May/June 2005 – Volume XI, Number 3
5 SAM HOUSTON REEXAMINED
Bruce Marshall
We are very pleased to present an article from a
man who is most likely the best authority on Texas history around today. Mr.
Bruce Marshall takes the reader on an exciting and enlightening tour of a
pivotal time for Texas—the confrontation between Gen. Sam Houston and Gen.
Santa Anna. The only problem is, Houston is not the man most Texans thought him
to be. . . .
18 INSIDE THE
MIND OF YOCKEY
Peter Huxley-Blythe
Famed writer and historian Peter Huxley-Blythe, a
personal friend and correspondent with Ulick Varange, better known as Francis
Parker Yockey, author of Imperium, provides a Revisionist angle on one of the
most underrated political theorists of the 20th century. There is much of
interest here, especially the conspiracy of the thouht police to destroy Yockey
and his legacy. . . .
28 ADAM SMITH
& THE WEALTHY
Dr.
M. Raphael Johnson
This brief historical column cites a few telling
passages from Adam Smith, passages that should stop the mouths of the big-money
Beltway conservative set. Controlled by big oil, neo-conservatism has been a
promoter of acquisitive capitalism, condemned by Smith himself. . . .
31 HOW BRANDEIS GOT HIS SEAT
Alex Perry Jr.
A recent article in The Wall Street Journal
discussed the indiscretions of Woodrow Wilson and other presidents. The author
claimed that Wilson was blackmailed before his governorship and presidency for
an affair with Mary Peck. But author Alex Perry sets the record straight,
telling us a different story—one of a scheming Samuel Untermeyer and his use of
blackmail to get President Wilson to appoint Louis Brandeis to the Supreme
Court.
33 WHO IS
ROBERT FAURISSON?
Guillaume Fabien
Robert Faurisson is certainly one of the
best-known and most competent historians in the short history of the
Revisionist movement. He was one of the first to risk questioning specific
facts about the Holocaust and was nearly killed by Jewish extremists for doing
so. . . .
36 AMERICA,
NEUTRALITY & WWI
Harry
Elmer Barnes
TBR’s namesake takes on the hack historians
concerning America’s entry into that needless and destructive wars—World War I.
In no manner did the U.S. have an interest in the war, and she certainly did
not have an interest in the peace. However, Wilson’s confidant, the communist
Col. House, was very interested in this war for it had great potential for
redrawing the map of Europe to suit the American left. Sadly, it did. . . .
44 KEEPING SOCIETY ALIVE
Revilo Oliver
What is the West? What is Europe? These are
central questions, and, as odd as it might seem, have not been adequately
answered. People who care about the survival of the “West” don’t seem to know
what the word means, and fall back on one ingredient of European civilization
that suits their particular political view. Here, Dr. Oliver clears much of
this up. . . .
50 THE
INFAMOUS RUSSIA LETTER
Presented
by the TBR Staff
Several months ago, most of the truly Russian
intelligentsia issued a statement condemning the power that mobsters have
accumulated at the expense of Russia. At one time heir to one of the world’s
great civilizations, under Zionist rule, Russia has been reduced to abject
poverty and political passivity. All of this might be changing however. . . .
59 WHEN HELLAS STOOD ALONE
Peter
Anthony Manti
TBR is happy to present an article on the ancient
Greeks, one of the globe’s elite peoples. Given short shrift by affirmative
action professors in the corrupt universities, it is left to TBR to build upon
and defend the greatness of our forefathers of Western culture. . . .
66 THE GREAT TSUNAMI OF 2004
Dr. Harrell
Rhome
The tsunami of 2004 was so massive and so
powerful, even atomic clocks had to be reset—it literally “changed time.” But
there were other changes to the earth—and its inhabitants—that you may not have
noticed, but will be with us as long as man records history. Here is a short
synopsis from a TBR editorial board member. . . .
70 ZUNDEL—FROM
THE GULAG
Ernst
Zundel
One of the world’s most prominent political
prisoners gives TBR an exclusive essay in which he suggests a plan for the
survival of the endangered white race. Arriving to TBR in lead pencil (the only
tool he has been given to put down his thoughts in the German prison in which
he is presently incarcerated), this insightful paper asks for the participation
of TBR and its readers in formulating and carrying out this plan. . . .
76 HITLER: THE
UNKNOWN SOLDIER
Michael
Collins Piper
Adolf Hitler: Few know much about his courageous
participation in World War I and even fewer have ever seen an unbiased film on
the man. Hitler: The Unknown Soldier is one of those rare films on Hitler that
actually helps set the historical record straight—taking an honest look at
Hitler, the frontline fighter, and his quite impressive combat record compiled
during “the Great War.” . . .