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Carrie 2022-01-12 08:02:10
The Nazis just pushed the exclusion to the extreme
It can be seen that the exclusion of Jews was the general background of Europe at that time. All the participants had no objection to the eradication of Jews in Europe, but they had a little disagreement on the method. You can say that they are all crazy Nazis, but these people are just extreme...
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Gayle 2022-01-12 08:02:10
See a group of the most elegant people, discuss the most horrible topics
This is a typical multi-departmental high-level meeting, from different factions with their own positions. All the participants were well-mannered in suits and leather shoes. The reception/organization of the meeting was of high standard. The snacks, snacks, meals and drinks during the meeting were...

Ross O'Hennessy
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Ambrose 2022-03-15 09:01:05
The whole scene focuses on a Nazi meeting: to determine the ultimate fate of the Jews. Although the views of all the participants are different, the basis is very consistent, and they all want to eliminate the Jews completely. The whole film revolves around the confrontation of various arguments, and behind the arguments are the positions of all parties. The film is a bit stuffy and brain-burning, but it's definitely a masterpiece.
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Alexandria 2022-03-26 09:01:11
Both have their own visions and united will, and both have their own rhetoric and their own opinions, but their conscience is absent.
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Adolf Eichmann: Now, last summer Reichsführer Himmler asked me to visit a camp up in Upper Silesia, called Auschwitz, which is very well isolated, and close to significant rail access. And we are turning that camp into a major center, solid structures (and here's where your Jewish labor comes into play, Herr Neumann, the Jews haul the bricks and they build the buildings themselves). And when the structures are complete, we expect to be able to process 2500... an hour. Not a day, an hour.
Heydrich: And those numbers look a lot better.
Luther: 2500 an hour?
Hofmann: 2500?
Adolf Eichmann: At 24 hours a day, that is 60,000.
Kritzinger: 60,000 each day...
Adolf Eichmann: That's 21,900,000 Jews a year, if ever there were that many.
Heydrich: And we are also constructing the means of disposal, which will obviously depend upon the process of combustion.
Adolf Eichmann: Yes, it'll be industrial in nature: large commercial gas-fed ovens, no residue to speak of.
Müller: 60,000 Jews every day go up in smoke.
Heydrich: We can achieve that. Imagine.
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Müller: Have you ever seen an animal with two heads? They do not live. You want to see Bormann and Goering fight it out?