Similar Posts

  • Rising Tide of Magic versus Reason

    Cornelius G. Hunter, Darwin’s Proof. The Triumph of Religion over Science, Brazos Press, Grand Rapids, MI, 2003, 168pp., hardcover, $17.99 Thomas Woodward, Doubts about Darwin. A History of Intelligent Design; Baker Books, Grand Rapids, MI, 2003, 304 pp., hardcover, $19.99 The battle over whether Darwin’s theory of evolution is correct or if life was indeed…

  • Verdict on Jan Sehn

    Concentration Camp Oswiecim-Brzezinka (Auschwitz-Birkenau) by Jan Sehn. Warszawa: Wydawnictwo Prawnicze, 1961. Pp. 161, (2). With 42 illustrations black and white photographs, a number of facsimile letters and several plans, including a large folding map at the rear showing the location of camps in Germany and occupied countries. If one reads and examines Oswiecim-Brzezinka by Jan…

  • The Public Stake In Revisionism

    Every American citizen has much more at stake in understanding how and why the U.S. was drawn into World War II than in perusing the Warren Report, its supplementary volumes, and the controversial articles and books of the aftermath, or the annals of any isolated public crime, however dramatic. However tragic and regrettable, the assassination…

  • Raul Hilberg’s Incurable Autism

    Raul Hilberg, Sources of Holocaust Research: An Analysis, R. Dee, Chicago, 2001, hardcover, 218 pp., $26.- 1. The Destruction of European Jewry Fifteen years ago, Robert Faurisson stated the opinion that Raul Hilberg was the only representative of the official version of the “Holocaust” for whom he felt a certain measure of respect, although only…

  • Stalin’s Apologist, Walter Duranty

    Stalin's Apologist, Walter Duranty: The New York Times's Man in Moscow, by S.J. Taylor. New York: Oxford University Press, 1990. Hb., 404 pp., illustrated, $24.95; ISBN 0-19-505700-7. Flamboyant and opinionated, Walter Duranty represented the quintessence of the star newspaper reporter. His beat was the Soviet Union. From the Revolution to the Second World War, Duranty's…