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Has anyone ever considered (actually I know several of you have) that the remnants of the holocaust were just misinterpreted?
I feel like wartime Germany's need for slave & cheap labor made the concept of mass executions ridiculous, even pertaining to societal outcasts of the time. It makes more sense that Germany planned to use the Jews as a disposable workforce to temporarily power the economy. The 6 death camps that we know today were all on the Russian side of occupied Europe, and it was several years before the purpose of such locations was properly evaluated, long after the war was over, society changed, and accurate records of the doings there could be properly inspected.
Maybe we misinterpreted the camps that the holocaust was known for, and in a peacetime society failed to recognize their purpose to holding Germany's disposable workforce.
Our misinterpretation has then been echoed until it is regarded as absolute truth, and serves the purpose of creating the impression that Natsoc is fundamentally evil and infeasible to serve as an effective political system, despite the fact that the holocaust and natsoc principles never perfectly coincided.