Not same things. Federal Reserve - a triumph for the bankers after over 100 years of contentious politics over how currency should be issued, and by whom. And, a lot of secrecy in its operations. So, it’s still reasonable to ask questions about it. 9/11 has open questions too insofar at least how USA keeps admitting thousands and now millions of Muslims from every damned Krapistan on earth, also how President Bush covered up the Saudi Arabisn connection and even broke his own air traffic shutdown during the emergency response to let Saudis escape USA before they could be interrogated. So, there are some things reasonable people can ask about 9/11. As for the deliberate torture and murder of millions of innocent Jewish and other civilians in ww2, that’s a matter of history as documented both by the Allied forces and by the Nazis’ own meticulous records. Everything is a matter of the record and can be examined in the public archives and displays and records and museums and historical press reports in Europe, USA, and Israel — so there is no question about it. Denying it reveals either an amazing ignorance or a terrible bigotry. But denying it is like denying the United States was founded in 1776 ( Or 1789). Denial of facts does not change the facts. It merely indicates that the denier needs to learn what happened ( or work on his spirituality some). Best, fhc
mostly I agree. but from what I have read over the years, there are two camps of deniers. one would fall into your category of being bigoted, which is they believe photos have been doctored and it never happened at all. which, if you believe that, then nothing is believable that we don’t witness with our own eyes.
the other camp questions the mathematics of killing 6 million in the 5 or so years of ww2. what I don’t like, is, just as an example, say you called into a mainstream talk show and wanted to give that math argument. first you would get hung up on, then the host would do an on air tirade of how stupid and bigoted you were just for raising the issue.