Stubble wrote: ↑Fri Jul 17, 2026 2:51 am
I also don't have to give a forgery artist any props. It is tradecraft. I would fully expect a professional to use correct paper, ink, equipment etc.
You would not expect them to track down a typewriter, or break one in a very specific way, no this is not typical. This would require, at the very least, a great deal of energy.
We have misrepresented the expert report. The expert only confirmed the model of typewriter, and, without the original could not confirm they were typed on the same machine.
I stress again that the biggest problem here is the content, not that it was typed on paper. You seem to think a forger would not use time correct materials or the same model typewriter to make a forgery. This omits the fact that a forger would and this isn't even a complex forgery. It is literally just words on paper.
If I were to guess why no t4 personnel were chosen to perform gassing that had experience with gassing, it would be because THERE WERE NONE.
Not only time correct materials bro, they made it look like the EXACT same typewriter, and you can examine the high def copies of the files to see this is true and the discrepancies (very slight almost unnoticeable manufacturing defects) line up.
"The expert only confirmed the model of typewriter, and, without the original could not confirm they were typed on the same machine."
Utter poppycock. The expert said "The matching system features and type features justify the conclusion that the documents "A" and "B" were with a great probability [mit großer Wahrscheinlichkeit] written with one and the same typewriter."
Stubble wrote: ↑Fri Jul 17, 2026 4:02 pm
You are misrepresenting the expert findings. He said same model, and, because of the carbon, could not confirm the same typewriter.
A higher probability statement was not possible because the examined documents were not available as originals.
The part of the quote, you docked.
I quoted that before so I felt no need to again.
By higher probability statement, he means higher probability than "great probability".
No he says a higher probability than great probability is not ascertainable without the originals.
"The matching system features and type features justify the conclusion that the documents "A" and "B" were with a great probability [mit großer Wahrscheinlichkeit] written with one and the same typewriter. A higher probability statement was not possible because the examined documents were not available as originals."
(expert opinion of 3 April 2019 by Bernhard Haas, Sachverständiger für Maschinenschriften, provided to the author)
Again, even granting the machine out of hand doesn't change the problems with the document.
I am again forced to ask, did he travel not just through space, but, through time, in Die Glocke? I understand you are hyperfocused on a guy saying 'it was probably typed on this typewriter', ultimately, it doesn't matter if it was printed on a model 85 newspaper rotary press, or the typewriter in the office of the purported author...it's still fabricated.
If I were to guess why no t4 personnel were chosen to perform gassing that had experience with gassing, it would be because THERE WERE NONE.
Almost any document imaginable could be fabricated by entities skilled and motivated enough. But people still look at identifying marks when judging provenance, why?