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The New York Times
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Where the conversation begins. Follow for breaking news, special reports, RTs of our journalists and more. Visit http://nyti.ms/2FVHq9v  to share news tips.

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    The New York Times‏Verified account @nytimes Feb 1

    Even Poles who do not support the law consider the phrase “Polish death camps” deeply offensive and historically wronghttp://nyti.ms/2DUE0n8 

    12:15 PM - 1 Feb 2018
    • 72 Retweets
    • 140 Likes
    • #PHSalt ryo bizzo Eduardo Corrêa Toby Manhire Jack Wright Jack G Dawn🇺🇸 #IVoted 🇺🇸 Jeni Zill Onley 09🌊🌊🌊 Edison Composition
    52 replies 72 retweets 140 likes
      1. Darek Kwiatkowski‏ @KvvKwiatkowski Feb 2
        Replying to @nytimes

        POLES and JEWS were VICTIMS of Germany TOGETHER = 6 million POLES died in the fight against German fascism in Poland (17%)== POLES have saved most JEWS from all over the world, despite the fact that it was punished with death..like Irena Sendler, Ulm family and thousands otherspic.twitter.com/yRLiL6QvUg

        0 replies 4 retweets 4 likes
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      1. Rafał Sawoniewicz‏ @r_sawoniewicz Feb 1
        Replying to @nytimes

        There were GERMAN death camps on territory of OCCUPIED Poland. It is really so hard to understand that they weren't polish? Poles, as like Jews, were collectively murdered in GERMAN DEATH CAMPS by GERMANS. Stop that ridiculous discussion! #GermanDeathCamps

        0 replies 2 retweets 6 likes
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      1. Kacper_Ek  🇵🇱‏ @Er_Maz_ Feb 1
        Replying to @nytimes

        Jews were killed by Germans on Polish territory occupied by them, because many Jews lived there before war. In all occupied Europe only Polish people didn't collaborate with Germans.

        0 replies 1 retweet 5 likes
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      1. Kamilla  🇵🇱  💯‏ @KamillaGdansk Feb 1
        Replying to @nytimes

        Remember #GermanDeathCamps not Polishhttps://m.youtube.com/watch?v=SztV961KKhA …

        0 replies 0 retweets 13 likes
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      1. New conversation
      2. reinhardX‏ @reinhardX Feb 1
        Replying to @nytimes

        And #Poland is correct: Those were no Polish Death Camps, They were #German death Camps in Poland

        1 reply 0 retweets 13 likes
      3. Cat Alexiadis‏ @Cat_astrophe18 Feb 1
        Replying to @reinhardX @nytimes

        Ummm I still think the important part is " Death Camps" and yes, they happened in Poland.

        1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      4. Tina MJD‏ @MjutTina Feb 1
        Replying to @Cat_astrophe18 @reinhardX @nytimes

        Because of perfect German engineering. Logistcs. Poland before the IIWW had the biggest Jewish population (and we were soooo antisemitic!). Besides Hitler planned to invade USSR where, in Byelorus and Ukraine, also there were many Jews.

        1 reply 0 retweets 4 likes
      5. Cat Alexiadis‏ @Cat_astrophe18 Feb 1
        Replying to @MjutTina @reinhardX @nytimes

        Thank you Tina for the respectful and thoughtful response. No argument, perfect engineering is absolutely right. Let's not forget ✌️

        0 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
      6. End of conversation
      1. New conversation
      2. Eternal‏ @Outside_85 Feb 1
        Replying to @nytimes

        Unsurprising since it implies Poland as a whole supported Nazi Germany, not just happened to be a place where some of the these camps were located.

        2 replies 1 retweet 1 like
      3. Tina MJD‏ @MjutTina Feb 1
        Replying to @Outside_85 @nytimes

        Poland (which formally did not exist at that time, being occupied either by Germany or by Soviets) NEVER collaborated with the enemy as the only country in Europe. It happened to be a place...because it had the biggest population of Jews

        0 replies 0 retweets 4 likes
      4. End of conversation
      1. New conversation
      2. Howard Beale‏ @BedBugCrazy Feb 1
        Replying to @nytimes

        So...German Death Camps in Poland?

        5 replies 0 retweets 1 like
      3. Tina MJD‏ @MjutTina Feb 1
        Replying to @BedBugCrazy @nytimes

        Poland was ocuppied. Polish state and administration did not exist. Formally this was either Reich or General Gouvernement.

        1 reply 0 retweets 7 likes
      4. Howard Beale‏ @BedBugCrazy Feb 1
        Replying to @MjutTina @nytimes

        We know how much the Poles loved the Jews...not much.

        2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
      5.  🇵🇱‏ @dzisu_ Feb 1
        Replying to @BedBugCrazy @MjutTina @nytimes

        Before war, the most Jews lived in Poland, more than in all of Europe combined. Other european countries didn't want Jewish community. Besides, it's estimated that from 1 million to 3 million Poles helped Jews during WWII, saving 450 000 Jews from certain death, from 30 000 to

        0 replies 0 retweets 1 like
      6. End of conversation
      1. New conversation
      2. Mark Bjorke‏ @markbjorke Feb 1
        Replying to @nytimes

        They were in Poland. Snowflakes?

        4 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
      3. Ala Filbier‏ @AlaFilbier Feb 1
        Replying to @markbjorke @nytimes

        So what? That does not mean they were Polish.

        0 replies 0 retweets 11 likes
      4. End of conversation
      1. New conversation
      2. Ala Filbier‏ @AlaFilbier Feb 1
        Replying to @nytimes

        I do not support this legislation in any way, I think it’s awful, but I really think phrase ‚Polish death camps’ shouldn’t be used. Those camps were in Poland because we were under Nazi occupation. Those were Nazi death camps.

        2 replies 0 retweets 4 likes
      3. Tina MJD‏ @MjutTina Feb 1
        Replying to @AlaFilbier @nytimes

        Those were #GermanDeathCamps in Reich or GG, where previously was Poland. There was no Nazi nation, no Nazi language, no Naziland.

        0 replies 0 retweets 2 likes
      4. End of conversation
      1. Sylwia K‏ @SylwiaK47812125 Feb 1
        Replying to @Ravensaysso @nytimes

        pic.twitter.com/XZDLimdRg2

        0 replies 0 retweets 8 likes
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