fireofice wrote: ↑Wed Jan 22, 2025 12:03 am
bombsaway wrote:Clearly they're not engaging in good faith on this point. I think they've said so themselves (Archie, so as not to invite a rebuttal). I would instead speculate they are experiencing an uncomfortable amount of cognitive dissonance about the physical evidence described, and don't want to linger on the subject for this reason.
I assure you I have no "cognitive dissonance" about the physical evidence nor am I "uncomfortable" with it. I just find your concerns about why you think anything you've said about "layers" is a problem for us to be completely incomprehensible, and it appears Archie does as well. I cannot respond to what I don't comprehend. I'm sure in your mind you think you've made some great argument (from my perspective, your victory laps about "winning" against us just look completely delusional), but I am simply at a loss as to what you are even saying. So we're just at an impasse until either you communicate better or any of us get a better understanding of what you're saying.
You think Belzec was a transit camp right, basically a transfer point for Jews who were being sent to Russia.
At this transit camp there happens to be 20,000 cubic meters of grave space, if Kola's study is accurate.
So the first question is, why so much grave space?
https://holocausthistorychannel.wordpre ... bic-meter/
Based on this, drawn from historical examples, we would get a total number of people buried of 10-11 per cubic meter,
"In any event, it’s fair to assume that the figures for pigs and sheep are the ones most comparable to human burials. The figures of 424 and 424.6 kg/m^3 are very close to Carlo Mattogno’s estimate of 420 kg/m^3, so the general reliability of revisionist reasoning on this subject is again confirmed, while Muehlenkamp’s figures are refuted on the basis of the best data we have."
or 200,000 people, if we take an average weight of 40 something kg. That number (the weight) could be lower IMO based on my calculations which I think I gave in this thread.
were that many buried at Belzec?
Then we have the issue of no corpses in these graves, but rather crematory layers
Question 2, Why were the corpses removed?
Question 3, concerns Kola's described crematory layers. The described volume is enormous, thousands of cubic meters. The actual human remains were thus diluted. Why?
Basically I am seeing a lot of peculiar things which are easily explained w the orthodox narrative and which no revisionist has ever explained.
You guys ask questions like, explain the lack of Prussian blue staining in the crema ruins.
The questions above are less scientific to be sure, but you have to fit the physical evidence into your narrative, whatever it is. That's the point of all this