TlsMS93 wrote: ↑Fri Dec 06, 2024 10:17 pm
No, it is not feasible because successive gassings would not have occurred. I repeat, Tauber claims that the victims destroyed the electrical and ventilation systems, so successive gassings are not feasible.
Now, for those who assume that these were mere morgues with crematoriums attached, they see no problem in the lack of protective masks for the Sonderkommandos or in this request for a gas detector.
This is a separate argument (destruction of ventilation).
What were the 10 gas detectors for exactly?
fireofice wrote: ↑Fri Dec 06, 2024 10:19 pm
Bombsaway is baffled on why it takes more to kill a room full of people with people consciously trying to survive longer by holding their breath rather than one animal.
I was commenting on Rudolf's statements about toxicity. He never brings up this argument
even so
ChatGPT said:
ChatGPT
The maximum oxygen consumption reduction a normal, untrained person could achieve under optimal conditions depends on their ability to lower their metabolic rate. Here’s a breakdown:
Factors Affecting Oxygen Consumption
Resting Metabolic Rate (RMR):
At rest, a normal person consumes about 0.2-0.25 liters of oxygen per minute (~300-360 ml/min).
This consumption is driven by basic bodily functions (e.g., breathing, circulation, maintaining body temperature).
Relaxation and Minimal Movement:
By remaining motionless and deeply relaxed, metabolic demands can be reduced to the basal level (~0.15-0.2 liters/min).
Cooling the Body:
Lowering body temperature (within safe limits) reduces metabolic activity, as the body requires less energy for thermoregulation.
In optimal, cool conditions, oxygen consumption could drop further.
Breathing Control:
Techniques like controlled slow breathing or intermittent breath-holding reduce the rate of oxygen exchange and delay the onset of hypoxia.
Estimated Oxygen Reduction for a Normal Person
Under optimal conditions, a normal person might reduce oxygen consumption as follows:
Baseline (relaxed, no movement): ~0.2 liters/min.
With extreme relaxation and cooling: ~0.15 liters/min.
With controlled breathing (e.g., periodic breath-holding): ~0.1-0.15 liters/min.
This represents a potential reduction of 40-50% from normal resting oxygen consumption.
Practical Limits
While it’s theoretically possible to reduce oxygen consumption further:
Normal individuals lack the training and adaptations needed for extreme reductions (e.g., diving reflex in free divers).
Untrained people will experience discomfort from rising CO 2 , levels before achieving substantial oxygen savings.
Conclusion
For a normal, untrained person in optimal conditions (cool environment, deep relaxation, minimal activity), oxygen consumption could be reduced by 40-50%, from ~0.25 liters/min to as low as 0.1-0.15 liters/min. This would modestly extend survival in an oxygen-limited environment. However, survival would still ultimately be limited by CO2 toxicity rather than oxygen depletion.
So even assuming everyone did this (which is just an insane assumption - which I might as easily argue is the opposite of what happened - mass panic), it doesn't substantially change things or justify Rudolf's calculations.
I'm frankly baffled by the notion that these are strong arguments.