Clayton, you do realize that just calling someone a liar doesn't make them one - they actually have to be lying about something.
Back at post #7053 I asked you to actually live up to your claim to be a revisionist. Use evidence to debunk these witnesses, if that is your intent.
If this was a court case the perponderance of evidence supporting the Holocaust would be sufficient for a conviction in a criminal court (proof beyond a reasonable doubt, in case you were unclear on the appropriate standard). Whereas you and the rest of your denier cohorts "cross-examinination" of the witnesses by going "they are just lying" without ANY counter evidence would not be considered a rebuttal at all. So, you can understand why we have little to no respect for any assertion you may make.
Because you're evidently unclear on the appropriate standard, here in the United States, preponderance of evidence is a burden of proof most commonly associated with civil law. Beyond a reasonable doubt is the burden of proof in criminal law. Preponderance of evidence doesn't lead to proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
In the case of Pesye Schloss, her story in The Last Days of Jerusalem in Lithuania we're told that she was shot in the arm and fell into the ditch where a soldier, noticing that she was still alive, removed her shoes and shot her in the foot. A little later she crawled out of the ditch and to safety in Vilna. In Who Will Write Our History?, she is said to have survived the shooting and, not being wounded, crawled out of the ditch and to the safety in Vilna.
To be fair, the first story would be considered hearsay evidence while the second is a second hand account of the original hearsay evidence. The first account introduces unnecessary cruelty into the circumstances under which she is wounded while the second account says she wasn't wounded. If a victim told an investigator she was wounded and in a later interview said she wasn't wounded, that discrepancy would need to be explained or the victim's credibility would be suspect.
I'll admit that I don't know where Saggy is going with his demands for the name of one credible witness or why he won't choose one from the list of two hundred that you gave about thirty pages back. If I were you I would just ignore him. But if you choose to engage him, give him the best you got. Remember that an enormous quantity of weak evidence doesn't add up to strong evidence. When you highlight the weaker links like Pesye Schloss, it makes it look you don't have any stronger links.