Month: June 2024

The Holocaust: Facts versus Fiction

“These [Holocaust] crimes are and remain a part of German history, and this history has to be told, over and over again.” German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Dec. 6, 2019;[1] https://youtu.be/K_PpXikL6Go Introduction In the Year 9 after Christ’s birth, Rome rules almost all of Europe. So far, the Romans have only been able to conquer the…

The War that Never Ends

World War Two ended in 1945, hence more than a three-quarter century ago. When that many years had passed, other, earlier wars were almost forgotten after an entire generation had passed. But WWII is different. It is being relived, resuffered, reenacted and kept in the limelight as if it had happened yesterday. For the victorious…

Belzec: Reder versus Gerstein

The following article was taken, with generous permission from Castle Hill Publishers, from Carlo Mattogno’s recently published study Rudolf Reder versus Kurt Gerstein: Two False Testimonies on the Bełżec Camp Analyzed (Castle Hill Publishers, Uckfield, 2021; see the book announcement in this issue of Inconvenient History). In this book, it features as Part 4. References…

Promoting Revisionism

Around the turn of the millennium, an anonymous author wrote a brochure titled Auschwitz: Facts versus Fiction, had it printed in great numbers, and wanted Castle Hill Publishers to distribute it from the UK. Castle Hill agreed initially, stocked it, and added it to its sales website. On closer inspection, it turned out that the…

An Historical Overview of “Holocaust” Reparations

This author has been accused of falsely claiming that it was easy for Jewish “Holocaust” survivors to get restitution, and that I have lied about the number of claims applied for by Jewish “Holocaust” survivors versus the number of claims paid. This article analyzes the reparations given to Jewish “Holocaust” survivors and acts as a…

The Laconia Incident

While you’re celebrating the 80th anniversary of D-Day, allow me to tell you another war story you’ve probably never heard (I graduated Phi Beta Kappa with a major in American History from an Ivy League school and I never had!). You may find it doesn’t fill you with the same patriotic pride as the Allied…

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