On consistency of revisionists vs holohoaxers
Posted: Wed Jun 18, 2025 1:44 pm
Nessie frequently says the holohoaxer side is in complete agreement and is therefore correct while revisionists supposedly cannot agree among themselves and are therefore wrong.
Wildly contradictory positions often do reflect inadequate evidence or very conjectural interpretations, but if hard evidence is in fact lacking then it is more honest to have disagreement than to present a fraudulent certainty.
How Consistent or Inconsistent Are Revisionists?
Contrary to Nessie, revisionists are in reasonably good agreement. The main example he harps on is over potential secondary uses for the Birkenau Kremas where there is the Butz/Crowell air raid shelter hypothesis vs Mattogno's disinfestation hypothesis. It is fallacious to say that disagreement per se disproves either position. It is fair to say that such disagreement does indicate that the evidence for either position is not conclusive (note that this is not the same thing as not true). But so what? This is also true of the mass homicidal gassing position. The mass gassing position has the additional problem of denying the well-established primary use which was corpse storage.
Sometimes there is some uncertainty over interpretation. Interpreting construction documents decades after the fact without complete context is generally hard. Nessie pretends like it is easy. It is only "easy" for him because he is working from a predetermined conclusion.
How Consistent is the Orthodox Side?
Nessie also implies that the orthodox side is consistent. Because they all agreement on the gas chambers, for example. But if Nessie had ever bothered to read any of the Holocaust literature (I can tell from his ignorance that he never has even after all these years), he would know that there are major inconsistencies in the Holocaust histories, especially if you look at how the story has shifted over time.
On the Birkenau Kremas, Nessie says revisionists are inconsistent while being totally ignorant of what his own side says about this. The story for years was that these facilities were planned from the beginning as extermination facilities with gas chambers. But in the late 1980s, Pressac gave a very different story.
The "final solution" is another place where we find major contradictions. Some have argued that Hitler was planning to exterminate the Jews from the 1920s and that the extermination program kicked into high gear around the time of Barbarossa. The Goering decree in the summer of 1941 is interpreted as an extermination order. The Nuremberg judgment also concluded that the "final solution" began in the summer of 1941. Meanwhile others say Hitler was not planning a full extermination until late in 1941, months later. Gerlach claims Hitler made the decision in December 1941 (based on rather flimsy evidence). This is the view Nick endorses. Browning says October 1941 based on his differing interpretations. The more modern theories also stress the more gradual and improvised nature of the process.
We could add to this the many contradictions over numbers.
The implication that the more "consistent" side must also have the stronger case is dubious to begin with. The Holocaust side is indeed very "consistent" in some respects, as are all religions. However, this is a reflection of dogmatism rather than justified certainty. Conversely, disagreement is not necessarily bad but is often a healthy sign of rigorous investigation.Nessie wrote: ↑Wed Jun 18, 2025 9:13 am Back on topic, and away from attacks on a forum member, having been there too many times before, a question about evidence and implementation.
Can any so-called revisionist explain why, when they try to revise history, they come up with so many alternatives?
For me, the reason is because of their failure to evidence any revised alternative in a convincing way. They are all so unconvincing that none are able to appeal to a majority and for there to be a consensus.
Wildly contradictory positions often do reflect inadequate evidence or very conjectural interpretations, but if hard evidence is in fact lacking then it is more honest to have disagreement than to present a fraudulent certainty.
How Consistent or Inconsistent Are Revisionists?
Contrary to Nessie, revisionists are in reasonably good agreement. The main example he harps on is over potential secondary uses for the Birkenau Kremas where there is the Butz/Crowell air raid shelter hypothesis vs Mattogno's disinfestation hypothesis. It is fallacious to say that disagreement per se disproves either position. It is fair to say that such disagreement does indicate that the evidence for either position is not conclusive (note that this is not the same thing as not true). But so what? This is also true of the mass homicidal gassing position. The mass gassing position has the additional problem of denying the well-established primary use which was corpse storage.
Sometimes there is some uncertainty over interpretation. Interpreting construction documents decades after the fact without complete context is generally hard. Nessie pretends like it is easy. It is only "easy" for him because he is working from a predetermined conclusion.
How Consistent is the Orthodox Side?
Nessie also implies that the orthodox side is consistent. Because they all agreement on the gas chambers, for example. But if Nessie had ever bothered to read any of the Holocaust literature (I can tell from his ignorance that he never has even after all these years), he would know that there are major inconsistencies in the Holocaust histories, especially if you look at how the story has shifted over time.
On the Birkenau Kremas, Nessie says revisionists are inconsistent while being totally ignorant of what his own side says about this. The story for years was that these facilities were planned from the beginning as extermination facilities with gas chambers. But in the late 1980s, Pressac gave a very different story.
Concerning the history of the camp, it could be demonstrated that the Kremas had started off as normal sanitary facilities; then later changed into liquidation centers for “Jews unable to work”, that is women, children and the elderly.
We see here that the orthodox side has been anything but consistent.What I indicate as being " criminal traces" arise from the difference between the normal installations of a normal crematory, one intended just to incinerate the dead and primarily including one or more mortuaries, along with an autopsy room which was legally mandated and a room for furnaces and coke storage; and those in an abnormal crematory which would have a homicidal gas chamber. This installation or this transformation required particular pieces of equipment which one finds mention of in the SS correspondence with the civilian firms or in their building site logs. A better definition would be “traces of criminal installations”. The search for such “traces” would not be possible if the Kremas had a criminal beginning, as the Polish historians believed for 40 years.
The "final solution" is another place where we find major contradictions. Some have argued that Hitler was planning to exterminate the Jews from the 1920s and that the extermination program kicked into high gear around the time of Barbarossa. The Goering decree in the summer of 1941 is interpreted as an extermination order. The Nuremberg judgment also concluded that the "final solution" began in the summer of 1941. Meanwhile others say Hitler was not planning a full extermination until late in 1941, months later. Gerlach claims Hitler made the decision in December 1941 (based on rather flimsy evidence). This is the view Nick endorses. Browning says October 1941 based on his differing interpretations. The more modern theories also stress the more gradual and improvised nature of the process.
We could add to this the many contradictions over numbers.