In twenty three years no Jews died or were born? Their numbers never flucutated, how odd. Could the deep state have been around from 1915? Oh, I do know the answer to that question, so please don't grief me too much. I've seen numbers where even if the Nazis had BBQ'ed Jews 24/7 they would have never had enough time to kill six million people. Plus they didn't have that many guards, food, raw materials, etc to exterminate all those people.
Just the ashes, would be like "hills", wouldn't it? Wouldn't that still be there.. like what did they do.. spread it out so it wasn't a hill, by the incinerator?
ChatGPT said:
The cremated remains of those who were murdered in gas chambers during the Holocaust, including at the main camps like Auschwitz, were often treated in a disturbing manner to try to erase evidence of the atrocities. In many cases, after the bodies were burned in crematoria, the ashes were disposed of in different ways, such as scattered in nearby fields, rivers, or even used as fertilizer.
At Auschwitz, for example, the Nazis made efforts to destroy evidence of mass murders by dispersing the remains or hiding them. Some of the ashes were buried in pits or spread around to prevent the creation of noticeable "hills." Despite these efforts, some of the ashes and human remains were still found in areas surrounding the camps when they were liberated. Though much of the physical evidence was destroyed or hidden, the memory of these atrocities persists through survivor testimony, historical research, and the remnants of the camps themselves.
In twenty three years no Jews died or were born? Their numbers never flucutated, how odd. Could the deep state have been around from 1915? Oh, I do know the answer to that question, so please don't grief me too much. I've seen numbers where even if the Nazis had BBQ'ed Jews 24/7 they would have never had enough time to kill six million people. Plus they didn't have that many guards, food, raw materials, etc to exterminate all those people.
gas chambers at the main camp.
Just the ashes, would be like "hills", wouldn't it? Wouldn't that still be there.. like what did they do.. spread it out so it wasn't a hill, by the incinerator?
ChatGPT said:
The cremated remains of those who were murdered in gas chambers during the Holocaust, including at the main camps like Auschwitz, were often treated in a disturbing manner to try to erase evidence of the atrocities. In many cases, after the bodies were burned in crematoria, the ashes were disposed of in different ways, such as scattered in nearby fields, rivers, or even used as fertilizer.
At Auschwitz, for example, the Nazis made efforts to destroy evidence of mass murders by dispersing the remains or hiding them. Some of the ashes were buried in pits or spread around to prevent the creation of noticeable "hills." Despite these efforts, some of the ashes and human remains were still found in areas surrounding the camps when they were liberated. Though much of the physical evidence was destroyed or hidden, the memory of these atrocities persists through survivor testimony, historical research, and the remnants of the camps themselves.