Misplaced Pages

Talk:Extermination through labour: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 18:58, 23 June 2011 editPaul Siebert (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers26,740 edits Anticipating future disputes← Previous edit Revision as of 19:05, 23 June 2011 edit undoPaul Siebert (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers26,740 edits SolzhenitsynNext edit →
Line 148: Line 148:
:::If you believe that there is a topic that can be found in the literature (and connects communism, fascism, etc.) , then you should explain to us what that literature is. We can then determine what the most common name is, so that we can ensure we are not confusing it with ''Vernichtung durch Arbeit''. Otherwise what we have is a Nazi policy and then a coatrack to hang what in the opinion of certain editors should be added. Otherwise we have another in a series of articles that scream Communists were worse than fascists without providing any useful information to readers. ] (]) 14:59, 23 June 2011 (UTC) :::If you believe that there is a topic that can be found in the literature (and connects communism, fascism, etc.) , then you should explain to us what that literature is. We can then determine what the most common name is, so that we can ensure we are not confusing it with ''Vernichtung durch Arbeit''. Otherwise what we have is a Nazi policy and then a coatrack to hang what in the opinion of certain editors should be added. Otherwise we have another in a series of articles that scream Communists were worse than fascists without providing any useful information to readers. ] (]) 14:59, 23 June 2011 (UTC)
::::Yes, sure. We need sources that describe extermination through labor in labor camps (no matter Soviet or German) as a general subject. And we have such sources: the books by Margolin and Solzenitsyn, but probably also some other sources currently quoted in this article. ] (]) 18:51, 23 June 2011 (UTC) ::::Yes, sure. We need sources that describe extermination through labor in labor camps (no matter Soviet or German) as a general subject. And we have such sources: the books by Margolin and Solzenitsyn, but probably also some other sources currently quoted in this article. ] (]) 18:51, 23 June 2011 (UTC)
:::::Solzhenitsyn is not a scholar, and the term "istrebitel'no-trudovye lagerja" is not accepted by scientific community. In addition, in a situation when about 1-2 million of GULAG inmates died there (out of 18 millions of those who passed through GULAG), we simply cannot speak about any deliberate extermination. If GULAG was a killing machine, it was a very inefficient machine.--] (]) 19:05, 23 June 2011 (UTC)

Revision as of 19:05, 23 June 2011

This article has not yet been rated on Misplaced Pages's content assessment scale.
It is of interest to the following WikiProjects:
WikiProject iconMilitary history: European / German / World War II
WikiProject iconThis article is within the scope of the Military history WikiProject. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the project and see a list of open tasks. To use this banner, please see the full instructions.Military historyWikipedia:WikiProject Military historyTemplate:WikiProject Military historymilitary history
B checklist
This article has been checked against the following criteria for B-class status:
  1. Referencing and citation: criterion not met
  2. Coverage and accuracy: criterion met
  3. Structure: criterion met
  4. Grammar and style: criterion met
  5. Supporting materials: criterion met
Associated task forces:
Taskforce icon
European military history task force
Taskforce icon
German military history task force
Taskforce icon
World War II task force
WikiProject iconGermany
WikiProject iconThis article is within the scope of WikiProject Germany, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of Germany on Misplaced Pages. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.GermanyWikipedia:WikiProject GermanyTemplate:WikiProject GermanyGermany
???This article has not yet received a rating on the project's importance scale.
Please add the quality rating to the {{WikiProject banner shell}} template instead of this project banner. See WP:PIQA for details.
WikiProject iconDeath Mid‑importance
WikiProject iconThis article is within the scope of WikiProject Death, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of Death on Misplaced Pages. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.DeathWikipedia:WikiProject DeathTemplate:WikiProject DeathDeath
MidThis article has been rated as Mid-importance on the project's importance scale.
Please add the quality rating to the {{WikiProject banner shell}} template instead of this project banner. See WP:PIQA for details.
WikiProject iconSoviet Union Low‑importance
WikiProject iconThis article is within the scope of WikiProject Soviet Union, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) on Misplaced Pages. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.Soviet UnionWikipedia:WikiProject Soviet UnionTemplate:WikiProject Soviet UnionSoviet Union
LowThis article has been rated as Low-importance on the project's importance scale.
This article contains a translation of Vernichtung durch Arbeit from de.wikipedia.

Untitled

"commonly digging ditches around the camp and then levelling them or excavating earth and transporting it by foot to the other side of the camp." I think you need a quotation for this... Unsigned comment by User:Andreasegde

If this article was something more than a stub, I would perhaps take my time to properly reference it. However, at the moment I'm working hard on Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp. Feel free to add your references though, I'm pretty sure every book on life in German concentration camps mentions such pointless activities, along with endless "mitzen ab" exercises, carrying wooden poles around the camp and so on. //Halibutt 03:55, 23 April 2006 (UTC)

Just saw the word 'communist' 9238293892 times, don't you guys get tired?

200.206.226.181 (talk) 04:27, 21 November 2009 (UTC)

PRoof

I want references to this principle. I could find none online and the supposed "principle" seems an invention to me.Smith2006 23:25, 8 August 2006 (UTC)

so does everyone else, but Halibutt has been in the mood lately that he thinks he can state anything he likes, and everyone else must provide references to remove it, if you don't cite anything that says that it didn't happen, well he reverts you--Jadger 01:43, 10 August 2006 (UTC)

Note: I wanted to remove the above piece of slander in accordance with WP:NPA, but Jadger's been inserting it here repeatedly. Be advised then that it's little more than a mere lie, intended to spoil my good name.//Halibutt 21:20, 17 August 2006 (UTC)

Note: I have cited the source for my "slander" on hali's userpage (one of his posts on discussion of German 17th Infantry Division), if it was really in contravention of WP:NPA he would of reported it to admin by now. It is hard for me to spoil Hali's good name, he is so much better at it than me. --Jadger 21:25, 17 August 2006 (UTC)

It's not published yet, but I recently attended a trial in St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada, in which a surviving jew from the Flossenburg camp testified to the existence of this policy. I could provide a citation once the decision is published; style of cause is Canada (The Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. Jura Skomatchuk and Canada (The Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. Josef Furman. A Dr. Terry, survivor of the camp, testified that the work policy was literally named "extermination through work." I would also suggest tracking down the text from a letter from Oswald Pohl to Heinrich Himmler, dated April 30, 1942, discussing work policies in the General Government camps (partial citation: Nuremberg Exhibit Doc. R-129, vol. 38, pp. 362-367). Regretably, I don't have a copy of this document.--Rumplefurskin 17:52, 10 August 2006 (UTC)

OMG, gentlemen, it's merely a stub. Check the German article if you want more specific examples. If you want sources I could add hundreds of books as almost every book on German WWII camps either uses the term or its explanation. I'll add some links for you anyway, but this would make this stub the best sourced stub we have in wiki. //Halibutt 05:01, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
Here you go: six phrases, 14 references. I could add twice as many, but I believe there's no need to (come on, just imagine 30 references per six phrases :) ). Or am I wrong? //Halibutt 09:13, 11 August 2006 (UTC)

Some Corrections

"Annihialation (not extermination) through work" was not only a de facto policy but an explicitly articulated one. Doubters are directed to Michael Thad Allen's superb book The Business of Genocide, where the subject is covered exhuastively. It needs noting, though, that it was not applied to all, industrially employed concentration camp inmates, but primarily to Jews, Gypsies and for a while to Soviet POWs. It was rarely applied to other categories of prisoners, although exceptions exist. The most infamous being the Dora camp, where the V2 rockets were produced. It was never applied to specialist prisoner-workers. It also needs noting that not all instances where work was used unproductively for strictly penal purposes were cases of Annihialation Through Work, just as not all punishments meted out in Concentration Camps was lethal. More over Halibut is mistaken in attributing economically useless work to subcamps. Subcamps were usually established in order to bring prison labour nearer to an economically valuble operation. Economically useless work was least likely to occur there. Soz

I've read of this practice regarding Norwegian prisoners in Sachsenhausen as well. Prezen 22:52, 27 January 2007 (UTC)

"unfree labour"

a user just added the category named "unfree labour" but I dispute that. this was free labour, the Nazis didn't pay them anything, unless you count the cost of food, then it would be "cheap labour" maybe.

--Jadger 07:57, 27 February 2007 (UTC)

"unfree" labor means labor by people who are not free, in the political sense. It's an umbrella category covering the various systems of slavery and serfdom. 128.148.38.26 15:22, 8 August 2007 (UTC)

A soviet invention

Modern extermination through labour was invented in Soviet Union, in 1917, not in nazi Germany.Lenin ordered the killing of about 35,000,000 people, in less than 7 years of government.Agre22 (talk) 13:53, 7 October 2008 (UTC)agre22

Not sure how that's possible. That's far greater than the sum total of people who died in the Soviet Union for every reason during that period, and longer. For your figures to be correct, that means that every person that died in the USSR, be it disease, natural causes, or the war and famine started by the Whites, that Lenin ordered each and every one of them, as well as the extra ten million or so who DIDN'T die, but seems to be a number you just pulled out of nowhere. The concept of extermination through labour was exclusively a Nazi one. The Soviets needed places to house prisoners of war, and the conditions everywhere in the country were terrible, so why would a labour camp be any better? There was no official policy of exterminating these prisoners. - p1nkfl0yd, 14:23, 5 July 2009 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 207.81.59.250 (talk)

Victims

Under the header 'Victims' this article reads:

'Approximately six million Jews, 80,000 sick and handicapped people of German origin, 500,000 Sinti, Romanies, and members of other persecuted "gypsy" groups as well as seven million Soviet prisoners of war and civilians in concentration camps were killed altogether. It is impossible to ensure that these numbers are exact, as the Nazis often kept no records of their victims.'

However horrendous the truth is of this outcome of the war, I fail to see how this has anything to do with annihilation through labor? Is the writer / are the writers suggesting that people who got gassed or were shot, or beaten to death etc. etc. etc. were also victims of annihilation through labor? This needs to change or be removed. Mlodewijk (talk) 22:16, 27 September 2009 (UTC)

Attempt to paint all Nazi forced labor with one brush?

I think that the article is trying to create the incorrect impression that all forced labor under the Nazis was "extermination through labor". Well, it's pretty well attested that Jewish workers were mistreated and had high death rates, and that was the explicit intent - gas chambers for some, death through labor for others. But the majority of forced laborers were not Jewish, they were Poles, Ukrainians, Russians and all sorts of others who were working under various levels of compulsion. It was not a good life, but it was not "extermination" in any sense. 76.24.104.52 (talk) 03:30, 29 October 2009 (UTC)

Soviet "extermination through labor" controversial?!

Hello everyone, I've noticed a sentence in the lead that says, "Whether it formed the basis for the exploitation of forced labor in the Soviet Gulag is controversial." What ignoramus wrote that? It's very well documented that it was indeed the official policy in the Soviet Gulag to work the prisoners to death, as evidenced by them being forced to do impossibly hard labor on a starvation diet -- the only people who would argue that it was in any way "controversial" would be the same Marxist diehards who still believe that collectivization was a necessary policy for the Soviets to follow at the time. Get real, people! 146.74.230.99 (talk) 23:36, 3 December 2009 (UTC)

Hello... anonymous IP!!! You have some interesting things to say; so register on WP (and I don't want to hear, "My server lists me as an IP, wah wah wah...") Register, please, and you'll have more of an audience... Doc9871 (talk) 12:13, 5 December 2009 (UTC)
I've done some editing on my own, check it out :-) As for your offer of registering on WP, I'll turn it down for ideological reasons, because I'm a true believer in American exceptionalism and I don't want to join a community that is so heavily in favor of globalism. So thanks, but no thanks. Clear skies to you! 24.23.197.43 (talk) 05:58, 6 December 2009 (UTC)
Hee hee... so you're a "subversive" sort, eh? I was just recommending you register because you obviously are an intelligent editor, and random IP editors on WP are treated as the lowest caste for the most part. Registering wouldn't compromise your ideals as much as you might think - hell, maybe you can bend it 'round to a "Yank" point of view ;> Peace Doc9871 (talk) 07:42, 6 December 2009 (UTC)
Soviet Gulag operated for several DECADES. Their policies differed at various times and in different locations (Russia is huge). Sometimes, especially back in the 30s, they were closer in spirit to "extermination". All the more so in places like Kolyma camps. Sometimes, like during the war, life was just very tough because there was little food for anybody, in the camps and outside alike. And sometimes, in the late 40s and early 50s, the Gulag authorities actually got the bright of idea of trying to keep the inmates healthier and, you know, able to do more useful work. A revolutionary idea, that... Anyway, the point is, the mileage varied. And if you ignore that, you can easily make credible arguments both ways, since you will find some locations and situations with documented horrendous death rates, and then your opponent will find likewise documented cases of low death rates in other locations and situations. 76.24.104.52 (talk) 04:29, 13 December 2009 (UTC)
Reliable sources exist (e.g. Getty of Wheatcroft) that directly contradict to what the article says, namely, that GULAG was designed and worked as a system of extermination through labour. The article deserves either WP:UNDUE, or WP:SYNTH tags.--Paul Siebert (talk) 21:32, 28 February 2010 (UTC)
Official idea behind Soviet forced labor camps was different. There was an idea of "correction through labor". You know, Marxist theory postulates that it was labor which converted monkey into a human. So they believed that labor can make a good man from a social parasite. For example when the White Sea channel was built there were many reports in the press on how those prisoners were becoming good people through work and even received government decorations such as orders and medals while still being prisoners.--MathFacts (talk) 20:05, 25 April 2010 (UTC)
Yes, that was officially "correction through labor", according to the official Soviet propaganda position, and especially with regard to White Sea channel. No, it was not intentionally designed to work as a system of extermination, according to most sources (but mostly as a system of cheap labor). But it actually worked as a system of extermination through labor according to most sources. Biophys (talk) 17:13, 22 June 2011 (UTC)

WP:Coatrack

This article seems to be randomly throwing together two particular instances of forced labour, with little or no justification for choosing them and only them. "Extermination through labor" was the name of the Nazi policy alone. The Soviets also used forced labour, yes, and that sometimes resulted in the death of the inmates, but there was no official policy of extermination. Is this article meant to discuss cases of forced labour with a clear intent to exterminate the inmates? Then it should only cover the Nazi case. Or is this article meant to discuss every case of forced labour where the conditions were harsh enough that some inmates died? Then I would contend that the subject matter is hopelessly vague, and we should probably add the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, etc. Amerul (talk) 11:42, 9 March 2010 (UTC)

I think the article should either reflect the Vernichtung durch Arbeit of the Nazi policy (possibly with a re-naming tweak) alone; or it would have to be expanded to include all instances of "extermination through labor" throughout human history. I think the former choice is far more manageable, and that a new article created for the broader sense could include the building of the Pyramids and all that other stuff; a "monumental' task (groan) ;> Doc9871 (talk) 11:54, 9 March 2010 (UTC)
Support the former choice.--Paul Siebert (talk) 14:16, 9 March 2010 (UTC)
Support the former choice.--MathFacts (talk) 20:09, 25 April 2010 (UTC)

Some sources against the latter choice

"The Gulag was neither as large nor as deadly as it is often presented, it was not a death camp, although in cases of general food shortage (1932-33 and 1942-43) it would suffer significantly more than the population at large."
(Stephen Wheatcroft. The Scale and Nature of German and Soviet Repression and Mass Killings, 1930-45. Europe-Asia Studies, Vol. 48, No. 8 (Dec., 1996), pp. 1319-1353)
"Yet it is important still to distinguish between states that commit genocide and genocidal regimes. The latter are, thankfully, relatively rare. They are the systems in which genocide moves to the core of state practices to such an extent that one can see the entire system revolving centrally around human destruction. The Third Reich constitutes the supreme example, and Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge a second one. The regimes that commit genocidal actions are many and include western colonial states going back to the fifteenth century as well as particular cases in the Soviet Union under Stalin."
(Eric D. Weitz. "Racial Politics without the Concept of Race: Reevaluating Soviet Ethnic and National Purges", Slavic Review, Vol. 61, No. 1 (Spring, 2002), pp. 1-29.)
In other words, it is incorrect to equate Nazi death camps with Soviet GULAG, because only a part of scholars think so. I'll modify the article accordingly.--Paul Siebert (talk) 16:00, 10 June 2010 (UTC)
WHAT THE FUCK DO YOU MEAN, THE GULAG WAS "NOT A DEATH CAMP", YOU COMMIE COCKSUCKERS -- THERE WERE AT LEAST TWENTY MILLION INMATES KILLED IN THE GULAG BETWEEN 1930-1953 (INCLUDING MANY MURDERED IN COLD BLOOD BY THE CAMP GUARDS AND KGB TORTURERS!!! I DEMAND THAT YOU RESTORE THE "IN COMMUNISM" SECTION AT ONCE, OR ELSE!!! 67.170.215.166 (talk) 00:52, 7 July 2010 (UTC)
Can you provide reliable sources that support these your claims? --Paul Siebert (talk) 00:56, 7 July 2010 (UTC)
I DID JUST THAT IN THE PREVIOUS VERSION (SOLZHENITSYN, ETC.), YOU COMMIE RASCAL, BUT YOU REMOVED THEM ALL WHEN YOU EDITED THIS PAGE! WELL I PUT'EM BACK AGAIN MYSELF, AND DON'T YOU DARE TOUCH ANY SOURCED STATEMENT IN THIS ARTICLE OR YOU WILL PAY THE PRICE!!! 67.170.215.166 (talk) 01:40, 7 July 2010 (UTC)
Solzhenithyn is a writer, not scholar. His writings are outdated. The figures provided by him are just earlier estimates. They have been re-examined recently and proved to be too high. And, more importantly, there is not enough evidences to speak about GULAG as a network of extermination camps. Although GULAG mortality was high, it was not specially designed to exterminate peoples. This article about extermination, not about GULAG itself.--Paul Siebert (talk) 01:58, 7 July 2010 (UTC)
AND WHO THE FUCK ARE YOU TO SAY WHICH SOURCES ARE RELIABLE AND WHICH SOURCES ARE NOT?! SOLZHENITSYN HAS ACTUALLY SERVED EIGHT YEARS IN THE GULAG, HIS EYEWITNESS TESTIMONY IS RELIABLE -- AND THAT'S FINAL!!!
Eyewitness testimony is a primary source that, according to WP policy should be used with cautions.--Paul Siebert (talk) 02:04, 7 July 2010 (UTC)
67.170.215.166 Can you please stop attacking other editors, personal attacks are not permitted here —Preceding unsigned comment added by Barts1a (talkcontribs) 02:06, 7 July 2010 (UTC)
67.170.215.166, consensus is needed to restore materials not to remove it. If you made one more revert, you may be blocked from editing.--Paul Siebert (talk) 02:17, 7 July 2010 (UTC)
67.170.215.166 has received a 24-hour block Barts1a (talk) 02:22, 7 July 2010 (UTC)
That will hardly resolve the issue. He is definitely not a vandal, he is just not tolerant to other's opinion and he doesn't know how WP works. That is not sufficient for not assuming his good faith. Maybe, we will be able to explain something to him after the end of the block term.--Paul Siebert (talk) 02:35, 7 July 2010 (UTC)

Anticipating future disputes

To avoid repetitions of the same arguments, let me explain the following. Although the crimes of Stalin's, Mao's or Pol Pot's regimes are obvious and indisputable, not all crimes can be attributed to them. For instance, although Stalin launched the Great Purge, he cannot be accused in mass killing of Jews. By contrast, it was the Stalin's Soviet Army that liberated most death camps.
Similarly, although GULAG was a huge system of labour camps, its primary purpose was not to exterminate people. Even Nazi camps were subdivided onto extermination (Majdanek, Belzec, Chelmno, Auschwitz-Birkenau (not Auschwitz), Sobibor, Treblinka) and concentration camps (all other camps). Only minor part of scholars call GULAG camps "extermination", and that is why the "Controversial section" is in the article. The extermination through labour system was invented by Nazi and should be presented as such.--Paul Siebert (talk) 04:06, 7 July 2010 (UTC)

I think that this is not such a clear distinction. Holocaust revisionists are not all wrong when they say, at least sometimes, Hitler didn't "want" to kill Jews - in the sense that he wanted to wring everything he possibly could out of them before they died. They're not lying when they say that many Jews died by tuberculosis rather than bullets or gas - tuberculosis induced by poor nutrition, overwork, exposure, and filthy living conditions, that is. If Misplaced Pages goes out on a limb and gives GULAG a pass for the deaths that occurred, year after year, under its tutelage, then we're effectively saying that the Holocaust revisionists are right also. I say if you don't want to be responsible for what happens to people, don't round them up at gunpoint and lock them in a camp of your own design. Deciding for ourselves whether the deaths were the "purpose" or a happy accident goes down a semantic happy trail we'd best stay out of.
Now you have a point that "extermination through labor", as literal translation of a German phrase, can be an article about that specific topic. :n IP went on about this at the Science Refdesk: I see his point that goes from an article intended to be general, to a very specific article.
My feeling is that the prior discussion suggests we should have some more general article about overwork or forced labor. (The first redirects to the too-specific workaholism and the second to the perhaps too-general unfree labor) It's time to ask, how do we do it? Is there a way, a source, that can tie together the relevant cases into a single article, without being accused of creating the so-called "coatrack" (an analogy I never really quite understood, but in other words, an article that has no objective way for people to decide what belongs in it). There are all kinds of somewhat relevant topics to a general heading, like
  • involuntary overwork, often in combination with deprivation of food, shelter, and other basic necessities. For example:
Now is there a way to round up all this stuff and make a good general article? As has been said it's not easy, but the IP wants it done, and I see why. Wnt (talk) 01:40, 21 June 2011 (UTC)
No. We are talking about a very specific phenomenon, namely, the Nazi program of extermination of unwanted people via forced labour, where their death is a primary and desired outcome. Everything else is either synthesis or fringe theories.--Paul Siebert (talk) 03:23, 21 June 2011 (UTC)
In fact, the sources (e.g. A Travel to the Land Ze-Ka by Margolin) make a point that is exactly opposite. According to people who spent time in both German and Soviet camps (cited in the book), both systems were actually "death camps", but the death in Gulag was longer and more painful, because people were tortured by "labor" (beaten by "Urkas") in Gulag. Hence it was Gulag, rather than in German camps where people were exterminated by labor, according to survivors (I am just retelling what they said in the documentary book).Biophys (talk) 02:32, 22 June 2011 (UTC)
In fact, we have reliable sources that disagree with that. Although the conditions in GULAG were terrible, they were not designed to kill people, and there were no system of deliberate extermination of the inmates through labour.
"The Gulag was neither as large nor as deadly as it is often presented, it was not a death camp, although in cases of general food shortage (1932-33 and 1942-43) it would suffer significantly more than the population at large. There were not 12 million deaths in the camps as suggested by Maier; and it seems highly unlikely that there were as many as 7 million deaths between 1935 and 1941 as claimed by Conquest citing Mikoyan's son. With a maximum number of inmates of 1.5 million in 1941 the Gulag was nevertheless of demographic significance and more than twenty times as large as the prewar Nazi concentration camp system at its peak following Kristallnacht. But all the same, twenty times as large as pre-war Nazi concentration camps does not make anything like Auschwitz." (The Scale and Nature of German and Soviet Repression and Mass Killings, 1930-45 Author(s): Stephen Wheatcroft Source: Europe-Asia Studies, Vol. 48, No. 8 (Dec., 1996), pp. 1319-1353)
"There are no equivalents to Auschwitz, Belzec, Chelmno, Majdanek, Sobibor or Treblinka in Soviet criminal history." (Klas-Göran Karlsson and Michael Schoenhals Crimes against humanity under communist regimes Research review ISBN: 978-91-977487-2-8)
--Paul Siebert (talk) 02:50, 22 June 2011 (UTC)
Yes, according to all sources, German camps were "true" death camps meaning that people were gasses or quickly terminated by other means. That was not the case in Gulag. The outright executions (like on Sekirka) took place on a relatively small scale. People were terminated more slowly through inhuman "working" conditions, cold and hunger. And that was real "extermination through labor", also according to most sources (starting from the book by Margoling and "Gulag Archipelago"). Note that your sources also do not dispute the assertion that people were exterminated through labor in Gulag. How many people were exterminated through "labor" is an entirely different question. Biophys (talk) 16:48, 22 June 2011 (UTC)
@Wnt. We have already page Unfree labour. Biophys (talk) 17:22, 22 June 2011 (UTC)
The sources presented by me state that peoples were not exterminated by any means (including "extermination by labour").--Paul Siebert (talk) 00:25, 23 June 2011 (UTC)
I made some changes per talk just to move forward. Yes, your sources do not use this expression. But a lot of other sources do. And they are quoted right now. If there are any problems with current text, let's discuss.Biophys (talk) 01:44, 23 June 2011 (UTC)
Being bold, you made the changes that I reverted, because I disagree with them. Now that is the time to discuss your proposal. Please, provide the arguments in support of your edits. Please, keep in mind, that Solzhenitsyn is not a scholar, and his writing are obsolete now.--Paul Siebert (talk) 18:58, 23 June 2011 (UTC)

Whipping

I've noticed that whipping is not discussed much in the article, yet I'm fairly certain that it was an incessant practice.Hoops gza (talk) 20:22, 6 June 2011 (UTC)

It certainly happened at Buchenwald - see this Time Magazine article from 1958. Doc talk 20:57, 6 June 2011 (UTC)

Etymology

I came to this article because I wanted to know about the origin of the term, where it was first used and by whom, whether it status on official documents. That sort of info isn't readily available here. I'm wondering if it is a term that others have applied to Nazi practice or one the Nazis used themselves, or if it appears once or twice in Nazi literature and then has been more extensively applied by others. Hardicanute (talk) 09:09, 15 June 2011 (UTC)Hardicanute

The Nazi term "Vernichtung durch Arbeit" is quoted at least in a PBS source: one of the better sources, IMHO. "They were victims of Vernichtung durch Arbeit -- the Nazi policy of physical destruction through labor, a concerted effort to kill the party's political and racial enemies through hard labor and deprivation." All manner of civilizations have used the same policy into antiquity and beyond, and also today. So I'm unsure if the article shouldn't be split into two, with one concerning the Nazi use of the policy and that term itself, and another concerning its use: everywhere else. Doc talk 03:31, 21 June 2011 (UTC)

Solzhenitsyn

So what was exactly the reason for removing text related to writings by Solzhenitsyn ? He widely used this expression ("istrebitel'no-trudovye lagerja", translation: "camps of extermination by labor") in his books. Of course this could be shortened and rephrased. Biophys (talk) 04:18, 21 June 2011 (UTC)

Because the article is about a specific Nazi policy which translates as "extermination through labor". We would not for example add sections on the Armenian genocide or American massacre of Indians to the Holocaust article, even though there are obvious similarities. It would be SYN. Also, we should be careful about holocaust trivialization. TFD (talk) 05:29, 23 June 2011 (UTC)
It depends on scope of the article. That could be Nazi policy of extermination through labor (then you would be right), or it could be simply Extermination through labor (as it is right now). Then it is simply about "Extermination through labor", whenever multiple RS claim something to be "extermination through labor". If multiple RS claim that Armenians were "extermination through labor", it belongs here with present title. Biophys (talk) 14:52, 23 June 2011 (UTC)
If you believe that there is a topic that can be found in the literature (and connects communism, fascism, etc.) , then you should explain to us what that literature is. We can then determine what the most common name is, so that we can ensure we are not confusing it with Vernichtung durch Arbeit. Otherwise what we have is a Nazi policy and then a coatrack to hang what in the opinion of certain editors should be added. Otherwise we have another in a series of articles that scream Communists were worse than fascists without providing any useful information to readers. TFD (talk) 14:59, 23 June 2011 (UTC)
Yes, sure. We need sources that describe extermination through labor in labor camps (no matter Soviet or German) as a general subject. And we have such sources: the books by Margolin and Solzenitsyn, but probably also some other sources currently quoted in this article. Biophys (talk) 18:51, 23 June 2011 (UTC)
Solzhenitsyn is not a scholar, and the term "istrebitel'no-trudovye lagerja" is not accepted by scientific community. In addition, in a situation when about 1-2 million of GULAG inmates died there (out of 18 millions of those who passed through GULAG), we simply cannot speak about any deliberate extermination. If GULAG was a killing machine, it was a very inefficient machine.--Paul Siebert (talk) 19:05, 23 June 2011 (UTC)
Categories: