Here.bombsaway wrote: ↑Thu Jul 16, 2026 9:39 pmYeah. Mattogno doesn't address the typewriter analysis in any substantive wayStubble wrote: ↑Thu Jul 16, 2026 8:55 pm Thanks Bombsaway.
You, do understand that document is very contentious, and why? Or no?
For inquiring minds, Mattogno goes over this particular document on p107 of Holocaust Handbook #40 Deliveries of Coke, Wood and Zyklon B to Auschwitz
Neither Proof Nor Trace for the Holocaust
https://holocausthandbooks.com/book/del ... auschwitz/
Spoiler
“Holocaust Controversies” and the Franke-Gricksch Report
In August 2019, bloggers of the web site “Holocaust Controversies” published
the scan of a carbon copy of what they claim to be the original text of the al-
leged Franke-Gricksch Report.149 It was a sensational discovery, as they put it.
In general, I only consider in my books what has been published in paper
form, but in this case I make an exception.
Before I begin, some general statements about historiographic methods are
in order.
https://chatgpt.com/s/t_6a594f3a5530819 ... 87e9c0dcfa
couldn't have said it better AI.Spoiler
Mattogno supplies no alternative typescript examination, no examples showing that a production series routinely possessed the same four individualized defects, and no evidence that the particular office machine was available to Lipman or another alleged fabricator after the war. His first two responses establish abstract possibilities, not evidence for either possibility in this case.
You should make a separate thread for FG with your explanation for the type match. Is it Coincidence?
There's obviously a defect, but yeah so it was coincidence? That fabricated document matched a signature related to FG?
You're not answering the question. I assume it's not a coincidence... therefore the conspirators plausibly might have done X. What is X
Are you claiming to have competence in typewriter analysis?
To be on the safe side, we had photographs of the documents examined by a qualified expert on typescripts. According to this expert opinion, both the report on Auschwitz (document "A") and the Krüger letter (document "B") were written with the font AR 1 from the company Ransmayer & Rodrian with a layout in use since 1930. The analysis concludes the following:
"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)
Well there are two possibilities, happy coincidence on the part of the forgers, or that they did it intentionally. I don't think you would argue for coincidence, so we're left with they purposefully rigged up the same or a similar typewriter for the purposes of their scheme. This is not really very speculative, from a revisionist frame.Stubble wrote: ↑Fri Jul 17, 2026 12:01 am We have no idea when this would have transpired, exactly. We don't have a proper chain of custody of the document.
Ostensibly the real appendix could have been replaced with this, frankly garbage, over half a decade after the war.
'Oh, well, they would have had to have the right typewriter, or, have made one to match'
Neither of those are out of the realm of possibility and both assume this is not a common set of defects...How many coins have the same misstrike, for example? Sometimes, things wear down, and manufacturing continues with the same go no go tolerance...
The guy refers to stuff that didn't exist, did he fucking time travel bombsaway? He fired up Die Glocke for his trip to Auschwitz-Birkenau?