Wilbur wrote:Butterfangers was correct. The transcripts were not released in an edited book on the topic, and it's not for lack of funding. The complete transcripts are still unavailable to the general public, and they're edits anyway. The issue is not moot at all. You chose to cut the next paragraph of my post which already answered this, and there is a reason for that too - probably to be a time-waster.
Sorry your posts are a little unclear to me. You said here
viewtopic.php?f=2&t=14859&start=345#p109672"In any case, a couple of months ago Yad Vashem uploaded a more legible variant, they're under O.65 in four parts:
https://documents.yadvashem.org/ I also have another different legible copy around somewhere, but I'm too lazy to search for it."
So there's multiple legible variants and the one I posted is at least half legible (according to Butterfangers), but are you saying they're still incomplete? If some are illegible is that by design? (as I think Butterfangers was alluding to).
bombsaway wrote:I asked you how he "prompted" (your word) Eichmann and you respond
How? In particular, see the course and evolution of the conversations in the Sassen transcripts - the confrontations Sassen creates are out of place given apparent previous statements. In the background, he proposed and agreed to a moneymaking plan, plied the subject with drinks and encouraged him to speculate and wild out a little to make for good content.
It seems the only evidence based example you provided was Sassen telling Dr. Langer ("Keep drilling!"). I'd say this is an odd form of "encouragement". Stangneth contextualizes like so:
Hardly any of the stories about Langer’s own involvement in the Holocaust
were reproduced in the transcript, suggesting that Sassen had guaranteed him
a level of discretion. Sassen certainly doesn’t seem to have brought him into
the circle because he was interested in hearing specifics from him. Langer
had something very different to offer. Unlike Sassen and Fritsch, he was in a
position to be able to evaluate at least some of what Eichmann said. It is
inconceivable that Langer and Eichmann didn’t have at least a fleeting
acquaintance from their time in power. If nothing else, then in the final
months of 1944, Eichmann’s appalling death marches would surely have
brought his name to the attention of an SD man of Langer’s rank. Langer was
able to judge and to ask questions where Sassen foundered. He was there to
run Eichmann through the mill on Sassen’s behalf. A former employee of Der
Weg stressed that Eichmann was literally interrogated in the Sassen circle.96
During a concentrated discussion between Eichmann and Langer, Sassen can
be heard on the recording whispering “keep drilling!” But Eichmann quickly
discovered how to handle Langer—by turning his own weapons against him:
laws and regulations. He liked to cite one of the books that the Sassen circle
discussed page by page and put his superior knowledge to good use, backing
up his partly dishonest theories by saying: “Lange[r] also saw it for the first
time when he saw Dr. Blau’s collection of statutes.”97
So it seems there was again this antagonistic relationship by Langer and Sassen towards Eichmann, as they thought he was lying about the full extent of the genocidal program.
The source here is given as BA tape 09D, 29:08
So this part of the interviews is both on the tape and in the transcripts (29:08). Assuming it is legible, revisionists should be able to verify Stangneth's interpretation. And yes, they have to be the ones doing the verification, as any orthodox historian automatically comes under heavy scrutiny. It seems you are arguing that because this hasn't happened yet, the transcripts at least are questionable, but this is silly. Using this logic, any evidence that hasn't been scrutinized yet by revisionists has no probative value. Therefore if revisionists scrutinized zero documents the entirety of documentary evidence for the Holocaust should be inadmissible.
I offered my assessment based on what I think is the best available evidence, including for example what Eichmann said in a serious setting believing to have the benefit of secure communications. When you say in relation to Sassen "there are some aspects of his character that say otherwise," yes, it's a cute speculative chain the author has going. Reveal Ludolf-Hermann von Alvensleben to whom and why?
The intimate conversations of high ranking Nazis like Alvensleben and presumably Langer (identity unknown) should make for saleable literature, yes.
Thanks for reiterating the Irreducible Complexity stuff. I understand; you just get "genocide" vibes from Eichmann and so those vibes are probative. I see a future Mossad worker arranging some exiled Germans to banter with designated bad boy Eichmann, so designated by the very darlings of the regime that exiled them, on the very subject of those darlings - to enhance the content creation process.
I don't understand your "irreducible complexity" argument. Is this in reference to the evidentiary case for the Holocaust?
first definition provided on Wikipedia is this: " a single system composed of several well-matched, interacting parts that contribute to the basic function, wherein the removal of any one of the parts causes the system to effectively cease functioning."
To be clear if the Sassen interviews had never come to light I don't think the case for orthodoxy would be meaningfully hurt, because the volume of evidence is so large, and virtually nothing exists for any alternative hypothesis. Even if there was half as much evidence as there is right now, it wouldn't become questionable, though certain aspects of it would probably be more mysterious.
My point with the evidence is simple. If you more evidence, the case becomes stronger. If there were a thousand diary entries like Herman Kruk's one where he reports on a rumor of Dutch Jews making it to Lithuania, this would become much more likely in the eyes of historians, or at least an explanation should be provided about why so many rumors were flying about this.
Really sounds like you haven't read Kruk and are relying on blogger gibberish. It's even been translated to English. You wouldn't do that to us would you?
Yes I've read it. He reports on a rumor (this is basically the weakest possible evidence, imagine if the best evidence for the Holocaust was rumors) and there is nothing more. The only thing he ends up learning is that their furniture made it.
Well, this goes back to the last point, which you mysteriously called speculative... I asked you a question and you avoid it. Eichmann is an expert on Jews and Jewish leaders, interacted with them, studied them, wrote white papers on them - and also admired them for some reason. Based on your avowed methodology, why should a man listen to the Sassen tapes and not accept Eichmann's "Jewish perfidy" vibes as factual too? Even if you couldn't pinpoint an individual specific claim you'd vouch for, then surely he was still on to something? Something plausibly general?
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Eichmann says things that are clearly speculative, but also reports on seeing gassings and having conversations, (eg with Heydrich: "The Führer has ordered the physical extermination of the Jews.")
If Eichmann reported on being present in a meeting with top level Jews who said something like "Yeah we admit it, we're manufacturing a genocide in order to make us more sympathetic in the eyes of the world" this would be evidence, rather than speculation. Such a comment would have be interrogated further, but yes it would have at least some probative value.
Vandegraf wrote:Hey bombsaway.
bombsaway wrote:Can you find a single instance of a German using this word as something that happens to people (as opposed to entities that are not formally alive) where through action is obviously not killing.
From the Rosenberg's diary:
Yesterday I caught up with Rust at Führer's and he again introduced the talk about the Reich Institute of Prehistory. Now that Rust had accepted my suggestions, all that was left to do was liquidate the visiting privy council Wiegand.[Theodore Wiegand, archaeologist and member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences] When the Leader heard that we agreed, he laughed happily.
[Alfred Rosenberg's diary, 1st May 1936]
I hope it helps in your unbiased search for truth!
I think you're confused because the council is named after Wiegand. But a council is formally a non-living entity, like a ghetto or a political organization, though comprised of people. E.g could the Supreme Court be killed? Well maybe but this is problematic language-wise in my view.
If Rosenberg had said '
the members of the privy council ' had been liquidated, this would be a strong counterexample.