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as "outrageous and shocking."
Irving's misrepresentations did not end with the publication of
his book.
According to Cesarani, in 1979, a German publisher had to
pay compensation to the father of Anne Frank after printing the
German edition of Irving's book, Hitler's War.
Irving had claimed that Anne Frank's diary was a forgery.
Irving claims that according to his "research", the Holocaust is
greatly exaggerated.
(He was recently quoted in the K-W Record as saying that the
number of Jews who died in concentration camps was "of the
order of 100,000 or more.") But during the 1988 trial of
pro-Nazi publisher Ernst Zundel, he was forced to admit under
cross-examination that he hadn't even read all of Eichmann's
1960 trial testimony.
(In this testimony, Eichmann admitted that Nazi leaders
discussed the so-called "Final Solution to the Jewish
problem''-- extermination, in 1942.) In November 1991, a
reporter from the Independent showed that Irving omitted
crucial lines from a translation of Goebbels' diaries -- lines that
would have contradicted his theory that Hitler knew nothing
about the extermination of the Jews.
Irving's record is clear: he is not an historian, and he has
made false statements and been forced to apologize for them.
As Andrew Cohen, reporter for the Financial Post, has said,
"David Irving should be denied credibility."
4. Eustace Mullins
According to analyst Chip Berlet of Political Research
Associates, Mullins is quite simply, "the most vicious
anti-Semite on the face of the planet." Eustace Clarence
Mullins, born in 1923, is the author of a biography of Ezra
Pound (a copy exists in the University of Waterloo library). But
he is also the author of numerous truly bizarre tracts published
by small Christian publishers. Some of these, like the excerpt
recently posted and then removed by Kitchener store owner
Rothe, are critiques of the banking system. Berlet says,
"Mullins masks his anti-Semitism with a critique of the [U.S.]
Federal Reserve System." In a 1952 book, Mullins wrote a
book blaming Paul Warburg, Bernard Baruch, and other U.S.
Jews for drowning Americans in debt.
According to Mullins, The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 put the
nation's banking reserves in the hands of the "Jewish
International Bankers" for the purpose of carrying out a plan
for world dictatorship. In a 1955 article entitled, "Jews mass
poison American children", Mullins claimed that the polio
vaccine, invented by Jonas Salk, was a poison because it
contains live polio germs. Other books depict Jews as
parasites, living off their gentile hosts. In what has to be one of
the most bizarre of Mullins' beliefs, it has been reported by L.
J. Davis that Mullins has claimed that the phrase "Have a nice
day" is a code for Jews to begin killing Christians. Mullins'
writings have been adopted wholesale by violent extremists in
the US, such as the Posse Comitatus. Should we not be more
than a little worried to see those writings appearing in the
window of a store in Kitchener?
5. Fred Leuchter
Rothe sells the "Leuchter report" in his store, a book
purporting to be an engineer's refutation of the existence of
gas chambers in Poland. (David Irving also uses Leuchter's
report to support his claims.) What Rothe will not tell you,
however, is that Fred Leuchter is not an engineer. Rothe also
won't tell you that, according to the Boston Globe, Leuchter
admitted to illegally collecting 20 pounds of building and soil
samples in Poland, and that Leuchter's ``analysis'' has been
thoroughly rebutted in a report by French pharmacist
Jean-Claude Pressac. Pressac "noted that Leuchter never
looked at documents in the Auschwitz Museum, and failed to
study German blueprints of the gas chambers." Leuchter is a
self-described expert in the construction of execution
machines. With his false credentials, he convinced authorities
in several states in the U.S. to let him construct execution
machinery for their prisons. But in 1990, according to the New
York Times, his misrepresentations began to unravel. The
Attorney General of Alabama questioned his expertise. Illinois
terminated his contract after determining that his machine for
injecting cyanide would cause prisoners unnecessary pain.
Then, in October 1990, Leuchter was charged with fraud in
Massachusetts. It was revealed that he had only a bachelor's
degree in history, and was not licensed to practice
engineering in Massachusetts. In June 1991, to avoid a trial in
which he would surely have been convicted, Leuchter
admitted that, "I am not and have never been registered as a
professional engineer", and that he had falsely represented