There were barely 6 million jews in the parts of Europe that Hitler conquered. Almost a million went to Israel shortly after the war, hundreds of thousands more moved to the UK and US, and over a million remained even according to the lying commies who were lying to exaggerate the death toll. France's jewish population was higher after the war than before even though Hitler controlled France through almost the entire war, and west German jews were more likely to survive than east German jews, so basically all of the deaths happened in camps taken over by the communists at the end of the war. Commies were mass murderers who lied about Katyn and built add-ons to Auschwitz to make it look like they could have killed and burned more people there than they actually could have. Even just looking at the population data, there's no way to reach 6 million jews. 4-5 million tops, and that's if the Soviets were being completely honest. If the commies were lying, the death toll could have easily been less than a million jews.
I believe it was much less than 6 million, in Germany at least. You can’t rely on public population numbers, all bullshit. There are other ways to estimate the population though. I found the info several years ago, they may have started fudging these numbers too.
If I remember correctly, the Germans kept very specific records on disease. Tay Sachs only appears in jews, it’s a genetic disorder. I believe it’s double recessive present in 1% of jews. You can mathematically calculate the total population size with the number of reported tay sachs cases in Germany in 1933. It’s a serious disease, nearly all will request medical treatment and were recorded.
Long story short, the jewish population in Germany in 1933 was around 1 million.
In Germany itself the jewish population was closer to half a million than a million. You have to add jews from France, Poland, and a bunch of eastern European countries to get anywhere near 6 million.
You may be correct, my research was a very long time ago and my memory is shit. But that method using medical records prior to ww2 is definitive, it’s a good tool to have/use in conversation.
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