Auschwitz: Plain Facts. A Response to Jean-Claude Pressac
a book by Germar Rudolf (ed.):
With two major works on the Auschwitz concentration camp, French pharmacist
Jean-Claude Pressac tried to refute revisionists with their own technical
methods. Whereas his first work remained rather obscured, Pressac's second book
on "The Technique of Mass Murder" was praised by the mainstream in Europe, and
they proclaimed victory over the revisionists. But they did not reckon with the
revisionists...
In Auschwitz: Plain Facts, Pressac's works are subjected to a detailed
and devastating critique by leading revisionist scholars. Although Pressac
deserves credit for having made accessible many hitherto unknown documents, his
writings could not refute the revisionists. Neither did Pressac adhered to
scientific nor to formal standards when interpreting documents: He made claims
that he either could not prove or which contradict the facts. Many documents he
quoted do not state what he claimed they do. But most importantly: He did not
pay any attention to "the technique" of the mass murder at issue, as his books
claim. Neither do his books contain references to technical or scientific
literature, nor are there any technical consideration in them. In fact, he
reveals such a massive technical incompetence that his works belong into the
category of novels rather than history. Despite these deficiencies, Pressac is
still hailed as the savior of the Auschwitz-Holocaust by the mainstream.
Auschwitz: Plain Facts is a must read for all those who want to argue
against the lies and half truth of established historiography.