Links to what? What is it you dispute?
Are you trying to tell me that it's not the Holocaust you are refuting, but that it's just not inclusive enough for you?
What's this "we" business? What have you done to build any monument or museum? You do understand that sitting here grousing about links on CC isn't going to build even a small wall with a plaque.
What about them? Where is your record of them and what happened to them? Seems to me you want to sit and watch while someone does what you want for you. Up and off your bum. I'm happy to support the building of a monument or museum if you get that together. But you have to get that together first. Not just sit here whining about someone else who has built one to remember the Jewish Holocaust.
Operation Reinhard (Einsatz Reinhard)
Killing Centers: Overview
Chelmno
Belzec
Sobibor
Treblinka
Auschwitz
Lublin/Majdanek Concentration Camp: Conditions
Killing Centers: Overview | Personal stories
Killing Centers: Overview | Personal stories
Killing Centers: Overview | Personal stories
Killing Centers: Overview | Personal stories
Killing Centers: Overview | Personal stories
Killing Centers: Overview | Personal stories
Porajmos - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Persecution of homosexuals in Nazi Germany and the Holocaust - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Action T4 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Generalplan Ost - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nazi crimes against ethnic Poles - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nazi crimes against Soviet POWs - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Persecution of Jehovah's Witnesses in Nazi Germany - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
World War II persecution of Serbs - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sonderaktion 1005 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Einsatzgruppen - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jäger Report - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Holocaust in Lithuania - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Holocaust in Latvia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithuanian_partisans_(1941)
Final Solution - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Holocaust Denial
One of the most notable
anti-Semitic propaganda movements to develop over the past two decades has been the organized effort to
deny or minimize the established history of Nazi genocide against the Jews. In the United States, the movement has been known in recent years primarily through the publication of editorial-style advertisements in college campus newspapers. The first of these ads claimed to call for "open debate on the Holocaust"; it purported to question not the fact of Nazi anti-Semitism, but merely whether this hatred resulted in an organized killing program. A more recent ad has questioned the authenticity of the U.S.
Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC. These ads have been published in several dozen student newspapers on campuses across the country.
Similar propaganda has established a beachhead on the computer Internet. In addition to creating their own home pages, Holocaust deniers have sometimes "crashed" the sites of legitimate Holocaust and Jewish discussion groups in a blatant effort at anti, Jewish provocation and self-promotion. Additionally, Holocaust deniers have advertised their Web sites by purchasing innocuous-sounding, inconspicuous classified ads in college and community newspapers.
These paid advertisements and Internet activities have been a national phenomenon since 1991. Though there is no evidence that they have persuaded large numbers of students to doubt the settled record of events which comprise the Holocaust, their appearance has generated acrimony and has frequently caused friction between Jewish and non-Jewish students.
This is precisely the intent of the Holocaust deniers: by attacking the facts of the Holocaust, and by framing this attack as merely an unorthodox point of view, their propaganda insinuates subtle but hateful anti-Semitic beliefs of Jews as exploiters of non-Jewish guilt and Jews as controllers of academia or the media. These beliefs, in fact, bear comparison to the preachings which brought Hitler to power in prewar Germany.
This pamphlet has been designed to provide a brief summary of the propaganda campaign known as Holocaust "revisionism," or Holocaust denial. What follows is (1) a "Q&A" description of the movement, its history, and its leading activists, as well as a review of legal and scholarly responses to this propaganda; (2) a summary of the movement's most common allegations, with brief factual responses, and (3) a selection of quotes by the leading propagandists, demonstrating their anti-Semitic and pro-Nazi agendas.
It is highly unlikely that this report will dissuade the Holocaust deniers from their mendacious and hateful campaign. But this information should provide students and educators with the facts to make informed decisions and vigorous responses to these bigoted lies.
Holocaust Denial