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August 12th, 2016 | #1 |
The Epitome of Evil
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: The Unseen University of New York
Posts: 3,130
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Remarkable Holocaust Nonsense #15: The Eternally Broken Death Engines of Treblinka
Remarkable Holocaust Nonsense #15: The Eternally Broken Death Engines of Treblinka This is reproduced from the wildly popular history of 'Nazi atrocities' named 'The Scourge of the Swastika' authored by Edward Russell (aka Lord Russell of Liverpool) who was a key figure in the Nuremberg and Tokyo War Crime Trials. I quote: ‘He [Rudolf Hoss] visited Treblinka in the spring of 1942 and found the methods in use there somewhat primitive. Small chambers were used, equipped with pipes to induce the exhaust gas from internal combustion engines. This device was unreliable as the engines came out of old captured transport vehicles and tanks and frequently failed.’ (1) Now I mean come on; the Germans had access to their own perfectly good engine stock and I am sure they could have found more than a couple of old engines from vehicles that were no longer roadworthy that could have been used to produce the needed exhaust gas. Why on earth would the Germans use engines from other countries (we are specifically talking Soviet made ones here) taken from captured vehicles if they always kept breaking down? That is just absurd. What is even more absurd is the idea that the Germans would have used exhaust gas anyway. Given that they had already allegedly been using the highly effective and easy to produce bottled carbon monoxide gas to murder mental patients as part of Operation T4. Why use engines that use precious fuel stock to produce the carbon monoxide when this fuel would be better used by the Wehrmacht’s trucks, planes and tanks in prosecuting the war? This is especially so since carbon monoxide is a common by-product of industrial processes. So why on earth would the Germans use captured Soviet engines that often broke down to produce it when they could have simply used the bottled the waste product of their own industrial processes instead? It simply doesn’t make sense: does it? References (1) Edward Russell, 1972, [1956], 'The Scourge of the Swastika', 14th Edition, Corgi: London, p. 148 ------------------------------------- This was originally published at the following address: http://www.semiticcontroversies.blog...nsense-15.html
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