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    Dissecting the Holocaust Edited by Germar Rudolf Germar Rudolf (ed.), Dissecting the Holocaust: The Growing Critique of ‘Truth’ and ‘Memory’, Castle Hill Publishers, Uckfield, 2019, 622 pages, 6”×9” paperback, b&w illustrated, bibliography, index, ISBN: 978-1-59148-227-7; the current edition is available as print, audio and eBook from Armreg Ltd.; free PDF download at HolocaustHandbooks.com. Normally we…

  • INCONVENIENT HISTORY, Volume 6, Number 3 – Fall 2014: It’s Here!

    Did covert machinations of the Great War betray the Arabs and result in a permanent conflict of civilizations? Contents Revisionism as Creative Destruction, by Jett Rucker Roots of Present World Conflict: Zionist Machinations and Western Duplicity during World War I, by K.R. Bolton The Rise and Fall of Historical Revisionism following World War I, by…

  • In Brief

    Belgian Revisionist Sentenced and Raided Again Austrian Revisionist Jailed German Lawyer Loses Passport for Revisionist Views European-Wide Law against Revisionism More Jewish Censorship in New Zealand Australia to Outlaw Criticism of Minorities Forced Commemoration of Lies in Germany Israel-Critical New Zealand Cartoonist Sacked Apologies for Praising Hitler's Economic Success Artistic Freedom for Auschwitz Souvenirs “Health…

  • Smith’s Report, no. 139

    This document is currently only available as a download. Please see the meta information below for the download link. Bradley R. Smith Bradley R. Smith was born in Los Angeles on February 18, 1930. At 18 he joined the army and in 1951 served with the infantry in Korea where he was twice wounded. After…

  • Smith’s Report, no. 157

    This document is currently only available as a download. Please see the meta information below for the download link. Bradley R. Smith Bradley R. Smith was born in Los Angeles on February 18, 1930. At 18 he joined the army and in 1951 served with the infantry in Korea where he was twice wounded. After…

  • British ISPs Crack Down on Hate

    5:30 p.m. 25. Jan. 2000 PST Internet service providers in Britain announced new self-regulatory content policies aimed at removing racist material from the Internet on Tuesday. The Internet Watch Foundation, an industry-funded self-policing body, said it will begin cracking down on “potentially criminal” hate content. The new brief expands the authority of the watchdog organization,…