December 28, 1996
Good Morning from the Zundelsite:
Remember the movie, Fields of Dreams, made famous for the line "If
you build it, they will come. . . "?
It seems that, everywhere you look, you see political awakenings to what
is really going on. My most popular ZGrams all have to do with inroads on
behalf of truth in history - both truth specific to Holocaust Revisionism
and, more important in the long run, those tentacles revealed and bared
pertaining to the New World Order schemes, plots and shenanigans for which
the Holocaust served as umbrella.
- In this week's Spotlight on Page 4, there is a fairly succinct summary
entitled "Plutocrats Cringed as Populism Gained" that is worth
reading in its entirety. It shows what's happening on the Old Continent
in many countries.
- Excerpted:
- "Populist movements throughout Europe chalked up smashing
electoral victories in 1996, making it "L'Annee du Populisme {The
Year of Populism" as the influential French newspaper Le Figaro put
it at year's end . . ."
- Reporting on populism's gains in general and, in more detail, on an
amazing populist victory as far away as Turkey, where a nationalist leader,
Necmettin Erbakan, ". . . led Turks for Turkey", the article
goes on to say:
- "Strategically, Erbakan's victory may be the most important
geopolitical conquest populism has made in the past year," noted Dr.
Jurgen Adler, an international affairs consultant.
- Erbaken and his Refah . . . movement came to power despite
public opposition from the Turkish political mainstream as well as clandestine
opposition from the United States, sharpened by the hostile intrigues of
the Mossad (Israel's secret service), Adler explained.
- The dramatic surge of populism from Austria to Ankara reached
all the way to the former Soviet-bloc nations, where nationalist parties
opposed to globalism, uncontrolled immigration, financial speculation and
international banking are in the ascendant in Hungary, Slovakia, Romania
and Slovenia.
- "Populism is on the march," Adler confirmed. "The
great leap forward it has made in 1996 has prepared the ground for even
broader advances in the coming year."
- From Britain's Nationalist Party's website editors we have the following:
- "Xmas greetings this Boxing Day from British Nationalists,
and thanks for all the great work you are putting in for no reward but
the satisfaction. We know all about the solitary hours involved!
- It will be interesting to see what happens after Labour make
'denial' a crime in the UK. Squaring it with the provisions in the European
Convention on Human Rights will be tricky, and forms of words will be found
which are difficult to prosecute.
- Judging from the hostile response to the announcement of the
new laws there will be lots of publicity which will be totally unfavourable.
The press is already gearing up to massively attack Blair in government,
and we predict that he will be the most unpopular Prime Minister in post-war
history, with, among other things, a wave of 'political correctness' legislation
which will generally unite the press against him.
- PC is under constant attack now in our mainstream media, and
increasingly resented even by ethnic minorities who know it makes them
resented. 'Denial' will simply become better known that it has ever been
- even if the distribution of literature on the subject is largely suppressed.
- 'Denial Martyrs' will become famous figures like the hippies
during the sixties who were prosecuted for the 'underground' magazines."
- Via Mike Hoffman's website at web at http://www.hoffman-info.com come
the following two items, one pertaining to Britain and one to the US:
- "POLICE officers should be compelled to reveal if they
are Freemasons to remove public suspicions about Masonic influence within
the service, a complaints watchdog recommends today. . .
- (T) the Police Complaints Authority says that a public register
is needed to stop the public thinking that officers who are Masons might
put their loyalty to the brotherhood before their duties.
- Until a statutory system is set up, officers should declare
their membership of the Freemasons and similar organisation in an entry
on their personal files, says the Authority's submission to the Home Affairs
select committee inquiry into Freemasonry in the police and judiciary.
- "Although some would clearly refuse, such an initiative
would at least start to dismantle the present culture of secrecy."
- . . . The PCA says that there is a perception among many members
of the public that Masons who are police officers might be tempted to put
their loyalty to their Brethren before their official duties.
- The PCA says public suspicion is shared by some non-Masons
in the police who had privately expressed their concerns. . . .
- (T)hough anecdotal evidence suggests that the influence of
Freemasonry in most police forces has declined over recent years, there
were some officers who believed that their careers had been adversely affected
by their refusal to join the Masons.
- In October the Association of Chief Police Officers called
on officers and civilian staff to register openly their membership of the
Freemasons. However, the Police Superintendents' Association and the Police
Federation have serious reservations.
- The Commons Home Affairs Select Committee held the first public
session of its inquiry into the influence of Freemasonry in the police
and judiciary last week. . . "
- Those are the big events that work in our favor. Let's not forget the
small - such as the story of the zealous Southern Holocaust Promotion sleuth
named Benjamin S. Austin,
- ". . . on the trail of offenders who may well have committed
no crime. It is the crime they deny or minimize that offends him: the Holocaust."
- Austin, an assistant professor of sociology at Middle Tennessee State
University in Murfreesboro, has spent the past year trying to find out
who keeps littering Holocaust denial literature between the pages of Holocaust
books at his university's library and at a bookstore in nearby Nashville.
- He still has no answer, but he is undaunted.
- Austin first discovered the materials when he checked out three Holocaust-related
books about a year ago. The keen professor observed at once that a book
must be brightly colored and new, or include such words as "Holocaust"
or "Auschwitz" prominently on its spine, to catch the attention
of the "Holocaust Denial" litterbug .
- ". . . Austin had hoped to stake out the library with
several students in an effort to catch someone in the act. But after news
of the leafleting leaked out, he felt that those responsible would know
the shelves might be under scrutiny.
- It is unclear what punishment, if any, anyone would face if
caught. "We would tell them to leave," Allen (general manager
of the bookstore) said. But he was unsure whether the store could prosecute.
- "Although it's offensive behavior," he said, "it's
not damaging the property."
- "There is nothing illegal about it," Austin admitted.
"Even if there were, we can't expect the libraries to post sentries
over all their Holocaust books."
- However, according to a New York Times article, Shelly Z. Shapiro,
according to a New York Times article, director of the Holocaust Survivors
and Friends Education Center in Latham, N.Y., near Albany, asserts that
disseminating Holocaust-denial literature in library books is "vandalism."
- Observes the NY Times: "Ms. Shapiro has some experience
in dealing with the phenomenon."
- The times in which we live - where it is a "phenomenon" to
counter lies with truth!
- Ingrid
- Thought for the Day:
- "If you take from the Apollo's nose the tenth part of
an inch, the god is lost."
- (Henry Fusell)
Comments? E-Mail: irimland@cts.com
Back to Table of Contents of the Dec. 1996 ZGrams