Editorials

Some people love to read op-eds just because it’s an opinion by some guy or gal they like or dislike. So here we go…

Moving with Movies

A picture tells more than a thousand words, and moving pictures tell more than a million words, one might add. The power of movies – both of the fiction and non-fiction genre – to convince the gullible as well as many skeptical minds can hardly be underestimated. This is particularly true in our times of reduced…

Total Revisionist Collapse – and Resurrection

As reported in last issue’s editorial, the situation at CODOH and Castle Hill had become critical, after one of CODOH’s board members, Michael Santomauro, until mid-December 2023 manager of Castle Hill, had seized all of Castle Hill’s company assets, and had taken exclusive control of domain-name and hosting accounts, using this as “leverage” (his word)…

Mayhem at Castle Hill and CODOH

Dramatic events are unfolding with Castle Hill and CODOH as I write this. Without going into too many details, I may pick up where I left off with my last editorial about Castle Hill’s payment processor bailing out. In the meantime, trying to implement Plan B also failed. When our Plan B, CODOH’s current payment…

Change at the Helm

Facing major challenges with the sudden drop out of Germar Rudolf from all roles and positions within CODOH, the CODOH Board of Trustees has appointed Trustee Michael Santomauro as Manager of Castlehill Publishing LLC. Mr. Santomauro was so generous to offer his services free of charge to front as Castlehill’s Manager, as long as it…

Resignation

To the Board of Trustees of the Bradley Smith Charitable Trust: I herewith, effective immediately, resign from: the position of CEO of the Bradley Smith Charitable Trust being a member of the Board of Trustees of the Bradley Smith Charitable Trust the position of CEO of Castlehill Publishing, LLC, a company owned by the Bradley…

The Day Ingram Murdered History

Looking at the pattern of censorship we have experienced over the years, it emerges that the beginning of each year seems to be the most challenging for us. The reason for that seems obvious. In 2005, the General Assembly of the United Nations officially declared the 27th of each January “an annual International Day of…

A Personal Note

Personal matters should not be part of contributions to Inconvenient History – unless it affects Inconvenient History. I am not yet sure that it will, but I thought it conducive to give a little glimpse into what’s going on in my little world at home, so the reader can appreciate my trials and tribulations, and…

Editorial Change

After some negotiations, John Wear has agreed to help out with running Inconvenient History. Right, now, this seems to materialize in such a way that almost all contributions are written by him. This is not sustainable in the long run, as such a monoculture is not only dangerous. It will inevitably lead to an early…

The New Inconvenient History: Expanding Horizons

Abstract Inconvenient History now carries material in a number of foreign languages, and we ask our readers to help us get non-English contributions translated into English for parallel carriage. Inconvenient History also allows video and audio files to be submitted alongside a transcript of their verbal contents. Unchanged is the type and style of content…

Remembering Bradley R. Smith

On Thursday evening, 18 February 2016, I glanced at my email on my phone. The subject of a newly received message struck me like a lightning bolt. “Bradley RIP” was all it said. It wasn’t that it was entirely unexpected. Bradley had been ill for many years, fighting off heart ailments, cancer, and even a bullet…

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