The effort to be honest is a strenuous business. Autobiographers are especially aware of this. Being honest and knowing what is going on at the same time of course are two different things. There is a sense in which none of us knows what is going on, so it might be a good idea for each of us to give the other the benefit of the doubt.




The Irrational Vocabulary of the American Professorial
Class with Regard to the Holocaust Question

Talk delivered at Tehran Holocaust Conference
December 11, 2006

05/27/08
Site Cleanup: We cleaned up the entire Founder's Page. There were a number of broken links. They have all been cleaned up and it will now be easier for you to navigate the page.

03/07/08
Smith's Report Issue 148, March 2008: With our lead article this issue introduces readers to the outline of the present CODDOH Campus Project. Here I feature our favorite mouthpiece on campus for the Holocaust Industry, Emory professor Deborah Lipstadt. We admire this professor in particular for her principled stand in refusing to communicate with anyone who doubts what she believes regarding the gas chambers at Auschwitz, and for promoting the concept of the "unique monstrosity" of the Germans with a industry that is unequalled by any other academic. So here we are. Can Professor Lipstadt, can any historian, provide the name of one person, with proof, who was killed in a gas chamber at Auschwitz? So far, nothing. (Read More).

02/28/08
One Person, With Proof (Bradley R. Smith's Blog;) - This Blog will follow my effort to have Professor Deborah Lipstadt provide me the name of one person, with proof, who was killed in a gas chamber at Auschwitz. For decades we understood that four millions were killed at Auschwitz. Now the professorial class assures us that about one million were killed there. It seems to me a modest request -- one name out of a million. This question addresses a moral issue as well as a historical one. The allegedly "unique monstrosity" of the Germans during WWII has its deepest roots in the Auschwitz gas-chamber story. So here we are. Can Professor Lipstadt, can any professor, provide the name of one person, with proof, who was killed in a gas chamber at Auschwitz? It's only a question. Let's do it. (Read More).

02/18/08
Outlaw History Newsletter: This is the original intorduction to the concept for the Newsletter. It has not been available for some time now. Just rediscovered it. What a find! (Read More).

09/27/07
BAJA, MEXICO ; Outlaw History Newsletter ; - Welcome to the first issue of Outlaw History, the Newsletter. Outlaw History will update you on what I do to encourage the decriminalization of World War II history in Europe, Canada, Australia, and Israel, and help prevent the criminalization of that history in the United States.

The special focus for me, as it has been from the beginning, is the taboo against open debate on the Holocaust story. That is at the core of the intellectual and cultural impasse where we Americans find ourselves today. Without an open debate on the Holocaust story there can be no significant debate on the role of the United States in the history of the 20th century, which has been a catastrophic for all concerned.

Without full disclosure to the public, in the light of day, of how the Holocaust story was generated, institutionalized, and exploited--unrelentingly--there can be no significant debate about the U.S. alliance with Israel, and no public understanding of one of the primary issues sparking the growing conflict between Muslims and the West. (Read More)

09/10/07
HOLLYWOOD ; Confessions of a Holocaust Revisionist ; - It's the morning of July 4th and I'm flying home from Newark to Los Angeles. I have an aisle seat and a young lady, perhaps 22, takes the seat to my right. From her facial features I feel confident that her family is Jewish. We fall into conversation and she is very bright and opinionated and oriented politically toward the radical left. She's full of intellectual energy and wants to talk, but she's willing to listen too and I can see she belongs to those few who take ideas seriously and weigh both sides of an argument carefully. She's considerably more sophisticated than I was at her age. She's studying at Harvard and is flying home to Beverly Hills for summer vacation. (Read More)

08/27/07
READING MEIN KAMPF ; Adolf Hitler and Me (A Work in Progress) - This afternoon I’m at a Starbucks in Chula Vista where I drink four or five or maybe six double shots of espresso to wake myself up and I get so high that in a fit of raging enthusiasm and self-confidence I decide I will write a book about Adolf Hitler. For the first time in my life I have swallowed enough espresso to get the real affect. Seventy-five years old and I’m flying. Thought is all over the place. The book won’t be entirely about Adolf Hitler, but about me too. Wonderful! I will read Hitler’s autobiography, Mein Kampf, and along the way I will write about what comes up in the brain while I read what he says came up in his. I will write autobiography about Hitler’s autobiography. I will focus on his text as he wrote it, not on what he did later, or on what he is accused of having done later.

This is what the lit-crits do. When a professor judges a literary work, she judges the work itself, the text, not the personal life of the writer. Judging the personal life of the author is saved for a different project. Poetry, novels, autobiography are literary works. They need to be judged on their own merits. Hemingway’s work is judged on its own merits. The critical reception to his novels and stories was not based on what a boor and liar he was, but on the texts themselves. Hemingway was a mixed bag. His texts were dazzling.
(Read More)

08/27/07
Break His Bones; The Private Life of a Holocaust Revisionist -"In Commentary there was an article by Walter Laqueur titled “The Mysterious Messenger and the Final Solution.” Professor Walter Laqueur was Chairman of the Research Council of Georgetown University's Center for Strategic and International Studies. He's a renowned Holocaust scholar. Here is a man I could depend on. I turned to “The Mysterious Messenger and the Final Solution” well fortified with drink and in fine good humor. I was willing to go wherever the story led. It could go any way it wanted. My job was to follow it out to the end and throw over the revisionists if the story went against them. Who was this mysterious stranger then, and what significance does he have for understanding the Final Solution? (Read More)

08/27/07
The Man Who Stopped Paying -"In Bradley Smith's The Man Who Stopped Paying, bureaucrats are the enemy, for while they maintain the welfare systems, they also maintain the machines and programs that will destroy those systems. Smith's hero simply pays no taxes at all - he doesn't even send in the forms.
"For the first time in a long while on stage – an anarchist libertarian has sounded out…. Jon Ackelson plays him with abandon (and)...a great deal of heart.... With his love of nature and disgust for the bomb and the Feds, Smith could become a kind of playwright laureate of an American Greens Party, but then he would probably rather go it alone." (Read More)
Robert Koehler, The Los Angeles Times

07/31/07
Holocaust Cultist Dreams - For several days now a story has been running in the papers about the American Library Association convention being held here. The Association reports that since 1979 there has been a threefold increase in censorship efforts by “outside” groups and an atmosphere reminiscent of the 50's when librarians became targets of Red-baiters because they continued to make available literature on communism. (Read More)

07/31/07
Waiting For Saigon to Fall - Last night I was smashing cockroaches with a shower slipper when it came to me all in a flash that I find a smashed cockroach, its insides all mashed out on the yellow-tiled floor, as repugnant as I do a dead and torn up human body. What occurred to me then was to wonder if I don't suffer how shall I put it—some form of ethical maladjustment? But that's just beating around the bush here. What I really want is to write down the one image I can't get out of my mind, the one where the Viet Cong Soldier is lying on his back in the rubble and slop of a blasted-out cafe, his open eyes swimming in blue milk. That's what I can't forget, how his eye-sockets were full of blue milk. It was an absolutely startling, aesthetic experience. It's the most powerful single image I have of Viet-Nam. Maybe it's the artist in me. (Read More)

07/31/07
Old Manuscripts, Old Lives - Everybody wants to put a little something away for his old age. I'm no exception. I'm not nervous about getting old but when you're fifty-one you think about it sometimes. You see yourself living alone in a room, you can't walk too good because of the extra weight, in fact you need special supports in your shoes or you can't walk at all, and sometimes your back goes out and you have to crawl to the kitchen table or the bathroom. From the outside it doesn't look like much of a life but still you don't want to give up on it. Though you can't explain why, you want to go on. (Read More)

07/03/07
Love At the Nirvana Arms -The alarm goes off at four thirty in the morning and when I get up to turn it off I see its raining so I mash a couple cockroaches and go back to bed to think things over. The next thing I know it's eight o'clock and too late to kick up the typewriter. So I dress and walk through a light rain over to Pinehurst Road and up the canyon to mother's little apartment to pick up the truck.
(Read more)

04/21/07
Viel of Maya -
Up at six this morning I listen to the rain falling from the leaves. I dress quietly in the dark, careful not to wake Jenny. In the kitchen by the light of the open refrigerator I mix half a glass of grapefruit juice with some mineral water. The rain is splashing on the concrete walk outside the back porch. I picture puppies sleeping in a heap in the dirt underneath the house. Dry and warm. Just like myself. Cozy. When it's raining, any roof is a luxury. (Read more)

04/21/07
The Last of the Romans - Worthington has agreed to let me sleep in his room for awhile, along with he and Marlow. I walked over here a couple days ago with my typewriter and a paper bag with my clothes in it. The room is off Highland Avenue a couple blocks from Hollywood Boulevard with an alley entrance, in the basement of an apartment building.
(Read more)

04/21/07
The Morning the Sun Was A Knockout-It wasn’t easy for Pamela because her family and friends were everywhere in New York and New Jersey, all of them well-situated, taking life seriously and pointing out to her, in the sensitive way they had, that she’d married beneath her station and that her life was moving in a precarious direction. Secretly I agreed with her family, but my thoughts where busy with something else. Something Pamela didn’t know about.
(Read more)

Barney's Beanry in True Stories of a Holocaust Revisionist (Hollywood era) had a broken link. It's fixed.
(Read more)

Break His Bones: The Private Life of a Holocaust Revisionist | by Bradley R. Smith
Uploaded the whole 25 Chapters to the book.
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Reading Mein Kampf: Adolf Hitler and Me | by Bradley R. Smith
New sample chapter uploaded, Chapter Six.
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Break His Bones: the Private Life of a Holocaust Revisionist | by Bradley R. Smith
Two new sample chapters online. One deals with very early, very problematical information about the gas-chamber stories, the second with the false and comic "eyewitness" testimony of a Treblinka survivor.
(Read more)

The Man Who Stopped Paying: A play in one act | by Bradley R. Smith
Produced in Los Angeles in the 1980s, well received by the Los Angeles Times, Drama Logue and others. An early foray into the issue of Weapons of Mass Destruction.
(Read more)

Outlaw History Newsletter | by Bradley R. Smith
Forty (40) issues of Smith's Online newsletter. Here Smith incriminates himself on a wide variety of subjects.

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Justice for the S.S. A Matter of Priorities | by Bradley R. Smith
Is tweleve years in prison about right for offing a million Jews at Treblinka? (Read More)

The Auschwitz Huggers | by Bradley R. Smith
The workaday world of bestial Germans at Auschwitz, according to interesting "eyewitness surivors" whose testimony is not and never has been disputed. (Read More)

Joseph Conrad and the Monster From the Deep | by Bradley R. Smith
You're in Hollywood, and you never know what picture you are going to see next. (1964) (Read More)

Faurisson Unhappy With How Smith Writes About Jews | By Bradley R. Smith
Robert Faurisson reacts forcefully to the column I printed in SR 125 . I try to explain my position, unsuccessfully. At Northwestern, Hillel, students, and faculty, including the Department of Religion, denounce Butz. (Read More)

Smith works out new format for "Smith Exposed."
This new page will contain stories and other info begining with South Los Angeles, where I grew up, and on to Korea, Mexico, Hollywood, Vietnam, Hollywood again, the San Joaquin Valley, and finally back to Mexico again.(Read More)

Free Speech, Free David Irving | By Christopher Jon Bjerknes
It is amazing to me that in the twenty-first century in the heart of Europe an internationally famous historian is being held against his will for the “crime” of offering his opinion on historical questions. (Read More)

The Holocaust, Palestine and Israel: Revision, Denial and Myth | By Frank Scott The murderous treatment of European Jews during the Second World War has become almost legendary in its depiction as a unique and singularly important example of bigoted inhumanity, carried to barbarous extremes.(Read More)