PrudentRegret wrote:Bombsaway, do you put any weight on the people who did not confess, including some of the highest-level officials put on trial like Goering, Hans Frank, Oswald Pohl? They all, without any doubt, would have known much more about the final solution than any of the low-level guards being put on trial decades after the fact. But none of them confessed to any knowledge or participation in an extermination plan.
If they had denied it yeah, eg if Hans Frank said he had investigated a supposed extermination camp and found nothing to be amiss, then that would be strong evidence. But all he says is he didn't know about it for certain, though he heavily suspected it was true.
Perhaps it should raise your eyebrows that generally speaking, the people who confessed were those directly implicated in the crimes through documentary or witness evidence. Frank and Goering weren't, Pohl most definitely was, and he did confess.
https://forum.axishistory.com/viewtopic.php?t=54569 So one theory that I think is plausible is that they pleaded ignorance when they thought they could get away with it.
At the very least you should be vigilant about false confessions and closely analyze the claims of the accused. If the claims do not make sense or contradict each-other, it should raise your suspicion that the alleged co-conspirators were coerced into a false confession by the invalid nature of the evidence being used against them.
The expectation would be that witnesses would contradict themselves
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eyewitnes ... eliability It would be more suspicious, I think, if everyone had the exact same story. But yeah at a certain point testimony has to be thrown out entirely. I think revisionists overstate the problems though. When you're cherry picking accounts, things seem pretty bad, but when viewed in their entirety most testimonies become much more believable for me. This is a judgement call though, I'll admit that.
Lamprecht wrote:Again Bombsaway shows his confusion, and fails to give a single name so we can go into specifics about this particular "confession" in a West German trial.
As far as I can tell, transcripts for the West German Trials are not available online (perhaps in German if someone can find them, and we could machine translate), so all we have is excerpts, which is not ideal. The reason I brought these trials up was because I think they were conducted more fairly than the Nuremberg trials (eg Judicial notice doesn't seem to have been taken).
If you want to go through a detailed testimony concerning a single alleged extermination camp (with extensive mention of grave sites etc) I would suggest this http://holocaustcontroversies.blogspot.com/2011/09/great-lie.html . According to Mattogno/Kues, Chelmno had a very similar function to the Reinhard camps. In my opinion it is the best evidenced of these camps in terms of documents so it might be interesting for us to take a longer look at.
I was also doing some research and saw that the general public had access while excavations were being carried out.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nxM9z7KaY3YAccording to the guy who shot the video, there are bone fragments all around, or at least there were. The site doesn't appear to be closed off, so available for people to go there and examine the ground non-invasively.
Lamprecht wrote:Again, this was all happening as Germany was under military occupation
What's the evidence that West Germany was under military occupation through the 1960s? (definitionally that the US/GB/France were the "ruling power")
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_ ... 20occupant.