No. 3

Vol. 12, No. 3 · www.InconvenientHistory.org · 2020

Inconvenient History seeks to revive the true spirit of the historical revisionist movement; a movement that was established primarily to foster peace through an objective understanding of the causes of modern warfare.

To browse the contents of this issue, click on the individual papers listed below.

Book Anouncements

Moral Turpitude Authored by Germar Rudolf Germar Rudolf, Moral Turpitude: Or the Legal Hazards of Maintaining Physical Fitness, Castle Hill Publishers, Uckfield, 2020, 122 pages plus documents appendix, full-color print, 6”×9” paperback, ISBN: 978-1-59148-254-3. This book has been replaced by a second, revised edition with a different main titled: Up Close and Personal (131 pages,…

On the Authenticity of the “Lachout Document”

1. Introduction In 1987, a decades-old document caused a considerable stir in Austria. It was a circular from the Military Police Service (MPS, Militärpolizeilicher Dienst, MPD), an Austrian auxiliary force that had been founded in the post-war years to support the occupying powers in matters where they had to deal with the Austrian population, not…

The Lie of the Six Million

Editor’s Remark: This article is reprinted here as a historical document of early Holocaust revisionism outside of occupied Germany. Inconvenient History does not claim that any of the statements made in it are correct (or incorrect, for that matter). Since none of the claims made are backed up with verifiable sources, this has to be…

Delayed and Early Revisionism

In his obituary for Ludwig Fanghänel aka Klaus Schwensen, Jürgen Graf wrote in Issue No. 2 of Volume 9 of Inconvenient History that some of Fanghänel’s studies have never been translated into English, among them his very important investigation on the authenticity of the so-called “Lachout Document.” (See online at https://codoh.com/library/​document/​ludwig-fanghanel-8-october-1937-20-january-2017/). As far as I…

Early Revisionism outside Occupied Germany

A relatively obscure German-language monthly magazine was published in Buenos Aires from 1947 to 1957 named Der Weg (The Path), published by the Dürer-Verlag there. It reported the post-war era from abroad – that is, free from the control and censorship of Germany’s occupiers. Thus, early versions of revisionist thought and analysis appear in the…

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