In article
<ffd0a004-9a11-4c75-9257-a3ffb59e7f54@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
kixi <k9i@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>On Jul 23, 10:51 am, kmc...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(Kenneth McVay OBC) wrote:
>> In article
<2840062f-9fd2-4e73-a631-7dc35367c...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>,
>>
>> kixi <k...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>> >Obama is in Israel hitting the notes we have come to expect of
>> >aspiring politicians fearful of the jewish power to destroy.
>>
>> >He made a visit to Holohoax Central in Occupied Jerusalem. According
>>
>> What is this "Holohoax Central" and what is a "Holohoax?"
>Beware! McVey receives money from B'nai Brith Canada to defend the
>Hoax.
Who is "McVey," and why do they pay him?
(Don't want to answer the question, eh? Can't say I blame you. If I were
as
bigoted an ass as you are, I'd run, too.)
PS - How do you know I receive money from B'nai Brith? Do you work there
as their token racist?
>Beware! McVey changed the follow-up groups to alt.revisionism - a
>common practice of his. I've changed them back.
>Beware of such tactics from beneficiaries of the Holohoax Industry.
Still waiting for you to tell us about this "Holohoax Industry." The only
one I'm aware of is the one run by Ernst Zundel and David Irving, both of
whom make money by claiming that this "Holohoax" is real.
http://www.nizkor.org/hweb/people/p/prutschi-manuel/zundel-affair/za-06.html
Propaganda Techniques and Activities
Most of Zündel's material takes the form of circulars, leaflets
and letters, including letters to the editor: occasionally, he also
issues questionnaires. Some of his organizations have distinctive
letterheads, e.g., Concerned Parents of German Descent, which
features a pre-adolescent blonde girl against a dark background,
curled up, fragile and fearful, with a teardrop descending from
each eye. The pathos-inspiring caption underneath reads, "HELP US."
The German-Jewish Historical Commission s****ts an imperial eagle
in the top left comer and a Star of David on the right.
Zündel's style is also distinctive: a tightly packed text,
sometimes with press clippings and commentaries appended. His
mail-order operation purveys books, pamphlets, tapes, video
cassettes, films, records and art. There are homemade
audio-visual productions. as well as tapes of media interviews
in which the self-appointed defender of Germany's honour is the
star attraction. Fantasy in space, as well as fantasy in history,
is included, with such titles as "UFO'S - Nazi Secret Weapon?" or
"Little Known UFO Sightings from Around the World."
The catalogue also shows that Samisdat serves as a
clearing-house for Holocaust denial publications from all over
the world. Authors represented are the Americans, Arthur Butz,
with his The Hoax of the Twentieth Century, and Austin J. App,
with his The Six Million Swindle; the Briton Richard Harwood,
with his pamphlet Did Six Million Really Die?; the Germans, Udo
Walendy, with (among other titles) Truth for Germany: The Guilt
Question of the Second World War and Thies Christophersen, with
his Auschwitz: Truth or Lie; the Frenchman Robert Faurisson,
with his taped presentation ("in slide show form") on the
"fraudulent character of the gas chambers"; and the Swede
Ditlieb Felderer on videotape with The Anne Frank Diary Hoax.
For US$10, one can obtain South Africa Today, in which life
in the last white bastion in Africa is described as it
"really is."[61]
A great deal of Nazi material can be ordered, especially
tapes of Hitler's speeches with a "simultaneous English-
language translation." One can hear "the man whose voice
captured the hearts and minds of millions of enthusiastic
sup****ters." Other Nazi offerings include the movie
Triumph of the Will, which is advertised as "The Third
Reich's Version of the Woodstock Festival." For only $10,
one can purchase Hitler Declares War on Poland or Hitler
Declares War on America; one can also purchase "Hitler's
sad but powerfully prophetic final broadcast from Berlin
on January 1, 1945." Besides Nazi speeches, the Music of
the Third Reich can be obtained, offering "old favourites"
like the "Horst Wessel Lied," and the "Badenweiler March,"
described as "Hitler's favourite."
One can further assuage one's penchant for Nazi melodies
with "Black ****rt and Brown ****rt Stormtrooper Songs and
Marches." Art is also available; the Nazi aficionado can
obtain for two dollars "large, beautiful illustrations of
Nazi Secret Weapons suitable for framing." Devising a
symbol based on the old runic form of the letter "Z," the
ingenious artist-entrepreneur has marketed his own creation
as "Thor's Warrior Belt Buckle," which comes with an
"embossed Lightning Bolt of Thor," and the "Amulet of Thor,"
depicting "Thor's Lightning Bolt within the Sacred Sun Symbol."
In both cases, the lightning bolt is the letter "Z."
[...]
Outside of North America, West Germany constitutes his
principal target, where (as in Canada) his mass mailings are
aimed at parliamentarians. In December 1983, he sent the
book "Allied War Crimes" to all members of the West German
parliament, acquiring in his homeland an ideologically
sympathetic clientele for his mail order business. In
December 1980, the Parliamentary Secretary of State for
the Federal Ministry of Finance announced in the
Bundestag that. between January 1, 1978 and December 30,
1979, "200 ****pments of a right wing extremist and neo-Nazi
content...books, periodicals, symbols, decorations, films,
cassettes, records...came overwhelmingly from Canada."[65] He
added that, as a result of similar ****pments during the
first half of 1980, prosecutions were being considered.
On April 23, 1981, in a letter to the Canadian Jewish
Congress, an official of the Ministry of Finance in Bonn
identified the source of these materials as "Samisdat
Publishers, 206 Carlton Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
M5A 2L1."[66] A story on Simon Wiesenthal in the New York
Times Magazine of May 3, 1981, provides a particularly
telling example of how Zündel's mailings filter through
German society and beyond. A Dutch tourist, vacationing
in Upper Austria, was supplied with antisemitic material
by a gas station attendant, who, in turn, had obtained the
writings from a friend who was a Samisdat subscriber.[67]
Canada, the United States, Germany and Europe do not
comprise the limits of Zündel's reach: Australia is also
within his orbit, as is the Middle East. In the summer of
1981, 400 tapes in the Arabic language apparently were
****pped to opinion-makers in Arab lands.[68] Zündel's
claim to be in touch with people in 45 to 47 countries
in at least 14 different languages is not impossible: an
impressive operation indeed! This propaganda mill is by
no means an altruistic enterprise. While much of the
material is mailed unsolicited, much of it, together
with his vast mail order enterprise, generates funds.
Police sources estimate that a steady income ranging
between $60000-100000 per annum comes from his empire.
Moreover, he has frequently appealed directly for money.
A re****t of the West German Ministry of the Interior
reveals that, in one fund-raising campaign in 1980,
Zündel raised close to 100000 German marks (the
equivalent of $50000).[69] Even this estimate may be
too modest. In one of his own publications in 1981, he
pooh-poohed the German magazine Der Spiegel for
guessing that his total annual budget amounted to
100000 marks, countering indignantly that "Samisdat
has long ago exceeded the figure...for no organization
that spans the world and reaches forty-five countries
can manage with so low a budget."[70]
--
"By refini****on you i mean you on their side definetly you
opinons are." (Kurt Knoll, Kitimat, B.C.'s Leading Revisionist
Scholar)
The Nizkor Project: http://www.nizkor.org/


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