patrick p
18.4K posts



What opinion will get you in this position?


While trump bitches and moans about the straight of Hormuz, Iran just monetized it! $2 million per voyage accepted in cash, crypto, or barter. Or they don’t cross There are 1000s of ships and sailors waiting on the other side of that price tag. And there nothing Trump and his Epstein coalition can do about it. Iran now calls the shots!


🚨BREAKING Bloomberg reveals that 16 U.S. fighter jets have been destroyed so far in the war against Iran.






Iranian President Rouhani married his cousin when she was 14 💀💀💀



"You're sentenced to work 9 to 5 with 2 weeks vacation a year for the rest of your life"






If the Holocaust was “the hoax of the twentieth century” there would be evidence…. There would be documents from the Red Cross that explicitly stated the concentration camps were not used for extermination….. there would also be detailed records of how many prisoners died, and it would be significantly lower than the 6 million figure… like the documents that show 271k recorded deaths… 🧵 1/23





Nazism is a degenerate thug ideology that was bankrolled into power by proto-ZOG (British & American bankers, etc) and later absorbed back into proto-ZOG (NATO & West German institutions). WW2/Nazism was a European Great Reset that helped the US monopolize West Europe under it.









"Uncommon sense" never actually responds to clear refutations of claims made in posts like these aimed at gullible tools. For everyone even slightly discerning: No Red Cross records with total camp death tolls exist; The numbers in these documents do not purport to be the total camp or Nazi victim death tolls in the first place nor do they stem from the wartime activities of the Red Cross. The Red Cross never visited the pure extermination camps like Treblinka, Belzec, Sobibor or Kulmhof (which were not even concentration camps). In its official report the ICRC states very explicitly that they were not allowed to visit all the camps: "It should be stressed that the powers of the ICRC for help and protection could not be extended to all concentration camps; there were numerous camps and labor detachments of which they had no knowledge, or to which they were denied access until the end of hostilities." [Report Of The International Committee Of The Red Cross On Its Activities During The Second World War (September 1, 1939 - June 30, 1947), vol. 1, p. 625] "Whereas other camps exclusively reserved for Jews were not open to inspections for humanitarian purposes until the end, the Committee's activities were at least effective in several concentration camps containing a minority proportion of Jews." [ibid., p. 643] Thus, when the Red Cross representative Maurice Rossel tried to visit Auschwitz (Auschwitz I, not Auschwitz II Birkenau where the actual extermination camp was), all he was allowed to do is talk to the commandant for about half an hour. This is described in detail in the ICRC report. The letter reads: "It is a fact that one of our delegates was able to enter this camp. He approached the Commandant with a view to arranging a scheme of possible relief consignments for the civilian prisoners there. "According to his impression, the camp was a type of 'extensive concentration camp' where the detainees were compelled to do various kinds of work, including work outside the camp. Our delegate told us that he had not been able to discover any trace of installations for exterminating civilian prisoners." The delegate referred to was Maurice Rossel, who in 1979 recounted his visit to Auschwitz in the documentary Shoah by Claude Lanzmann. collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog… Rossel explains in the film (from 01:16:59 timestamp on screen) that the visit was not an official ICRC inspection, as the organization had no legal basis to enter the camp. He said he had "no authorization, written or otherwise" (01:21:01) and managed to enter the camp by his own wits. Rossel says he was then invited to the commander's office for coffee, where he discussed the delivery of supplies and food packages. In the interview (01:25:23:28) Rossel is asked, "Did you see the camp?" He replies: "No, Only the barracks. I could see from where I was." From his description, it's likely Rossel's 30-45 minute meeting took place in Auschwitz I, which was separate from the extermination center. He also indicates in the documentary that he wasn't at Birkenau. "You suspected nothing of Birkenau…an extermination camp half a mile away," Lanzmann asks (01:27:46). "No, I didn't," he replies. "Nothing."

The funniest part about this is that the delegate was invited (I wonder why). He snuck in, was immediately caught, and ended up having tea with the camp commander in a barracks at Auschwitz I before leaving. The whole thing lasted 30 minutes, and barely went past the camp gates. Somehow this is conclusive proof the Holocaust never happened.









