New York crematory "bottleneck" proves jews lie about Auschwitz

Started by yankeedoodle, May 03, 2020, 12:49:00 PM

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yankeedoodle

NY Crematories 'Bottlenecked' With COVID-19 Deaths — Yet 20,000 Were Cremated Daily At Auschwitz?
https://christiansfortruth.com/ny-crematories-bottlenecked-with-covid-19-deaths-yet-20000-were-cremated-daily-at-auschwitz/

Apparently the inability of crematories in the New York metropolitan area to handle the surge in demand caused by the COVID-19 "pandemic" is causing many people to start questioning how the Germans could have possibly cremated literally ten thousands of dead Jews every day for almost three years straight using much more primitive facilities:
Quotehttps://www.lohud.com/story/news/coronavirus/2020/04/16/coronavirus-deaths-crematory-funeral-backlog/2990919001/
The pandemic has also created a cremation bottleneck. Funeral homes across Westchester and Rockland counties typically use two crematories, at Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale or Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx.

In the Metro New York area, in addition to Ferncliff and Woodlawn, there is Green Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, U.S. Cremation Company in Middle Village, and St. Michael's Cemetery in East Elmhurst...

Staff at the crematory at Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale has been working 16- to 18-hour days to handle a spike in demand in the coronavirus outbreak....doubling its normal number of cremations, said Phil Tassi, a member of the cemetery association's board of directors and president of the New York State Association of Cemeteries.

Despite the long hours, there's still a two-week backlog at Ferncliff, Tassi said...

"We're running at full capacity, roughly 20 cremations a day," he said. "Our average would be 11 in normal circumstances."

Ferncliff has five cremation chambers, called retorts, and Tassi explained that a cremation can take anywhere from two-and-a-half to seven hours.

The burial side of Ferncliff's business is no less busy, with burials up 300% from normal, Tassi said.

The crematory backlog has kept funeral directors on the phone, trying to find space wherever they can...

That bottleneck has put Flower on Interstate 95 to Camden, New Jersey, twice this week, transporting six bodies in need of cremation.

"I called every crematory within 100 miles: Upstate New York, Connecticut, New Jersey," Flower said. "And I couldn't find anybody that could accommodate me right away."

Camden is 112 miles from Yonkers, but, for Flower, the four-hour round trip has been the difference between action and inaction, between clearing cases and not. Ferncliff's two-week backlog won't work for him.

"I can't wait two weeks because that's two weeks from the cases I have now," he said. "What if I get five more, which I've been doing about every single day? I get five to 10 more a day. I've been turning people away because I can't clear the cases I have."

His funeral home has two refrigerators to hold bodies to be buried weeks from now and he converted one of his chapels into a temporary morgue, dropping the air-conditioning to 45 degrees while those bodies await burial "in the next couple of days."

The pandemic has also created a cremation bottleneck. Funeral homes across Westchester and Rockland counties typically use two crematories, at Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale or Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx.

In the Metro New York area, in addition to Ferncliff and Woodlawn, there is Green Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, U.S. Cremation Company in Middle Village, and St. Michael's Cemetery in East Elmhurst...

Staff at the crematory at Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale has been working 16- to 18-hour days to handle a spike in demand in the coronavirus outbreak....doubling its normal number of cremations, said Phil Tassi, a member of the cemetery association's board of directors and president of the New York State Association of Cemeteries.

Despite the long hours, there's still a two-week backlog at Ferncliff, Tassi said...

"We're running at full capacity, roughly 20 cremations a day," he said. "Our average would be 11 in normal circumstances."

Ferncliff has five cremation chambers, called retorts, and Tassi explained that a cremation can take anywhere from two-and-a-half to seven hours.

The burial side of Ferncliff's business is no less busy, with burials up 300% from normal, Tassi said.

The crematory backlog has kept funeral directors on the phone, trying to find space wherever they can...

That bottleneck has put Flower on Interstate 95 to Camden, New Jersey, twice this week, transporting six bodies in need of cremation.

"I called every crematory within 100 miles: Upstate New York, Connecticut, New Jersey," Flower said. "And I couldn't find anybody that could accommodate me right away."

Camden is 112 miles from Yonkers, but, for Flower, the four-hour round trip has been the difference between action and inaction, between clearing cases and not. Ferncliff's two-week backlog won't work for him.

"I can't wait two weeks because that's two weeks from the cases I have now," he said. "What if I get five more, which I've been doing about every single day? I get five to 10 more a day. I've been turning people away because I can't clear the cases I have."

His funeral home has two refrigerators to hold bodies to be buried weeks from now and he converted one of his chapels into a temporary morgue, dropping the air-conditioning to 45 degrees while those bodies await burial "in the next couple of days."

"Perhaps only 2 million will survive the upcoming Holocaust, but they will be ready for life in Palestine."
—Chaim Weizmann, World Zionist Conference, 1936

"The Holocaust is to be the Keystone, or fundamental principle, of the New World Order." 
–Ian J. Kagedan, Ian J. Kagedan, spokesman for the Canadian B'nai B'rith lodge, The Toronto Star on 26 November 1991