Exterminationists have in recent years pretty much given up entirely on the physical evidence debate. I have not seen/heard any significant activity at all from the likes of Muehlenkamp and Hans in this regard (the only ones I recall in the last decade ever focusing on physical evidence, specifically). As far as I am aware, they are still welcome to this current forum.Hektor wrote: ↑Tue Nov 19, 2024 9:03 am What you trying to do is essentially flip-flopping from the problem for exterminationism in terms of missing evidence for extermination or in this case dead Jews. The real question is Where are the Corpses, if they were gassed. Instead you are peddling Jews not reporting after WW2 to be somehow a proof of extermination. Which it isn't even indirectly.
The whole affair demonstrates that one needs to comply with quite some twisted logic to believe in the Holocaust Narrative. That's a service we van even be grateful for.
In addition to the "corpses problem" ("Where did they go?"), the "cremation fuel problem" ("Where did it come from?") has recently crept up with a similar amount of force (I think The Holocaust Encyclopedia has helped simplify some of this otherwise-complex information, making it more digestible and easy to discuss). Both of these matters are pretty-much firmly resolved in favor of the revisionist interpretation.