Quoted By:
You have it all wrong, sir. It's not that I doubt the atrocity happened. It's that I have questions and observations which deserve mainstream attention but due to our political and social climate are taboo. For example...
1) Why are the estimates for the victims so wildly disparate with approximations between 2-12 million?
2) Of course "enemies of the state" of many varieties were rounded up, deported, and/or put into camps, but why has no documentation of the order for extermination being explicitly given ever been found? Is it possible this all occurred somewhat organically rather than systematically? How many were exterminated according to a "plan" and how many prisoners died of other causes like typhus or starvation caused by the allied bombing?
3) Why is there an industry within academia, our media, and our politics which profits financially and politically from this atrocity?
4) Why does this atrocity receive hugely disproportionate attention relative to other atrocities of that era of 1914-'45 (Ukraine, Armenia, the Greeks?)
To raise these questions does not make one a NAZI or a hateful person. It's in fact an indicator of a thoughtful and righteously critical mind.