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This is not a hypothetical question. I really wanna know.

2007-01-09 21:47:48 · 2 answers · asked by Nick 2 in News & Events Current Events

2 answers

It isn't illegal to doubt the Holocaus, it seems that we're suppose to believe all that history has taught us. I know that some form of massacre occurred way back before I was born and to question the authenticity of that event brings about anger from a mob of people. I do believe that it actually happened, it's what was done afterwards to appease for the harm done to them that I question the most. France and England gave this land which happens to be Israel, land taken from the Palestinian people and just handed over to these new immigrants. That's what's drawing blood in that country, land that the Palestinian people had called home, they were just ousted out of their estates and sent to live somewhere else. Religion wise all I can say is "follow your heart and not what your brain says", our heart is capable of telling us what's right or wrong, try using Jesus's name in vain and I'll bow my head and say to myself "have mercy on him" as he is blinded to your love.

2007-01-09 22:22:55 · answer #1 · answered by whispergently0204 3 · 0 1

If I were someone who dropped from the moon, my answer would be: I guess it is because the Holocaust involves the story of people who were killed. But in practice, indeed, there is a lot of hypocrisy in the world: It is illegal to doubt what happened to Jews in WW2, but at the same time, no legal proceedings were ever taken against Dead President Tudjman of Croatia, "historian" Philip Kohen and former PM of Britain Thacher, for doubting what happened in the Jasenovac death camp, because most of its victims were Serbs. And in Turkey it is illegal to publicly say what happened to Armenians in WW1, but I think it is probably illegal there too to doubt what happened to Jews in WW2.

2007-01-09 22:04:24 · answer #2 · answered by Avner Eliyahu R 6 · 0 0

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