From:
Fredrick Toben <toben@toben.biz>Date: 2010/11/7
Subject: I'M A DENIER - and proud of it! Remember, prisoners enjoy receiving letters ...........
To: Adelaide Institute <
info@adelaideinstitute.org>
I'M A DENIER - and proud of it!
I'm a denier - it was all a HOAX - a Ponsi scheme -there was no debate -just a lie….
POLITICAL PRISONERS who refuse to believe in the Holocaust-Shoah
Monsieur Vincent REYNOUARD
Centre pénitencier de Valenciennes
N° d'écrou: 33034 - 75 rue Lomprez - B.P. 455,
F - 59322 VALENCIENNES Cedex
FRANCE
Herrn Wolfgang FRÖHLICH –
Justizanstalt Hirtenberg
Leobersdorferstraße 16,
A - 2552 Hirtenberg
AUSTRIA
Herrn Gerd HONSIK
Justizanstalt Wien Simmering
Brühlgasse 2,
A - 1110 WIEN
AUSTRIA
Frau Sylvia STOLZ
Münchenerstr 33,
D - 86551 AICHACH
GERMANY
Herrn Horst MAHLER
Anton Saefkow Allee 22
D - 14772 BRANDENBURG/HAVEL
GERMANY
--
Being happy–is it good for the Jews? "Before Professor Dershowitz accused me of being an anti-Semite (news to me), I was a happy person. Since then, I'm still a happy person". –Michael Santomauro
An antisemite condemns people for being Jews, I am not an antisemite.--Michael Santomauro
Most of us are mentally trapped to think Jewish. Actually, it is safe to say that virtually every mainstream publication or or other type of media organ is "nothing more than a screen to present chosen views." The great battle over the last century has been a battle for the mind of the Western peoples, i.e., non-Jewish Euros. The chosen won it by acquiring control over essentially the complete mainstream news, information, education and entertainment media of every type, and using that control to infuse and disseminate their message, agenda and worldview, their way of thinking, or rather the way they want us to think. Since at least the 1960s this campaign has been effectively complete. Since then they have shaped and controlled the minds of all but a seeming few of us in varying degree with almost no opposition or competition from any alternative worldview. So now most of us are mentally trapped in the box the chosen have made for us, which we have lived in all our lives. Only a few have managed to avoid it or escape it, or to even sometimes see outside of it, and so actually "think outside of the (Jewish) box." --Michael Santomauro
Thank you and remember:
Peace is patriotic!
Michael Santomauro
253 W. 72nd Street
New York, NY 10023
Call anytime: 917-974-6367
E-mail me anything:
ReporterNotebook@Gmail.com
5 comments:
The governing council of the American Historical Association, meeting at the group's annual conference here last week, unanimously approved a statement condemning recent claims that the Nazi extermination
of Jews in WWII is a myth.
"The AHA council strongly deplores the publicly reported
attempts to deny the Holocaust," the statement said. "No serious
historican questions that the Holocaust took place."
Over the past year, efforts by neo-Nazis and others to deny the Holocaust--through such means as advertisements placed in student newspapers--alarmed scholars. Last fall, however, the 13-member AHA council declined to issue a statement explicitly asserting the truth
of the Holocaust, largely because of the strong feeling of some of the that the association should not be in the business of certifying
historical facts. Instead, the council called on historians to "encourage the study of the significance of the Holocaust."
Some 300 Signatures were collected.
The councils latest action, taken on the closing day of the association's annual meeting, came in response to a groundswell of support among historians at the conference for a more forceful statement against the so-called "Holocaust revisionists."
Approximately 300 signatures were collected on a petition, circulated informally
at the conference, calling on the AHA council to take a public position against attempts to deny the fact of the Holocaust.
"If we'd had the time and the personnel, I think we could
have gotten 3,000 signatures." said John W. Chambers, associate
professor of history at Rutgers University, who spearheaded the
petition effort.
Mr. Chambers said many who signed the petition were alarmed at the presence of people at the presence of people at the enterance
of the convention hotel handing out pamphlets purporting to refute
historical claims about the Nazi concentration camps. Others at the meeting expressed dismay at the AHA's council's earlier failure
to take a stronger stand against the revisionist position.
The governing council of the American Historical Association, meeting at the group's annual conference here last week, unanimously approved a statement condemning recent claims that the Nazi extermination
of Jews in WWII is a myth.
"The AHA council strongly deplores the publicly reported
attempts to deny the Holocaust," the statement said. "No serious
historican questions that the Holocaust took place."
Over the past year, efforts by neo-Nazis and others to deny the Holocaust--through such means as advertisements placed in student newspapers--alarmed scholars. Last fall, however, the 13-member AHA council declined to issue a statement explicitly asserting the truth
of the Holocaust, largely because of the strong feeling of some of the that the association should not be in the business of certifying
historical facts. Instead, the council called on historians to "encourage the study of the significance of the Holocaust."
Some 300 Signatures were collected.
The councils latest action, taken on the closing day of the association's annual meeting, came in response to a groundswell of support among historians at the conference for a more forceful statement against the so-called "Holocaust revisionists."
Approximately 300 signatures were collected on a petition, circulated informally
at the conference, calling on the AHA council to take a public position against attempts to deny the fact of the Holocaust.
"If we'd had the time and the personnel, I think we could
have gotten 3,000 signatures." said John W. Chambers, associate
professor of history at Rutgers University, who spearheaded the
petition effort.
Mr. Chambers said many who signed the petition were alarmed at the presence of people at the presence of people at the enterance
of the convention hotel handing out pamphlets purporting to refute
historical claims about the Nazi concentration camps. Others at the meeting expressed dismay at the AHA's council's earlier failure
to take a stronger stand against the revisionist position.
The governing council of the American Historical Association, meeting at the group's annual conference here last week, unanimously approved a statement condemning recent claims that the Nazi extermination
of Jews in WWII is a myth.
"The AHA council strongly deplores the publicly reported
attempts to deny the Holocaust," the statement said. "No serious
historican questions that the Holocaust took place."
Over the past year, efforts by neo-Nazis and others to deny the Holocaust--through such means as advertisements placed in student newspapers--alarmed scholars. Last fall, however, the 13-member AHA council declined to issue a statement explicitly asserting the truth
of the Holocaust, largely because of the strong feeling of some of the that the association should not be in the business of certifying
historical facts. Instead, the council called on historians to "encourage the study of the significance of the Holocaust."
Some 300 Signatures were collected.
The councils latest action, taken on the closing day of the association's annual meeting, came in response to a groundswell of support among historians at the conference for a more forceful statement against the so-called "Holocaust revisionists."
Approximately 300 signatures were collected on a petition, circulated informally
at the conference, calling on the AHA council to take a public position against attempts to deny the fact of the Holocaust.
"If we'd had the time and the personnel, I think we could
have gotten 3,000 signatures." said John W. Chambers, associate
professor of history at Rutgers University, who spearheaded the
petition effort.
Mr. Chambers said many who signed the petition were alarmed at the presence of people at the presence of people at the enterance
of the convention hotel handing out pamphlets purporting to refute
historical claims about the Nazi concentration camps. Others at the meeting expressed dismay at the AHA's council's earlier failure
to take a stronger stand against the revisionist position.
The governing council of the American Historical Association, meeting at the group's annual conference here last week, unanimously approved a statement condemning recent claims that the Nazi extermination
of Jews in WWII is a myth.
"The AHA council strongly deplores the publicly reported
attempts to deny the Holocaust," the statement said. "No serious
historican questions that the Holocaust took place."
Over the past year, efforts by neo-Nazis and others to deny the Holocaust--through such means as advertisements placed in student newspapers--alarmed scholars. Last fall, however, the 13-member AHA council declined to issue a statement explicitly asserting the truth
of the Holocaust, largely because of the strong feeling of some of the that the association should not be in the business of certifying
historical facts. Instead, the council called on historians to "encourage the study of the significance of the Holocaust."
Some 300 Signatures were collected.
The councils latest action, taken on the closing day of the association's annual meeting, came in response to a groundswell of support among historians at the conference for a more forceful statement against the so-called "Holocaust revisionists."
Approximately 300 signatures were collected on a petition, circulated informally
at the conference, calling on the AHA council to take a public position against attempts to deny the fact of the Holocaust.
"If we'd had the time and the personnel, I think we could
have gotten 3,000 signatures." said John W. Chambers, associate
professor of history at Rutgers University, who spearheaded the
petition effort.
Mr. Chambers said many who signed the petition were alarmed at the presence of people at the presence of people at the enterance
of the convention hotel handing out pamphlets purporting to refute
historical claims about the Nazi concentration camps. Others at the meeting expressed dismay at the AHA's council's earlier failure
to take a stronger stand against the revisionist position.
The governing council of the American Historical Association, meeting at the group's annual conference here last week, unanimously approved a statement condemning recent claims that the Nazi extermination
of Jews in WWII is a myth.
"The AHA council strongly deplores the publicly reported
attempts to deny the Holocaust," the statement said. "No serious
historican questions that the Holocaust took place."
Over the past year, efforts by neo-Nazis and others to deny the Holocaust--through such means as advertisements placed in student newspapers--alarmed scholars. Last fall, however, the 13-member AHA council declined to issue a statement explicitly asserting the truth
of the Holocaust, largely because of the strong feeling of some of the that the association should not be in the business of certifying
historical facts. Instead, the council called on historians to "encourage the study of the significance of the Holocaust."
Some 300 Signatures were collected.
The councils latest action, taken on the closing day of the association's annual meeting, came in response to a groundswell of support among historians at the conference for a more forceful statement against the so-called "Holocaust revisionists."
Approximately 300 signatures were collected on a petition, circulated informally
at the conference, calling on the AHA council to take a public position against attempts to deny the fact of the Holocaust.
"If we'd had the time and the personnel, I think we could
have gotten 3,000 signatures." said John W. Chambers, associate
professor of history at Rutgers University, who spearheaded the
petition effort.
Mr. Chambers said many who signed the petition were alarmed at the presence of people at the presence of people at the enterance
of the convention hotel handing out pamphlets purporting to refute
historical claims about the Nazi concentration camps. Others at the meeting expressed dismay at the AHA's council's earlier failure
to take a stronger stand against the revisionist position.
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