How do we know there was general policy related to killing? Because there were so many killing sites. How do we know these were all killing sites? Because there was a general policy related to killing. How do we know there was general policy related to killing? Because there were so many killing sites. How do we know these were all killing sites? Because there was a general policy related to killing. How do we know there was general policy related to killing? Because there were so many killing sites. How do we know these were all killing sites? Because there was a general policy related to killing.
If you're done making an idiot of yourself....
And this little exercise of yours will in what way address the physical limitations imposed by our three dimensional universe? The fact that you say there was a general policy governing all these camps is irrelevant to this discussion. The only thing that matters is size of the camp and the number of people killed there.
If all the camps were all the same size and had the same death toll, or if the size of the camp was directly proportional to the death toll with a 1:1 ratio, you could consider them as a unit.
Otherwise, "policy" has nothing to do with the scale of killing.
Well, let's take your chosen fixation on Treblinka, and hypothetically deduct 781,000 victims for a moment. That still leaves at least 4.5 million Jews killed by the Nazis across 42 other sites (Jews died everywhere, in every single KZ and euthanasia institute, so it really is 42 other sites - just counting the major ones where cremation was used).
It then produces a major anomaly, which is explaining why deportations to Auschwitz, Belzec, Chelmno and Sobibor resulted in death, whereas deportations to Treblinka supposedly did not. So already there's a biiig problem with fixating on Treblinka.
In practice, your incredulity about the scale of Treblinka couldn't do more than produce a hypothesis that
a certain proportion of the accepted number of Treblinka victims did not die there. Since you haven't established that proportion or rigorously demonstrated the maximum possible number of victims, then your argument becomes even weaker.
Thus the request to identify the level at which 'scale' supposedly becomes a big deal. It doesn't seem very likely that you can invoke 'scale' for any site under 100,000 bodies cremated (by whatever means). You've not offered a single argument which would call into question the
physical possibility of cremating 7,000 or 70,000 bodies.
You've also not offered any arguments for the camps in the 100-250,000 range (Chelmno and Sobibor). Nor have you offered any arguments for the camps in the 250,000 to 750,000 range (Belzec, Auschwitz crematoria, Brezinka woods). You've only repeated your tedious incredulity about... Treblinka.
On a continent-wide level it would already be extremely odd that the Nazis, who constantly talked about 'Jews' as a relatively undifferentiated entity, would murder all the Jews of the occupied Soviet Union and then cremate a large number of their victims at a variety of sites in the USSR, but not do the same to Polish Jews.
It becomes even odder when we consider that the Nazis murdered an awful lot of Polish Jews at a variety of sites in western Poland, like Trawniki, Poniatowa and Majdanek, or when clearing the Krakow ghetto.
Same with German, Austrian and Czech Jews. The Nazis murdered Jews of those nationalities at Riga, in Estonia, outside Kaunas, and at Minsk. They killed them at Chelmno, and at Auschwitz, and at Sobibor, and they killed them at Belzec and Treblinka too.
We now can add two simple observations:
1) there is an extensive body of evidence indicating that the Nazis had a policy of exterminating Jews other than a small proportion spared for work, and a few exemption categories.
2) there is no evidence that Jews deported to the camps who did not escape or who were not selected for work (Auschwitz) turned up anywhere else during or after the war.
and reiterate one crucial point
3) you haven't offered anything more than an argument to personal incredulity, haven't modelled anything, and haven't demonstrated the actual physical limits of what was possible or what would have been hypothetically achievable.
Even if we cut out hypothetically all five big death camps, then there were still 2.9 million Jewish victims of the Nazis and their accomplices; and now there are 2.4 million anomalies. Your theory cannot explain what happened to them, whereas the conventional explanation can. So they're anomalies for your theory.
And that's being extremely generous in labelling your argument to personal incredulity a 'theory'. It isn't even a properly formulated hypothesis. It's simply seizing on one point and then not stopping to consider whether your incredulity fits with everything else we know.