borjastick wrote: ↑Thu Jun 25, 2026 8:48 am Why was Auschwitz not gripped with deprivation, bodies piled high and walking disease ridden inmates when those pesky Russkies found it?














Nobody claimed that there was no typhus epidemic in the eastern camps (typhus was mostly an Eastern European disease at that time after all) and that the Soviets didn't use typhus victims to make atrocity propaganda. But the enormity of the health disaster filmed and photographed in the western camps by the Anglo-American Allies in April and May 1945 convinced almost everyone (including the defendants themselves at the Nuremberg parody of justice!) that the "Holocaust" was true and it still does to this day. Atrocity stories have a small, short-lived impact on the minds that have not been preconditioned by shocking images such as the miscaptioned pics of the huge health disaster that devastated the last operational concentration camps of the collapsing Third Reich (i.e. the western camps, located at Dachau, Buchenwald and Belsen). And many people still remembered in 1945 that they had heard the same atrocity stories 30 years ealier and that it had been admitted later that these were propaganda lies. Impossible to sell them the Holocaust story without the Belsen-Buchenwald-Dachau Grand Guignol staged by the All-Lies in the spring of 1945.Wetzelrad wrote: ↑Fri Jun 26, 2026 11:24 pm I disagree somewhat with the premise. Here is a quick breakdown in chronological order, sourced mainly from Wikipedia, numbers as reported.
In my opinion, the west and east camps were similar and were portrayed similarly at war's end. Not hugely different. Where they do differ, it results from three things: the date of liberation, the state the camps were in, and how the Allies chose to portray them.
That is, the eastern camps were liberated earlier by several months, which meant they avoided some of the carnage caused by starvation and disease. They also had simply fewer prisoners left by the time liberators arrived. Most of their prisoner population had in fact been evacuated west, especially to Belsen. When the western camps were liberated, they had several times the population of the eastern camps, so it shouldn't be surprising if they had several times as many deaths.
Grand Guignol
Promotional poster for a Grand Guignol performance called "The Man Who Killed Death"
The Théâtre du Grand-Guignol was a theater in the Pigalle district of Paris (7, cité Chaptal). From its opening in 1897 until its closing in 1962, it specialized in horror shows. Its name is often used as a general term for graphic, amoral horror entertainment, a genre popular from Elizabethan and Jacobean theater to today's splatter films.
In a typical Grand Guignol performance patrons would see five or six short plays, all in a style that attempted to be brutally true to the theater's naturalistic ideals. The most popular and best-known were the horror plays, which featured a distinctly bleak worldview and gory special effects, particularly in their climaxes. The horrors depicted at Grand Guignol were generally not supernatural; rather these plays often explored altered states like insanity, hypnosis, or panic.
A former chapel, the theatre's previous life was evident in the boxes — which looked like confessionals — and in the angels over the orchestra. Although the architecture created frustrating obstacles, the design that was initially a predicament ultimately became beneficial to the marketing of the theatre. The opaque furniture and gothic structures placed sporadically on the walls of the building exude a feeling of eeriness from the moment of entrance. People came to this theatre for an experience, not only to see a show. The audience at Grand Guignol endured the terror of the shows because they wanted to be filled with strong "feelings" of something. Many attended the shows to get a feeling of sexual arousal.
A 1937 scene from Grand Guignol
Audiences had strong reactions to the new disturbing themes the horror plays presented. One of the most prevalent themes staged at the Grand-Guignol was the demoralization and corruption of science. The "evil doctor" was a recurring trope in the horror shows performed. During the time, curiosity and skepticism ravaged science and medicine. The depiction of scientists at the Grand-Guignol reflected the public attitude of fear and disdain. Medical science held a reputation of "terror and peculiar infamy".
Audiences waned in the years following World War II, and the Grand Guignol closed its doors in 1962. Management attributed the closure in part to the fact that the theater's faux horrors had been eclipsed by the actual events of the Holocaust two decades earlier. "We could never equal Buchenwald," said its final director, Charles Nonon. "Before the war, everyone felt that what was happening onstage was impossible. Now we know that these things, and worse, are possible in reality."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Guignol







borjastick wrote: ↑Thu Jun 25, 2026 8:48 am Why was Auschwitz not gripped with deprivation, bodies piled high and walking disease ridden inmates when those pesky Russkies found it?
... as demonstrated by the unillustrated (no typhus victims piled high and no still-standing crematories, no horror pictures for atrocity propaganda) and quite unnoticed fanciful newspaper "report" on the Soviet capture of Auschwitz that was published in February 1945.Waldgänger wrote: ↑Sat Jul 04, 2026 9:27 pm The war situation in January 1945 (when Auschwitz was taken) was nowhere near as catastrophic as in April 1945 (when the Western camps were found). The front had been mostly static, East & West, during Oct-Dec. Three months is a long time to prepare for wrapping up operations and evacuating people. The Germans were able to make an orderly exit from Auschwitz between Jan. 17-20.
What remained of German forces ("old men and boys") three months later had no ability to do this organisationally, and that's ignoring supply and motivation to do it properly. It was pure chaos; and after all, it only takes a few days of food deliveries ceasing before overworked, exhausted, diseased people to start dying. If the Western Allies had discovered the camps just a month or two before they did, the sight would've been different.


Well, you're right that that is a relevant consideration. Despite that, Majdanek historians claim the inmates were starving toward the end. They claim that entire stretches of grass were eaten by inmates.
I once read a transcript for it, but I wasn't totally satisfied with the translation. I think it's this one:
Sticks to the definition of a conspiracy theory if I'm asked.

No one claims that Stalin's scorched earth policy was a conspiracy to conceal something criminal; this only reversed in relation to Germany when they found Katyn.Eye of Zyclone wrote: ↑Tue Jul 07, 2026 12:08 pm
Sticks to the definition of a conspiracy theory if I'm asked.
Sounds very much like "alien spaceships are nowhere to be seen because world leaders are hiding them from the population"...
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