PrudentRegret wrote: ↑Sat Dec 14, 2024 8:04 pm
And now the gaze of that critique is turning on the Holocaust Narrative, and rightfully so. People correctly associate it with wokeness (which is on the retreat) and meta-premises in social science that define our morality, and even associate it with the root of race denial itself.
I don't think those connections are widely made at all, and when revisionist sympathisers try demonstrating that the Holocaust lies behind Civil Rights and other paradigm shifts of the postwar era, they end up losing people or sounding too conspiratorial. The opposite is the case; the Civil Rights era mood shift (however contested it was or became) preceded the greater interest in the Holocaust, which was arguably 'safer' and more anodyne than wrestling with race, since mass killing is easy to condemn.
Moreover, interest in the Holocaust was never particularly left-wing nor integrated into an intersectional canon, for a variety of reasons including left-wing anti-imperialism morphing into anti-Zionism. The portrayals of the Holocaust mostly revolve around stories that are easy to follow and not laden with jargon. The Holocaust was held up as almost an antidote to postmodernism in the 1980s and 1990s. Aside from some attempted hijacking from trans activists arguing for a Nazi trans genocide, it hasn't been subjected to much woke rebranding. Indeed, the rhetoric of 'decolonisation' means it is seem as associated with 'settler colonialism' of the *victims* rather than understanding it as part of a larger Nazi colonial project (which is the academic consensus now).
There is certainly some momentum from general rejection of anything mainstream or which seems politically correct, to question 'taboos' and so on, but how far such dudebro contrarianism will go remains to be seen. Likely not as far as you'd like.
The root of the recent surge in HBD-consciousness traces back to Charles Murray. He was a respectful academic who got mega-cancelled for
correctly identifying the problem of persistent social inequality caused by heterogenous population-level differences in IQ distributions. It wasn't even the main topic of a book, but part of a single chapter. But importantly, what happened was starting in 2015 you got these young people disillusioned with the prevailing political paradigm questioning these premises responsible for the things you mentioned.
This led to coarse and offensive 4chan memes and infographics. And then those infographics inspired "alt-right" content creators who introduced "race realism" to large audiences, mostly on YouTube. Then those ideas became debated on podcasts by scandalized liberals who thought it couldn't possibly be true, and it wasn't until later, probably 2018+ the the writers and Substackers interested in Elite Human Capital rebranded "Race Realism" as "HBD" and incorporated it into their thinking.
And now it's ubiquitous, you get people with no connection to either the Alt-Right or Elite Human Capital blogging talking about it:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBZGgrgMwvU
Point being, this started with coarse 4chan memes. Then it went to Alt Right content creators and fringe podcasts, and then Podcast debates with scandalized liberals. Then it got picked up by "Grey Tribe" intellectuals and now it's getting more ubiquitous. The proliferation of it in the past 10 years had nothing to do with centralized efforts by any institution or any original research done by those institutions. Yes, it started with offensive 4chan memes and alt-right podcasts.
The level of engagement with Holocaust Denial on X is going to herald a very similar trend here. You even have some figures closely associated with the 2015 Race Realism content that went viral are now associated with Revisionism, like Ryan Faulk AKA Alternative Hypothesis. And now it's appearing on fringe podcasts, but that's just another step forward along the same path HBD took.
So why hasn't this translated into a network of Substackers? I have not said 'bloggers' because revisionist-inclined blogs did not work out so well in that heyday. The Black Rabbit of Inle closed his down, and Further Glory/Gen Baugher simply passed away. Caroline Yeager retired recently. That was not quite it, but close to it for revisionist blogging. Other bloggers were the same 'name' revisionists of the 1980s, like Faurisson and Berg, who passed away in the 2010s.
This has already been done, the heroic life's work of Rudolf, Mattogno, and many more I won't name have accomplished this. I know you will deny it, but this part has already been done, they have won the long-form academic argument. There are some outstanding questions but the narrative as it stands now is totally untenable. HBD didn't get mainstreamed by some HBD nonprofit releasing long-form research. It got mainstreamed by Alt Right podcasts which then virally influenced non-Alt Right audiences.
I suspect the Substackers interested in Elite Human Capital as a theory will be particularly susceptible to Holocaust Denial, they have a penchant for Forbidden Knowledge, and if they start to look into this topic because of the waves being made on X then we will see something very similar happen.
But no, the path to Revisionist victory was never 'Revisionists release book, Nick Terry admits defeat and Academia corrects its errors.' Our illustrious academic institutions will be the LAST ONES to accept the truth of HBD which has long-been accepted by various bloggers and X amateur commentators. You get highly qualified professors like Eric Turkheimer, the Nick Terry of HBD denial, who will never ever accept HBD no matter what research comes out because, as he openly admits, we have to deny it even if it's true because of the Holocaust.
Your argument here contradicts itself; Mattogno and Rudolf have certainly not "won the long-form academic argument" if "academic institutions" won't accept the arguments.
But that's down to the failure to make revisionism fit with the *formats* of humanities and social science disciplines. Research and study are meant to be open-ended processes not about teaching a particular dogma. But they are also meant to be teachable and representable in comprehensible forms.
Some of the problems stem from the fact that revisionism's roots go back to before the emergence of several important approaches which are now deeply embedded into academia and which also 'make sense', namely memory studies and genocide studies plus now violence studies.
Revisionism is making claims about the significance of the Holocaust in the postwar world through to the present without empirically demonstrating them. It typically puts the thumb on the scale for some aspects of why the Holocaust resonated while ignoring others, especially the universalising trends regarding perpetrators (one reason why there are so many comparisons with other genocides and acts of mass violence), but also the nation-specific rather inward looking debtes in Europe. Overgeneralising from a US perspective or indeed a Jewish perspective is going to be met with raised eyebrows in Europe or from anyone familiar with Europe.
Revisionism consistently refuses systematic comparison with other genocides and acts of mass violence, and instead prefers to see the Holocaust as unique, and to focus on the specific (thus 'unique') and distinctive elements of the Holocaust, such as the camps. This doesn't work in a post-Rwandan genocide world where Jedwabne and Jozefow loom very large in what is discussed and cited.
As a result, a very high proportion of what is researched and studied about 1933-1945, for the Nazi regime, occupied Europe in WWII, other Nazi crimes *as well as* most of what is researched and studied about the persecution and murder of European Jews, goes entirely ignored.
This also extends to the source bases which are being studied, translated, researched, used. Revisionists have engaged rather shallowly with the contemporary non-German sources, both Jewish and non-Jewish, as well as postwar testimonies collections but especially the investigations and trials. They might think they have addressed them, but they really haven't. The claims made about testimonies and trials are even more ludicrous because there is no evidence any of the vaunted gurus have engaged properly with these sources in a systematic way. The same, ultimately, with the German documents as a totality.
There's another disconnect, which is the failure to translate the ideas into the frameworks of the full range of humanities and social science disciplines. Different disciplines can take the same source material and interpret them in different ways. So for example, psychologists and sociologists in Germany have examined war crimes investigation and trial records, going to the archives and not simply relying on the say-so of historians, and interpreted them in the light of psychological and sociological models, hypotheses and theories. In so doing they are less concerned with physical evidence than geographers or archaeologists. Historians as the magpies of the humanities and social sciences will synthesise everything from other disciplines, and they like other social scientists can also compare.
To visualise how narrow revisionism is, consider that it has not affected *anything* regarding the history of the Holocaust at a national level for each European country affected. Nothing that is discussed in Mattogno, Rudolf et al concerns France, Greece, Italy, etc or leads to any revisions of how the history unfolded in these countries, or their postwar aftermaths. The persecution of Jews in Germany and Austria, how Nazi antisemitism arose and compared to earlier political antisemitism, the impacts of forced emigration, Aryanisation, and basically anything inside the Reich - nothing in Mattogno or Rudolf addresses these themes in ways that would provoke anything more than derisive laughter from specialists and non-specialists familiar with the literature. It's not even go back to the drawing board, it's - become aware you're facing a totally blank slate.
The gulf between what little has been written about the mass shootings in revisionism and the histories of the Holocaust in the Baltic states, Belarus, Russia, Ukraine, Moldova and Romania is colossal. Mattogno's Einsatzgruppen book is undoubtedly one of his worst, it may not be quite as bereft as his Chelmno book but it doesn't address the subject thoroughly *at all*, and is littered with errors as well as flawed arguments.
The history of Nazi concentration camps in Germany and Austria is likewise not something that revisionism has mastered in the slightest; conventional histories are reliable and well developed, so there is basically nothing to add other than droning on about haberdashery and overemphasising gas chambers when these were far from central to the KZs in Germany and Austria.
A theme like Nazi euthanasia has barely even featured in revisionist writings so the discrepancy between conventional and revisionist claims is simply colossal. Unless revisionists have done the basic work, they will have no leverage or influence on how this topic might be discussed; ditto with related themes like medical experiments. Both are of ongoing continued interest in medicine, nursing, and medical history; these fields don't need you guys at all, and you have nothing to say to them that is worth listening to.
Even regarding Poland, where the key extermination camps were located, revisionism is utterly irrelevant to the histories of eastern Poland, to ghettos, to deportations, forced labour, hiding/rescue and 'Jew hunts'. It has flubbed its arguments about Chelmno quite drastically and really boils down to a set of partial claims about Auschwitz and the Reinhard camps. Regarding Auschwitz, the results still fail to engage with the history of the camp complex as a KZ, and are otherwise too long-winded through Mattogno's many volumes to be convincing. Regarding the Reinhard camps they are too abstracted from the regional context and still haven't addressed everything of relevance to these camps.
The same problem extends to themes such as wartime knowledge and reactions, postwar trials, historical commissions, the many other aspects of the aftermath (displaced persons, emigration, restitution, compensation), and from there one segues into the memory studies and historiography themes which revisionism hasn't really got to grips with at all.
Instead of persisting with the inane insistence there is a single 'narrative', perhaps get it through your head that there are multiple narratives and subplots which unfolded in parallel, in combination and some quite separately. Different histories can combine and synthese these narratives into larger ones, about the Holocaust as a whole, or Hitler, or France in WWII. Or into smaller ones, about a single small town or less well known region. The flexibility is endless.
Then realise how little revisionism addresses these multiple narratives, which is why it cannot alter the history of the Holocaust in France, a storyline which continues to be debated and disputed with nary a reference to any revisonist ever, since they said sweet fa about the key issues with Vichy, the Germans, French society etc. It would take an awful lot to produce a better take on France than already exists in many hundreds of books, so it would seem, quite sensibly, that revisionists have decided to ignore this. But at the cost of having no influence, leverage or veto power over the conventional understanding of what happened. And thus being entirely irrelevant to this.
That conventional understanding is now embedded and summarised in countless websites as well as online encyclopedias, not just Wikipedia but many other reference works, alongside similar portrayals and summaries of other genocides, waves of mass violence, and atrocities in WWII, in parallel to other summaries and pages about all the other aspects of WWII (including bombing, the expulsions, Soviet repressions and more).
One can certainly influence some portion of public opinion to dismiss all of this but that was happening already, since most people don't care about the past; if they start to care they look things up or decide to read a book. Which should be, you know, readable. Meaning likely best in a narrative-chronological format.
Ultimately, the refusal to really research
what actually happened is the simplest way in which revisionism is ultimately excluded. (Cue Callafangers offering more of his Dog Ate ALL My Homework excuses and applying for mitigation from conventional standards.)