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Discovering Absurdistan

Germany is an odd place. If you want to be successful in that country, you better not show the national flag, sing the national anthem, or proclaim that you are a patriot. Because being patriotic is being nationalistic, which gets dangerously close to being a Nazi, which equates being the evil incarnate. And there are more absurd things you better not do in that country, or else you might find yourself in prison faster than you can think…

204: Holocaust Victims: A Statistical Analysis

Six Million Jews fell victim to the Holocaust. So we are told. The only mainstream book dealing with this issue, published in 1991, does indeed confirm this number. But a revisionist book from 1983 contests that figure, claiming a victim count of “merely” 300,000. Both are based on solid statistical material. So how come the results are so different? This paper of mine points out how their numbers differ, why that is so, and what conclusions are to be drawn from this.

Fleeing From England

“Hunting Germar Rudolf” could also be the title of this paper, because that’s what was going on back in 1999, when the British media unleashed a manhunt for me. I wrote this essay shortly before applying for political asylum in the U.S. One of the questions I had to answer when filing the application was something like “Describe exactly how you came into this country.” Well, that’s what I did. It ended up being a 20 some odd pages essay, which my lawyer said I shouldn’t file. I ended up filing a 15 lines short version of this story instead.

Censorship in Germany? Never! Unless…

Germany is proud of its surrogate constitution, the “Basic Law,” which solemnly guarantees a wide range of civil rights, freedom of speech among them. But did you know that this very right is completely revoked in the paragraph following the one granting it: “This right finds its limits by the prescriptions of general laws […].” In 2009 Germany’s highest court decided that even non-general laws aiming at certain opinions are acceptable. In other words: Everything can be outlawed in Germany, provided you have the influence and power to do so. As a result, numerous books are burned and authors jailed in Germany…

May 10, 2008

This letter to Paul Grubach describes the regimen at Rottenburg prison, my last stage before my release on July 5, 2009.

August 27, 2006

This letter from the Stuttgart prison was my battle cry, a few months before my trial started. Hear the lion roar!

Letters from the Dungeon

During the years of my incarceration in Germany between 2005 and 2009 I’ve written many letters to supporters, some of which with the explicit intent to have them published on the internet. A few of them I have managed to recover from there, and some of them might be of interest to the public, so …

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Resistance Is Obligatory

What exactly happened once Germar had been deported to Germany in 2005? There he faced criminal charges for his publishing activities abroad, although these activities had been perfectly legal there. How did he defend himself in court? Well, he fought like you would expect a courageous scholar to fight: He stood by his views, denied the German court any right to meddle into scientific affairs, and appealed to every fellow human to resist the oppressors! Here is a summary of his defense speech.

Scientists Don’t Get Political Asylum

This essay gives a summary of the legal issues involved in my attempts at gaining permanent legal residence in the U.S., primarily by means of applying for political asylum. It exposes a fundamentally flawed legal system which cherry-picks the kind of peaceful dissidents they appreciate, but dumps all the rest whose views the Powers That Be detest. Hence, at the end of my initial efforts to escape German persecution, I was not only denied a safe haven in the U.S., but rather handcuffed and deported back to Germany where it all had started. But that wasn’t the end…

Documents on Persecution

This is a list of documents in relation to my persecution by the German authorities, most of which were introduced or produced during my asylum case in the U.S.