January/February 2002 – Volume VIII, Number 1
5 Machiavelli & the Ethics of Control
DR. M. RAPHAEL JOHNSON
His book The Prince knocked down a hornets’ nest, due to the
many controversial statements it contained. Are today’s American ruling elites
Machiavelli’s greatest disciples? . . .
11 America’s Greatest Generation?
ALEX S. PERRY JR.
News reader Tom Brokaw claims Americans were gung-ho to go
off to fight the Japanese and the Germans after Pearl Harbor. But, in spite of
(or is it because of?) his seven million-dollar-a-year salary, Brokaw is not
telling it like it was. . . .
21 The Crematoria at Auschwitz
RUSSELL GRANATA
A detailed analysis of the data available regarding
the crematoria of Auschwitz-Birkenau proves that the
theories (or, more accurately, fables) of mass executions in the so-called
“death camp” are actually nothing but a house of cards, with each card being a
falsehood. . . .
29 The Return of “Mr. Death”
FRED LEUCHTER
Fred Leuchter, America’s leading expert on gas chambers and
other modes of capital punishment, explains how he became a Revisionist and the
trials he had to suffer for telling the truth.
Here’s his paper delivered to last year’s TBR conference. . . .
32 The Very First Republic of Texas
FRANK JACKSON
A little-remembered but still exciting chapter of Texas
history is brought to light. . . .
35 FDR’s Favorite Commie
DR. M. RAPHAEL JOHNSON
In fighting Nazi Germany, was “Uncle Joe” Stalin merely
defending the motherland, or is that a false scenario? A book review. . . .
43 Adolf Hitler’s Tragic Life
R.M. WEST
To be acceptable to the establishment, you practically have
to dismiss Adolf Hitler as a devil in human form. What made this
ever-controversial German leader tick? Was he out to conquer the world? . . .
51 “City of the Gods” Emerges from Cambodian Rainforest
JOHN TIFFANY
A lost city of temples was found in Cambodia in the 19th
century. So grand were the remaining ruins that the natives, who had only vague
knowledge of the mysterious city themselves, believed it must have been built
by gods or giants. . . .
55 A Look Into the Private Journals
of an American Icon
MICHAEL COLLINS PIPER
Unusual insights into the thinking of “Lucky Lindy,” the
famous flier, are provided by his daily journals from World War II. . . .
63 A Cancer Infects the National Socialist Party in the Form
of Röhm
WAFFEN SS GEN. LEON DEGRELLE
The radical Nazi Ernst Röhm and moderate leader Adolf Hitler
both wanted to establish a new kind of German army. But they found themselves
on a collision course, thanks to Röhm’s continuing provocations. . . .
67 Unforeseen Consequences of Yalta
ROBERT L. LOGAN
After making hypocritical promises about their glowing and
altruistic war aims, the Big Three got down to real business at Yalta and a vindicative,
barbarous powerfest to upend the world began. Unfortunately, the power of Josef
Stalin had been underestimated. . . .