Eh, it's not clear to me that 2x is a bad estimate for humans vs monkeys. There aren't going to be conclusive numbers on humans for obvious reasons. Bombs is free to present his own alternative calculations (he won't).fireofice wrote: ↑Sat Dec 07, 2024 1:37 am Well it's possible Rudolf made a mistake. His book/report has been through several editions with several mistakes corrected. I'm sure he hasn't gotten all of them. Everybody makes mistakes. Regardless, the source still says that monkeys are probably more susceptible to HCN than humans, therefore taking that number as sacrosanct is silly. And the believer side still has to explain the large amount of HCN in the delousing chamber but not in the homicidal gas chamber. They have yet to demonstrate that it is likely there would be negligible amounts of HCN in a homicidal Zyklon gas chamber.
Why should I answer such a question when you point blank refuse to answer similar questions from me? I was asking you to explain what you believed happened at Belzec, in accordance with what Kola found. I think you refused based on some notion of me being a bad actor. In this case why engage with me at all?Archie wrote: ↑Sat Dec 07, 2024 2:39 am Bombs, let's cut to the chase.
What concentration are you claiming is necessary? And what concentration do you think they used? (Note that there's no reason to assume it was the theoretical minimum).
What evidence do you have that such a concentration would be too low to form Prussian blue?
Quote me please. I don't speak in definite terms about such things, and if I did I made a mistake. That's a key difference between me and Rudolf. When he makes an assumption (totally unwarranted in the case of monkey vs humans) he treats it as being definitive.Archie wrote: ↑Sat Dec 07, 2024 3:20 am Reminder that just recently bombs was trying to say grave volume at Belzec was 70% reduced because of decomposition. No discussion of conditions, assumptions, nothing. Based solely on ChatGPT, his primary research tool. And then he's criticizing Germar for what is probably a decent assumption. And then there's Muehlenkamp who literally takes the most extreme value he can possibly find, high or low, in whichever direction he needs it to go. That's how he ends up with stuff like 15 kg of wood to cremate a body.
Does he?bombsaway wrote: ↑Sat Dec 07, 2024 4:16 am Quote me please. I don't speak in definite terms about such things, and if I did I made a mistake. That's a key difference between me and Rudolf. When he makes an assumption (totally unwarranted in the case of monkey vs humans) he treats it as being definitive.
We always have to keep in mind that these data are not the result of experiments with human beings, which are of course out of the question, but of extrapolations.
No clear mechanism? It's a reaction with iron. It's pretty well understood.bombsaway wrote: ↑Sat Dec 07, 2024 4:16 am One thing that immediately jumps out to me is why (when looking at these dedicated delousing chambers) the staining is not consistent along the interior. Why only some parts of the wall? Have revisionists or anyone presented a clear mechanism for how staining happens? Without that, there's too much uncertainty around the basic question.
Rudolf said "Talmage and Rodgers suggested that human beings are roughly only halfArchie wrote: ↑Sat Dec 07, 2024 6:17 amDoes he?bombsaway wrote: ↑Sat Dec 07, 2024 4:16 am Quote me please. I don't speak in definite terms about such things, and if I did I made a mistake. That's a key difference between me and Rudolf. When he makes an assumption (totally unwarranted in the case of monkey vs humans) he treats it as being definitive.
IMMEDIATELY after the part you are quibbling with,
We always have to keep in mind that these data are not the result of experiments with human beings, which are of course out of the question, but of extrapolations.
So when I look at a picture like thisArchie wrote: ↑Sat Dec 07, 2024 7:03 amNo clear mechanism? It's a reaction with iron. It's pretty well understood.bombsaway wrote: ↑Sat Dec 07, 2024 4:16 am One thing that immediately jumps out to me is why (when looking at these dedicated delousing chambers) the staining is not consistent along the interior. Why only some parts of the wall? Have revisionists or anyone presented a clear mechanism for how staining happens? Without that, there's too much uncertainty around the basic question.
That the blue forms in patches and spots doesn't strike me as strange. Lots of things work like that. Mold for example. It would be weirder if it perfectly coated the walls like paint. Certain parts of the wall must have been more favorable for the reaction to occur. The crucial point is that if the conditions are generally conducive (sufficient moisture, etc) then you would expect it to form somewhere. And if there's none at all that would be a bit surprising.
Now, could there have been some weird circumstance in Krema II that prevented this reaction from occurring despite heavy Zyklon usage? It is conceivable, and there have been many speculations in this regard. But it's not probable.
No one was gassed at Dachau.
Is it not feasible for electrical cables and the vents to be repaired? Tauber speaks about gassings after he said "The people going to be gassed and those in the gas chamber damaged the electrical installations, tearing the cables out and damaging the ventilation equipment." Clearly, repairs were completed.
The construction office documents recorded the construction of gas chambers within the Kremas. That documentary evidence corroborates the witnesses, all of whom speak to the presence of gas chambers and their use for gassing people. Revisionists cannot agree on what the Kremas were used for, let alone evidence any of their claims.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.
A very important point by Rudolf. He is admitting he has a theory, which is not backed by experimentation. That is why I argue no one, including Markiewicz, can definitively conclude whether the Leichenkeller was used for homicidal gassings, purely on the levels of HCN found there.
He's talking about the delousing chambers where Zyklon B was used. Rudolf addresses it in his book:Nazgul wrote:No one was gassed at Dachau.
https://holocausthandbooks.com/wp-conte ... 2-tcoa.pdfTo my knowledge, only the Zyklon-B-disinfestation chambers at the Buchenwald and Dachau camps (Degesch circultion chambers) exhibit no blue pigmentation, probably because first of all the walls were professionally coated with a paint impermeable to gas and water, and facilities of this type were moreover operated with heated dry air. Warm, dry walls, however, don’t tend to absorb hydrogen cyanide and to accumulate them as cyanide salts, as we shall see further below.
I see. Well Crema I gas chamber was probably heated before use and maybe only 15 gassings took place there, with gas quickly vented out. Quick ventilation isn't an important factor in absorption?fireofice wrote: ↑Sat Dec 07, 2024 9:33 amHe's talking about the delousing chambers where Zyklon B was used. Rudolf addresses it in his book:Nazgul wrote:No one was gassed at Dachau.
https://holocausthandbooks.com/wp-conte ... 2-tcoa.pdfTo my knowledge, only the Zyklon-B-disinfestation chambers at the Buchenwald and Dachau camps (Degesch circultion chambers) exhibit no blue pigmentation, probably because first of all the walls were professionally coated with a paint impermeable to gas and water, and facilities of this type were moreover operated with heated dry air. Warm, dry walls, however, don’t tend to absorb hydrogen cyanide and to accumulate them as cyanide salts, as we shall see further below.
I am unsure where he got his information on the paint.
The walls of the Krema II and III were brick with plaster. Many people on both sides have examined the ruins and I have not see any report of any special paint. If that were true, it would have come up by now.bombsaway wrote: ↑Sat Dec 07, 2024 4:07 pm I see. Well Crema I gas chamber was probably heated before use and maybe only 15 gassings took place there, with gas quickly vented out. Quick ventilation isn't an important factor in absorption?
Cremas II-V gas chambers were also heated and vented. And maybe had this special paint as well.
So all of these objections (from the revisionist side) seem very insubstantial to me, and you're relying on assumptions as well. Meanwhile you can't answer basic questions about your own narrative -- seemingly no narrative even exists that fits with and explains evidence. If you want to understand why you are viewed as being silly, this is it. You're not going to be taken seriously by the historical establishment until you start playing their rules (creating narratives that fit with evidence) or rewrite the rules, which you haven't even attempted to do either.
The walls of the morgue consist of double brick masonry with a layer of waterproofing in between for insulation (ibid., pp. 325, 327). The interior walls are plastered with a hard, cement-rich material, the ceiling and support pillars of reinforced concrete show the marks of wooden planking and are therefore not plastered. The roof, made of reinforced concrete, is insulated on the outside by a layer of tar, which is protected from environmental and mechanical damage by a rather thin, screed-like layer of cement covering it. The layers of tar both on top of the roof as well as between the two brick walls were indispensable as a water barrier due to the high groundwater in the swampy region of Birkenau. Both morgues had several drains. (Chemistry of Auschwitz, 114)
Part of the argument is then that the conditions in the gas chambers (as well as most of the delousing chambers with the exceptions outlined earlier) were especially good for the formation of Prussian Blue.Section 1.3 already contained a discussion of two instances of disfigurement of churches which occurred in the 1970s in Bavaria, Germany. In the many hundreds of thousands of fumigations which have been carried out since 1920, there cannot, as a rule, have been any complications. Otherwise the procedure would have been very rapidly abandoned. The cases in question were, therefore, exceptions. But what exactly was it that made these churches exceptions? (Chemistry of Auschwitz, 181-182)