters in his other accounts.
And bombsaway's point about the size of graves and frequency of cremains and human remains at Belzec still remains unanswered.