• Nougat
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    3411 hours ago

    I know that another driving force for the gas chambers was to preserve ammunition.

    The earliest versions of gas chambers were essentially “piping truck exhaust into a building.” They moved on from that in order to preserve metal (from the piping), fuel, and vehicles for other purposes.

    • @[email protected]
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      611 hours ago

      I think they were using vans or buses, not filling buildings with carbon monoxide. Smaller spaces.

      • Nougat
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        610 hours ago

        Maybe? I know for sure they were doing piping into a building early on.

      • rand_alpha19
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        110 hours ago

        That doesn’t seem very efficient if you want to gas dozens of people at once, which happened many times.

          • rand_alpha19
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            06 hours ago

            They did it throughout the war and not merely at the start? So weird that there’s photographic and video evidence of people being gassed in buildings then.

            Edit - Here’s evidence that the Germans used chambers (often called “showers”) from 1941 onwards:

            https://www.theholocaustexplained.org/the-camps/types-of-camps/ https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/gassing-operations

            While I’m sure vans were still used for their mobility/convenience and in cases where not many people were to be executed, Germany created extermination camps specifically to kill people (in more ways than just gassing) and those locations contained constructed buildings meant for execution with gas, not vans.

            Even a few concentration camps had their own gas chambers, which were not vans, that were used to execute people that could no longer do forced labour.