I visited aush in Poland a couple years ago. Prior to my Poland visit. I watched a few videos on aush. Even from 1970’s. Explaining the buildings and shit. When visiting some of the buildings were crumbled. I asked the tour guide what happen to these buildings in rubble. She said it was destroyed by the Germans right after loosing the war to prevent people from seeing what they were doing to the Jewish people. But in the 1970’s video, that building was there. Also note the piles of glasses. Remind you jews from all over Europe supposedly we’re collected. Yet all of them wore the same exact glasses? Low effort illusion… or the jews specifically wore only certain type or there was only one type back then. I don’t know. Hair was arguable since jews have frizzy curly disgusting smelling wool. Gas chambers were confusing. No seal. Wood outward closing door. You could kick the door and would fall apart. Later videos explained zyclon b was used but then changed to a Diesel engine for its exhaust. And the crematoria. Why both if they were stacking dead gassed jews on fire pits on stacks of wood (doesn’t burn hot enough to burn bodies of that magnatud) the work force needed to collect such wood and stack burn. Chop bones up, would be challenging even with the population of China. The story is quite far reaching. Holocoaster was another wtf?! Extermination was silly. If you wanted to kill many like that. Just gun up Fence lines. And starve them. Then the dead ones feed to the live ones.
Churchill, Eisenhower and De Gaulle each wrote extensive books after the war totaling thousands of pages of their memoirs of WWII. There's not a single mention of "death camps" as later described by jews. Genrikh Yagoda was a Soviet jew with a little Hitler mustache. A General. He was responsible for the murder of 10 million Christian farmers and peasants in Russia and Ukraine from 1939 to 1949. The reason you never heard his name is because the people that are responsible for all those REAL deaths are in charge of our media to this day.
That's why the internet is so important. Places like Voat and Poal. If it wasn't for these last few bastions of free speech, I never would have heard of Genrikh Yagoda.
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