MG1962
Unregistered
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2006
- Messages
- 17,252
That's called a quote. A quote mine is when a person starts with a premise--like, let's say: Nazis planned to exterminate all the Jews. Then that person reads a bunch of Nazi speeches and tries to find a sentence or two that can be retrofitted to sound extermination like. It's a way of working backwards to find evidence to support a predetermined conclusion. What I did was quote Joachim Neander's summary directly to show people just how far off base JN was with his critique of Irene Zisblatt.
No it is when you leave this bit out of the article you quoted. I highlighted the important part for you
An intelligent reader, however, who has read some scholarly literature about Auschwitz and Neuengamme, as well as one or more memoirs of undisputed survivors of these camps, and uses common sense cannot but question the authenticity and credibility of Mrs. Zisblatt's memoir
Notice the problem? Yeah you forgot to mention that the author cast doubt on this womans story because he was well acquainted with other narratives of the same event
