1/5/2007

“The worst part about being in prison was being away from family”

Posted under: — @ 12:10 am
Email This Post Print This Post

David Irving in front of the Goethe memorial, one hour before his arrest in Austria November 11, 2005
David Irving in front of the Goethe memorial, one hour before his arrest in Austria November 11, 2005.

David Irving’s First Interview From The Outside

By David Irving as told to Orato Editor Heather Wallace
January 5th, 2007

Everybody has crossroads in their lives where they have the alternative of taking the right-hand fork or the left-hand fork. There have been several such forks in my life, and I’ve always taken the right track. But, looking back I can see turnings that I shouldn’t have taken. However, when I started to write my Hitler book, it was the most important turning I took. It was back in 1964 when I decided to write the biography of Adolf Hitler.

I decided to write that biography the way I’ve written all my books, which is based entirely on original, primary sources. If you write from primary sources, then you are bound to come up with a different picture and a different perspective than historians who just copy what other historians have written.

In certain respects, it has become very difficult to write Real History. I call it Real History with a capital ‘R,’ and it’s difficult to write Real History because there is legislation against it in different countries. The legislation is different in the different countries, but it always has the same purpose. In France, for example, the legislation makes it a criminal offense to dispute the history that was laid down in the Nuremburg trial in 1945. In Germany, the law is called Defaming the Memory of the Dead, and in Austria, the law is called The Reactivation of the Nazi Party. The general effect is to make it very difficult to write Real History about the Holocaust.

The Holocaust has been chiseled in stone, and anybody who wants to have a closer look at that stone is running the risk of being sentenced. In Austria this last year, they’ve already had 35 people put on trial for this particular offense and I think only 12 were acquitted. (….Full Article Here)

Also see:

David Irving’s latest Radical’s Diary

Staff


Frosty Wooldridge: “Our Future is in Our Hands”

Posted under: — @ 12:07 am
Email This Post Print This Post

500,000 Illegal Immigrants Protest in Front of Los Angeles Court House 2006The Next Added 100 Million Americans
Part 15: Losing the Wild

By Frosty Wooldridge
January 4, 2007

Before the Industrial Revolution, humanity existed by tilling the fields for crops, picking fruits and storing them in root cellars. Transportation included animals, ox carts, rivers and oceans. All limited and slow!

Diseases wiped out millions of people at the drop of a hat. Polio, cholera and Bubonic Plague ruled.

In 1900, the average American died by 49 years of age. Citizens kept warm by firewood and coal. As long as humans depended on solar flow, winds and currents, we remained sustainable within nature’s carrying capacity.

The Industrial Revolution

However, in the late 1800s, steam power burst upon the scene. With it, steam driven ocean liners and trains afforded swift transport across oceans and continents. With the advent of the internal combustion engine, the tractor and car made their appearance.

Whereas one farmer might feed 20 people with his labors, a tractor allowed one farmer the ability to feed 10,000 humans. Food canning guaranteed sustenance throughout the year.

With the advent of electricity, everything changed in America. Coupled with production and the assembly line, consumption became the driving force of capitalism.

Those technologies allowed Americans to overwhelm the natural world. (….Full Article Here)

 
Also Hear Frosty’s:

Latest Sobering Interview I, II

Staff


War on Terror or War on Error?

Posted under: — @ 12:05 am
Email This Post Print This Post

Trillion Dollar War on Terror or War on Error?Peanuts Kill More Americans Than Terrorists

If western governments were really trying win the “war on terror” they wouldn’t give terrorists so much credit

Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet
Friday, January 5, 2007

The menace of global terrorism has been labeled the greatest threat to western civilization since communism and yet swimming pools, peanuts and lost deer kill more Americans every single year. Why are our governments facilitating the terrorist’s agenda by hyping a peril that simply doesn’t exist?

The number of Americans killed as a result of international terrorism since the 1960’s gives us a benchmark from which we can correctly identify and target other dire dangers to our very way of life.

- Allergic reactions to peanuts

- Accident causing deer

- Lightning strikes

That’s correct - all of the above have killed an equal number of Americans since 1960 as terrorism. One could even categorize M&M’s, lost deer and the weather as an “axis of evil arming to threaten the peace of the world,” as George Bush famously once said. (….Full Article Here)

Staff

0.590 || Powered by Duke site