I'm not passing blame, I'm pointing to a wall you guys seem to be hitting.TlsMS93 wrote: ↑Thu Jan 23, 2025 6:45 pm Instead of discussing layers of ash with soil, the size of the more than 30 trenches, where local residents dug the earth in search of precious metals or the rain may have affected their distribution, you do not demand a complete excavation, examination of the saponified remains, determination of how much real ash there is. It is easy to pass the blame to the revisionists . . .
It is explained by the revisionist reliance on the argument from incredulity. Any excuse is used by them, to find something too hard to believe, so they can dismiss it as false. They have to rely on that argument, because they cannot evidence their claims about what did and did not take place.bombsaway wrote: ↑Thu Jan 23, 2025 4:36 pmYeah it's a strange point to make considering the graves are real, enormous, and contain human remains...Numar Patru wrote: ↑Thu Jan 23, 2025 2:49 pmI don't understand this argument. They were improvising as they went. Therefore, there was not much in the way of planning.
Nessie, this goes without saying. My point, which you too are distracting from tbh, is that they don't even have a testable hypothesis for Kolas results. The problem is more fundamental than absence of evidence. Either they are being unreasonably obstinate in refusing to provide an explanation that might be easily given, or the results are so anomalous and strange one cannot be provided. The revisionist concession here would be that something extraordinary, even in the context of the war, happened concerning the graves at Belzec.
The contested points are 1) the number of dead, 2) the causes of death.bombsaway wrote: ↑Thu Jan 23, 2025 7:16 pmI'm not passing blame, I'm pointing to a wall you guys seem to be hitting.TlsMS93 wrote: ↑Thu Jan 23, 2025 6:45 pm Instead of discussing layers of ash with soil, the size of the more than 30 trenches, where local residents dug the earth in search of precious metals or the rain may have affected their distribution, you do not demand a complete excavation, examination of the saponified remains, determination of how much real ash there is. It is easy to pass the blame to the revisionists . . .
W regards to Kola's results, I think there's only 3 ways for committed revisionists to think about what he found
1) Kola's study was incompetently conducted/compromised, therefore the findings are inaccurate, and merit no response
2) there are reasonable explanations within the revisionist framework, which can be provided
3) Despite all efforts a reasonable explanation cannot be offered
The 21,000m3 of disturbed ground Kola identified, or 8.4 Olympic sized swimming pools, puts Belzec into one of the largest mass grave sites in history. TII, Sobibor and Chelmno are the only comparable others.Archie wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 3:30 amThe contested points are 1) the number of dead, 2) the causes of death.bombsaway wrote: ↑Thu Jan 23, 2025 7:16 pm ...I'm not passing blame, I'm pointing to a wall you guys seem to be hitting.
W regards to Kola's results, I think there's only 3 ways for committed revisionists to think about what he found
1) Kola's study was incompetently conducted/compromised, therefore the findings are inaccurate, and merit no response
2) there are reasonable explanations within the revisionist framework, which can be provided
3) Despite all efforts a reasonable explanation cannot be offered
In the revisionist view, the Kola data, if reliable, indicate a vastly lower number of bodies were buried at the camp...
There is no basis upon which to draw any firm conclusion about how many died. Probably a few thousand, possibly in the tens of the thousands.
I lol at the mental gymnastics revisionists use to dismiss the evidence of mass graves and mass murder at Belzec. You claim that 100% of the witnesses lied, something you have previously tried to deny and that 21,000m3 is not that big a volume for graves, when only three other places are known to exist that are equivalent, and they are not coincidentally contemporaneous to Belzec. You then fail at the basic task of any investigation, as you cannot evidence what did happen at the camp, leaving you without a completed conclusion.
It does not mean orthodoxy is true, but you should be able to explain the findings within your framework, otherwise that framework needs to be changed. And again, I'm not asking you to provide documentation, witness evidence, anything like that, just a hypothesis which can be examined.Archie wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 3:30 am
Your distinction between 2 and 3 is arbitrary ("reasonable") and will depend on the level of detail demanded which will depend on the documentation available and is also arbitrary. Your idea that revisionists have to document X, Y, Z and if not the standard version must be true is an argument from ignorance fallacy. The documentation may be too thin to provide a reconstruction sufficiently detailed to satisfy you, but that doesn't mean the standard story is true.
We don't know the minimum or a maximum.Numar Patru wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 5:48 pm The matter of the minimum number of bodies that could be accommodated by the graves at Belzec identifed by Kola is really a major point, in my opinion, since it really puts to the test the Durchgangslager thesis of the Reinhard camps.
Argument from incredulity.
Why would burning the bodies be a problem for the revisionist thesis? You realize this was done regularly in the non-extermination camps, right? So why do you think cremation is per se proof of exterminations?But this is only the beginning for the revisionists, who then have to explain why the bodies were extracted, destroyed, and the ashes diluted with sand. Since they haven't done this, they without doubt are "losing" when it comes to Kola's report on Belzec. They can criticize the Orthodox narrative, but they lose by default by not providing any possible version of events that can even be tested. As I said before, they can make any favorable assumption they want, disregard the lack of evidence, just provide something or admit that they can't, or call into question the accuracy of the study itself. No other option as far as I can see.
They have to prove why the hell most of the extermination was concentrated in places where there wasn't even a muffle furnace and relying on inadequate open-air cremations, without enough fuel and without transport logistics, just for Treblinka there would be 200 thousand trucks harvesting nearby brushwood and taking it to camp for the 800,000 unfortunates, first being harvested in winter and then transported over muddy roads during the spring thaw.Archie wrote: ↑Sat Jan 25, 2025 12:03 amArgument from incredulity.
There are lots of mass graves that have rather low corpse densities. Hyper-efficient corpse packing isn't the norm, especially if the deaths are spread out over a period of time.
Why would burning the bodies be a problem for the revisionist thesis? You realize this was done regularly in the non-extermination camps, right? So why do you think cremation is per se proof of exterminations?But this is only the beginning for the revisionists, who then have to explain why the bodies were extracted, destroyed, and the ashes diluted with sand. Since they haven't done this, they without doubt are "losing" when it comes to Kola's report on Belzec. They can criticize the Orthodox narrative, but they lose by default by not providing any possible version of events that can even be tested. As I said before, they can make any favorable assumption they want, disregard the lack of evidence, just provide something or admit that they can't, or call into question the accuracy of the study itself. No other option as far as I can see.
You should refresh your memory about how mass graves were created outside Kyiv and Riga. Practical experience gained by Friedrich Jeckeln in Ukraine in September 1941 was applied two months later in Latvia. Belzec did not start receiving trainloads of Jews until March of the following year — plenty of time for those methods to be communicated from Reichskommissariäte Ukraine and Ostland to the Generalgouvernement.
Again, this is a fundamental misunderstanding of how things were done. Staffing for the Reinhard camps came from Aktion T4, which had lots of experience with gassing and not nearly enough with large scale body disposal. So there was a lot of improvisation and learning as they went.TlsMS93 wrote: ↑Sat Jan 25, 2025 12:09 am They have to prove why the hell most of the extermination was concentrated in places where there wasn't even a muffle furnace and relying on inadequate open-air cremations, without enough fuel and without transport logistics, just for Treblinka there would be 200 thousand trucks harvesting nearby brushwood and taking it to camp for the 800,000 unfortunates, first being harvested in winter and then transported over muddy roads during the spring thaw.
Do you really not know this?Why was the cleaning in Belzec not as good as they say it happened in Treblinka when it was closed relatively early compared to other extermination camps?