Apologies getting to this late, and it seems I am still in time and Confused Jew hasn't been banned just yet. Some of the delay was caused by needing to actually verify if Confused Jew's quotes were real, given that he has been caught (in this thread nonetheless) fabricating and mis-attributing quotes, which is something I think we all take seriously. I credit the ever vigilant Wetzelrad for catching multiple of these fabrication.
Anyway onto the main course of this slop.
ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Sat Nov 01, 2025 3:09 am
That is not "AI garbage". If you can't answer the question then fine, but banning me because you can't answer is lame.
This is directly from the Markiewicz report.
10 samples of plaster from the delousing chamber (Block No 3 at Auschwitz), 10 samples from gas chamber ruins and, in addition, 2 control samples from the buildings which, as living quarters, had not been in contact with hydrogen cyanide. Out of the 10 samples from the delousing chamber, seven contained cyanogen compounds at concentrations from 9 to 147 µg in conversion to potassium cyanide (which was used to construct the calibration curve) and 100 g of material. As far as the ruins are concerned, the presence of cyanide was demonstrated only in the sample from the ruins of Crematorium Chamber No II at Birkenau. Neither of the control samples contained cyanides.
If you can't explain why the controls expectedly showed no cyanide while the homicidal chamber did using the same exact method, you need to explain how it got contaminated. Otherwise, you are not doing serious scientific investigation and are just ignoring evidence because it disconfirms your theory.
Confused Jew's challenge here has been underlined by me, and I will answer it with his own quote from upthread, which was a correct quote:
ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Thu Oct 30, 2025 10:17 pm
....If results are near detection limits and possibly ambiguous,
the only valid conclusion is “inconclusive data”, not “absence of residues.” Equivocal or low-signal measurements don’t demonstrate nonexistence — they just mean you can’t tell.
Now, the careful reader will notice that while Rudolf produces his results in the range of mg/kg which is the equivalent of PPM (parts per million), Markiewicz produces his results in µg/kg which is the quivalent of PPB (parts per billion). Ironically enough, Confused Jew continues in a subsequent thread to explain why this is problematic (for him), yet uses this as a critique againsts Rudolf (!):
ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Sat Nov 01, 2025 4:03 am
Here Rudolf tries to explain away the results from the Markiewicz study and doesn't do a very good job in my opinion.
...when considering that they determined the cyanide content using photometry, we need to keep in mind that Meeussen et al. had clearly established that major amounts of carbonate can consistently result in reproducible false positives (see Table 26 on p. 302). It is therefore not far-fetched to posit that the readings Markiewicz and his colleagues obtained from their masonry samples did not reflect their cyanide content but to a major degree or maybe even exclusively their carbonate content.
This is not Rudolf "explaining away" the results, but rather simply "explaining" the purpose of a detection limit. I'm sorry Confused Jew, but your opinion that this isn't a good job, is irrelevant here.
So to address the original challenge with finality: the controls and homicidal gas chamber both reflect readings at or below the detection limit, which renders them unreliable according to Confused Jew's own logic earlier in the thread. He himself calls it
"inconclusive data"
But! It gets worse for Confused Jew. He opens this very thread by attacking Rudolf for lack of reproducability. He has so far ignored my multiple explanations that it is Rudolf, not Markiewicz, who sought to reproduce results at or below the threshold. Here is me explaining this to Confused Jew upthread:
HansHill wrote: ↑Fri Oct 31, 2025 10:27 am
I think you are getting confused here. What the lack of reproducibility means in this instance is that the Fresenius Institute detected anomalous low-levels of HcN below the detection limit. The correct thing to do, is to corroborate these results and see can a positive be found again. When repeated by the Institute in Stuttgart, these false positives
were not found again. This means Rudolf is very likely to be right, in that they were false positives, as they were, as described, non-replicable.
Here Confused Jew gets fiesty and makes another challenge:
ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Sat Nov 01, 2025 4:03 am
Since all of you here are chemistry experts, would you like to explain to me how this works exactly and also why there was a false positive in the homicidal chamber but not in the living quarter controls?
This has been asked and answered but I will address it yet again anyway. According to Confused Jew's own logic here:
ConfusedJew wrote: ↑Thu Oct 30, 2025 10:17 pm
5. Analytically, being near a detection limit means signal-to-noise is low — not that the signal is false. Standard lab practice would report such results as trace detected,
repeat tests, or improve sensitivity — not declare that nothing meaningful exists. The book offers no replicate data, calibration curves, or blank controls to justify calling these values “near detection limit” in the first place.
Markiewicz did NOT do this. Read that again - Markiewicz did not follow what CJ describes as "standard lab practice". Markiewicz simply denotes that readings
at or below the detection limits are positives (!!) and moves on. No repeat tests, as Confused Jew is calling for here, as would be standard. Why the double standard Confused Jew? Rudolf has met his obligation here with a repeat test in the Stuttgart Institute, Markiewicz didn't, and you attacked Rudolf for what Markiewicz failed to do?
I will post this now and await more replies, as Mr Stubble has noted upthread, Confused Jew has already not responded to my earlier series of replies and I think he has alot of "research" to do.
That is, if he survives a final ban.