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@RedpillBot I was never particularly interested in the holocaust, and was unaware of it until around the same time I started to develop critical thinking skills, so I was always going to be predisposed to doubting it. Most everything I learned after just vindicated my doubts.
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@suquili @RedpillBot Independent of the holocaust myth, World War II is a war that makes sense with clearly defined sides, strategies, causes and consequences, but the Holocaust is a narrative that exists independently of any defined logic or recorded history, and it necessitates the complete rewriting of events and the reinvention of how we perceived them for it to exist in any framework of reality.
Six million deaths in three years is difficult for even laymen to parse as it defies the basic fundamentals of the laws of mathematics and physics, therefore it must exist as a spiritual event on par with the parting of the Red Sea or Moses' flood: An unquestioned article of faith.
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@RedpillBot It's funny too because growing up I was rather fixated on WWII, a family friend gave me all kinds of detailed books on the strategies and armies of WWII, model kits, toy soldiers n stuff like that, but the whole holocaust thing was just never mentioned at all.
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@TheEternalAnglo @RedpillBot It's sort of a sequestered narrative in the grand scheme of things. If you remove the holocaust from the story of WWII, not much changes. It's always described as this extra atrocity that was uncovered by the Allies after the dust had settled. Everyone knew the Nazis hated the Jews, but the holocaust itself is described like this secret evil plot that not even our heroes could've expected from the enemy.
In my history 101 class (after I had already become a denier) we had two separate lectures, one for the entirety of WWII, and one for the holocaust lol.
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@TheEternalAnglo the "holocaust"? never heard of it. Sounds like some made up bullshit