LemmyCaution
Master Poster
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2011
- Messages
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One of the most important documents about the holocaust you say?
That was THHP expressing things that way. Ronald Headland says that "this report is without equal" among reports about the killings of the mobile killing squads, which carried out he massacres of Jews in the East. Again, I won't pile up comments here but simply note that you somehow missed the point of my post: you say that the document is irrelevant, yet people who study and write about the Holocaust stress its relevancy. Leaving you looking like a dissembler and weasel, I'm afraid.
Let's test that using the Irrelevant Documents Test.
Another standard you are making up ad hoc?
You know, the test we apply to reject the relevance of any appearance of, say the Auschwitz four million or the Auschwitz four and a half million, in a trial transcript. When has the Jaeger Report been introduced into evidence in any court? Which specific defendant was convicted based upon which specific information found in the report? How did the Jaeger Report factor into a convicted criminal's sentence? Which specific information was cited specifically by the court as a factor in determining the guilt of and or the sentence of the convicted criminal? If any other evidence was submitted along with the Jaeger Report in any criminal trial, please explain the relative importance of the Jaeger Report vis-a-vis the other evidence and prove that the trier of fact believed that the facts in the Jaeger Report are in fact true.
1) The gold standard of a document's value in reconstructing the past is not its usefulness in a trial. 2) The document, in case a reader doesn't know this, was discovered subsequent to the Nuremberg proceedings, for example. 3) Nevertheless, the very THHP article to which I linked, and which you evidently ignored, just as you ignore questions about the claims you've made concerning Jaeger's report and about the fate of Jews in 5 German-occupied cities, said this
the Jaeger Report has been used at several other legal proceedings in several countries including Germany, Canada, and the United States. The most recent use of the Jaeger Report was in "U.S. v. Stelmokas" 100 F.3rd 302 (3rd Cir.; 1996). . . . Its impact can be gauged by the statement of one of the appeals court judges who reviewed the document. "Colonel Jaeger reports the executions of thousands of Jews and hundreds of others in such an impersonal, matter-of-fact-manner and with such pride that his account leaves one in a horror-driven state of shock." (100 F.3rd 302, 325).
Then you can tell me how this report is relevant to gas/plan/six--something you continually run away from doing.
Leaving aside the "little" definitional problem you ignore, I have done this at length in posts I've linked to, posts from months ago. The document is an official report informing Jaeger's superior of the activity of Jaeger's squad in Lithuania in executing its assignments and itemizes the murders of over 130,000 Jews in summer and fall 1941, which constitute a portion of the 1.4 million Jews estimated by Hilberg to have been exterminated by the Germans and their helpers in mobile killing actions. The report states that the goal of the murders carried out by Jaeger's squad was to make Lithuania free of Jews, which applies the goal of German Jewish policy to a specific occupied area.
To remind you, you had claimed no documentation existed for extermination actions and specifically said you wouldn't accept a document that was oblique, that used fuzzy maths, or that discussed anti-partisan actions or reprisal shooting. I wrote that the Jaeger report rubbished your silliness on all grounds. To remind you what you asked for, here is what I was responding to when I offered the Jaeger report, among other documents,
When asked for a document that unambiguously says "extermination," don't offer one that says "special treatment." . . . Don't say that the documentary evidence of a planned ethnic cleansing is evidence of an extermination. . . . Don't quote the opinion of a court that convicted members of the SS of treating Jews inhumanely as evidence that there was a policy of physically annihilating all the Jews. Don't offer a report that says X number of Jews were shot in retaliation for the murder of a German soldier as evidence that all the Jews were going to be killed."
To remind you, again, that I have never avoided the question how the report links to the Holocaust, here are some points I made during our first discussion of the report:
[The Jaeger Report] reflected a policy to exterminate Jews in Lithuania, unequivocally, and can be connected to other documents and actions to kill Jews throughout the East, even before the general European program was decided.
The early mass extermination actions targeting Jews, initiated by instructions to the Einsatzgruppen and then expanded by orders from Himmler and Heydrich in the summer of 1941, occurred in the East, with victims being Jews living in the occupied East. There are documents and other evidence that show this. One such document is the Jaeger Report.
[T]he intention to murder all of Europe's Jews developed over time, with input from regional activists as well as central orders.
The most obvious and glaring point is your steadfast refusal to give an explanation of your view that Colonel Jaeger's report doesn't discuss the extermination actions resulting in over 130,000 Jewish deaths but rather anti-partisan operations, rogue activity, or ethnic cleansing. If we could clear this up, we could then move on to Cyrix's requested discussion intentionalism/functionalism or to your sophistic presentation of what constitutes an action that's part of the Holocaust. But first things first - and you've been dodging a defense of your stated viewpoint for months.
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