Stubble wrote: ↑Thu May 08, 2025 10:29 am
The most thorough examination I'm aware of is the Kola study. There is a thread on it here. They found actual evidence of human remains. Not in the quantity used to calculate the 6,000,000, but human remains none the less.
In my opinion, the Kola study thoroughly undermines the thesis of 'aktion 1005' which has always been used to justify the distinct
lack of human remains.
So far as the burden of proof goes, the burden of proof always falls to positive claims as you can not prove a negative.
I know what is needed, to prove there were no gas chambers inside the A-B Kremas. I know how to prove a negative claim. It is the same evidence gathering process that is used to prove a positive claim, such as, that there were gas chambers inside the Kremas. If evidence is gathered from Krema workers, documents, circumstances, physical items, and that evidence proves the Kremas were used for a purpose other than gassings, then gassings is proven not to have happened.
The problem so-called revisionists have, is that there is no evidence to prove what did happen inside the Kremas, that was not gassings. By proving what did happen, the negative has been proven. Those revisionists do try to revise the history of the Kremas, to they were used as delousing chambers, showers, corpse stores or bomb shelters. But, they cannot find sufficient evidence to prove their claims, which is why they cannot reach any agreement and they contradict each other.
I can prove the D-Day landings were not on the beaches of Belgium. I can do that by interviewing Belgian residents and German soldiers based there, would report that on D-Day, no Allied soldiers landed on the beaches. I would find no film or photos of landings there, no Allied plans, nothing. I have now proved a negative.
So-called revisionists, with their ignorance about investigations, think that it is not possible to prove a negative, when in fact it is quite simple to do so.