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David
Irving comments:I CEASED to do any more on the
Deborah Lipstadt front than follow that noxious person’s movements and career, both past and present; no doubt to the annoyance of my enemies, I have moved on.Yes, the website is an important weapon, currently being visited by about 70,000 people daily. It all costs a lot of money to maintain. As it grows in size, more people will join this interesting two-front battle — against the traditional enemies of the truth, and for Real History. Now go get some sleep.
For both of us.
Jocelyne
Demers of Toronto writes (): “Since you do not refer to Mr. Hamilton’s Guy ‘Sader’ and his Forgotten
Soldier in your published answer to him, here goes just in case. The author’s name is Guy Sajer, and the book was initially published in French, as Le soldat oublié. I have no idea whether that work was also published in English.The book is about men of conscription age born Germans in Elsass-Lothringen before the end of 1918 or French later in the French départements of Haut-Rhin, Bas-Rhin or
Meurthe-et-Moselle, who were mobilized in the German armed forces after the late 1940 reannexation of that territory by the Reich, and a number of whom endured a prolonged captivity in a vast Soviet concentration camp in the region of Tambov.”