Author: Thomas Dalton

Thomas Dalton is the pen name of a U.S. scholar, and PhD-level educator of many years who has taught and lectured on various universities in a number of countries. Dalton currently heads the small book outlet Clemens & Blair. For all his writings, see his personal website www.thomasdaltonphd.com.

Tucker Carlson’s Non-Denial Denialism of the Holocaust

Well, the Jewish Lobby is at it again. In the latest kerfuffle over “Holocaust denial,” Jews and their sycophants are in an uproar over a podcast interview aired on September 2 in which Tucker Carlson spoke at length with a “popular historian” named Darryl Cooper. The two-hour episode is titled “The True History of the…

The Shulchan Aruch

The following article was taken, with generous permission from Clemens & Blair, from Erich Bischoff’s The Book of the Shulchan Aruch (Clemens & Blair, New York/Castle Hill Publishers, Bargoed, UK, February 2023; see the book announcement at the end of this issue of Inconve­nient History). In this book, it forms the introduction. Print and eBook…

The Jewish Hand in World War Three

Thanks to the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, we indeed seem to be rushing headlong into a major war – possibly a World War Three, possibly the world’s first (and perhaps last) nuclear war. Ukraine leadership and their Western backers seem hell-bent on fighting to the last man, and Vladimir Putin, as an old-school Cold Warrior,…

“Justice” at Nuremberg

Thomas Dalton has had it with the Jews, so he keeps on dishing it out. His latest book on this topic titled Streicher, Rosenberg, and the Jews was a “quickie” in terms of how fast it was put together, since it is based mainly on the transcripts of the Nuremberg International Military Tribunal of 1945/46….

Eternal Strangers

With the permission of Castle Hill, Inconvenient History prints in this issue, without further ado, the Part One of Thomas Dalton’s newest tome, Eternal Strangers: Critical Views of Jews and Judaism through the Ages. The book can be purchased in print and eBook from Armreg Ltd at armreg.co.uk. For a more-detailed description, see the book…

Hitler on the Jews ∙ An Excerpt

With the permission of Castle Hill, Inconvenient History prints in this issue, without further ado, the first section of Thomas Dalton’s newest tome, Hitler on the Jews. It explains very well why this book exists – in fact, needs to exist. References in text and footnotes to literature point to the book’s bibliography, which is…

Jasenovac Unmasked

An obscure WW2 concentration camp in present-day Croatia by the name of Jasenovac, accounting for some 0.33% of the presumed Jewish death toll of 6 million, is by any reasonable accounting all but irrelevant to the Holocaust story. A three-year-old Croatian TV interview with historian and Croatian Jew Ivo Goldstein expounds on the “increasingly problematic” camp at Jasenovac, decrying "the lack of forensic evidence from this particular camp", meaning the lack of any corpses, ash, or other human remains. This paper discusses the basis and implications of this admission.

Rethinking “Mein Kampf”

On 1 January 2016, Mein Kampf came out of copyright. It has now been 70 years since the author’s death, and by international copyright law, legal protection for the book has expired. Thus it is perhaps a good time to reconsider and reexamine this most notorious work—and perhaps to banish some of the many myths…

Debating the Holocaust

For the past few decades there has been raging a kind of subterranean debate, one of monumental importance. It is a debate about the Holocaust – not whether or not it "happened" (this is a meaningless claim), but rather, how it happened, through what means, and to what extent. On the one hand we have…

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