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..cyanide-saturated bodies simply would not pose a threat to any workers' lives

Kiwichap wrote:These questions are getting too tricky for me. I suggest you bundle them up and send them to Rudolf.
Kiwichap wrote:Don't include Wahrheit's ..cyanide-saturated bodies simply would not pose a threat to any workers' lives.. that one might be too tricky for him.
Absorption through the skin is especially likely when the skin has become moist, for example, as a result of sweating at work. It is generally advised to avoid sweating during the handling of hydrogen cyanide. In this regard, concentrations from 6,000 ppm[419] (0.6 % by volume) constitute a health hazard, while 10,000 ppm (1% by volume) can cause death in just a few minutes.[420]
http://www.vho.org/GB/Books/trr/7.html
It should not be forgotten here that hydrogen cyanide is a contact poison. Transporting corpses, on whose skin huge, possible lethal amounts of hydrogen cyanide are absorbed, had required that the special commands dealing with these corpses had to wear protective clothes. Finally, when considering the applied concentrations attested to, the guards, like the special commands, would have risked their health.
http://www.vho.org/GB/Books/trr/7.html

I believe this point is correct, while his later statement that:
Quote:
It should not be forgotten here that hydrogen cyanide is a contact poison. Transporting corpses, on whose skin huge, possible lethal amounts of hydrogen cyanide are absorbed, had required that the special commands dealing with these corpses had to wear protective clothes. Finally, when considering the applied concentrations attested to, the guards, like the special commands, would have risked their health.
http://www.vho.org/GB/Books/trr/7.html
Is not true, but likely only originated from Faurisson's flawed argument, which he contradicted above, and which has been discredited here.
"One of the things that cyanide gas does, it goes in the pores of your skin. You hose the body down, see. You have to use rubber gloves, and you hose the body down to decontaminate it before you do anything [else]"
source:
Bill Armontrout, warden of the Missouri State Penitentiary in Jefferson City, confirms the danger:[13]
http://www.vho.org/GB/Books/trr/1.html

Hannover wrote:Wrong, it has nothing to do with Faurisson. The need for gloves when using cyanide is well established:



Kiwichap wrote:Wahrheit Absorption through the skin is especially likely when the skin has become moist, for example, as a result of sweating at work
Ya just gotta laugh Wahrheit. Are you telling me that 2000 Jews would not start sweating profusely when they realised what was happening?
And Berg, His science only extends to one Jew pegged and hanging on the line, merrily drying in the warm temperature. How about the poor sods at the bottom of the pile, no ventilation, no real heat... Death Traps!
I expect to see Berg's website change its name to -
Nazi gassings never happened, but they could have,

