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Questions About the Holocaust
-- Most historical events are mentioned less as time
marches on -- but not the Holocaust. It is mentioned more today than in 1970.
Why?
-- Why should it be illegal to question any historical event? If
that historical event happened as claimed, why would anyone care if some people
questioned certain aspects of that event? If museums and archives were full of
proof that such an event happened as claimed, what would it matter if some
people questioned the official accounts of such an event?
-- Out of the
tons of German paperwork found by the allies after WWII, why does none of that
paperwork contain any evidence of the "gassing of Jews?" Are we to believe that
every single piece of paper possessed by the Nazis concerning "gassing" [e.g.
the amount of Zyklon B needed per month, the length of time personnel should
wait before entering gas chambers, the protective clothing personnel must wear
when removing bodies from gas chmabers, etc.] was destroyed? All such paperwork?
Every piece? Human beings make mistakes, and surely some such paperwork would
have been misplaced, only to surface years later. Why has no such paperwork
surfaced?
-- British personnel intercepted German communications at
various points during WWII. The British observed the Germans mentioning deaths
in so-called "Nazi death camps," including murder [e.g. shootings]. But none of
the intercepts from the Germans contained any mention of "gassing." Why not? The
Germans would admit to shooting but not to gassing? [Related items Here and also
Here
]
-- Many different types of people were victims of the Nazis:
communists, leftists, gypsies, homosexuals. Indeed, Jews made up only about 1/3
of the populations of all German concentration camps. In other words, Jews were
in the minority of Nazi victims per capita. Why does the Western public never
hear about that fact?
Furthermore, some of the questions asked in this
White-written/Muslim-posted essay Here are very
interesting and revealing. We think the essay is a
must-read.
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