I don't need to because I am not wrong, btw did you read footnote number 1?
Great, there's no such thing as an ethnostate, there never has been, and there never will be. Footnotes only apply up to 2011 anyway.
What if you had wheels? Would you be a bicycle? We talk about reality here, well, some of us do, I've lost trying to figure out what you are doing here.
Check it out. This is from Jurgen Graf
Our curiosity about Treblinka reawakened at the close of 1999, triggered by our Australian associate Fredrick Töben, who relayed information about groundbreaking radar explorations conducted by another Australian, Richard Krege, a young and intrepid engineer. Krege employed ground-penetrating radar, a technology adept at unearthing hidden objects and grave sites by detecting anomalies in soil composition, to probe the grounds of Treblinka. Allegedly, according to numerous eyewitnesses, the site was said to hold enormous mass graves. The prevailing narrative suggests that, since neither Treblinka, Belzec, Sobibor, nor Chelmno had crematoria, the bodies of anywhere from 750,000 to three million Jews were initially interred in mass graves. Subsequently, in spring 1943, these bodies were supposedly exhumed and incinerated on colossal outdoor pyres, leaving no trace behind. However, Krege's early radar scans in October 1999 revealed the ground in these areas to be untouched, challenging the very existence of these alleged graves.
This revelation was electrifying. If Krege's data were accurate, it could shatter the extermination camp narrative, which hinges entirely on these graves being real. I immediately reached out to Krege to dive deeper into his findings. He clarified that his data were not yet comprehensive and that further field investigations were crucial. Krege also intended to examine the sites at Belzec and Sobibor. We decided to combine our efforts for a comprehensive investigation.
The cost of renting the radar equipment for two weeks was prohibitive for Krege, so I launched a campaign among sponsors and friends, successfully securing the necessary funds. On August 21, 2000, just days after my 49th birthday, marking my final departure from Switzerland, Krege, Carlo Mattogno, and I assembled in Cracow. Unfortunately, Mattogno had to return to Italy after two days due to a family emergency, which turned out to be minor, leaving Krege and me to pursue our mission solo.
Auschwitz was our first target. Krege needed a control site to compare with Treblinka, a place where mass graves from World War II were known to exist. Such graves were present at Auschwitz-Birkenau, where roughly 20,000 people succumbed to a typhus epidemic in 1942. The old crematorium at the main camp couldn't cope with the influx of bodies, and the Birkenau crematoria were not yet operational, leading to mass burials. These graves are evident in Allied aerial photos, analyzed by John Ball. Krege had no difficulty locating one of these graves using the radar; the soil and vegetation in the area stood out starkly from the surrounding landscape. Krege spent two days gathering data, while my role was confined to interpreting, as I lacked the expertise to operate the equipment.
Next, we moved to Belzec, where Krege found conditions ideal for his work
. Despite the claim that about 600,000 Jews were exterminated in this small camp—making up a significant portion of the infamous "six million"—the site receives few visitors, and there is no museum presence, allowing Krege to work undisturbed for days under favorable weather conditions. Sobibor presented a different scenario: The camp has a museum at its entrance, vigilant against any unauthorized activities, and a young Polish historian there informed us that the exact locations of the mass graves were uncertain. Known to the historian as revisionists from a 1997 visit, we openly requested permission to use the radar. He directed us to an office in Warsaw for authorization, but we opted to bypass bureaucratic delays and continued to Treblinka.
At Treblinka, we lodged at a charming guest house in Ostrow.
For the following days, Krege meticulously swept every inch of the alleged mass grave area with his radar. Despite the steady stream of Holocaust tourists, often from Israel, our operation went unnoticed, and we departed without incident. Krege then returned home via Germany, while I continued my journey, heading to Lviv, Ukraine, to delve into the archives before traveling to Moscow and later to the Orient—another adventure entirely.
Richard Krege's preliminary results, displayed on slides, were presented at conferences in Washington (June 2001) and Moscow (January 2002). The radar scans from Birkenau confirmed significant ground disturbances, indicating the presence of a mass grave. In stark contrast, Treblinka and Belzec showed no such evidence of soil disruption. The unavoidable conclusion from these findings is that the enormous mass graves—allegedly containing up to one and a half million corpses, with the Encyclopedia of the Holocaust citing 870,000 for Treblinka and 600,000 for Belzec—simply did not exist. This singular fact is sufficient to topple the entire official narrative of the Holocaust like a house of cards.