I agree, as Nobel Prize winner and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel reminded us "Some stories are true that never happened"
So all i'm asking is where's the middle ground? Can you doubt and mock the utterly ridiculous accounts without being prosecuted or labelled a complete denier and a Nazi?
For example, Spielberg's Oscar winning 'The Last Days', where he had access to the largest collection of survivor interviews (apparently 50,000 +) of anyone on earth. Yet even Spielberg couldn't find people telling the truth (Irene Zisblatt, LOL).
Spielberg's Hoax - The Last Days of The Big Lie
www.bitchute.com
Eric Hunt's documentary about it (It's 2 hours, I don't expect anyone to watch it and i'm not a big fan of some of his narrative decisions).
Or Academy Award nominated -
Liberators: Fighting on Two Fronts in World War II . Telling the tale of the role played by the 761st Tank Battalion in freeing the prisoners of Dachau and Buchenwald.
Which ended up having to be withdrawn because it was so full of shit.
After an intensive examination of Army records and interviews with military historians, Holocaust experts, [and] World War II veterans including black soldiers whose lives were depicted in "Liberators," the Guardian has learned that the most celebrated facts of "Liberators" are not true. Neither soldiers of the 761st All Black Tank Battalion nor the soldiers of the 183rd Black Combat Engineers ever liberated Buchenwald or Dachau.
So now we have unreliable testimony from not just Trump's Chosen survivors but also the Allied soldiers.