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The Beacon
Student Center, Room 310
William Patterson University
Wayne New Jersey 07470
Editor in Chief: Ryan L. Caiazzo
Newsroom: 973 720 2248
Email: <beacon@student.wpunj.edu>
28 August 2,000
For Publication
I run advertisements in student newspapers at college and university
campuses around the country encouraging an open debate on the Jewish
holocaust story. My ads have run some 300 times. On 17 April 2000
I ran one in The Beacon titled “Holocaust Studies:
Appointment with Hate?”
President Arnold Speert wrote (24 April) that my ad contains
“lies” and that The Beacon should apologize for having run it. I
find it rather tacky that a university president would use the position
of his office to attack a student newspaper staff for running a
controversial text containing “lies” without demonstrating what
those “lies” are.
President Speert believes students should simply take his word
for it, eh? President Speert writes: “The Holocaust did happen.”
He ignores the fact that in my ad I do not write that the Holocaust
did not happen. As a matter of fact – that’s what is at issue.
What was the Holocaust? The first thing we have to say is that the
Jewish holocaust story is a vast collection of war stories.
Like every other war story, some of them happened and some of them
didn’t. I’m doing what I can to encourage our professors (and their
administrators) to separate the wheat from the chaff.
President Speert quotes the “New York Times Manager
of Advertising Acceptability” as stating that the Times
will not accept advertisements that deny a recognized crime of substantial
proportions or vividness.” He suggests that The Beacon’s
staff get together with its faculty advisors and legal counsel to
devise advertising policies that can be used to suppress revisionist
texts. That is, get the lawyers in, make it illegal for student
newspapers to allow expressions of skepticism regarding those historical
issues about which their professors have declared a consensus. Why
not? It worked for Hitler. It worked for Stalin. It still works
for Fidel Castro and every other tin pot dictator the world over.
Professors Carol Gruber (History), Neil Kressel (Psychology),
Peter Stein (Sociology) and Miryan Wahrman (Biology) expressed their
astonishment that a student newspaper would run an advertisement
encouraging an open debate on an historical controversy: “It is
ironic … that the Beacon saw fit to accept and print this ad a scant
week after a British court’s … rejection of David Irving’s libel
suit against historian Deborah Lipstadt [Emory University]).” That
is, these WPU professors approve of the idea that historical controversies
should be decided in courtrooms sanctioned by the State rather than
through a free exchange of ideas. Every tyrant past and present
would certainly agree with them.
The professors find it “twisted” that I would observe that to
ask for proof that “one (one!) Jew was gassed in any German camp
as part of a program of ‘genocide’ is hate.” Why is it hateful to
ask for proof of a great crime that another is accused of? And then
– where is the “one” proof? The professors are dismayed that I would
suggest that Democrats and Republicans committed the same “crimes
against humanity” that the National Socialists committed. Let’s
take a look at this one.
The great “ crime against humanity” that the German National
Socialists are accused of committing during WWII is that they intentionally
killed civilians – we don’t really care whether the victims were
Jews, do we? Why would we care? A human being is a human being.
And there, of course, is the rub. The Bi-partisan State policy of
Democrats and Republicans during the war included the intentional
killing of hundreds of thousands of German and Japanese civilians,
including tens of thousands of children and babies. These civilians
were intentionally blown apart and burned alive in the great firestorms
purposely set by US air arms (along with the British, mainly), culminating
in the nuclear obliteration of the civilian populations of Nagasaki
and Hiroshima.
It is not immoral – to the contrary – to hold Democrats and Republicans
to the same moral standards to which we hold German National Socialists.
Why would you argue otherwise?
Count the books, the monographs, the essays, articles and fulminations
(count them if you can – for they are endless) the professorial
class has written about the intentional killing of Jewish
civilians, then add up the tiny, tiny number that they have written
about the intentional killing of Japanese and German civilians.
Who benefits from this immense Holocaust publishing industry? The
Japanese? The Germans? Christians? Or is it the folk who invaded
and conquered Palestine at the close of WWII, destroyed Palestinian
culture, formed a Jewish settler state on Palestinian land, and
now receive billions (billions!) of dollars yearly via the US Congress?
The weapons used by Democrats and Republicans to intentionally
kill civilians are known to all and denied by none. The gassing
chambers allegedly used by the Germans to intentionally kill civilians
can not be demonstrated to have existed, and there are men and women
in every nation in Europe and North America who are willing to argue
in public debate that they never did exist. At the Irving/Lipstadt
trial referred to by the WPU professors, the expert on the fabled
“gassing chambers,” the Dutch-Canadian professor of architecture
Robert van Pelt, was reduced on the witness stand to stating that
the presence of gas chambers at Auschwitz is a “moral certainty.”
A “moral” certainty? Really? We have been told for half a century
that the murder weapon was an “historical” certainty. What is this?
Stand-up comedy?
The Beacon printed a number of letters from students
who were offended by the text of my ad. Their letters contain, for
the most part, the same accusations and misunderstandings reflected
in the letters published by their professors. My work is to encourage
a few students to set out on their own, to find out for themselves,
what the truth of the matter – the gas-chamber matter – really is.
It is not immoral – to the contrary -- to argue for the innocence
of Germans on those counts where you suspect they might be innocent.
On 24 April The Beacon printed a letter from Matthew
G. Helpern, the business manager of The Beacon last
semester, and the individual I dealt with in having my ad run. He
suggests that reading the text of my ad might “open your mind a
little … [so that you can ask yourself] … are the stories we hear
100 percent true? Is there something more to it? …. Personally,
I do not believe what this advertisement claims…. [but] when we
ask the questions, rather than yelling out at one another just because
something doesn’t sound right, we all benefit from the answers …
Open your mind, ask the questions, and listen for the answers. ‘Free
your mind and the rest will follow ….’”
Bravo! Written by a student who understands what the ideal of the
university stands for in Western culture. I ask myself: Who needs
to be teaching whom at WPU?
[ Bradley R. Smith is publisher of The Revisionist www.codoh.com/revisionist/revisionist.html]
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