BA's case for orthodoxy

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Re: BA's case for orthodoxy

Postby fireofice » 1 week 6 days ago (Sat May 27, 2023 1:29 pm)

Archie wrote:Some revisionists have said that a Saurer of this era likely implies diesel.


It appears that there were Saurer vans that had gasoline.

http://holocaustcontroversies.blogspot. ... s-why.html

Germar Rudolf in an interview said that he was trying to get documents on the issue to create a revised edition of the gas vans book. Not sure if that will actually happen though considering lots of issues Rudolf is facing at the moment.

30:25 for the relevant part:

https://odysee.com/@RizoliTV:d/Leuchter ... m-5-3-22:d

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Re: BA's case for orthodoxy

Postby Archie » 1 week 6 days ago (Sat May 27, 2023 2:00 pm)

fireofice wrote:
Archie wrote:Some revisionists have said that a Saurer of this era likely implies diesel.


It appears that there were Saurer vans that had gasoline.

http://holocaustcontroversies.blogspot. ... s-why.html

Germar Rudolf in an interview said that he was trying to get documents on the issue to create a revised edition of the gas vans book. Not sure if that will actually happen though considering lots of issues Rudolf is facing at the moment.

30:25 for the relevant part:

https://odysee.com/@RizoliTV:d/Leuchter ... m-5-3-22:d


Right, I have seen that. If you read that carefully I think they are implicitly conceding that the Saurer trucks were overwhelmingly diesels, virtually all of them by 1940. So for it to be a gasoline engine, they speculate that it could have been pre-1940 models or they could have been from a batch of trucks from a specific factory in France.

"Maybe under this scenario it could have theoretically been possible. So we win." Holocaust Controversies in a nutshell.

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Re: BA's case for orthodoxy

Postby Hektor » 1 week 6 days ago (Sat May 27, 2023 2:49 pm)

Archie wrote:
fireofice wrote:
Archie wrote:Some revisionists have said that a Saurer of this era likely implies diesel.


It appears that there were Saurer vans that had gasoline.

http://holocaustcontroversies.blogspot. ... s-why.html

Germar Rudolf in an interview said that he was trying to get documents on the issue to create a revised edition of the gas vans book. Not sure if that will actually happen though considering lots of issues Rudolf is facing at the moment.

30:25 for the relevant part:

https://odysee.com/@RizoliTV:d/Leuchter ... m-5-3-22:d


Right, I have seen that. If you read that carefully I think they are implicitly conceding that the Saurer trucks were overwhelmingly diesels, virtually all of them by 1940. So for it to be a gasoline engine, they speculate that it could have been pre-1940 models or they could have been from a batch of trucks from a specific factory in France.

"Maybe under this scenario it could have theoretically been possible. So we win." Holocaust Controversies in a nutshell.


Fact of the matter is, they don't have a 'smoking gun' or by that any evidence for the claim of engines being used for homicidal gassings. The diesel engine story just happens to be dumber than other options. That it is alleged is evidence to some... But it's based on the credulity of an audience. So if they want to believe that, they do and this can be manipulated. The thing is that one can't disprove it with certainty neither and this is what the promoters of the narrative count on. Confirmation bias in the audience and logistical impossibility of 'refuting it'. It's the reason why there are certain rules against libel in many legal systems.

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Re: BA's case for orthodoxy

Postby bombsaway » 1 week 5 days ago (Sun May 28, 2023 8:16 pm)

Archie wrote:You are saying that the "better" testimonies say gasoline. Have you personally reviewed all of the potentially relevant testimony and confirmed that HC's testimony selection is honest?


No, I'm not a capital R researcher on the level of HC blog people or Mattogno for that matter. I can only go by the arguments evidence others have presented

It would be pretty easy for revisionists to show this wasn't true. Do what HC blog did, find the witness testimonies. Revisionists have prided themselves on doing deep dives into the literature. The diesel hypothesis was "refuted" more than a decade ago, which is a lot of time for a response, but none has come, despite capital R revisionist researchers continuously publishing on codoh and sites like inconvenient history. I'd like to think that I'm open minded enough to base my views on evidence presented, regardless of which side is presenting it, but revisionists have presented nothing to back their argument here.

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Re: BA's case for orthodoxy

Postby curioussoul » 1 week 5 days ago (Mon May 29, 2023 6:00 am)

bombsaway wrote:It would be pretty easy for revisionists to show this wasn't true. Do what HC blog did, find the witness testimonies. Revisionists have prided themselves on doing deep dives into the literature. The diesel hypothesis was "refuted" more than a decade ago, which is a lot of time for a response, but none has come, despite capital R revisionist researchers continuously publishing on codoh and sites like inconvenient history. I'd like to think that I'm open minded enough to base my views on evidence presented, regardless of which side is presenting it, but revisionists have presented nothing to back their argument here.


What exactly are you waiting for a response to?

Revisionists have already gone through the witness testimonies much more carefully and exhaustively than the HC blog (which is not conducting primary research but simply arguing polemically against revisionists). What specific argument is left unchallenged, in your opinion? Considering you had to lie about Gerstein "never seeing an engine", I don't think you have much credibility here.

The diesel debacle has been discussed at length in numerous books published by revisionists, in particular Rudolf Reders vs. Kurt Gerstein by Mattogno, as well as The Operation Reinhard Camps, The "Extermination Camps" of Aktion Reinhardt (which is a specific response to the HC bloggers' arguments), and Dalton's Debating the Holocaust, as well as the individual monographs on Treblinka, Sobibor and Belzec written by Graf, Mattogno and Kues.

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Re: BA's case for orthodoxy

Postby Hektor » 1 week 4 days ago (Mon May 29, 2023 9:10 am)

bombsaway wrote:
Archie wrote:You are saying that the "better" testimonies say gasoline. Have you personally reviewed all of the potentially relevant testimony and confirmed that HC's testimony selection is honest?


No, I'm not a capital R researcher on the level of HC blog people or Mattogno for that matter. I can only go by the arguments evidence others have presented

It would be pretty easy for revisionists to show this wasn't true. Do what HC blog did, find the witness testimonies. Revisionists have prided themselves on doing deep dives into the literature. The diesel hypothesis was "refuted" more than a decade ago, which is a lot of time for a response, but none has come, despite capital R revisionist researchers continuously publishing on codoh and sites like inconvenient history. I'd like to think that I'm open minded enough to base my views on evidence presented, regardless of which side is presenting it, but revisionists have presented nothing to back their argument here.



It's not the job of Revisionists to show every single assertion made by Exterminationists to be 'untrue' or 'not true'.
The Exterminationists do however have the moral (and actually legal) obligation to demonstrate that their assertions are true beyond reasonable doubt. For some reason they never do this. Once they find something the can twitch into their core narrative, this isn't really questioned anymore. That evidence isn't what they claim it is, that testimony is false or deceptive, etc. isn't even considered by those hacks.

So demonstrating that the Exterminationists did not demonstrate that what they claim happened via corresponding empirical evidence, is sufficient to prove the Revisionist thesis in that matter.

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Re: BA's case for orthodoxy

Postby Archie » 1 week 4 days ago (Mon May 29, 2023 12:29 pm)

bombsaway wrote:
Archie wrote:You are saying that the "better" testimonies say gasoline. Have you personally reviewed all of the potentially relevant testimony and confirmed that HC's testimony selection is honest?


No, I'm not a capital R researcher on the level of HC blog people or Mattogno for that matter. I can only go by the arguments evidence others have presented

It would be pretty easy for revisionists to show this wasn't true. Do what HC blog did, find the witness testimonies. Revisionists have prided themselves on doing deep dives into the literature. The diesel hypothesis was "refuted" more than a decade ago, which is a lot of time for a response, but none has come, despite capital R revisionist researchers continuously publishing on codoh and sites like inconvenient history. I'd like to think that I'm open minded enough to base my views on evidence presented, regardless of which side is presenting it, but revisionists have presented nothing to back their argument here.


Please be specific when you say "this."

Mattogno's response is on page 815 of the MGK response book. You should probably read that before making a pronouncement on whether it is satisfactory.

Berg originally raised the diesel issue in the early 80s, decades before HC pivoted to gasoline engines. Berg was responding to the mainstream story. It is not Berg's job to tell the holocaust historians what THEIR story is. Berg's arguments on the technical points were so thorough and conclusive that HC was forced to simply CONCEDE that he was correct and that diesel gassings are an absurdity. This is a win for revisionists.

The HC article is pretty much self-refuting if you strip away their spin and slippery rhetoric. For simplicity, let's focus on Belzec for now. Here are the witnesses they mention.

Diesel
1) Gerstein: Technical background, closely monitored a gassing, describes the engine breaking down for a long time, mentions diesel repeatedly. Says Globocnik described a diesel engine for gassing."
2) Pfannensteil: "The engine itself was not in a separate room but stood in the open, raised on a platform. It was a diesel engine."
3) Schluch: "For the gassings an engine was started up. I cannot give a more detailed description of the engine because I never saw it. I am certainly not a specialist, but I would say that based on the sound, it was a medium-sized diesel engine."
4) Oberhauser: “at first the Jews were killed with a gas, but after the camp was enlarged, they were killed by diesel exhaust”.

"Uncertain" (although one of these actually leans toward diesel)
5) Gley: "After the doors of the gas chambers had been closed, a large engine-I don’t know whether it was a diesel or an Otto (gasoline) engine-was started up by a mechanic from the Hiwi section. The exhaust fumes of this engine were fed into the chambers and caused the death of the Jews."
6) Semigodov: "The people doomed to death were driven into these gas chambers or “dushegubki”, as they were also known, where they were killed with exhaust gas from a diesel motor (found in the same building) or some other motor."

Gasoline (only two)
7) Reder: "I myself saw that in that small room there was an engine with petrol fuel that looked very complicated. I remember that the engine had a flywheel, but I could not make out any other specific construction or technical features. This engine was always operated by two technicians, Russians from the armed camp staff. I know only that the engine used 4 cans of petrol each day, because that is how much petrol was brought to the camp every day. It was when the petrol was delivered to the engine room that I briefly had the opportunity to look inside the room."
9) Czerniak: “The 200 H.V. motor was powered by gasoline, as were the three other mentioned cars."

Their conclusion:
From the testimonies of Shalayev (Treblinka), Hödl (Sobibor), Fuchs (Sobibor), Bauer (Sobibor), Reder (Belzec) and Czerniak (Belzec) it is clear that the engines in the Reinhard camps were petrol.


What?! At best, you might say something like, "well, maybe it could have been gasoline." But to say the testimonies heavily favor gasoline is ridiculous.

BA, I would like to ask you a pointed question here and I would like a direct response. Please do not dodge this. For Belzec, do you think it reasonable for them to conclude on the basis of 2/8 testimonies that the engine was "clearly" gasoline? If you were to give a percentage of certainty, would you say 100%? 95%? 90%? 51%?

To me, this is classic motivated reasoning. For Sobibor, I think you could fairly argue that the testimonies lean toward gasoline, but this is just not true for Belzec and Treblinka. They are introducing arbitrary criteria to favor the gasoline testimonies. They introduce technical knowledge as a consideration (okay) but they apply this selectively, not consistently. Gerstein had superior technical knowledge to Reder, yet they favor Reder. But otherwise, they assume you need advanced technical knowledge to distinguish diesel and gasoline engine which is not actually true. They assume that Gerstein did not see the engine with this eyes because he doesn't explicitly say this, but that is an assumption on their part. His testimony suggests intimate familiarity with the gassing procedure. He very well could have seen it and he certainly would have heard it (diesels are noticeably loud). They disregard Oberhauser and Globocnik (via Gerstein) because they were too high-level to know, but they don't have a good explanation for this "diesel" rumor they are imagining. Higher ups should have some idea of what fuels are being delivered to the camp and how they are used. Why should we expect all these people to have been given false information about the type of engine?

HC on Gerstein: "Well, it's possible he didn't actually see the engine, so let's assume he did not see it and that he was told false information." They can't attack him technically, so they say he wasn't direct enough of a witness.
HC on Pfannensteil: "Well, he saw it, but he wasn't a mechanic, so must have got it wrong." They can't say he didn't see it, so they attack him technically.

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Re: BA's case for orthodoxy

Postby bombsaway » 1 week 4 days ago (Mon May 29, 2023 1:47 pm)

Archie wrote:BA, I would like to ask you a pointed question here and I would like a direct response. Please do not dodge this. For Belzec, do you think it reasonable for them to conclude on the basis of 2/8 testimonies that the engine was "clearly" gasoline? If you were to give a percentage of certainty, would you say 100%? 95%? 90%? 51%?


I think Reder's and Czerniak's testimonies are stronger than the others so going only based on these testimonies, 50% chance. But gasoline engines are indicated more definitively at the other camps and with gas vans, so the co delivery method seems clear. At best you've shown that the situation is unclear at one of the killing sites.

You're right that it's not revisionists job to tell orthodox historians what their story is. But I'm not sure what the argument is here. That mainstream historians have been bad on one particular detail that isn't going to be of importance to anyone except those with interest in the forensics of the killing method?

I reject your assumption that everyone or most people at the camp would have known the kind of engine used here, and especially remembered 20 years on sometimes.

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Re: BA's case for orthodoxy

Postby curioussoul » 1 week 4 days ago (Mon May 29, 2023 1:59 pm)

Archie wrote:They assume that Gerstein did not see the engine with this eyes because he doesn't explicitly say this


He actually says so explicitly. He quite literally stated that "I see everything" as he supposedly timed the attempts to get the broken engine to work. You would have to jump through some quite elaborate hoops to claim that Gerstein literally talked about observing attempts at getting the diesel engine running - while timing it with his stopwatch and proclaiming "I see everything" - but that he didn't actually see the engine itself. That is actually borderline-lying. The HC bloggers are not the only ones to try their hands at this blatantly dishonest argument, even orthodox historians have used it.

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Re: BA's case for orthodoxy

Postby Hektor » 1 week 4 days ago (Mon May 29, 2023 3:07 pm)

curioussoul wrote:
Archie wrote:They assume that Gerstein did not see the engine with this eyes because he doesn't explicitly say this


He actually says so explicitly. He quite literally stated that "I see everything" as he supposedly timed the attempts to get the broken engine to work. You would have to jump through some quite elaborate hoops to claim that Gerstein literally talked about observing attempts at getting the diesel engine running - while timing it with his stopwatch and proclaiming "I see everything" - but that he didn't actually see the engine itself. That is actually borderline-lying. The HC bloggers are not the only ones to try their hands at this blatantly dishonest argument, even orthodox historians have used it.



Repeating a (hearsay) story about an engine is innuendo. To prove a homicide you need far more than this. E.g. that the homicide occurred (with evidence) that the instrument to kill did work and was actually used... And you need to exclude any other possibility / valid explanation for the physical evidence as is. But what do we get? Unfeasible stories, lacking physical evidence or investigation thereof with asserted narratives whose source had a strong motive to make accusations of that kind. Add to this that the 'key witnesses' are recognizable as habitual liars, while other witnesses that didn't remember things like this are systematically ignored.

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Re: BA's case for orthodoxy

Postby Archie » 1 week 4 days ago (Mon May 29, 2023 3:20 pm)

curioussoul wrote:
Archie wrote:They assume that Gerstein did not see the engine with this eyes because he doesn't explicitly say this


He actually says so explicitly. He quite literally stated that "I see everything" as he supposedly timed the attempts to get the broken engine to work. You would have to jump through some quite elaborate hoops to claim that Gerstein literally talked about observing attempts at getting the diesel engine running - while timing it with his stopwatch and proclaiming "I see everything" - but that he didn't actually see the engine itself. That is actually borderline-lying. The HC bloggers are not the only ones to try their hands at this blatantly dishonest argument, even orthodox historians have used it.


Oh, I agree that it's an absurd argument and BA should feel embarrassed offering it, but I am willing to indulge him in this fantasy for sake of argument.

Here is a map of Belzec (from Arad). #16 is the gas chamber building, separated into six rooms (2x3). #17 is the engine which is right next to the building. According to Pfannensteil, the engine was visible and not in a separate building.

Image

What they are imagining is a hypothetical scenario in which Gerstein positioned himself somewhere (perhaps by the gas chamber door) and never at any point looked at the engine. Not even during the several hours when the engine broke down and they were trying to fix it.

"It is plain that he is afraid because I am a witness to this breakdown. Yes, indeed, I see everything and wait."

Yeah, they are really grasping at straws here.

These interpretations require gross abuse of the ambiguities of language and lots of convenient speculations. That is a major pattern with them. I can imagine how X might be possible. So let's assume X and it's on revisionists to disprove this speculation.

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Re: BA's case for orthodoxy

Postby Archie » 1 week 4 days ago (Mon May 29, 2023 4:07 pm)

bombsaway wrote:
Archie wrote:BA, I would like to ask you a pointed question here and I would like a direct response. Please do not dodge this. For Belzec, do you think it reasonable for them to conclude on the basis of 2/8 testimonies that the engine was "clearly" gasoline? If you were to give a percentage of certainty, would you say 100%? 95%? 90%? 51%?


I think Reder's and Czerniak's testimonies are stronger than the others so going only based on these testimonies, 50% chance. But gasoline engines are indicated more definitively at the other camps and with gas vans, so the co delivery method seems clear. At best you've shown that the situation is unclear at one of the killing sites.

You're right that it's not revisionists job to tell orthodox historians what their story is. But I'm not sure what the argument is here. That mainstream historians have been bad on one particular detail that isn't going to be of importance to anyone except those with interest in the forensics of the killing method?

I reject your assumption that everyone or most people at the camp would have known the kind of engine used here, and especially remembered 20 years on sometimes.


1) You say "more definitely" at the other camps, but for Treblinka, HC cited only ONE witness which is even more meager than the two for Belzec.

From the testimonies of Shalayev (Treblinka), Hödl (Sobibor), Fuchs (Sobibor), Bauer (Sobibor), Reder (Belzec) and Czerniak (Belzec) it is clear that the engines in the Reinhard camps were petrol.


2) Czerniak is a very obscure witness and he himself indicates that he knew very little about the supposed gassings ("I understood that it was where the gas chamber was located"). His testimony is about a million times less direct that Kurt "Stopwatch" Gerstein. Go read what is quoted on the HC page and note how unclear the excerpts provided are (in particular how it's talking about a generator). Only one part mentions gasoline and the footnote says this is a handwritten marginal comment. It's in German from a translation from 14 years after the original statement. It's not even part of the original statement. See Mattogno's response starting on page 826.

3) "But I'm not sure what the argument is here." The argument is that your whole thing hinges on fictional stories. These stories do not cohere credibly. To the extent they can be corroborated with hard evidence, then often fail on major points. They have internal contradicts and major contradictions with each other. They often are not consistent with physical reality. At this point, we are debating merely whether the story is physically possible. You long ago gave up trying to prove it. You consider "maybe it could have happened" to be a victory.

If you won't take if from me, take it from orthodox scholar Michael Tregenza.

Judged in the light of what we know today, the two reports [Reder and Hirszman] are contradictory and contain inconsistencies. Reder, for example, spoke of 3 million victims and gave false dimensions regarding the mass graves and the camp. He stated that Rumanians and Norwegians had been involved in the exterminations, which is incorrect, and he mentions an undocumented visit to Bełżec by Himmler. Hirszman, too, exaggerated the number of victims, speaking of 800,000 victims between October and December of 1942; he spoke of roll calls, which Reder, for his part, discounted; he spoke of children being thrown into the gas chambers over the heads of the women, which is improbable considering the height of the ceiling in the chambers.

Further information regarding Bełżec is limited to the frequently mentioned report of the SS officer Kurt Gerstein, the ‘Gerstein Report.’ […]

Based on the current state of our research, we must also designate Gerstein’s material on Bełżec as questionable, even belonging to the realm of fantasy in some places. He gave erroneous dimensions for the mass graves, the number of guards he mentioned is too high, he assigned twenty to twenty-five million victims to Bełżec and Treblinka, he described the camp commander Wirth as ‘a frail and small man from Swabia’ (in reality, Wirth was tall and broad-shouldered), etc. In contrast to Gerstein’s statements we must assume that he spent more than two days in the Bełżec camp. As he indicated to another witness, he was present there on several occasions. As has been ascertained by later investigations and statements, all three eyewitness reports regarding the Bełżec camp must be considered to be unreliable.

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Re: BA's case for orthodoxy

Postby Archie » 1 week 4 days ago (Mon May 29, 2023 4:21 pm)

curioussoul wrote:
Archie wrote:They assume that Gerstein did not see the engine with this eyes because he doesn't explicitly say this


He actually says so explicitly. He quite literally stated that "I see everything" as he supposedly timed the attempts to get the broken engine to work. You would have to jump through some quite elaborate hoops to claim that Gerstein literally talked about observing attempts at getting the diesel engine running - while timing it with his stopwatch and proclaiming "I see everything" - but that he didn't actually see the engine itself. That is actually borderline-lying. The HC bloggers are not the only ones to try their hands at this blatantly dishonest argument, even orthodox historians have used it.


Another point. This "stopwatch" meme was ringing a bell and I was trying to remember where else I had heard this. I took me a minute but Eichmann (supposedly) said something similar to Sassen. From Life magazine (page 104),

When I reported back to Müller in Berlin, he chided me for not having timed the procedure with a stop watch. I said to him, "This sort of thing can't go on. Things shouldn't be done this way." I admitted I had not been able to look through the peephole. This time, too, Müller behaved like a sphinx. He forgave me, so to speak, for not having looked. Perhaps "forgive" sounds like an odd expression here.


The stopwatch thing is the classic sort of stupid detail you get in atrocity propaganda. It's very similar to the peephole meme.

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Re: BA's case for orthodoxy

Postby bombsaway » 1 week 3 days ago (Tue May 30, 2023 10:34 am)

Archie wrote:
1) You say "more definitely" at the other camps, but for Treblinka, HC cited only ONE witness which is even more meager than the two for Belzec.

From the testimonies of Shalayev (Treblinka), Hödl (Sobibor), Fuchs (Sobibor), Bauer (Sobibor), Reder (Belzec) and Czerniak (Belzec) it is clear that the engines in the Reinhard camps were petrol.


No there were others. From HC blog about Treblinka

There also exist testimonies about petrol engines by the people whose degree of closeness to the engine is unknown. We will list them to show that not only diesels were mentioned by such witnesses.

Ukrainian guard Ivan Semyonovich Shevchenko made a very detailed statement on September 8, 1944 to a senior SMERSH investigator of the 65th army. Among other things he reported:
A stone building, the so-called “dushegubka”, had nine chambers inside, in which people were murdered by asphyxiation with gases. In the tenth chamber there was an engine of high power which pumped the gas into the chambers.[24][...]In the last chamber on the right side in the north-eastern corner of the building there was a high-power engine which worked on petrol or ligroin.[25]
Treblinka inmate Oskar Strawczynski also wrote in 1944 that he heard from others that:
The doors are hermetically sealed, the motors start to work. The air from inside is sucked out and fumes from burnt gasoline forced in.[26]


There is only one description of the engine from someone who actually worked on it, and they said it was gasoline based.

The argument is that your whole thing hinges on fictional stories. These stories do not cohere credibly. To the extent they can be corroborated with hard evidence, then often fail on major points. They have internal contradicts and major contradictions with each other.


So you're saying that because they don't cohere on the details, that means >> the people who testified are definitely lying >> which means the entire event couldn't have happened. The logic would be that if it had indeed happened, the witness testimony would necessarily be much more consistent on the details. Am I understanding your argument properly? Please keep it simple in the response to this.

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Re: BA's case for orthodoxy

Postby Hektor » 1 week 3 days ago (Tue May 30, 2023 12:15 pm)

bombsaway wrote:....
So you're saying that because they don't cohere on the details, that means >> the people who testified are definitely lying >> which means the entire event couldn't have happened. The logic would be that if it had indeed happened, the witness testimony would necessarily be much more consistent on the details. Am I understanding your argument properly? Please keep it simple in the response to this.


Do you really want to 'understand the argument properly'?

With testimony one doesn't have to prove that people are 'definitely' lying. One needs to make sure that they are not lying, not mistaken or in error, etc. That's why testimony isn't exactly the best type of evidence. Bear in mind what is testified to there as well. It's something where the evidence can't simply vanish afterwards.
Then there is a lot of hearsay as well as testimony that convincingly claims that, while they were there, knew about nothing like this.


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