Yes.ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 5:10 pm
Has anybody here done any field research by visiting sites or archives or even been to a Holocaust museum?
Yes.ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 5:10 pm
Has anybody here done any field research by visiting sites or archives or even been to a Holocaust museum?
Gee, how convenient that you only use AI tools to 'debunk' revisionists... it's almost like you're not interested in truth or learning and are acting on other motives:ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 1:55 pm
That's not how it worked. After the war, there were seriously organized efforts to locate missing relatives and people. There were displaced person camps, survivor registries, and well known organizations that helped survivors search for family members. The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC), the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS), and the Red Cross were some of those.
The Arolsen Archives (formerly known as the International Tracing Service) are the world’s largest archive on Nazi persecution, forced labor, and the Holocaust. They hold millions of documents about the fate of people persecuted by the Nazis, and for decades their central mission was to help survivors and families trace missing relatives.
I'm starting to see that you guys are worse than Flat Earthers. The mid 20th century was not the Stone Age and a few decades later really heavy duty technology was developed to fill in the gaps of the few survivors that slipped through the cracks.
I seriously recommend that you guys do some actual research, go visit a Holocaust museum, talk to a Holocaust survivor, go visit the camps and archives. You have been clearly stuck in your basements and haven't even ventured out of this tiny echo chamber.
Limited Organizational Reach
Tracing services (e.g., Red Cross, UNRRA, Jewish Agency) focused on DP camps and major urban centers. Survivors who fled directly to small communities, rural areas, or overseas often had no exposure to these systems.
Uneven Geographic Coverage
Archives like the International Tracing Service were more complete for Western Europe; records from Eastern Europe and hidden populations were sparse or absent.
Communication Barriers
Postwar postal and telephone networks were disrupted, and many survivors didn’t even know such services existed, limiting participation.
Incomplete Registrations
Efforts like the Pinkas HaNitzolim survivor lists or radio broadcasts reached many—but only those who proactively submitted details or happened to tune in. Survivors who never registered remained invisible.
Name Changes and Identity Shifts
Many survivors changed names after migration (to assimilate or start anew), making matching with earlier records difficult.
Hidden Children & Assimilation
Children hidden with non-Jewish families often did not come forward or resisted reunification, leaving them outside official records.
Wahrheitssucher wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 3:07 pmConfusedJew wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 1:55 pmI seriously recommend that you guys do some actual research,…Callafangers wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 5:50 am Even if I took your personal story seriously, losing your family does not equate to "they were gassed".
You lost them. People lose each other sometimes, especially in war-torn continents where all of them disperse to dozens of different countries, none of which have effective means of tracking or communicating with one another using early-mid 20th century technology.
If I lose my keys, I might tell people a dragon ate them... the fact that they are lost is true, and the dragon is bullshit.
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Oh really! What a novel idea.![]()
How should we do this “actual research”, oh vastly knowledgeable and studiously erudite one?
ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 1:55 pm…go visit a Holocaust museum,
talk to a Holocaust survivor,
go visit the camps...![]()
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ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 5:10 pm Has anybody here done any field research by visiting… a Holocaust museum?
https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads ... opulation/
Part a) see link;ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 9:31 pm
Yad Vashem has names of many millions that were murdered by the way just probably not 100%.
This is where you guys are clearly Flat Earthers. You can't explain where the people went who were there at the beginning of the war.
That childish response suggests that you have no real response. I don't care about the central database, you can't explain where 10% of the missing people went from the census report, let alone 6 million.Stubble wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 9:43 pmPart a) see link;ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 9:31 pm
Yad Vashem has names of many millions that were murdered by the way just probably not 100%.
This is where you guys are clearly Flat Earthers. You can't explain where the people went who were there at the beginning of the war.
https://codoh.com/library/document/brie ... -of-shoah/
Part b)
Point to 'where they goed' on a map please, any map.
Where are they CJ, 'where did they goed'.
I can't help but notice, you aren't even looking...
"Documented"? Please share your documents with us, ConfusedJew.ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 9:44 pm There apparently credible documented cases of infants being murdered by being thrown out of windows during ghetto liquidations.
Hmm this is like the third or fourth time you've mentioned this census report. How about this: list what you can say for certain about the data in the census report you keep referring to, insofar as how it supports your conclusions. You seem to think this census reflects reality of how many Jews were present before vs. after the war. I challenge you to explain why you think this, because it seems to be a very strong belief (one I would argue is starkly at odds with evidence and reason).ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 9:45 pm don't care about the central database, you can't explain where 10% of the missing people went from the census report, let alone 6 million.
Because people reporting as "Jewish" (or whether census collection even considers this) is highly complex, as are questions of movement, birth rates, etc. It is you who keeps asserting importance to census-related considerations, so I am asking you to justify why you keep doing this. Do you even know what you are talking about?ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Thu Aug 21, 2025 11:24 pm Why wouldn't that census report be reliable? Do you know how statistical significance works?
You are criticizing me for being persistent about this but I haven't gotten any answers at all from you guys. Not even bad ones!
Your questions are elementary, they have been answered ad nauseum on this forum, the prior forum, Holocaust Handbooks, the Holocaust Encyclopedia, and more. Your question was "Why wouldn't that census report be reliable?" which is ridiculous because you are not even clear about why you find it to be remotely reliable yourself.ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Fri Aug 22, 2025 1:55 am I don't understand what you are asking.
You can't answer my question so you are trying to flip it back on me.
WTF? Yea, not like Jews benefit from the 'Holocaust'. It isn't like there's a whole book written on this or anything: https://archive.org/details/HolocaustIndustry/ConfusedJew wrote:If the Holocaust was fake, there would be no reason for censuses or Jews to underreport after the fact.
Where did you get these figures, ConfusedJew? You are not adding any value, here. Cite your sources or STFU.ConfusedJew wrote:Jewish emigration did happen, and those numbers were only in the hundreds of thousands, less than a million. During the war, large-scale emigration was impossible and we know how many Jews were sent to camps.
More figures you copy-pasted five minutes ago and have absolutely no understanding of whatsoever. Excellent.ConfusedJew wrote:Post-war censuses in the U.S., Israel, and elsewhere show some survivors arriving, but nowhere near the millions.
Yes, it's great that you copied this from your seventh grade textbook. Good job.ConfusedJew wrote:About 3 million Jews were left in Europe after the war. Roughly 250,000–300,000 survivors ended up in Displaced Persons (DP) camps in Germany, Austria, and Italy, under Allied supervision. Jewish relief groups like the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee and HIAS registered them, so we have good numbers.
I do enjoy reading Wikipedia from time to time, thank you for sharing and for adding nothing of substance to any debate, ever.ConfusedJew wrote:Between 1945–1948, about 100,000 survivors made it to British-mandate Palestine (often illegally, since Britain restricted immigration.
The US Displaced Persons Act (1948) allowed about 80,000–100,000 Holocaust survivors to immigrate in the late 1940s and early 1950s.
Some survivors resettled in France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Britain, often after passing through DP camps. Britain admitted about 50,000 Jewish survivors, including “the Boys” (a group of ~700 orphaned children).
Canada took in about 35,000–40,000 survivors.
Australia admitted ~25,000 survivors.
Argentina, Brazil, and other South American countries accepted tens of thousands more.
Yes, I understand you're great at copy-pasting, great job, keep it up.ConfusedJew wrote:Holocaust survivors didn’t all leave Europe, the majority initially stayed, particularly in the USSR, Poland, Romania, and Hungary. Later emigration waves reduced these numbers, but Europe still had millions of Jews immediately after 1945.
Yes, you understand correctly that I'm not going to "play ball" while you try to keep myself and others occupied with your copy-paste instead of doing more productive revisionist work.ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Fri Aug 22, 2025 3:06 am OK, so fine I take it you can't even so much as criticize the census count.