It was pretty easy to jump on the band wagon and become a holocaust denier, because it seemed so obvious. Not to mention them darned Jews, right? But something never sat right with me, something along the lines of if it was so obvious why are deniers a minority.
So I did a bunch of research independent of any forums, because let's face it any one on a forum already has an axe to grind.
In the end I really did have to agree that:
-
Deniers cherrypick. I was overwhelmed by the sheer volume of war related documentation there is available and deniers only ever seem to use the few bits that suit their purpose, and then they beat that like a kettle drum.
-
Overwhelming evidence about the gas chambers NOT being gas chambers turned out to not be so overwhelming afterall. Again deniers seem to only use evidence or methodology that suited their objectives.
So either the Jewish conspiracy is so huge and well funded that they are able to perpetuate a hoax of a scale grander than I can even imagine. Or there actually is a lot of truth there. I do remain open to any new information on or approaches to the subject however.
Anyhow, am I the only one?
view the rest of the comments →
dellcos ago
No. Same as with Ron Paul. No one has ever said, "I USED to support Ron Paul."
Ideas come to through legit thought and research aren't easily swayed.
Tallest_Skil ago
Libertarians are leftists. Virtually everyone who is actually right-wing supported (past tense) libertarianism at one point, and then they realized that jews exist and races are separate species, and then understood that until the whole world is white libertarianism will never work.
dellcos ago
No one mentioned anything about libertarians. But I generally agree with your comment.
Hard to be leftist though when you are totally against collectivism. So, everything but the first sentence makes sense.