.
So, is it your contention that Klee is not an historian, or that "The Good Old Days" doesn't discuss the Holocaust at all
.
.
No, you aren't, but no, I don't
.
.
And what makes it absurd, in your world?
.
.
No, it is to show that those findings and stories have zero impact on the actual history involved.
Just like the fact that George Washington not having chopped down that cherry tree nor thrown a silver dollar across the Potomac does not mean the American Revolution didn't happen.
.
.
Mostly because few of them use nonsensical claims.
.
.
And I gave you Klee.
Which you then lied about.
.
.
And I rejected that suggestion, since AFAIK none have, but it is impossible to prove a negative.
You want to throw out that detail on that basis, be my guest -- it won't change a single thing about the normative understanding of the Holocaust.
.
.
Yes, thereby fulfilling your any historian and any detail requirements,
.
.
Which is true.
.
.
Which word is confusing you?
.
.
It's not my claim nor that of anyone here (so I can hardly have defended it), so it's not my responsibility to research it.
.
.
No, it is meaningless denier drivel that this shows anything contradicting the Holocaust as we know it.
.
.
If that's how you want to treat it, go ahead.
But why I don't I give you more exercise by your running away from the question "So what if it is?"
.
.
No, we cannot assume that. It's been explained to you how eyewitness testimony can be unreliable in spots, and how this unreliability is handled.
It's no one's fault but your own if you choose to continue to make yourself the object of ridicule by ignoring that explanation.
.
.
When an historian offers such a source without commentary as Klee did in this case, it can be assumed that it is offered with approval, even if the historian doesn't add "... and I agree" at the end.
.
.
No, it demonstrates problems with the pop culture. For example, most people assume that the signing of the Declaration of Independence was part and parcel with the vote for independency. This is because of the popularity of things such as the musical, film, and revival of "1776".
The fact is, these were two separate votes, with independency having been approved on July 2nd.
That the other is assumed to be fact does not indicate intellectual bankruptcy on the part of historians of the era, no more than it mean the American Revolution never happened.
Only the Holocaust has that standard applied by deniers.
.
.
No, it was an *lowering* of the standards (not one specific detail from the book, but any detail at all from the book) in order to show that deniers can't even do the easier task.
That deniers cannot but still continue with the claim shows intellectual bankruptcy, unlike your example.
.
So which specific detail provided by a survivor or perpetrator is referenced to and "endorsed" by Klee?