Nazgul wrote: ↑Tue Oct 14, 2025 3:30 am
bombsaway wrote: ↑Tue Oct 14, 2025 1:16 am
Why, did it happen? Are there records of fuel requisition for it? Based on these facts you should be a Dresden cremation denier
The Dresden bodies were only scorched not cremated, though many were cremated in the firestorm. Germany's resource shortages during WWII affected civilians, industry, and the war effort. Rationing, substitutes, and
fuel shortages weakened the economy and military. The reality is that it was fuel shortages that brought the downfall of the Third Reich.
Considering this fact, they would not waste fuel on burning corpses.
What evidence do you have that they were merely scorched? Does scorching produce ash, ascertainable in cubic meters, and baggable, pourable? In that case perhaps the dead at the extermination camps were also merely scorched.
The document StAD, Marstall- und Bestattungsamt, Nachtrag I - Schreiben, 4.3.1945, referred to in Matthias Neutzner, Martha Heinrich Acht, pp. 91, 93 and 221, partially quoted in the excerpt from Martha Heinrich Acht transcribed and translated here (emphasis added):
Thousands of corpses still had to be retrieved and buried. A task that the available forces were not up to: thus, after Gauleiter and city administration had agreed, corpses were collected on the sealed-off Altmarkt, registered and finally burned. This happened »in consideration of the quickly progressing decomposition and the existing extraordinary difficulties in retrieving [the corpses] as well as the lack of suitable vehicles for transportation to cemeteries«, was stated in the Order Police's final report. For two weeks the old market place in the city center became a crematorium. On 5 March the corpses collected in the streets had been retrieved, the pyres gone out. »By my estimate, 8 - 10 cubic meters of ash lay on the Altmarkt«, was reported to the city administration the day before. »The Brigadeführer wished that this ash be loaded into recipients (boxes or sacks) and transported to the Heidefriedhof, where it is to be sunk into the earth at the place marked in lead on the map. It is not necessary to leave the boxes or sacks in the soil. You shall thus pour the ash from the transport recipients into the soil, so that the recipients can be reused several times. Transport should start on Tuesday.«
Callafangers wrote: ↑Tue Oct 14, 2025 1:37 am
bombsaway wrote: ↑Tue Oct 14, 2025 1:16 am
Why, did it happen? Are there records of fuel requisition for it? Based on these facts you should be a Dresden cremation denier
This is how far you have fallen, eh, bombsaway? Red herrings left and right, won't even attempt to defend your theory? You're saying it was liquid fuel at AR camps, I'm just asking to see what evidence you base this upon.
Nothing at all, then?
Yeah I posted the witness testimony saying liquid fuel was used on the first page.