I don't need to explain this further. It is sufficient to show that Korherr does not appear to include the GG as part of Europe, which is now done and sealed.
I don't need to explain this further. It is sufficient to show that Korherr does not appear to include the GG as part of Europe, which is now done and sealed.
If Europe isn't the GG or the Soviet territories, from where does he subtract 4 million Jews? There weren't enough Jews in this smaller area, not even remotely close. You seem to be colossally confused in argumentation, though I expect some sort of convoluted retcon on this point. I'm glued to my seat waiting for this tbh,Callafangers wrote: ↑Thu Aug 28, 2025 8:45 pmI don't need to explain this further. It is sufficient to show that Korherr does not appear to include the GG as part of Europe, which is now done and sealed.
Please continue pretending not to comprehend what I have shared bombsaway, I expected nothing else from you.bombsaway wrote: ↑Thu Aug 28, 2025 8:52 pmIf Europe isn't the GG or the Soviet territories, from where does he subtract 4 million Jews? There weren't enough Jews in this smaller area, not even remotely close. You seem to be colossally confused in argumentation, though I expect some sort of convoluted retcon on this point. I'm glued to my seat waiting for this tbh,Callafangers wrote: ↑Thu Aug 28, 2025 8:45 pmI don't need to explain this further. It is sufficient to show that Korherr does not appear to include the GG as part of Europe, which is now done and sealed.
again the quote: "Between 1937 and the beginning of 1943, the number of Jews in Europe is likely to have declined by an estimated 4 million"
Don't be mad at me, bombsaway, be mad at Korherr, he is the one saying it.
- Territorial categorization: Korherr consistently distinguishes between "Reich territory" and areas like the General Government and eastern territories. For example, he notes that balance sheet figures "do not include the newly acquired eastern territories" and separately mentions "about 1.3 million Jews in the General Government."
- Administrative distinction: When discussing evacuations, Korherr refers to "Transportation of Jews from the eastern Provinces to the Russian East" where "the following numbers sifted through the camps in the General Government." This framing suggests the General Government serves as a channeling, filtration, or processing zone rather than a mere transit corridor or final European destination.
- Geographical conceptualization: In his concluding section on "Balance Sheet for The Jews in Europe," when discussing the pre-war distribution of European Jewry, Korherr refers to Jews being "concentrated in Europe especially in the former Polish-Russian territories occupied by Germany." The phrasing "former Polish-Russian territories occupied by Germany" suggests these areas might be viewed as administratively separate from his conception of core Europe.
Your AI is selectively judging the paper. Ask it to adjudicate the meaning of this sentence since you're clearly incapable of it.Callafangers wrote: ↑Thu Aug 28, 2025 9:14 pmPlease continue pretending not to comprehend what I have shared bombsaway, I expected nothing else from you.bombsaway wrote: ↑Thu Aug 28, 2025 8:52 pmIf Europe isn't the GG or the Soviet territories, from where does he subtract 4 million Jews? There weren't enough Jews in this smaller area, not even remotely close. You seem to be colossally confused in argumentation, though I expect some sort of convoluted retcon on this point. I'm glued to my seat waiting for this tbh,Callafangers wrote: ↑Thu Aug 28, 2025 8:45 pm
I don't need to explain this further. It is sufficient to show that Korherr does not appear to include the GG as part of Europe, which is now done and sealed.
again the quote: "Between 1937 and the beginning of 1943, the number of Jews in Europe is likely to have declined by an estimated 4 million"
Korherr subtracts those who are being "sifted through the camps in the General Government" -- they are not in Europe, they are being sifted through work channels whose destinations entail Eastern territories, per official policy. They have no contact with Europeans, they are not any part of Europe in terms of racial contact or engagement. The GG itself was shown as conceptually distinct from Europe, per the report excerpts already shown which I note that you avoid addressing directly. Here they are again (in green, for your enjoyment):
Don't be mad at me, bombsaway, be mad at Korherr, he is the one saying it.
- Territorial categorization: Korherr consistently distinguishes between "Reich territory" and areas like the General Government and eastern territories. For example, he notes that balance sheet figures "do not include the newly acquired eastern territories" and separately mentions "about 1.3 million Jews in the General Government."
- Administrative distinction: When discussing evacuations, Korherr refers to "Transportation of Jews from the eastern Provinces to the Russian East" where "the following numbers sifted through the camps in the General Government." This framing suggests the General Government serves as a channeling, filtration, or processing zone rather than a mere transit corridor or final European destination.
- Geographical conceptualization: In his concluding section on "Balance Sheet for The Jews in Europe," when discussing the pre-war distribution of European Jewry, Korherr refers to Jews being "concentrated in Europe especially in the former Polish-Russian territories occupied by Germany." The phrasing "former Polish-Russian territories occupied by Germany" suggests these areas might be viewed as administratively separate from his conception of core Europe.
Nah, sorry, your ignorance of the besetzten Ostgebieten is truly spectacular. Have you ever read *anything* conventional about them?Callafangers wrote: ↑Thu Aug 28, 2025 5:19 pm Nick, you aren't listening. The records were minimized by a number of factors:
This is why it is necessary for you to show official, veritable, contemporary documents or physical/forensic evidence that supports your case, which is 'conveniently' where you repeatedly and inevitably fail.
- No OBL units and a general lack of administrative structure further East - few or no documents ever created
- Germany covering their tracks on Jewish dispossession and policy and war's end - even fewer documents
- Soviets and Allies (and their Jews) pillaging and corrupting any remaining records at war's end - those who forge will also shred
Yes, fortunately, I was able to dig up this 'inconvenient source(s)' you reference, it's here: https://rodoh.info/post/16436SanityCheck wrote: ↑Thu Aug 28, 2025 9:32 pmI went over some very inconvenient sources for your 'theory' at RODOH a while back, specifically showing that by mid-1943, multiple sources indicated 72,000 Jews remained in the RK Ostland, a mixture of Latvian, Lithuanian and Reich Jews.
Let's see what this cited source actually says:Despite all the gaps, these records rule out essentially all 'resettlement' fantasies. In July 1943, a meeting at the Eastern Ministry about labour issues was told there were 72,000 Jews left in the Reichskommissariat Ostland (Memo of 20 August 1943 on a conference of 13 July 1943, NO-1831, Trials of War Criminals Before the Nuernberg Military Tribunals, Volume 13, p. 1021).
https://archive.org/download/TrialsOfWa ... e%2013.pdfGauleiter Dr. Meyer mentioned the resettlement of 22,000 Jews and the concentration of 50,000 Jews in concentration camps in the Eastern Territories and emphasizes that the same must be replaced by the Plenipotentiary General for Labor Allocation.
Commissioner General Kube was of the opinion that White Ruthenia would be able to furnish the labor contingent as demanded by the Plenipotentiary for Labor Allocation, if entire areas were evacuated and the population transferred to the Reich, family by family. Any breaking-up of families would only cause considerable unrest in the land. Moreover, the evacuation must be carried out along peaceful lines under all circumstances, and the transportation and all other measures must be well planned and the treatment must be decent.
You're just confused, bombsaway, it is yourself who is cherry-picking the document, as are other exterminationists.bombsaway wrote: ↑Thu Aug 28, 2025 9:21 pm
Your AI is selectively judging the paper. Ask it to adjudicate the meaning of this sentence since you're clearly incapable of it.
"Between 1937 and the beginning of 1943, the number of Jews in Europe is likely to have declined by an estimated 4 million"
This sentence makes clear that he is including the General Government in Europe, since there is no possible way you can reach the 4 million figure without accounting for the 3.3 million Jews that he reports were there in 1937.
Oof, again.There are several key pieces of textual evidence that show Korherr's language deliberately avoids claiming these 4 million Jews "died" or "left Europe completely":
1. Korherr explicitly lists multiple causes for the decline -- not just death or departure:
He states it occurred "in part through emigration, in part through excess mortality of the Jews in central and western Europe, in part through the evacuations especially in the Eastern territories where the population is stronger, which here are calculated as departure."
The key phrase is "which here are calculated as departure" -- this is an accounting methodology, not a factual claim about physical location.
2. He acknowledges incomplete information:
"One must not overlook that only a part of the deaths of Soviet Russian Jews in the occupied eastern territories are recorded here"
"All in all, migration streams (unknown to us) of the Jews within Russia into the Asiatic region"
"The stream of emigration of Jews from European countries outside of German influence is also a largely unknown quantity"
3. The 1.27+ million "durchgeschleust" (sifted/channeled/filtered) through the GG camps:
These Jews are counted toward his evacuation totals that contribute to the 4 million decline, yet the German word suggests they may still be within the General Government.
4. His careful qualifier:
He says the number "is likely to have declined" - this is statistical estimation language, not definitive factual assertion.
5. Above all, the methodological admission:
When he writes "evacuations...which here are calculated as departure," he's explicitly telling us this is an accounting convention for his statistical purposes, not necessarily reflecting actual geographical departure from Europe.
The text shows that Korherr is making a bureaucratic accounting claim about population statistics, not an empirical claim about 4 million people having physically died or left European territory.
Impressive as always but, as always, lacking original or compelling evidence of any kind. Notice that what we see here is a compilation of references (likely a written list which SC/Nick keeps handy just for debates like these) which are all supposed to entail a degree of "trust me bro" -- that we should accept that the facts are in there and supportive of SC's statistics and figures based on the fact that somebody wrote a book about it.The 72,000 figure for Jews remaining in the RK Ostland as of July 1943 is confirmed from separate sources, as I noted originally. The reading of NO-1831 to say 50,000 to be sent to KZs and 22,000 'resettled' adding up to 72,000 is standard in the literature. Angrick/Klein agree with this in their book on The Final Solution in Riga and also cite Yitzhak Arad's Ghetto in Flames from 1979 (IIRC) which agreed with them, and first did a breakdown. Hans Safrian in Eichmann's Men (1993) and Christoph Dieckmann in Deutsche Besatzungspolitik in Litauen (2011) likewise agree.
The 72,000 consisted of
- 13,200 in Latvia, overwhelmingly in the Riga ghetto, but this figure includes the small provincial ghetto workforces that survived to 1943, such as a few hundred (just under 500) at Dvinsk-Daugavpils, confirmed from multiple sources cited in Angrick/Klein
- 40,800 in Lithuana, with just under 4800 in Siauliai, just under 16,000 in Kaunas and just over 20,000 in Vilnius. This had been just over 44,000 at the start of April 1943, before 4000 Jews from Oszmiana and other shtetls annexed to Lithuania from Weissruthenien were murdered in Ponary that month
- 16,000 in Weissruthenien, with most in the Minsk ghetto (9-10,000), the balance in Lida and Glebokie, with only a few hundred left in labour camps in Nowogrodek and Baranovichi.
The various reports cited by the specialists mentioned (Dieckmann, Angrick/Klein, Gerlach etc) refer to Jews in general, not just labouring Jews. At the end of July 1943, 11,776 Jews were recorded in one count as in work in Weissruthenien, which is lower than the 16,000 being discussed in NO-1831 (Wehrwirtschaftskommando Minsk, Sonderbericht über Arbeitseinsatzfragen, 26.8.43, NARA T77/1144/50). This would fit with some not being counted as in productive work if they were in the ghetto councils or working for the SS, or if the count was incomplete. Unfit Jews and children had almost all been murdered already in Weissruthenien and the Minsk ghetto, unlike in Lithuania. Latvia's surviving Jews in 1943 were essentially all able-bodied.
Thus, it is a mistake to add the 16,000 to the 22 + 50K figure. The 72,000 figure did not just apply to workers, and the issues being debated would have made little sense if all concerned overlooked or were ignorant of a separate set of books counting 'resettled' Jews who were working on different projects.
One can allow for small margins not being included in the 72,000 figure, but for Weissruthenien, the figures go - an overall estimate by Kube in November 1942 of 30,000 versus the SS counting 27,000 at the end of October; the SS talking of killing 11,000 Jews between November 1942 and April 1943, which included big ops in late 1942 that side-swiped ghettos ('Nuernberg' and 'Hamburg') but especially the 3,300 killed in the Slutsk ghetto in February 1943 as a side-gig during Operation 'Hornung'; multiple smaller executions earlier in 1943 and in the early summer in Minsk, and various other small ghettos/work camps wiped out. The Security Police commander Strauch spoke of 22,000 alive in April, 1943, but this was probably referring to earlier in the year; the maximum wiggle would be a few thousand above the 72K, The figures for Latvia and Lithuania are comprehensive.
In other words, Soviet documents, postwar coercive show trials, and 'survivor' storytelling form the vast bulk of every page within this book. Just imagine if revisionists had thousands of hours and infinite money to tear through it all. Do you suppose we'd find 100% accuracy and valid interpretations therein? 90%? 70%?Drawing upon a broad array of sources that includes previously inaccessible Soviet archives, postwar criminal investigations, and trial records of alleged perpetrators, and the records of the Society of Survivors of the Riga Ghetto, the authors have produced an in-depth study of the Riga ghetto...
I never said the document suggested they were killed. The AI slop items (btw you should link to your AI chats, I always did, to provide transparency about how "manipulated" they were) are not strong indications he thought they were in the GG.Callafangers wrote: ↑Fri Aug 29, 2025 12:16 amYou're just confused, bombsaway, it is yourself who is cherry-picking the document, as are other exterminationists.bombsaway wrote: ↑Thu Aug 28, 2025 9:21 pm
Your AI is selectively judging the paper. Ask it to adjudicate the meaning of this sentence since you're clearly incapable of it.
"Between 1937 and the beginning of 1943, the number of Jews in Europe is likely to have declined by an estimated 4 million"
This sentence makes clear that he is including the General Government in Europe, since there is no possible way you can reach the 4 million figure without accounting for the 3.3 million Jews that he reports were there in 1937.
Oof, again.There are several key pieces of textual evidence that show Korherr's language deliberately avoids claiming these 4 million Jews "died" or "left Europe completely":
1. Korherr explicitly lists multiple causes for the decline -- not just death or departure:
He states it occurred "in part through emigration, in part through excess mortality of the Jews in central and western Europe, in part through the evacuations especially in the Eastern territories where the population is stronger, which here are calculated as departure."
The key phrase is "which here are calculated as departure" -- this is an accounting methodology, not a factual claim about physical location.
2. He acknowledges incomplete information:
"One must not overlook that only a part of the deaths of Soviet Russian Jews in the occupied eastern territories are recorded here"
"All in all, migration streams (unknown to us) of the Jews within Russia into the Asiatic region"
"The stream of emigration of Jews from European countries outside of German influence is also a largely unknown quantity"
3. The 1.27+ million "durchgeschleust" (sifted/channeled/filtered) through the GG camps:
These Jews are counted toward his evacuation totals that contribute to the 4 million decline, yet the German word suggests they may still be within the General Government.
4. His careful qualifier:
He says the number "is likely to have declined" - this is statistical estimation language, not definitive factual assertion.
5. Above all, the methodological admission:
When he writes "evacuations...which here are calculated as departure," he's explicitly telling us this is an accounting convention for his statistical purposes, not necessarily reflecting actual geographical departure from Europe.
The text shows that Korherr is making a bureaucratic accounting claim about population statistics, not an empirical claim about 4 million people having physically died or left European territory.![]()
Nazgul also presented a statement from an SS guard from one of the transports, to Belzec, who stated that stops were made to change guards, repair carriages that were being damaged in escape attempts, to wait around the normal daily train services which were given priority and to refuel the trains. He also described an instance when some carriages were split from a transport and taken to a labour camp, but they returned full of other people from that camp.Callafangers wrote: ↑Thu Aug 28, 2025 7:05 pmForgot to mention, on the above, Nazgul has presented in the past Fahrplanordnung documents which clearly show lengthy, unexplained stops at various labor camps en route toward Treblinka and other Reinhardt camps. These stops are not explained by routine maintenance or known deliveries, etc., and only reasonably seem to align with lots of people offboarding/onboarding at each location.SanityCheck wrote:Projection isn't a good look, Callafangers, because it's you who've failed to make a case that there were any sievings out of workers en route to the Reinhardt camps
If millions of Jews were not murdered, one would expect millions of Jews to living in ghettos in 1945. But they had all closed down by the end of 1944.Callafangers wrote: ↑Thu Aug 28, 2025 7:10 pm The ghettos were controversial because it still entailed Jews within major cities and areas, across Europe...
Poland disappeared under the Nazis and it became regions, that were to part of a greater Germany. Lebensraum would lead to it becoming German land, populated by Germans with Poles acting as forced labourers.Callafangers wrote: ↑Thu Aug 28, 2025 8:45 pmI don't need to explain this further. It is sufficient to show that Korherr does not appear to include the GG as part of Europe, which is now done and sealed.