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I've lived most of my life comfortably without a doubt that the big-ticket items of the Holocaust narrative: the extermination plan, the 6 million, the gas chambers, were true. If it turned out that I was wrong to now doubt them, it would make me lose confidence in my ability to discern a truthful picture from a large set of complex of information. It would also make me more hesitant to contradict expert consensus particularly when there is practically unanimous consensus.
It's not something I want to be wrong about. If it's true, I want to be sure, and if it's false I want to be as sure as I can be. That's really the motivating force. If you want to increase your certainty, how else are you supposed to other than doing a lot of legwork to learn the minutiae, review primary sources, etc.? If you don't trust either side you have to do that. Revisionists didn't convince me to trust them. They convinced me that I couldn't trust mainstream historiography. So many lies and deceptions. So you are left in this gaslit middle ground until you are satisfied with a conclusion based on your own interpretation of the evidence.
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