02-22-2009, 11:29 PM
I move here the offtopic from other threads.
I especially love how 'good boys'' hirelings resort to the same arguments that the 'vilest' revisionists adopt:
Sounds like the argument revisionists use arguing that no order ever came from Hitler etc etc...how funny, eh?
Ho ho ho!
They ignore (purposefully?) the fact that eminent Communist leader Palmiro Togliatti [there is a city named after him in Russia] refused to plead in favor of Italian POWs in USSR, leading to the death of so many of them. Togliatti argued that personal losses (=a family member not coming back) were "the best antidote" against Fascism, whose existence deserved punishment.
Togliatti also argued in favor of the soviet crushing of eastern European rebellions, which he saw as obstacles to 'Socialism'.
Quote:No real accounting has ever been done of all the deaths in WWII because the results could not be stomached politically.
I especially love how 'good boys'' hirelings resort to the same arguments that the 'vilest' revisionists adopt:
Quote:The mountain of evidence has been building that Bacque's charge of the "missing million" supposedly perishing in the American (and French) POW camps in Germany and France is based on completely faulty interpretation of statistical data. There was never any serious disagreement that the German POWs were treated badly by the U.S. Army and suffered egregiously in these camps in the first weeks after the end of the war. That the chaos of the war's end would also produce potentially mismatches and errors in record keeping should surprise no one either.
Quote:But there was NO AMERICAN POLICY to starve them to death as Bacque asserts and NO COVER UP either after the war. No question about it, there were individual American camp guards who took revenge on German POWs based on their hatred of the Nazis.
Sounds like the argument revisionists use arguing that no order ever came from Hitler etc etc...how funny, eh?
Quote:The total death rate for POWs in World War II were as follows
Ho ho ho!
They ignore (purposefully?) the fact that eminent Communist leader Palmiro Togliatti [there is a city named after him in Russia] refused to plead in favor of Italian POWs in USSR, leading to the death of so many of them. Togliatti argued that personal losses (=a family member not coming back) were "the best antidote" against Fascism, whose existence deserved punishment.
Togliatti also argued in favor of the soviet crushing of eastern European rebellions, which he saw as obstacles to 'Socialism'.