Firsthand account of the Roosevelt administration's most daring attempt to throttle noninterventionist and anti-Communist dissent through court action. This "guilt by association" and "conspiracy" legal ploy is perhaps the most sinister federal government attack ever against our constitutional guarantee of freedom of speech. Defendant Dennis and trial lawyer St. George present a brilliant, lucidly reasoned critique of the closest thing to a Soviet show trial that America has ever experienced. Must reading for patriots and civil libertarians.
Covers the American "genius" for self-censorship. Focusing on an episode in World War I, it provides a fascinating rundown on the people, agencies, organizations, campaigns and situations that worked to pull inconvenient history books from the libraries and bookshops long before -- and after -- 1917. Here you'll learn just how far the liberal paragons of "the open mind" have permitted minds to be open. The study includes A Beginner's Manual for Apprentice Bookburners and, like all of Jim Martin's books, is not only highly informative, but lots of fun, too.
In 1945 Poland's new Soviet-dominated government was actively recruiting Jews for its Office of State Security to carry out a brutal "de-Nazification." The Office's agents raided German homes, rounding up some 200,000 men, women, children and infants -- 99 percent of them non-combatant, innocent civilians. Incarcerated in cellars, prisons, and 1,255 concentration camps where typhus was rampant and torture was commonplace, the inmates subsisted on starvation rations. In this brief period, between 60,000 and 80,000 Germans perished at the hands of the Office.
Revisionist giant Harry Elmer Barnes is at his battling best in these essays and reviews on the Second World War, and on the "Cold War" with the Soviet Union that soon followed. Professor Barnes takes passionate issue with the writings of his historian colleagues, whether in the academy or (increasingly) in the Pentagon and the CIA, on the causes, conduct, and results of America's "crusade" against Germany and Japan. Stern assessments of the establishment accounts, from Walter Millis to William Shirer, that laid the groundwork for today's wrongheaded history, and vital reviews of the studies that refute them, including A. J. P. Taylor's Origins of the Second World War and David Hoggan's Erzwungene Krieg (Forced War). Aimed at Cold War America's march toward global embroilment and a "new world order," these "Essays against Interventionism" hit home amidst harum-scarum U.S. involvement all around the planet.
In these memorable, spirited addresses, two seasoned speakers tackle headline-making issues at an IHR meeting in Arlington, Virginia, July 8, 2006. Paul Fromm, director of the Canadian Association for Free Expression, speaks with humor, verve and first-hand knowledge about the battle for free speech in Canada and Europe, and the legal persecution of “political prisoners” such as British historian David Irving, and German-Canadian publisher Ernst Zundel.
Subtitled “Essays on Some Historical Consequences of the Crisis in the Pacific in 1941,” this is a succinct, closely reasoned look by one of America’s great dissident historians at the Pearl Harbor attack and the US-Japan conflict of the 1940s. Includes “Pearl Harbor: Antecedents, Background and Consequences,” “The Framing of ‘Tokyo Rose’,” a review of a pathbreaking book about the wartime US internment of Japanese Americans, and “Where was the General: Some new Views and Contributions Relative to the Ongoing Mystery of Pearl Harbor.”
David Irving
In this rousing lecture, Irving mesmerizes his listeners with facts and hilarious anecdotes, including dramatic revelations concerning the true character of Sir Winston Churchill, and summarizes Churchill’s underhanded efforts to maneuver the US into the war against Germany – all new material from the second volume of Irving’s blockbuster, Churchill’s War. Irving also tells attendees what led him to finally accept the revisionist position on the Holocaust issue. From the Ninth IHR Conference, 1989.
Misleading title to the contrary, these lively musings on life and the Holocaust are not "Part I" of Bradley Smith's Confessions of a Holocaust Revisionist. Admirers of Smith's intense, uniquely personal grapplings with the Holocaust story and the challenge that, once exposed as untruth, it presents the free individual will find new food for thought and impetus to laughter in the several essays included in this sequel to Confessions.
Classic debunking of the propaganda lies politicians and press manufactured about the enemy to stampede their own citizens into "the war to end all wars." British MP Ponsonby reveals how all the belligerents, but foremost his own country, faked documents, falsified photos, and invented horrifying atrocity stories. Authoritatively debunks numerous wartime hoaxes, including such durable tales as: the bayoneted Belgian babies, the German "corpse factory," "The Crucified Canadian," the martyrdom of Nurse Cavell, and the "passenger ship" Lusitania. In the publisher's foreword, historian Mark Weber points out fascinating parallels with World War II atrocity tales.