You're basing your argument on the where are the missing Jews gambit. It's a logical fallacy based on the excluded middle--that Jews in Europe either 1) survived the war or 2) were intentionally murdered through a variety of methods including gas chambers by the Nazis as part of the plan to exterminate all the Jews.
The more I read this, the more stupid it seems. Whoever taught you logic ought to be ashamed of themselves, or you were a very dumb student.
You were presented with a simple point based on two very substantial sets of
empirical evidence, namely 1) more than 1.5 million Jews can be amply documented as deported in 1942, 2) Goering was in charge of agriculture and the food supply in Nazi-occupied Europe.
These two points were presented because they are essentially irrefutable, so extensive is the documentation and the proof of them. They were made while removing any evidence or reference to the point in dispute - namely that the deported Jews were in fact sent to a small number of camps and killed there, in 1942.
It really doesn't matter what kind of handwaving waffle you offer to avoid explaining where the Jews went if not to the small number of camps and into the ground, because Goering was in charge of agriculture and the supply for the
whole of Nazi occupied Europe. Every single possible location that could ever be dreamed up would concern him. And every single possible location would be receiving some unknown number of Jews over and above the people already living there. It doesn't matter whether the SS or somebody else takes charge of the Jews, they have to receive some food, or they die. And this is going to leave a paper trail. Right back up to Goering. Who would therefore know what had happened to the deported Jews.
There is no fallacy of the excluded middle here. The point I made was quite open ended, you could have dreamed up all manner of respones if you knew how, except you don't know how to reply because you don't actually really know anything about Nazi-occupied Europe. You probably didn't even know that Goering was in ultimate charge of the food supply, I'm guessing. None of you guys seem to bother to learn about very simple things like that.
For all the blethering about quantities of wood required to cremate corpses and other pseudo-technical arguments we get from deniers, none of you have ever paid the slightest attention to economics or logistics. You move someone, they need looking after. Or they will eventually die.
You move someone in 1942, you've got at least two years to look after them in most places in occupied Europe. That's the yawning chasm which deniers can never explain. It's got nothing to do with whether someone survives the war. The question is about 1942-44. Not 1945 or 1948 or any other year.