Ron Unz, who I'll highlight (again) is himself Jewish, systemically calls into serious question the most basic tenets of the Holocaust narrative.
http://www.unz.com/runz/american-pravda-holocaust-denial/
This is very long... but very interesting. And it moves me significantly more into the camp that "something is extremely fishy with regards to our Holocaust narrative."
Vox Day offers an interesting, albeit speculative (by his own admission) syllogism. Let's assume the major premise that a large number (not 6 million, but something that can reasonably called a large number, at least) were killed in the lead-up to and during the years of WW2 is in fact true. Let's assume the minor premise, that the Germans who are notoriously bureaucratic, did not keep any records detailing the process of the Holocaust (which is in fact true.) What is the parsimonious solution, then? That someone else is responsible for killing the Jews, not the Germans.
Reading Unz's article, what are some interesting things that pop up? 1) Most of the supposed Jewish victims were not living in Germany, but in Eastern Europe. 2) All of the evidence of the Holocaust actually comes from the Soviets, 3) Who were responsible for, among other things, the Katyn Forest massacre and a Holocaust of his own peoples that dwarfs that of the Jews, even as historical revisionism has lowered his numbers and raised that of the Germans. 4) Most of the American political and military personnel of the 50s and even the 60s, many of whom actually served in the European theater, thought the Holocaust narrative was nonsense, 5) The American government was literally riddled with Soviet spies, as the Venona Papers conclusively proves, so much so that Joseph McCarthy is not only completely vindicated, but it's clear that he didn't go nearly far enough in his accusations.
So.. did Stalin actually perpetrate whatever Holocaust actually happened? Vox Day isn't actually suggesting as much, merely pointing out that it's more plausible than the narrative that we actually have.
Anyway, again—read the entire article linked above. It's kind of amazing.
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