It is always a pleasure to listen to Mark Weber, whom I mention in the most important article of this site, ‘The Wall’.
Weber is a revisionist about the official story of the Second World War, Hitler and the Holocaust.
It is always a pleasure to listen to Mark Weber, whom I mention in the most important article of this site, ‘The Wall’.
Weber is a revisionist about the official story of the Second World War, Hitler and the Holocaust.
5 replies on “Mark Weber”
I am still swamped because I have to leave the house where I live on a designated date…
It’s a coincidence to find this. I was listening to the GTV interview between Weber and the sometimes egregious Jim Rizoli yesterday. The latter seemed dogmatically incredulous. It was quite frustrating. I know Jim is a staunch Christian also. Thanks for posting this one. I’ll just go listen.
And thank you very much for your private comment to me this morning. I’m afraid my email monthly service has expired due to a lack of funding, but I’ll have it operational by later on today/tomorrow hopefully.
Today I purchased a quite expensive translated copy of The Destruction of the European Jews by the ‘foremost’ historian on the ‘holocaust’, Raul Hilberg. (I’ll read it when I am established in a town where I won’t be able to visit good bookstores.) I don’t care if the author was a Jew. My method of study is to pass the microphone to both the deniers and the holocaust affirmers. Only then, by listening to both sides, can I get an idea of historical reality.
Yes, that seems the most sensible option for reviewing the matter. On a tangential note, I purchased a second-hand copy of The Informed Heart by Bruno Bettelheim recently. I was interested in the obvious theme of how regular terror and distress impacts the mind, but I think he uses concentration camps (though not death camps) as an example. I know the holocaust deniers make some effort to paint the camps as a bed of roses. I’m in-between on this suggestion.
My personal understanding of the holocaust (whatever it was) does take into account Rizoli’s ultra-scepticism, in that the numbers of Jews in Germany/Europe at the time don’t match up to the court orthodox death figures, but I still get the idea quite a few were exterminated – almost as many as were ‘available’, not including those who died in poor conditions or were shot as partisans etc. I’d have to go with David Irving on that also. I read all the denier material some years back and it swayed me for a while, but then I came to the conclusion they were protesting a little too loudly, diminishing Hitler’s actual likely opinion on the matter, especially given his Lebensraum plan also. As if one cannot authorize expansive extermination (probably with some pronounced sadness) and yet still be a good person.
Incidentally, I differ morally from both Weber and his interviewer in that I’m not anti-world conquest, and don’t see it as an inherent evil, and also see war for reasons of Aryan domain expansion as glorious, perhaps in the heroic way (I gather) it was seen by the Hellenic Greeks.
I had meant to ask, did you find anything particularly interesting in Scalp Dance?
I haven’t had time to read anything except what’s on the jacket of Goodrich’s book, and it will be a long time before I sit down to read it…
Although they are good people, Mark Weber and the Quebecker who interviewed him subscribe to Judeo-Christian ethics. Naturally, those who wanted a Lebensraum for the Aryan race last century didn’t subscribe to it.