I brought up a quote from a website that used an example of the Hitler order to illustrate how absence of proof isn't proof of absence. The example isn't what we're talking about.
Besides missing the point, you tried a sleight of hand to talk about the lack of evidence for a Hitler order or the lack of the lack of evidence for a Hitler order. Lipstadt's minions weren't talking about the lack of evidence. They said lack of proof. Since you previously acknowledged that evidence and proof aren't the same thing you know perfectly well what you tried but failed to do.
If you believe there's plenty of proof of a Hitler order, take it up with the non-historian and her non-historian web content provider. They're the ones who said there is an absence of proof for a Hitler order but that that isn't proof of the absence of the Hitler order.
There doesn't seem to be very much left of your two specious claims that
1) the Holocaust is held to a different standard of evidence to other events
and
2) that 'absence of evidence is not evidence of absence' somehow plays a role in this
Those were your claims, right? So no "sleight of hand" in continuing to address them. Since you've evidently been reduced to weaseling out of what you previously wrote and are left with little more than general poo-flinging, unless you have anything further to add on the subjects of (1) and (2) we can conclude this by saying that you were, as usual, wrong.
A major plank? Who said it was a major plank?
You're right, I forgot, you never actually say
anything coherent.
Well why didn't you say that? All you said was that you knew that Lipstadt didn't write them.
Because it's funnier to watch you speculate wildly and make an idiot of yourself.
No. Just an unwillingness to spend money on a book and read it just because you told me to.
Ever heard of libraries?
If your recommended reading is valuable to our discussion then it's incumbent upon you to tell us why.
David Hackett Fischer's Historians' Fallacies is a classic philosophy of history text. It's also very readable. If you were really interested in the problems you raise in this thread then you should be trying to educate yourself using such books, as they might actually answer some of your questions and show you where
you are going wrong.
I've already provided twice as many examples of absence of evidence/proof isn't evidence/proof of absence being endorsed by people who write about the holocaust (two people who have no doubt exerted more influence over how we think about the holocaust than you have despite your status as historian of the holocaust and their status as a historian of science and a whatever it is that Lipstadt studied).
Yeah, me and Raul Hilberg and Christian Gerlach and Alina Skibinska and Robert Kuwalek and Ben Kiernan and Hannah Arendt and all the other people I mentioned in a previous post, sure, we collectively have had less influence than Michael Shermer and the webmaster at hdot.org.
It is clearly going to be an excruciatingly pointless waste of time watching you dredge up another tenuous example, so the end result is: two peripheral voices mentioning 'absence of blah', a zillion others not mentioning it, still no double standard proven, Dogzilla once again proven to be a mass-debater who makes stuff up then cannot justify it, even after dozens of posts.