RE: Get In The Ark Before It Is Too Late!!!
June 28, 2014 at 6:25 pm
(This post was last modified: June 28, 2014 at 6:26 pm by Angrboda.)
(June 28, 2014 at 4:40 pm)rasetsu Wrote:Patrick Scrivener Wrote:According to the World Almanac and Book of Facts, there were about 15,000,000 "Jews" in the world in 1934. According to the same source, there were just about the same number in 1946.
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These figures are available in the World Almanac found in many colleges and the Library of Congress. According to the Khazars, the "Holocaust" took place from 1939 to 1945.
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This 6 million perishing in this mythic "Holocaust" with no diminution of numbers is as great a miracle as Moses opening up the Red Sea or Joshua causing the sun and moon to stand still.
(June 28, 2014 at 5:12 pm)Wyrd of Gawd Wrote: Did you check the World Almanac and Book of Facts for 1934 and for 1946?
Quote:When citing the World Almanac as a source for data "proving" that there was no Jewish population decline during World War II, Holocaust deniers are simply propagating one of the standard denier myths that has recurred regularly for more than a decade.
The problem has nothing whatever to do with rates of population increase or anything like that. It has to do with how frequently the World Almanac's sources had access to fresh estimates of religious populations.
Whoever first started propagating World Almanac figures neglected to mention that all figures before 1949 were from 1938 estimates. Since the year of estimate is given at the top of the chart it is difficult to believe that the originator did not intentionally mean to decieve by negelecting this key piece of information.
I have posted the following correction several times:
The University of Alberta library has the World Almanac issues for the pertinent period for 1941, 1944, 1947, 1948, and 1949. The figures listed for total world Jewish population are as follows:
1941 15,748,091
1944 15,192,089
1947 15,688,259
1948 15,688,259
1949 11,266,600
Now you may be wondering what happened to all those Jews in 1948-49. No fresh estimates were made between 1938 and 1947. The figures listed for 1941, 1947, and 1948 are identified as estimates made in 1938. The source for the estimate for 1944 is not given, and the numbers are listed differently than in other years. In 1944, the numbers are given as a part of a list of various world religions rather than standing on their own with a country-by-country breakdown as in the other years.
Only in 1949 are postwar estimates employed, the figures given are for estimates made in 1948. A year or two lag seems to be common for various other population estimates given by the World Almanac.
https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index...300AASovcZ