German Jews from Würzburg and Kitzingen, in Bavaria, being deported to ghettos and concentration camps.
NY Times: Mapping the Holocaust: How Jews Were Taken to Their Final Destinations
By ISABEL KERSHNER
REBUTTAL BY
What's this? A Holocaust TM story appearing in the Jew York Slimes? No frickin' way! (rolling eyes in sarcasm). Break out the tissues and violins; and pay no attention to those "White guys" who run the media, Hollywood, the banks, academia, the government, etc. Diversion and protection -- that's always been the game with this "Shoah business."
Gas masks and goggles on, truth seekers. Into the mythical mist of the Zyklon B we go!
"There's no business like Shoah business like no business I know."
Slimes: Nini Ungar clearly recalled that Friday in February 1942 when the Nazis loaded her, her husband and her parents on a cattle cart and transferred them....
The Viennese were standing and laughing. ‘Finally they got the Jews out!’ ” Ms. Ungar, who was born Mina Tepper ... recounted in video testimony."
Rebuttal: Assuming Ms. Unger's account of the Viennese "standing and laughing" as the Jews departed is even true, dare we ask why the Austrian-Germans were so happy to see the Jews being deported? "Youse guys" (New Jerseyese for the plural of you) must have done something really bad to piss-off the famously polite and civil people of Austria. What might that have been? Hmmmm?
Always the "victims" -- eh? The images above are from 1933, a full 9 years BEFORE most Jews and Communists were interned during World War II.
Slimes: Her journey across a wintry Europe can now be traced on a database that documents about 1,100 transports, searchable by train (or boat or bus) or victim’s name.
Rebuttal: How about some tears for the 5 million Germans booted out of their homes after World War I; or the 15 million forced out after World War II? At least the Jews had sheltered transportation. The
poor Germans were forced to march westward while exposed to the elements and marauding gangs of communist partisans.
Slimes: A project of Yad Vashem, Israel’s Holocaust memorial and research center, the database sheds new light on the cross-border, Europewide nature of the stages leading to the mass extermination of some six million Jews, known in Hebrew as the Shoah.
Rebuttal: Yad Vashem. eh? That's the greasy bunch that ordered Amazon to ban "The Bad War," along with at least 80 other "offensive" books. Where are the actual remains of these "six million" TM bodies? Oh, that's right. There were turned into ashes in a handful of crematoria the size of pizza-ovens.
Slimes: “Very often people think of the Shoah as something that took place in the camps and killing sites in Eastern Europe from a geographical perspective,” said Joel Zisenwine, who has directed the “Transports to Extinction” project since 2008. “By focusing on the transports, I think we provide a more precise image of the Final Solution.”
Rebuttal: So, the Jews were "transported" to the camps? Wow. That's interesting. We never knew that. We just figured they flew into the camps by flapping their arms. Ya learn something new every day.
1- Dutch Jews boarding a train bound for an internment camp.
2 & 3 - Japanese-Americans were also interned by FDR. The only difference between the two events was that the Japanese-Americans had never expressed any hostility towards their adopted country.
Slimes: “In Paris, Amsterdam or Salonika, people may not have witnessed mass murder,” he said, “but they did witness Jews being marched to the train station.”
Rebuttal: This is really getting ridiculous.
Slimes: On arrival at the Skirotava station in Riga, the deportees were told that they had to walk miles to the ghetto, and that those unable to make the distance could take buses instead.
Rebuttal: So, the big bad genocidal Germans were considerate enough to allow elderly Jews to ride buses instead of walking the last few miles? That was nice of them, eh?
Slimes: Yad Vashem researchers said the vehicles were not buses but gas trucks, and their passengers were murdered.
Rebuttal: Ah yes. Of course. That explains it. The old "the-bus-is-actually-a-gas-chamber-on-wheels" trick. Those clever Germans!
Slimes: Half a dozen researchers are beginning the next phase: mapping the transports in Eastern Europe, where documentation is harder to come by.
Rebuttal: What exactly does the "mapping" of the transports prove? No one had ever disputed that Jews and Communists (plenty of overlap there!), as a temporary wartime security measure, were placed in internment camps as enemy aliens. Show us some forensic or documentary evidence of the Holohoax -- not "transportation routes."
Slimes: He described one of the sisters — it was not clear which — approaching the commander of the camp, showing him an identifying document, saying she was the sister of Sigmund Freud and asking to be given light office work. The commander said there must have been a mistake and told her that in two hours there should be a train to Vienna.
Rebuttal: That was nice of the big bad Germans, eh?
Slimes: “She could leave all her valuables and documents here, have a bath, and after the bath she would receive her documents and a travel permit to Vienna. The lady, of course, went to the bath house, from which she never returned.”
Rebuttal: Ah yes. Of course. That explains it. The old "the-bathroom-is-actually-a-gas-chamber" trick. Those clever Germans!
One thing we must concede about the Tribe -- they sure do produce some funny comedy writers!
"A Jewish guy walks into a bar and asks if he can use the bathroom......"
Boobus Americanus 1: I read an interesting piece in the New York Times today about the transport routes used during the Holocaust.
Boobus Americanus 2: I can't imagine the horror the 6 million Jews must have felt -- not knowing what or where they were being shipped to.
"Cheer up Boobus. It couldn't have been sso bad. Check out these Yiddish yentass ssinging in a choir at Ausschwitz. "
(It's not what it seems, Sugar. You see, unbeknownst to the choir, the conductor is actually releasing Zyklon B gas from his baton.)
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario