I will give some behind-the-scenes commentary to explain my approach.
-I decided to write for a skeptical (or at least curious) reader. I adopted an easy going tone, no outrage, no sanctimonious condemnations, no emotional manipulation, no attempt to bully the reader.
-I gave a reasonably comprehensive, largely chronological overview of the orthodox history from a
functionalist perspective. I wanted to focus on the best
positive evidence, but I thought it best to present this with context.
-I made various concessions toward the end (the "Easy Targets" section). I understand why anti-revisionists don't do this (slippery slope concerns), but I think it's better to inb4 these things. Defending the Soviet reports for example is a losing game and it's flabbergasting to me that so many of them choose to die on that hill.
-I made use of internal revisionist debates and/or concessions (the more normal approach is to avoid directly discussing revisionists, or if they do engage to do so in a very nitpicky way). I am a big fan of this technique (I also used it here:
viewtopic.php?t=70) because people who are new to a topic usually can't evaluate the evidence very well on their own. But if you can cite people from the other side admitting something, then people will feel pretty confident that it's a strong point even if they don't entirely follow everything. I suspect the reason this isn't done much is that they don't want to lead people to the revisionist literature, and they don't actually want people to have a clear picture of the overall debate.
-I focused mostly on documentary evidence (along with some demographic arguments). I think those points are
relatively stronger for them.
-I referred to testimonial evidence in general and quoted a little bit of it but not much. People who find testimonies convincing will be convinced off the bat. No need to bother with them. A really thorough defense of the testimonial evidence from an orthodox perspective would be quite the project, way beyond what I was willing to do for this short essay. I think it'd be tough.
-Physical evidence is another weak point, and so thought it wise not to emphasize these topics but I knew I couldn't ignore this completely. There was not enough space to address everything, so I decided to focus mostly on Pressac (even though his arguments are mostly documentary) and the Leuchter report (which does have vulnerabilities). The AR forensics I think is a tough sell, so I decided to avoid it. The idea is that if the reader finds the Leucher critiques convincing, they might discount the revisionist forensic arguments more generally.
-Pilgrim is correct that I did not define "Holocaust." In fact, I mostly avoided using that word at all in most of the article. I also avoided discussing the six million figure (another losing point). My thinking was that I would try to establish mass killing and extermination and would rely on the discussion of demographics and deportations to establish a rough scale of say 4+ million which is good enough for most people. Unless the revisions are really dramatic, I don't think most people care.
Quite a lot of anti-revisionist presentations do not really develop their arguments much. Often if feels like a grab bag of material presented almost a random. I tried to cite the documents with more context and I tried to buttress them with additional support. For example, we've all seen the Goebbels diary entry that's always quoted. I quoted it, but I tried to establish some context within a discussion of AR and I cited
revisionists like Graf admitting to it being a difficult document and Irving endorsing the authenticity. This is much better than the usual "document dump" approach, imo.
I will not provide a full rebuttal here, but I (and others) have countered a lot of these points in prior posts. These for example.
viewtopic.php?t=340
viewtopic.php?t=514
viewtopic.php?t=443
There are individual documents where revisionist interpretations may seem strained. And you can cherry-pick and string these together like I have done in the essay. But I don't actually think it's necessary to have a perfect slam dunk explanation for every single document. The full context and meaning of individual documents may not be possible to determine in every case. There could be some inauthentic documents where forgery cannot be satisfactorily proved. What matters is the evidence in total. And if you notice, on the documentary evidence, it's very skewed toward Einsatzgruppen and euthanasia. This is because those are the parts of the story that have more of a historical basis. And it underscores the dearth of evidence for the other parts (which are frankly the parts that matter).
If I were to write a full response to this, I would hammer the testimonies which are really the basis for the whole thing. I probably should have tried to inb4 that in the essay, but I couldn't think of good way to do it. I would also of course hammer the physical evidence.