Speaking of intellectual bancrupcy I would like to make a comment: What you might have seen if your eyes had been open and your mind not fogged with bias. is that the term "denier" is offending and insulting those who do not bluntly "deny" a complete narrative but who according to defined and accepted standards of good scientific conduct "revise" results like all scientific results must be revised constantly with growing knowledge.
Literally none of you have used "defined and accepted standards of good scientific conduct" on this thread. That goes for the outright deniers, the fellow-travellers, self-styled skeptics, fence-sitters, and the merely clueless.
The correct branch of knowledge needed to comprehend the history of the Holocaust is, doh, history. Do you have any familiarity with the defined and accepted standards of modern historiography?
Thought not.
It might have disappointed you that not the expected bunch of SS adoring skinheads were dumping their brown oozem, but to confirm prejudice this is not the right place and the right level of forum.
On the contrary, quite a few of the deniers on this thread have been SS adoring nutters, most have been overt antisemites, and only a handful have been fellow-travellers and useful idiots.
Those appearing here have seious doubts in parts of the story. Their doubts in no way have to be proven. The burden of proof is always on the accuser because nothing is provable not to exist or not to have happened.
The burden of proof is on deniers and their sympathisers to substantiate their conspiracy theories and present evidence to justify their baseless assertions. Merely posing as a defence attorney does not absolve you of the requirement to prove your case. Neither you nor any other denier has managed it in what is the better part of a year.
Your confusion fails to realise that the burden of proof for the Holocaust was carried a long time ago, elsewhere. If it had not been carried, then it would not be an accepted historical fact. But it clearly is an accepted historical fact. So anyone wishing to challenge that accepted historical fact now has the burden of proof to substantiate their challenge and justify how and why we ought to revise the accepted understanding.
Revising history also means rewriting history. As a narrative and as an explanation. Deniers do neither.
At the very least, any genuine skeptic has the burden to read something on the subject about which they are skeptical. Ad by something, I mean the conventional scholarship, not fringe drivel. It is quite clear that the deniers and their sympathisers in this thread have not done so.
The accusers however never hesitate to quote the "mountains of evidence" and being asked to present at least some, come around with some reliable looking details, some obscure and some clearly fabricated or falsified material. It should be clear that if a witness is caught lying in court, EVERYTHING which was submitted by that witness, true or not true, has to be ignored by the jury. This is also applicable in case the prosecutor is lying, as seen in the OJ Simpson trial. Then the case is done for the prosecution. period. And so is yours.
This is flat-out wrong. Firstly, falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus is explicitly rejected in Californian law, indeed in Anglo-American common law as a whole. It's also rejected in continental law, including German law. It's also a logical fallacy in philosophy. It was last used explicitly in the Middle Ages. So you're asking us to revert back to what is quite literally medieval thinking.
Secondly, you seem to assume that every witness relevant to the Holocaust has been 'caught lying'. In actual fact the number of outright liars is minuscule, and those outright liars have had their testimonies rejected by courts as well as historians. There are 10s of 1000s of witnesses who gave probative evidence to one or other aspect of the Holocaust. I seriously doubt you have actually listened to what these witnesses are saying in any significant way, yet you set yourself up as jury and judge on this subject without having shown that you really know what you're talking about.
Thirdly, you seem blithely unaware of how important contemporary documents are to the historiography. On this thread we have been discussing quite a few examples in some detail - most recently, the Jaeger report.
I finish with a quote from Gilad Atzmon in "The Wandering Who? A study of Jewish Identity Politics". Zero Books, Washington. 2011, page 174:
When I was young and naive, I regarded history as serious academic matter. As I understood it, history had something to do with truth seeking, documents, chronology and facts. I was conviced that history aimed to convey a sensible account of the past based on methodical research. I also believed that an understanding of the past could throw some light over our present and even help us to shape a better future.
I grew up in the Jewish state and it took me a while to understand that the Jewish historical narrative is very different. In the Jewish intellectual insular world, one first decides what the historical morale is, then one invents a past to fit.
No further comment.
But the Holocaust isn't just part of a Jewish historical narrative. It's very firmly part of a German historical narrative, and also part of the Polish, Ukrainian, Russian, Belarusian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Estonian, Romanian, Hungarian, Slovakian, Czech, Bulgarian, Greek, Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian, Austrian, Italian, French, Belgian, Dutch, Luxembourgeois, Danish and Norwegian historical narratives, because it directly affected those countries. It also affected Britain, Sweden, Switzerland, Finland, Turkey, the US, at the time, in the 1940s. So it's also part of those countries' historical narratives, too.
The country whose scholars pay most attention to the Holocaust is hands-down, Germany. They do so of their own free will.
Their scholarship is the gold standard which everyone else is expected to read and digest. And their productivity is ferocious. Here are just a few of the more prominent examples of works written about the Holocaust and directly related issues by German historians in the past two years:
- Anders, Freja, Stoll, Katrin, Wilke, Karsten (eds), Der Judenrat von Bialystok. Dokumente aus dem Archiv des Bialystoker Ghettos 1941-1943. Paderborn: Schöningh, 2010
- Bajohr, Frank and Christoph Strupp (eds), Fremde Blicke auf das ‘Dritte Reich’: Berichte ausländischer Diplomaten über Herrschaft und Gesellschaft in Deutschland 1933-1945. Göttingen: Wallstein, 2011
- Baum, Herwig, Varianten des Terrors. Ein Vergleich zwischen der deutschen und rumänischen Besatzungsverwaltung in der Sowjetunion 1941-1944. Berlin: Metropol, 2011
- Benz, Angelika and Marija Vulesica (eds), Bewachung und Ausführung. Alltag der Täter in nationalsozialistischen Lagern. Berlin: Metropol, 2011
- Benz, Angelika, Der Henkersknecht: Der Prozess gegen John (Iwan) Demjanjuk in München, Berlin: Metropol, 2011
- Benz, Wolfgang, Barbara Distel, Angelika Königseder (eds), Nationalsozialistische Zwangslager. Strukturen und Regionen, Täter und Opfer. Berlin: Metropol, 2011
- Buser, Verena, Ueberleben von Kindern und Jugendlichen in den Konzentrationslagern Sachsenhausen, Auschwitz und Bergen-Belsen. Berlin: Metropol, 2011
- Christ, Michaela, Die Dynamik des Tötens: Die Ermordung der Juden in Berditschew. Frankfurt am Main: Fischer, 2011
- Conze, Eckhart, Norbert Frei, Peter Hayes, Moshe Zimmermann, Das Amt und die Vergangenheit: Deutsche Diplomaten im Dritten Reich und in der Bundesrepublik. Karl Blessing Verlag, 2010
- Cramer, John, Belsen-Trial 1945. Der Lüneberger Prozess gegen Wachpersonal der Konzentrationslager Auschwitz und Bergen-Belsen. Göttingen: Wallstein, 2011
- Curilla, Wolfgang, Der Judenmord in Polen und die Ordnungspolizei 1939-1945. Paderborn: Ferdinand Schöningh, 2011
- Dieckmann, Christoph, Deutsche Besatzungspolitik in Litauen 1941-1944. Göttingen: Wallstein, 2011
- Friedrich, Klaus-Peter (ed), Die Verfolgung und Ermordung der europäischen Juden durch das nationalsozialistischen Deutschland 1933-1945. Bd 4: Polen September 1939-Juli 1941. Munich: Oldenbourg, 2011
- Gerlach, Christian, Extremely Violent Societies: Mass Violence in the Twentieth-Century World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010 (a German historian)
- Gerwarth, Robert. Hitler’s Hangman. The Life of Heydrich. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2011 (a German historian)
- Greiser, Almut, Der Kommandant Josef Schwammberger: Ein NS-Täter in den Erinnerungen von Ueberlebenden. Berlin: Aufbau Verlag, 2011
- Gruner, Wolf and Osterloh, Jörg (eds), Das ‘Grossdeutsche Reich’ und die Juden. Nationalsozialistische Verfolgung in den ‘angegliederten Gebieten’. Frankfurt am Main: Campus Verlag, 2010
- Hess, Christiane, Julia Hörath, Dominique Schröder, Kim Wünschmann (eds), Kontinuitäten und Brüche: Neue Perspektiven auf die Geschichte der NS-Konzentrationslager. Berlin: Metropol, 2011
- Hoppe, Bert and Hildrun Glass (eds), Die Verfolgung und Ermordung der europäischen Juden durch das nationalsozialistischen Deutschland 1933-1945. Bd 7: Sowjetunion mit annektierten Gebiete I. Munich: Oldenbourg, 2011
- Kammerhofer, Andrea, Brigitte Kepplinger, Irene Leitner (eds), Dameron Report. Bericht des War Crimes Investigating Team No 6824 der US Army vom 17.7.1945 über die Tötungsanstalt Hartheim. Vienna: StudienVerlag, 2011
- Keller, Rolf, Sowjetische Kriegsgefangene im Deutschen Reich 1941/42. Behandlung und Arbeitseinsatz zwischen Vernichtungspolitik und kriegswirtschaftlichen Zwängen. Göttingen: Wallstein, 2011
- Kühne, Thomas, Belonging and Genocide: Hitler’s Community, 1918-1945. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2010 (a German historian)
- Kuretsidis-Haider, Claudia, Irmgard Nöbauer, Winfried Garscha, Siegfried Sanwald, Andrzej Selerowicz (eds), Das KL Lublin-Majdanek und die Justiz. Strafverfolgung und verweigerte Gerechtigkeit. Polen, Deutschland und Oesterreich im Vergleich. Vienna: CLIO, 2011
- Lang, Hans-Joachim, Die Frauen von Block 11. Medizinische Versuche in Auschwitz. Hamburg: Hoffmann und Campe Verlag, 2011
- Longerich, Peter, Heinrich Himmler. A Life. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011 (originally in German)
- Longerich, Peter, Holocaust. The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010 (originally in German)
- Löw, Andrea and Markus Roth, Juden in Krakau unter deutscher Besatzung 1939-1944. Göttingen: Wallstein, 2011
- Mallmann, Klaus-Michel, Andrej Angrick, Jürgen Matthäus, Martin Cüppers (eds), Die ‘Ereignismeldungen UdSSR’ 1941. Dokumente der Einsatzgruppen in der Sowjetunion. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 2011
- Meyer, Ahlrich, Das Wissen um Auschwitz, Täter und Opfer der ‘Endlösung’ in Westeuropa. Paderborn: Schöningh, 2010
- Mick, Christoph, Kriegserfahrungen in einer multiethnischen Stadt: Lemberg 1914-1947. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2011.
- Mlynarczyk, Jacek Andrezj and Böhler, Jochen (eds), Der Judenmord in den eingegliederten polnischen Gebieten 1939-1945. Osnabrück: fibre Verlag, 2010
- Morsch, Günter, Bertrand Perz, Astrid Ley (eds), Neue Studien zu nationalsozialistischen Massentötungen durch Giftgas, Berlin: Metropol, 2011
- Neitzel, Sönke and Harald Welzer, Soldaten: Protokolle vom Kämpfen, Töten und Sterben. Frankfurt am Main: Fischer, 2011
- Neumann, Boaz, Die Weltanschauung des Nazismus: Raum – Körper – Sprache. Göttingen: Wallstein, 2010
- Osterloh, Jörg and Clemens Vollnhals (eds), NS-Prozesse und Deutsche Oeffentlichkeit: Besatzungszeit, Frühe Bundesrepublik und DDR. Göttingen: Vandenhoek & Ruprecht, 2011
- Reichelt, Katrin, Lettland unter deutscher Besatzung 1941-1944. Der lettische Anteil am Holocaust. Berlin: Metropol, 2011
- Rentrop, Petra, Tatorte der ‘Endlösung’. Das Ghetto Minsk und die Vernichtungsstätte von Maly Trostinez. Berlin: Metropol, 2011
- Riedel, Dirk, Ordnungshüter und Massenmörder im Dienst der ‘Volksgemeinschaft’. Der KZ-Kommandant Hans Loritz. Berlin: Metropol, 2011
- Riedle, Andrea, Die Kommandanturstabsangehörigen des KZ Sachsenhausen: Sozialstruktur, Dienstwege und biografische Studien. Berlin: Metropol, 2011
- Schüle, Annegret, Industrie und Holocaust. Topf & Söhne – Die Ofenbauer von Auschwitz. Göttingen: Wallstein Verlag, 2010
- Steegmann, Robert, Das Konzentrationslager Natzweiler-Struthof und seine Aussenkommandos an Rhein und Neckar 1941-1945. Berlin: Metropol, 2010
- Wefing, Heinrich, Der Fall Demjanjuk: der letzte grosse NS-Prozess. Das Leben, der Prozess, das Urteil. Berlin: Beck, 2011
- Weigelt, Andreas, Judenmord im Reichsgebiet. Lieberose: Aussenlager des KZ Sachsenhausen. Berlin: Metropol, 2011
- Wette, Wolfram, Karl Jäger: Mörder der litauischen Juden. Frankfurt am Main: Fischer, 2011
- Wrochem, Oliver von and Jockheck, Lars (eds), Das KZ Neuengamme und seine Aussenlager. Geschichte, Nachgeschichte, Erinnerung, Bildung. Berlin: Metropol Verlag, 2010
These works, by the way, also illustrate just a tiny fraction of what is meant by the burden of proof for the Holocaust being carried. If you want to criticise them, fine, but first you have to read them.