I don't know why Prussian Blue didn't form at Dachau, and it's not my responsibility. All I have to demonstrate is that this is a variable that you're not taking into account. As you tacitly admitted, Rudolf's statement is insufficient in terms of explaining this.Archie wrote: ↑Sat Dec 07, 2024 5:34 pm If you want to use the Dachau fumigation chambers as an argument, you need to 1) determine why Prussian blue did not form in that location, 2) show that the same explanation applies to Krema II, etc.
Also, with some structures we should be alert to the possibility of postwar modifications. Any wall that has been reconstructed would not have staining. I don't think that's the explanation for Dachau, but it is a general point.
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)
The assumptions you are making here, and is necessary for your case are as follows
Special paint was used at Dachau and Belsen which prevented formation (all we have to go by is Rudolf's statement that he doesn't qualify -- based on the very elementary mistake I saw him make with regards to the toxicity study -- which led him to double the lethality number -- I'm not inclined to take his word for it)
That special paint was not used at the Crema ii-v
If it had been, that special paint would have been noted by investigators (that special paint would have survived the detonation of the crema and decades of exposure to elements)
No response to the points about ventilation and heating in the gas chambers, but it seems you are assuming these would have no effect on staining. However Rudolf said that it wouldn't happen in a dry environment. I don't think you can make a definitive statement here.
In sum, your arguments about the staining are based on assumptions, and largely speculative. As I said earlier, if you're trying to prove the scientific impossibility of gassings you have to go further than this. If you're making a probabilistic argument, there's a lot of subjectivity here. Similarly I could make probabilistic arguments against revisionism (based on say keeping a conspiracy that included many hundreds of thousands --the survivors of resettlement-- secret would be next to impossible, a .00001% chance )
Rudolf also points to dry and warm conditions being pivotal.
It is an assumption to say these conditions weren't present in the gas chambers.
It also seems to me to be giant assumption to say that gas being ventilated out quickly isn't going to make a substantial difference in formation, and that the stains would form under very sporadic gassings (in Crema 1 only 10,000 were said to have been killed. So maybe there were only 20 or 30 gassings there)
What isn't speculative is the inability of revisionists to answer basic questions about their narrative. And of course the no direct evidence thing. You either have to answer to these challenges, or argue for them being unimportant. My advice to revisionists would be stop focusing on science that you don't have a grasp on (and using Rudolf as an authority here when he was shown to deeply unreliable on the first thing I investigated him on) and focus on answering these much more basic questions.