The Growing Critique of ‘Truth’ and ‘Memory’
Dissecting marshals the work of more than a dozen
researchers to subject the „gas chambers,” the „six million,” the postwar
trials and other linchpins of the orthodox Holocaust narrative to careful,
precise, methodical and withering analysis. Robert Faurisson, Germar Rudolf and
Claus Jordan on how testimony was coerced and convictions manufactured; G.
Rudolf on the evidence for Jewish losses during WWII; Udo Walendy and John Ball
on analysis of photos alleged to depict the crimes or their locations; Jürgen
Graf on myths about the concentration camps; Germar Rudolf on how chemical
analysis gravely weakens the case for gassing in the Auschwitz gas chambers;
Carlo Mattogno on the cremation furnaces of Auschwitz; Fritz Berg, Ingrid
Weckert, Carlo Mattogno and Arnulf Neumaier on the technical and evidentiary
absurdities of gassing claims for German trucks and gas chambers at Majdanek,
Belzec, Sobibor and Treblinka; and more. Dissecting’s handsome design
and format lend themselves well to the numerous illustrations, charts, and
diagrams with which these leading revisionists advance the wealth of evidence
the book offers against the Holocaust myth. 3rd revised and updated edition of
2019.
„There is at present no other single volume
that so provides a serious reader with a broad understanding of the
contemporary state of historical issues that influential people would rather
not have examined.“ – Prof. Dr. Arthur R. Butz, Evanston, IL
„There is much in the various contributions
that strikes one as thoroughly convincing.“ – Historian Dr.
Joachim Hoffmann, Expert Trial Report
„Read this book and you will know where
revisionism is today. And the shock is that revisionism has done away with the
exterminationist case.“ – Andrew Gray, The Barnes Review
„These contributions read like detective
stories – analyzing the evidence for several crimes in a Sherlock Holmes style.“
– The Christian News, July 24, 2000
„I envy the United States where such a book can
be published without negative consequences. It will probably unleash a broad
discussion.“ – Historian Prof. Dr. Ernst Nolte, Berlin,
Germany
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