English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

To make people feel sorry for them and drag the sympathy card for as long as possible.

2006-09-28 06:23:31 · 24 answers · asked by YankyMyWanky 1 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

24 answers

No. It happened.
But they still milk it no end to get everybody to agree that the state of Israel is a poor victim of its vicious neighbours, and can't be criticized for being the terrorist state that it is, without the critic being antisemitic and agreeing with the holocaust.

2006-09-28 06:28:59 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

Ahhhh, just a brief, cursory glance at the history of the second world war would answer your question. Not to mention all the people I've met who are Holocaust survivors let alone the children of Holocaust survivors. Given the number of people involved, living around the globe, do you have any idea how difficult it would be to create this kind of conspiracy? Having all these people say the same basic thing about the same event? You can't even get a consistent answer regarding the 9/11 Commission. Something on the scale of the Holocaust would be beyond the definition of the word, "impossible."

2006-09-28 06:36:38 · answer #2 · answered by gjstoryteller 5 · 1 0

And the Ottman Turks and Armenians didn't get into anything either, that was a hoax.

So were the Crusades. They were made up by Muslims so we'd feel sorry about them.

Attilah the Hun was also a fairey tale.

It's also a fallacy Christians and Jews shunned Mohammad. The Jew simply recomended he try Mecca because it had a nice ring to it.

Mecca

Jersualem has too many syalbles.

So Mohammad went there at the suggetion of the JEws and Chritians and the rest is all a bunch of made up stuff.

2006-09-28 07:20:06 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You do not have a compassionate bone in your body. The Holocaust was very very real for 6 million Jews and their loved ones. The people who deny the Holocaust just want to discredit Jews. The Holocaust is well documented with a massive volume of books and pictures. Shame on you.

2006-09-28 06:31:14 · answer #4 · answered by Robert L 4 · 1 1

Not really.

There is evidence that many many Jews died in Germany during WWII. Many of the deniers claim that there wasnt really 6 million of them that were killed - and this number does seem a bit high, but it doesnt take away from the fact that they were systematically killed.... Also, there is much propaganda that has been proven to be false - such as the rumor that Germans made soap out of the fat of Jews. Thousands of bars of soap left over from wartime Germany were DNA tested, and not one had any human DNA contained in it.

So, there was a alot of propaganda, but also a lot of evidence that it actually happened as well....

2006-09-28 06:33:20 · answer #5 · answered by YDoncha_Blowme 6 · 1 1

No, it is not true. The holocaust occurred. The photos, the bones, the mass graves, the Nazi records of the murders are all true.

The Jews are not imagining that Islam wants to murder them, Islam itself says so every day.

2006-09-28 06:29:08 · answer #6 · answered by Just David 5 · 2 0

Yet another argument for not dropping out of school!

You're an anti-semitic moron - go align yourself with the Aryan Nation and/or the KKK, but leave Yahoo alone. You have posted this "question" before - it is no more valid this time than the last.

2006-09-28 08:02:09 · answer #7 · answered by Annie 4 · 0 0

So, what do you think about the answers you've received so far? No, it is not true! 17 members of my family died in Buchenwald and another 3 survived and have told me stories that would make you shiver. Are you saying that these people, who have numbers tattooes on their arms, did that themselves and are lying about what they went through? You should be ashamed of yourself!

2006-09-28 08:15:41 · answer #8 · answered by irenaadler 3 · 0 0

Jews made up only about half of those killed in the "Holocaust". I have spoken to many who were survivors of The Camps. And my own father was one of those who helped liberate them. It was very real...

2006-09-28 06:28:45 · answer #9 · answered by IdahoMike 5 · 3 0

Ask a holocaust survivor. A video and a picture are worth a thousand words. What, you think Hitler loved them?

2006-09-28 06:27:48 · answer #10 · answered by Red neck 7 · 2 0

fedest.com, questions and answers