The number has been tallied as around 6 million Jews. If you want to pettifog over the exact number, be my guest, but it alters nothing. The events happened. It is an entirely believable circumstance that once the number was published, it was simply repeated. How do you know that any were wrong? If all you have are questions, then all you can prove is nothing. Your position is to disbelieve something terrible, testified by witnesses and evidence, without any reason for disbelief.
How does this get you closer to anything? This is your conception of making a point: get snarled up in a trivial detail and miss the big picture. Nothing changes if the number was some other number.
Asking questions is a way to try and get the listener to ask those questions for him or herself. People can find many reasons for not believing what is said but if they do their own research then they tend to be believe what they find.
"The Jews." That's all I need to know about a collectivist view. I've read Mein Kampf. I've also read his "other book." I've read countless personal biographical accounts and histories of his main henchmen.
Asking questions in search of reinforcement is not sincere.
Just because some of the leading trouble-makers are Jews does not mean that all Jews are trouble-makers. Don't read in things that are not said.
Having many questions that do not have any satisfactory answers is a cause for concern and is not something to be ignored. It can be a sign of a cover-up.
If you do not have a questioning mind you will never work out which questions are unanswered.
So, do you believe all the extant six million figures or not?
If you do, isn't is an unbelievable coincidence that it is always exactly the same number?
If not then how do you know which ones are right and which ones are wrong?
Your position is to believe something incredible without any clear evidence.
The number has been tallied as around 6 million Jews. If you want to pettifog over the exact number, be my guest, but it alters nothing. The events happened. It is an entirely believable circumstance that once the number was published, it was simply repeated. How do you know that any were wrong? If all you have are questions, then all you can prove is nothing. Your position is to disbelieve something terrible, testified by witnesses and evidence, without any reason for disbelief.
How does this get you closer to anything? This is your conception of making a point: get snarled up in a trivial detail and miss the big picture. Nothing changes if the number was some other number.
Asking questions is a way to try and get the listener to ask those questions for him or herself. People can find many reasons for not believing what is said but if they do their own research then they tend to be believe what they find.
Here is one interesting article you could start with.
"The Jews." That's all I need to know about a collectivist view. I've read Mein Kampf. I've also read his "other book." I've read countless personal biographical accounts and histories of his main henchmen.
Asking questions in search of reinforcement is not sincere.
Just because some of the leading trouble-makers are Jews does not mean that all Jews are trouble-makers. Don't read in things that are not said.
Having many questions that do not have any satisfactory answers is a cause for concern and is not something to be ignored. It can be a sign of a cover-up.
If you do not have a questioning mind you will never work out which questions are unanswered.