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Apr
24
2010

Inconvenient History 2009 Hardbound Annual now available!

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By History Behind Bars-

Inconvenient History Vol I 2009

The hardbound edition of Inconvenient History Volume 1 is finally available. This beautiful hardbound book is 296 pages of hard-hitting revisionist scholarship revealing the truth on several inconvenient moments in our recent history.

Inconvenient History Volume 1, contains all the content from our 3 issues from 2009. You will receive a hardbound book withthe Summer, Fall, and Winter issues of Inconvenient History.

All the content is here. From our challenging editorials and comment to our ground-breaking book reviews. And of course, all the inconvenient truth of our feature articles. Read through Mark Turley’s “Freedom, Democracy and the Conquering of Evil,” Thomas Kues’s “Chronicle of Holocaust Revisionism,” Paul Grubach’s “Christianity and the Holocaust Ideology,” Joseph Bellinger’s “Prohibition of Holocaust Denial,” Paul Grubach’s “Nazi Extermination Camp of Sobibor in the Context of the Demjanjuk Case,” Thomas Kues’s “Tree-felling at Treblinka,” Juergen Graf’s “David Irving and the Aktion Reinhardt Camps,” Mark Turley’s “Genocide at Nuremberg,” Veronica Clark’s “Adolf Hitler’s Armed Forces: A Triumph of Diversity?,” Joseph Bishop’s “Einsatzgruppend and the Holocaust.”

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Written by Widmann in: Free Speech,Historical Revisionism | Tags:
Apr
03
2010

Traces of a Chimera, or Bełżec’s Vanishing Gas Chamber Building

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By Thomas Kues

1. The Alleged Second Phase Gas Chamber Building at Bełżec

According Israeli historian Yitzhak Arad [1] the first gas chamber building at Bełżec, a wooden barrack containing three chambers each measuring 4 x 8 meters, was torn down sometime in late June 1942 and replaced with a larger, more solid building measuring 24 x 10 meters and containing six separate gas chambers, each measuring 4 x 8 (or possibly 4 x 5 or 5 x 5) meters. As for the construction material, Arad quotes the Jewish key witness Rudolf Reder, who in 1946 stated that the building was made “of grey concrete”. The former SS-Untersturmführer Josef Oberhauser described it as “a massive new building” in his testimony.[2] The witness Wilhelm Pfannenstiel testified that “the building that housed the gas chambers was made of concrete”.[3] That the building was made of brick and/or concrete was accepted also by the verdict of the 1965 Bełżec trial in Munich[4], and has been adopted as a fact by various authoritative works on the Holocaust, such as the Encyclopedia of the Holocaust.[5]
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Written by Thomas Kues in: Belzec,Gas Chambers,Operation Reinhardt | Tags: