Nessie wrote: ↑Tue Apr 14, 2026 10:51 am
Holocaust historians have gathered the evidence left behind by the Nazis to determine the narrative of what took place [...]
No, they haven't. The historians only came in after the Soviet show trials, after the camps had been ransacked and their guards killed, and after the IMT had made a joke of international law. The historians then took the evidence produced by the Allies and the narrative produced in large part by propagandist authors, and they gave it a seal of legitimacy. This is evident from the fact that Hilberg's history was basically the same as the IMT indictment, which was basically the same as what the newspapers and resistance fighters wrote while the war was still ongoing.
The idea that any historian approached this independently or relied primarily on evidence that they "gathered" themselves is wrong and dishonest.
Nessie wrote: ↑Tue Apr 14, 2026 10:51 am
Their opinion has had little to do with the narrative.
Who would ever believe this? Do Holocaust historians choose to write about the Holocaust just out of purely academic interest? When so many of them uncritically cited the Soviet claim of 4 million dead at Auschwitz, you think that's because they're unbiased robots?
Nessie wrote: ↑Tue Apr 14, 2026 10:51 am
Nessie wrote: ↑Thu Apr 02, 2026 6:47 am
The historian's methodology is evidence based and designed to produce a history of events and reach a proven conclusion. They assess witnesses using the studies of memory, recall and estimation and corroboration.
Totally ridiculous. In all the narrative-aligned Holocaust history books I've read and referenced, I haven't seen a single one make an assessment of that kind. I realize this is one of your favorite talking points, but where is it in the literature? Which historians have you seen cite a study about memory, estimation, or corroboration?
A history of the Holocaust is not going to include details about methodology, as that is a separate subject. I have seen revisionists quoting historians who have commented on the credibility of certain witnesses. Historians tend not to use certain witnesses [...]
Therefore your statement above was false. It does not actually describe any historian. It's just something you made up to defend them.
Nessie wrote: ↑Tue Apr 14, 2026 10:51 am
Kurt Gerstein is another who is widely acknowledged by historians to have credibility issues. That is because their recollection of events is not considered to be that accurate, or reliable.
Nessie wrote: ↑Tue Apr 14, 2026 10:51 am
What you then fail to take into account, is that Hoess and Gerstein are corroborated.
Oh, brother.
Putting aside most of this, my point is that Hilberg cited Gerstein repeatedly but did nothing to note those credibility issues. Is it not maybe relevant to inform the innocent reader that Gerstein claimed 25 million were killed in camps alone? Or some summary words to that effect? Why didn't he?
Nessie wrote: ↑Tue Apr 14, 2026 10:51 am
Has the witness got a reason to lie? Why would Gerstein lie about gassings? What would his motive be and can that motive be proved?
Yes, and not only for the usual reasons of wanting favorable treatment from prosecutors. You should read
A Spy For God by Pierre Joffroy. In conversation with Baron Goran von Otter in 1942, Gerstein claimed he joined the SS to investigate the Nazis, and he presented his idea on how to bring down Hitler:
Gerstein's idea was that the Allied air forces, acting on Swedish information, should drop millions of leaflets into Germany, telling the German people what was going on, so that then they would rebel against Hitler.
A witness who claimed to have been an anti-Nazi infiltrator should be properly understood by historians to have cause to lie against the Nazis. He especially demonstrated this motive in suggesting the distribution of propaganda leaflets carrying his invented gassing story. Gerstein also had a long history of anti-Nazi offences prior to the war, which includes spreading propaganda and treason. Despite all this, historians did and still do take his confessions very seriously.
Nessie wrote: ↑Tue Apr 14, 2026 10:51 am
Revisionists take witness claims about the gas chambers, over how many people fitted inside, what gas was used, how long the process took and the limited information we have about the ventilation and declare the gas chambers were a physical impossibility, the witnesses lied. They ignore the evidenced fact that the Nazis did build and operate numerous gas chambers for delousing clothing, so it stands to reason they could build one that could be used to kill people.
Don't let me/us discourage you from making this argument. I suspect it is very helpful in persuading neutral observers.
Nessie wrote: ↑Tue Apr 14, 2026 10:51 am
I have just defenced Gerstein as a witness and explained that he is corroborated and that he is not reliable or credible on the details, as he made mistakes. I can do the same with any other witness you care to name.
Well, I'm not going to name more witnesses here, but you're welcome to do that where appropriate.
I do take amusement from your dual-sided approach to Gerstein. In the world outside the Holocaust, all people agree that mass killing of innocents is an abominable crime, and an accusation thereof is not to be made lightly. Were such an accusation to be made, the greatest skepticism and doubt would be applied not to minor details but to the act of killing itself. Where minor details are found to be wrong, it would only tend to support that the major claim is also wrong. If the accuser majorly erred in describing the murder weapon, the number of dead, and other parts of his story, third parties would naturally accuse him of being a liar. This is an assessment you can make of Gerstein even without any consideration of his person.
For strange reasons you choose to say the accuser is wrong in all these provable ways but still truthful about the part of his story that is the least likely to be true and most deserving of skepticism. He is "corroborated"? I would say that he discredits his corroborators.