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Culture War Roundup for the week of September 11, 2023

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The Armenian genocide holds basically no cultural significance in the United States, it's not taught about at all in schools and holds no influence in the literature and film used to 'educate' children. So, I simply do not know much about it. Reading a couple of articles, it looks plausible to me and appears void of the fantastical claims you will find in Holocaust literature. If there are claims of mega "factories of death" where a million Armenians were killed inside some makeshift contraption in a precisely known location, I would expect that claim to be substantiated with documentary or physical evidence, but so far I don't see anything that resembles that sort of claim. The Armenian genocide seems to tragically track with other ethnic cleansings in history: more decentralized, dispersed, it involved many more people in the killing, the people weren't allegedly killed with absurd contraptions like gas chambers disguised as shower rooms...

There is no claim that, like, 200 Ottoman officers alone knew about secret orders and carried out this secret genocide death-factory program with some ridiculous contraption. The Army went around and killed a lot of people, deported them, and they died. Prima facie it's far more plausible, and it's far closer to the Revisionist theory of the real events in Eastern Europe during WW-II than the official narrative of what happened during that time.