News Archive | Printer Version | December 16, 2007 | |
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Ernst Zündel
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"Six million cannot be right!" Brief Commentary to the sizzling news below: Is the Holocaust claim, enforced via shameful Stalinist-type statutes and show trials in the so-called Bundesrepublik of Germany, really coming apart at the seams? It surely seems so - at long last! If Udo Voigt's Party, the NPD, has any sense of political savvy and opportunity at all, this could be their historical moment! Imagine some ten thousand or so party members getting their act together and backing their chief by openly announcing that they, too, no longer believe what their Zionist-beholden government is forcing them at bayonet point to believe! Why not ask the vassal Republic of Germany to prove to the world that the Holocaust, as claimed, really happened?! All they need to do is to insist on a scientific, impartial, international investigation! Who knows? It might even verify what Ernst Zundel already documented forensically in 1988. I feel a government apology already coming on! This certainly bears watching! Ingrid Zundel 'SIX MILLION CANNOT BE RIGHT' German party chief questions Holocaust deaths Source: European Jewish Press AFP - Monday, 10 December 2007 BERLIN - The head of the German neo-Nazi party NPD, Udo Voigt, has questioned the number of Holocaust deaths in an interview to be broadcast on Monday. "Six million cannot be right. At most, 340,000 people could have died in Auschwitz," Voigt said in excerpts from the interview that were released in advance. "The Jews always say: 'Even if one Jew died that is a crime.' But of course it makes a difference whether one has to pay for six million people or for 340,000," the head of the National Democratic Party added. "And that also puts paid to the uniqueness of this big crime, or so-called big crime," Voigt added in comments initially made in an interview with Iranian journalists that was to be rebroadcast on the political program Report Mainz. The airing of his remarks come amid a debate over whether to cut off funding for the NPD and groups that support it. Politicians seek to stifle party The head of the national parliament's internal affairs commission, Social Democrat Sebastian Edathy, has viewed the interview and said he would file a complaint against the NPD chief. German politicians last week said they wanted to choke off funding for extremist parties such as the NPD. But that could prove difficult because the German constitution stipulates that all political parties are to be treated equally, the interior minister of the central state of Hesse, Volker Bouffier, has conceded. The NPD holds seats in regional parliaments in the eastern states of Saxony and Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, although it has never been represented in the federal lower house of parliament. The government has in the past tried to ban the NPD, but failed after it emerged that some members of the party who had given evidence in legal proceedings were police informers.
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