Justasking wrote:Good question. But was it that massive a conspiracy? How many were involved? a few dozen SS admin people writing a few reports.
Yes it would have been a massive conspiracy, but a very sloppy one. Or they used the correct words and the ridiculous conspiracy theory is the "code word" nonsense.
I do not have the info to hand but I vaguely remember that there were draft copies of reports that were sent back to have their wording changed from "special handling" to some even more euphemistic term as that euphemism was already too well known to mean something sinister.
You're referring to Korherr's report and "special treatment" or "special action" - it is a vague term, and on purpose. It can mean to kill but does not always mean that, much like "Special operation" by the US military.
I presume that if you were part of a small group of people carrying out a highly morally and legally questionable operation that you did not want your victims or the wider public to know about you would soon start using euphemistic language. That seems natural.
That doesn't explain the use of confusing terms that already have meanings - rather than terms that are vague on purpose - in top-secret documents as well as diary entries.
Well possibly yes. But that requires someone to have already thought out that line of evidence to be faked, and to have it ready.
The accusation of a conspiracy of using already-defined words as 'code words' to mean something entirely different does imply that there is already a desire to fake documents. The assumption here is that there was a conspiracy for many years of using the wrong word[s] in documents, and for what purpose other than to trick someone that reads them if they were not 'in the know' then?
And fake outbound records wouldn't take much time, they can be made in less than a day. Some camps were dismantled long before the war was over so they had plenty of time. There were reports in the English-language press that "resettlement" actually meant mass murder.
Given that the Hilberg argument for a gradual slip into mass murder, (not pre planned by the Nazis from before 1933, which is what other historians had been saying for years), didn't come out until the 1950s, that would mean that some clever soviet/allied thinker had come up with this idea, promulgated it to hundreds of allied interrogators, co-ordinated a huge scheme to make the idea widespread without leaving any traces of how they did that, and then waited a decade for some historian to finally cotton on to the idea... seems implausible to me.
That is implausible but the claim is that the Germans had a conspiracy over many years to use deceptive words that already had clearly defined meanings in their documents to refer to mass murder or killing.
[Also, there are plenty of examples of people who wrote letters reports and diaries during the war that mention these things happening, and no evidence that was all forged.
Please create threads for these alleged diary entries and/or reports.
And no evidence that the majority of testimony was forced or manipulated. Even Hoess memoirs show little sign of being written to order. That SS accountant, Oskar Groening, who was recently tried for his part in Auschwitz on the evidence he had provided by saying what he saw and did , for years in the face of people that told him to shut up - he got hpoist on his own petard, but he took the rap, without anyone forcing him to say it happened. he had every motive to say it was a hoax, but he didn't.
He had every motive to lie and say that there were gassings. For how many years did Groening serve his sentence in prison?
the thing is that to organise a hoax like that really would take a huge organisation, perfectly co-ordinated, and that really would need a mastermind, a central planning office, a huge apparatus to control it. If you cannot accept the idea that the SS (run by a few dozen officers in a well organised pre existing organisation which had its own funding streams and a leadership that had well known motives and desires) could not possibly run a half dozen camps without needing huge amounts of paperwork, then how can you accept the idea that an enormous multinational multidecadal conspiracy to hoax the holocaust can be run without any organisation? or any paperwork?
You are the one insisting that there was some massive conspiracy of using words like "deport" or "resettle" in a genocidal context, without evidence. Naturally, there is no physical/material evidence that can be shown to substantiate this ridiculous conspiracy theory even though it would exist in huge quantities in exactly known locations if your conspiracy theory was true.
Paperwork can be so easily destroyed and "confessions" fabricated. That is why these forms of evidence are much lower on the hierarchy of evidence than physical or material evidence.
I do not know what you are talking about here, but would be delighted to learn. I know that pre 42 the term "final solution" was used in various ways, mostly associated with a territorial expulsion of jews, to pipedream destinations, but the usual story from the believers is that given that those ideas became impossible to implement, and that the pressure to get rid of the jews mounted as it became expensive to keep them, guard them, feed them, look after them mounted (and why would any dyed in the wool nazi want to do any of those things?) then the turn to extermination of the unfit to work and working the others to death was natural.
Even after 1942, the "Final Solution" was referenced as a non-genocidal policy. It never meant "kill all the Jews" and the documents are clear about that.
Now maybe not everyone was in on the secret. It was after all an SS run operation, top top secret. Maybe some underling in the labour ministry still thought that "resettlement" actually meant sending the jews somewhere to live, and didn't know they never set up new jewish communities after they closed the old ones down and put the people on trains to the camps. So some people would still be using the term to mean expulsion. But those in the know would know different.
Such terms were used by people who supposedly would have known, but it is very convenient to just dismiss anyone that would have said otherwise as "they just didn't know!" or "they were lying!" when there is not actually physical or material evidence that can be shown to substantiate your conspiracy theory.
I used to work for a big corporation, offices all over the place. They had bought up several small firms in the same sort of business, and some were quite old factories. Top brass decided to close a factory in one place because it was old, inefficient and they had room for a new production line in another state in a new factory they were building, which would be using similar raw materials and processes, and which would make distribution easier. They went down to the old factory and surveyed the whole factory, took notes of the whole production process, under the cover of doing an energy efficiency audit. Then they built a new production line, with robots and automated controls, and then they fired the whole team at the old factory. They never saw it coming. No one knew about it in the organisation apart from a few at the top. I knew about the new production line, but I didn't know what it was for, or that it was to put fifty guys out of work. It was talked about in code. Hundreds of people worked to design it, build it, get it running, and recruit new staff for it, and train them. None knew that fifty others were going to be dumped. We felt like shit, and the company made a big profit jump, with its shiny knew lower cost high productive factory. But we all helped those guys get canned. We all worked to do it, without knowing that was what we did. We solved problems at a local level, in accord to the business ethos, serving the good of the company by doing what we were told. We just obeyed orders. We made decisions that helped to put those guys out of work - because we had a shared mindset, and didn't ask questions. And most of my colleagues didn't give a shit anyway. It was just business. those guys weren't human beings, just guys in another state who got canned because they were not fit for purpose, not earning their keep. I think the term "useless eaters" was not used, but it could have been.
Excellent, but what we know is that documents can be easily destroyed and testimony can be easily manufactured. But physical evidence cannot magically disappear, nor can enormous mass graves magically be created in specific places with the wave of a wand. That is why physical/material evidence is considered more definitive than documents, which are more definitive than party testimony (the weakest form of evidence).
Falsifiability is important, anyone can invent some story about an event and end it with "...and then all the evidence was destroyed so nobody could prove that it happened, the end!"
But that doesn't fly here. If there is a conspiracy theory that the Germans exterminated millions of people - roughly the population of Sweden - and buried large numbers of them in huge mass graves at specific sites, then that could be proven or disproven by attempting to uncover the physical evidence.
Relying only on a bunch of "eyewitness testimony" instead of going for this hard evidence is just a mere repetition of evidence of the same kind. It's not very convincing, which is probably why certain governments have adopted laws to imprison people that question the established conspiracy theory.