That definitely sounds like the word he used in the video.PangaeaProxima wrote: ↑Sat Apr 05, 2025 8:37 pmI think you mean "Geheimnisträger"? https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geheimnistr%C3%A4ger
That might explain why Mattogno's dimensions are so different from the Soviet report but it falls short of explaining why the dimensions from the contractor differ so much from the Soviet report.Wetzelrad wrote: ↑Sat Apr 05, 2025 9:40 pm Well, the most likely reason is that it was changed some time after their report in 1944. Possibly the Soviets altered it to make it more plausible as a gas chamber, the same as they carved holes in other roofs. Also possible is that someone took out the flue pipes during roof work or for some other innocent reason.
We can say confidently that you would not want to be standing nearby when the doors were first opened. There was one incident at Auschwitz that led Rudolf Hoess to send out this notice:Booze wrote: ↑Wed Apr 09, 2025 10:07 pmAfter an application of Zyklon in any of those chambers how does that effect the use of the B41 facility and surrounding area?
(Even without the post-war construction connecting these two buildings)
When they open the doors to aerate the cyanide gas do they have to evacuate everyone from the area for a period of time?
Why did they build it so close to the shower facility?
So your concern is not unfounded.A case of indisposition with slight symptoms of poisoning by hydrocyanic gas which occured today makes it necessary to warn all those participating in the gassings and all other SS members that in particular on opening rooms used for gassing SS not wearing masks must wait at least five hours and keep at a distance of at least 15 meters from the chamber. In addition, particular attention should be paid to the wind direction.
The way that Pressac declares this as established fact is typical of the technique used by the holocaust industry.Concentration used in homicidal gassing in Birkenau: 12g/m³ (1%), or 40 times the lethal (or mortal) dose.
I'll buy that, so long as those 3 rooms are mot thought as a homicidal gas chamberBooze wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 11:44 pm I definitely understand the idea of relying on cross ventilation to aerate the chamber. My thought was that they're going to have racks of clothes in those chambers. They're going to want to allow enough time to make certain that it's safe. And on some days you'll have less air movement than others.
As Wetzelrad said they have to keep ppl out of there for some length of time.
It just seems odd to me that they located it so close to the showers. They had their reasons I'm sure. It's a big camp, lots ppl and a lot of clothes, so It makes me wonder how many showers and de-infestation chambers they had.
Not by me, I don't believe there was a single homicidal gas chamber at any camp, I also doubt the T4 claims.Fred Ziffel wrote: ↑Fri Apr 11, 2025 4:37 amI'll buy that, so long as those 3 rooms are mot thought as a homicidal gas chamberBooze wrote: ↑Thu Apr 10, 2025 11:44 pm I definitely understand the idea of relying on cross ventilation to aerate the chamber. My thought was that they're going to have racks of clothes in those chambers. They're going to want to allow enough time to make certain that it's safe. And on some days you'll have less air movement than others.
As Wetzelrad said they have to keep ppl out of there for some length of time.
It just seems odd to me that they located it so close to the showers. They had their reasons I'm sure. It's a big camp, lots ppl and a lot of clothes, so It makes me wonder how many showers and de-infestation chambers they had.
I wasn't able to find that paper, but I do see that the Majdanek website has a database of 56,564 prisoners, many of which are marked as "released" with a date given. I decided to look up some notable witnesses.According to the Polish historians, 45,000 prisoners were transferred from Majdanek to other camps, 20,000 were released, a few hundred managed to escape, and 1,500 were liberated by the Red Army on July 23, 1944. The number of transferred prisoners verifiable through contemporary camp documentation is only slightly higher than 35,000 but since that documentation is incomplete, the real figure might very well be 10,000 higher than that. The – astonishingly high – number of 20,000 released prisoners is never substantiated through documentary sources in the Polish literature on the subject; we accept it, however, because especially in this case there is no reason why it should have been deliberately exaggerated. On the contrary, that number effectively undermines the assumption that Majdanek was an “extermination camp,” since the released inmates would have spread their news of the mass murders immediately all over Poland, and the alleged subsequent attempts of the Germans at “covering up their deeds” would have become futile.
Concentration Camp Majdanek: A Historical and Technical Study by Jürgen Graf and Carlo Mattogno, p.263
It must be pointed out that in any normal population women and children make up the majority, so if this is true of released prisoners it is not surprising or noteworthy. The rest of the statement demands justification, but I don't think we'll get it from a museum exhibit.The display includes photographs of the former inmates, which look like prison mug shots, taken with a good quality German camera. Along with each photograph is an explanation of what happened to the prisoner. The majority of them look Slavic and have Polish names. According to this exhibit, 18,000 prisoners were released, but the guidebook says 20,000 were released. Those who were released were mostly women and children who were held as hostages in an attempt to stop partisan activity or hostages who were taken as punishment for the civilians in the area not meeting their quote of agricultural products which they had been ordered to supply to the German occupation. The hostages wore the red triangle of political prisoners.
Why do the majority seem to be Polish?Wetzelrad wrote: ↑Wed Apr 16, 2025 8:29 pmThe display includes photographs of the former inmates, which look like prison mug shots, taken with a good quality German camera. Along with each photograph is an explanation of what happened to the prisoner. The majority of them look Slavic and have Polish names.