Institute for Historical Review

The Institute for Historical Review (IHR) is an American publisher, controversial for its associations with holocaust denial and holocaust revisionism. The Southern Poverty Law Center regards the IHR as a hate group, and a "pseudo-academic organisation" whose purpose is to "promote Holocaust denial and defend Nazism".

A lunatic Chaplin imitator
and his greatest fans

Nazism
First as tragedy
Then as farce
v - t - e

History

The IHR was founded in 1978 by David McCalden of the National Front and Willis Carto of the Liberty Lobby, and served as an outlet for antisemitism, publishing texts on Holocaust denial and Judeo–Bolshevism. In 1979, the IHR offered a $50,000 reward for proof that gas chambers existed in Auschwitz and for the purpose of killing people. Mel Mermelstein, a survivor of Auschwitz-Birkenau, wrote to the IHR but his account of captivity was ruled not to be sufficient evidence. This led to a lawsuit with Mermelstein in 1981, represented by lawyer William John Cox. After four years and two courts, it was ruled that the Holocaust was an established fact that did not require additional evidence to prove, and the IHR was ordered to pay $90,000 to Mermelstein, publicly humiliating Carto in the process. During the trial, the IHR's office was subject to firebombing, which destroyed most of its text and audio archive. In the early 1990s, Carto was forced out of the IHR, and was sued for $5 million dollars for embezzling funds.

Since then the IHR has had a change in its focus. With holocaust denial no longer being legally defensible, it became a publisher of negationism. With negationism, authors and publishers can drive a "teach the controversy"-type narrative that basic facts are heavily disputed among historians. Its current director, Mark Weber, has been quoted as accepting the deaths of millions of Jews, but insists that the figures of 10, 6 and 2 million is an on-going debate among historians,[1] though his claims the Holocaust is a hoax religion and his continued support for Neo-Nazis suggests that he is not being honest.[2]

gollark: How do you even have a computer that old? x86 has been 64-bit since... 2005 or so?
gollark: Coincidentally, I read an xkcd about this just yesterday.
gollark: Generally the temperatures of the ones this sort of thing produces are quite high, briefly.
gollark: In principle you could avoid that with clever algorithms, though.
gollark: The infinite information density (and thus energy density) created when buffering all the read stuff causes a black hole to form.

References

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