@littlewisehen ich würde sagen der Heiratstermin ist schon fest und die Polterabendplanung mit Menü/Caterer abgeschlossen. fehlt nur noch das gut bürgerliche Ersatzfräulein
@littlewisehen@Schluter3Jorg Es ist doch immerhin mal sinnvoll Leute die was können anzuwerben. Und wenn es ein Busfahrer aus Südafrika, der computerinder oder die Pflegekraft aus Peru ist er hier nur noch die Anerkennung der Papiere braucht. Ist mir Recht
@WassiDer So nen halben kubikmeter kann der schon einnehmen. Sind ja auch mehrere Pflänzchen in einem Topf. Da könnte man schon die obere Hälfte ernten, die Blätter abzupfen und für den Winter einfrieren.
The French navy boarding the Tagor proved the legal framework exists. Two ships boarded in three years while 600 shadow tankers operate freely proves the political will doesn't.
The EU has the legal architecture through UNCLOS and its own sanctions regulations. What it doesn't have is a member state willing to absorb Russia's retaliation for being first.
It's a courage issue...
See our page debunking many deniers’ lies.
https://t.co/KH7B2X2Twh
In the case of KL Auschwitz, a surprisingly large number of such sources have survived, despite the SS’s attempts to destroy and burn all documentation before the final evacuation in January 1945. Moreover, the crimes committed in this camp were also testified by witnesses, who were far more numerous than the survivors of Treblinka, Sobibor or Belzec. As a result, the history of Auschwitz is among the best documented of the German Nazi concentration and extermination camps.
The primary sources of knowledge about the history of the Auschwitz camp are the accounts and testimonies of witnesses.
The authors of these accounts were primarily:
- Survivors of Auschwitz,
- SS members of the camp staff,
- residents of Oświęcim and surrounding villages (including members of the resistance movement),
- civilian workers employed in the expansion of the camp and working alongside the prisoners on construction sites and in factories, chiefly in Upper Silesia.
Among the testimonies written during the war, the following in particular should be mentioned:
- the manuscripts of Sonderkommando prisoners, which they had hidden (buried) near the Birkenau crematoria,
- the secret messages and reports written by resistance movement members and smuggled out of the camp,
- correspondence illegally smuggled out of the camp to avoid SS censorship,
- the reports of those who had escaped from the camp—both Poles and Jews.
Of the key sets of records, the most important in confirming the existence and functioning of the gas chambers in Auschwitz include:
- transport lists (Transportlisten) of Jews sent to Auschwitz from transit camps in various countries of Europe, sometimes containing last-minute deletions of individuals withdrawn from the transport and the inclusion of the names of those added to make up the transport quota;
- collective lists of Jews from various transports who were given prisoner numbers (Zugangslisten Juden – nicht fotografiert);
- similar lists of registered prisoners, including Jews as well as other deportees, prepared by members of the resistance movement (Liste der Männertransporte, corresponding lists for women, and separate lists of male and female Jews assigned numbers preceded by the letters A and B).
The above sources indicate that from the commencement of regular selections of Jewish transports on the Auschwitz ramps, the number of deportees began to dramatically exceed, by several orders of magnitude, the number of prisoners registered in the camp.
Moreover, there exist:
- a few surviving reports on the results of selections on the Birkenau ramp after the arrival of transports, prepared by the KL Auschwitz Employment Department;
- statistical summaries compiled at Bletchley Park based on SS radiograms intercepted and deciphered by British cryptologists during the war;
- extensive files of the Central Construction Office of the SS and Police Auschwitz O/S containing information about the planning and progress of construction work, including the construction of crematoria and gas chambers;
- files of the Camp Administration Department (Verwaltung), including certificates for purchase and delivery of Zyklon B;
- files of the camp Employment Department (Arbeitseinsatz), including reports of the number of prisoners employed in the Sonderkommando;
- photographs of the burning of corpses in incineration pits, taken by members of the resistance movement within the Sonderkommando;
- photographs taken by the SS, showing the selection procedure on the Birkenau railway ramp, from the arrival of a transport of Jews to the place where the deportees waited to enter the gas chambers;
- SS photographs showing the progress of work on the construction of the crematoria and gas chambers;
- aerial photographs of Auschwitz and Birkenau taken by the pilots of Allied reconnaissance aeroplanes in 1944, showing the plumes of smoke rising from the incineration pyres;
as well as many other documents containing information confirming the existence of gas chambers.
Above all, the Museum grounds contain the ruins of the crematoria and gas chambers, which, despite having been blown up by the SS, still retain their clear functional layout. Moreover, Gas Chamber and Crematorium I building have survived in the Auschwitz I main camp.
@joncoopertweets are they shocked? i don´t know they can´t cope, they don´t know what to do when drones and fire, i see no panic no running, they are like what ever and going their ways. or is this behavior a sign of shock?
@BrennpunktUA wann wird es auf der "Landbrücke" so gefährlich und die Versorgung der Krim so Kritisch dass sie Tanklaster wieder über die Kertschbrücke schicken?
7 June 1933 | An Italian Jewish girl, Nedda Segrè, was born in Venice.
In February 1944 she was deported to #Auschwitz. She was murdered in a gas chamber after the selection.