Holocaust Revisionist Ad Runs in Two University Newspapers
This release was sent to the press nationwide.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:
Bradley R. Smith, Founder
Committee for Open Debate on the Holocaust
PO Box 439016
San Ysidro, California 92143
Desk: 209 682 5327
Email: bradley1930@yahoo.com
Web: www.codoh.com
01 October 2009
Holocaust Revisionist banned from the Harvard Crimson is now selling his book in
the Iowa State Daily and in The Journal at U Michigan-Dearborn.
Revisionist Bradley Smith placed an ad in the Harvard Crimson asking why Dwight
D. Eisenhower, in his account of WWII published as Crusade In Europe, did not
mention German weapons of mass destruction ("gas chambers"). The ad also asked
for the name, with proof, of one person who was killed in a gas chamber at
Auschwitz.
The Crimson was deluged with emails, letters and phone calls demanding that the
ad be withdrawn. The Crimson did so, breaking its contract with Smith,
apologized for running it one time, and the Crimson staff wrote that it hoped
that those questions were never again asked in a student newspaper anywhere in
America.
No one on the Harvard faculty dared try to answer Smith's two questions, and no
one in the Harvard faculty stood with the student journalists to support a free
press and a free exchange of ideas. Rather, Harvard faculty let The Crimson
journalists hang and twist in the wind.
Now Smith is running an ad announcing a "blow-out" sale for his autobiographical
book, Break His Bones, The Personal History of a Holocaust Revisionist. It is
running in the Iowa State Daily and The Journal at U Michigan at Dearborn.
Smith says that in Break His Bones he asks many questions about "gas chambers,"
not just two, and many questions about "eyewitnesses" who claim to have seen gas
chambers. "I am not a historian. You do not have to be a historian to critique
foolish eyewitness testimony to gas chambers, and you do not have to be a
scholar to value a free exchange of ideas and a free press."
"I'm a simple writer," Smith says. "Break His Bones is an account of my life, my
family, and my friends as I discover revisionist arguments regarding the
orthodox Holocaust story and attempt to take those arguments public. It's been
an interesting trip, even when I have been mistaken, or foolish."
You can read Chapter 1 of Break His Bones here.
http://codoh.c.topica.com/maanrHXabTpCqbNMGSvbafpTId/
You can buy Break His Bones here. It costs $4. No postage. $4. That's it.
http://codoh.c.topica.com/maanrHXabTpCrbNMGSvbafpTId/