How many statements do you have from German politicians, as opposed to German military leaders, talking about exterminating the Jewish people?
Since the rest of your post has been utterly decimated by everyone else, I get the scraps.
Actually I have rather a lot of statements from Nazi politicians (I see you're reverting back to conflating 'German' and 'Nazi', btw. It's an obnoxious habit you should lose). Before you ask, the definition of a Nazi politician would be:
1) the Fuehrer, plus the Reichsleiter and Gauleiter = about 70 top Nazis
2) members of the Reichstag, who often took executive jobs in the occupied territories or were SS generals
3) other district leaders and department heads in the civil administrations
Counting just the top Nazis, I would say that some Nazi leader or other is recorded as talking about the extermination of the Jews on average at least once a week through 1941-3, when the bulk of the killing happened. That would include for certain Hitler, Goebbels, Hans Frank, Rosenberg, Himmler, Ley, Streicher, Ribbentrop, as well as less well known figures like Gauleiter Alfred Meyer (Rosenberg's deputy in the Eastern Ministry). If one includes former Gauleiter, then Erich Kube obliged with quite a few more such remarks, but he would also count towards (2), since he remained an MdR. At least a third of the remarks were made in public, the rest behind closed doors or in their diaries.
These remarks are, of course, written up in the history books, so I refer you to those. Peter Longerich dealt with a number in his expert report for the Irving trial; he dealt with more in Davon haben wir nichts gewusst, as did Bernward Doerner in Die Deutschen und der Holocaust. The standard works on Nazi policy by Longerich and Browning contain a bunch more, other historians have found others. It's not like anyone needs to collate 150 statements by top Nazis talking about the extermination of the Jews. Most people get the point after far fewer. You, however, don't seem to have got the point.
So it's probably more interesting to see how many remarks about exterminating the Jews from top Nazi politicians you know about. I'm talking here of remarks that are
conventionally understood as talking about the extermination of the Jews. You know, like the Posen speech.
Because it's
your job, if you're to sustain your argument, to explain away every single such statement, while avoiding cherrypicking, quote-mining, selective citation or the fallacy of hasty generalisation. Anything less, and your argument will fail. Since you're probably about to start bloviating again on this subject, it would also behove you to remember that asserting opinions without checking the evidence is frowned upon in polite circles. I appreciate this is a tactic widely used by your even more clueless brethren, but deep down you know it won't wash.