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Denial

A Wisdom Archive on Denial

Denial

A selection of articles related to Denial

We recommend this article: Denial - 1, and also this: Denial - 2.
denial, Denial

ARTICLES RELATED TO Denial

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Nazi extermination camp - Terminology

Extermination camps are distinguished from concentration camps (such as Dachau and Belsen), which were mostly located in Germany and intended as places of incarceration and forced labour for a variety of "enemies of the state" of the Nazi regime (such as Communists and homosexuals). In the early years of the Nazi regime, many Jews were sent to these camps, but after 1942 all Jews were deported to the extermination camps. They should also be distinguished from slave labor camps, which were set up in all German-occupied countries to exp ...

See also:

Nazi extermination camp, Nazi extermination camp - Terminology, Nazi extermination camp - The Camps, Nazi extermination camp - Operation of the camps, Nazi extermination camp - Post War, Nazi extermination camp - Holocaust denial, Nazi extermination camp - Notes

Read more here: » Nazi extermination camp: Encyclopedia II - Nazi extermination camp - Terminology

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Nazi extermination camp - The Camps

Most accounts of the Holocaust recognise six extermination camps, all located in occupied Poland. These were: Auschwitz II (Auschwitz-Birkenau) (Auschwitz I was a concentration camp and Auschwitz III a labor camp) Belzec Chelmno (German: Kulmhof an der Nehr, Polish: Chelmno nad Nerem) Majdanek Sobibór Treblinka Of these, Auschwitz II and Chelmno were located within areas of western Poland annexed by Germany - the other ...

See also:

Nazi extermination camp, Nazi extermination camp - Terminology, Nazi extermination camp - The Camps, Nazi extermination camp - Operation of the camps, Nazi extermination camp - Post War, Nazi extermination camp - Holocaust denial

Read more here: » Nazi extermination camp: Encyclopedia II - Nazi extermination camp - The Camps

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Nazi extermination camp - Operation of the camps

The method of killing at these camps was by poison gas, usually in "gas chambers", although many prisoners were killed in mass shootings and by other means. The bodies of those killed were destroyed in crematoria (except at Sobibór where they were cremated on outdoor pyres), and the ashes buried or scattered. The camps differed slightly in operation, but all were designed to kill as efficiently as possible. SS Lt. Kurt Gerstein, who worked in the SS medical service, for example, testified to a Swedish diplomat during the war about wh ...

See also:

Nazi extermination camp, Nazi extermination camp - Terminology, Nazi extermination camp - The Camps, Nazi extermination camp - Operation of the camps, Nazi extermination camp - Post War, Nazi extermination camp - Holocaust denial

Read more here: » Nazi extermination camp: Encyclopedia II - Nazi extermination camp - Operation of the camps

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Nazi extermination camp - The Camps

Most accounts of the Holocaust recognise six extermination camps, all located in occupied Poland. These were: Auschwitz II (Auschwitz-Birkenau) (Auschwitz I was a concentration camp and Auschwitz III a labor camp) Belzec Chelmno (German: Kulmhof an der Nehr, Polish: Chelmno nad Nerem) Majdanek Sobibór Treblinka Of these, Auschwitz II and Chelmno were located within areas of western Poland annexed by Germany - the other ...

See also:

Nazi extermination camp, Nazi extermination camp - Terminology, Nazi extermination camp - The Camps, Nazi extermination camp - Operation of the camps, Nazi extermination camp - Post War, Nazi extermination camp - Holocaust denial, Nazi extermination camp - Notes

Read more here: » Nazi extermination camp: Encyclopedia II - Nazi extermination camp - The Camps

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Nazi extermination camp - Operation of the camps

The method of killing at these camps was by poison gas, usually in "gas chambers", although many prisoners were killed in mass shootings and by other means. The bodies of those killed were destroyed in crematoria (except at Sobibór where they were cremated on outdoor pyres), and the ashes buried or scattered. The camps differed slightly in operation, but all were designed to kill as efficiently as possible. SS Lt. Kurt Gerstein, who worked in the SS medical service, for example, testified to a Swedish diplomat during the war about wh ...

See also:

Nazi extermination camp, Nazi extermination camp - Terminology, Nazi extermination camp - The Camps, Nazi extermination camp - Operation of the camps, Nazi extermination camp - Post War, Nazi extermination camp - Holocaust denial, Nazi extermination camp - Notes

Read more here: » Nazi extermination camp: Encyclopedia II - Nazi extermination camp - Operation of the camps

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Logical nor - Definition

A common means of writing p NOR q is , where the symbol + signifies OR and the line over the expression signifies not, the logical negation of that expression The two-input logical NOR operator is commonly described by a truth table, describing the output state for all possible input combinations: ...

See also:

Logical nor, Logical nor - Definition, Logical nor - Joint Denial, Logical nor - Symbol

Read more here: » Logical nor: Encyclopedia II - Logical nor - Definition

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Elizabeth Hope - The Lady Hope Story

The Lady Hope Story first appears in an American Baptist newspaper the Watchman Examiner on August 15, 1915. The author was identified only as a "consecrated English woman", "Lady Hope", but research by L.G. Pine a former editor of Burke's Peerage found no other Lady Hope other than Elizabeth Hope who was adult in the 1880s and still alive in 1915. The article was preceded by a four-page report on a summer Bible conference held in Northfield ...

See also:

Elizabeth Hope, Elizabeth Hope - Biography, Elizabeth Hope - The Lady Hope Story, Elizabeth Hope - Original text of the article, Elizabeth Hope - Denial by Darwin's children, Elizabeth Hope - Subsequent retellings and academic investigation, Elizabeth Hope - Conclusion, Elizabeth Hope - Footnotes

Read more here: » Elizabeth Hope: Encyclopedia II - Elizabeth Hope - The Lady Hope Story

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Ernst Zündel - Trials

In 1984 Zündel was criminally charged for "disseminating and publishing material denying the Holocaust." The trial was notable for its reliance on testimony from individuals such as David Irving and Fred A. Leuchter, a self-styled expert in gas chambers whose testimony was dismissed due to his lack of any engineering credentials. Key expert testimony against Zündel's alleged Holocaust denial was provided at great lengths by eminent Holocaust historian, Raul Hilberg. Zündel was convicted in 1988 and sentenced to 15 months imprisonment by a ...

See also:

Ernst Zündel, Ernst Zündel - Background, Ernst Zündel - Holocaust denial, Ernst Zündel - Trials, Ernst Zündel - Detention and deportation, Ernst Zündel - German trial, Ernst Zündel - Zündel's ancestry, Ernst Zündel - Quotes

Read more here: » Ernst Zündel: Encyclopedia II - Ernst Zündel - Trials

Denial: Encyclopedia II - David Irving - Persona non grata

By the late 1980s, Irving was barred from entering Austria because of his neo-Nazi ties and hate speech. In the early 1990s, a German court found him guilty of breaking laws forbidding the denial of the Nazi extermination of Jews, and he was subsequently fined and barred from entering Germany. Other governments followed suit. In 1992, he was barred from South Africa and Canada, where he was arrested in November 1992 and deported back to the United Kingdom. In an administrative hearing surrounding those events he was found by the hearing offi ...

See also:

David Irving, David Irving - Early life, David Irving - The Destruction of Dresden, David Irving - Historian, David Irving - Revisionist, David Irving - Holocaust denial and libel suit, David Irving - Persona non grata, David Irving - Current activities, David Irving - Arrest in Austria, David Irving - Recent Past, David Irving - Irving bibliography

Read more here: » David Irving: Encyclopedia II - David Irving - Persona non grata

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Institute for Historical Review - Criticism of methods

The IHR is not regarded as conducting historical research by mainstream historians and academics, but rather as conducting pseudo-science aimed at "proving" that the Holocaust did not happen. The editorial board of one of the leading historical journals, the Journal of American History, wrote "We all abhor, on both moral and scholarly grounds, the substantive arguments of the Institute for Historical Review. We reject their claims to be taken seriou ...

See also:

Institute for Historical Review, Institute for Historical Review - History, Institute for Historical Review - Holocaust Denial, Institute for Historical Review - Criticism of methods, Institute for Historical Review - Journal of Historical Review, Institute for Historical Review - Alleged links to Muslim anti-Semites

Read more here: » Institute for Historical Review: Encyclopedia II - Institute for Historical Review - Criticism of methods

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Institute for Historical Review - Journal of Historical Review

The IHR publishes the non-peer reviewed Journal of Historical Review, which its critics (including the ADL, the Danish Center for Holocaust and Genocide studies, and other scholars, such as Robert Hanyok, a National Security Agency historian [7]), accuse of being pseudo-scientific. When Noam Chomsky defended an author who wrote articles for the journal (Dr. Robert Faurisson), it led to great controversy, though Chomsky insisted he was defending Fauris ...

See also:

Institute for Historical Review, Institute for Historical Review - History, Institute for Historical Review - Holocaust Denial, Institute for Historical Review - Criticism of methods, Institute for Historical Review - Journal of Historical Review, Institute for Historical Review - Alleged links to Muslim anti-Semites

Read more here: » Institute for Historical Review: Encyclopedia II - Institute for Historical Review - Journal of Historical Review

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Institute for Historical Review - History

The IHR was originally founded by Dave McCalden (also known as Lewis Brandon), a former member of the extreme right-wing National Front, and Willis Carto, the head of the now-defunct Liberty Lobby, who eventually lost control of the IHR in an internal power struggle. Liberty Lobby was an anti-Semitic, neo-Nazi organization best known for publishing The SPOTLIGHT, now reorganized as the American ...

See also:

Institute for Historical Review, Institute for Historical Review - History, Institute for Historical Review - Holocaust Denial, Institute for Historical Review - Criticism of methods, Institute for Historical Review - Journal of Historical Review, Institute for Historical Review - Alleged links to Muslim anti-Semites

Read more here: » Institute for Historical Review: Encyclopedia II - Institute for Historical Review - History

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Web traffic - Controlling web traffic

The amount of traffic seen by a web site is a measure of its popularity. By analysing the statistics of visitors it is possible to see shortcomings of the site and look to improve those areas. It is also possible to increase (or, in some cases decrease) the popularity of a site and the number of people that visit it. Web traffic - Limiting access. It is sometimes important to protect some parts of a site by password, allowing only a ...

See also:

Web traffic, Web traffic - Measuring web traffic, Web traffic - Controlling web traffic, Web traffic - Limiting access, Web traffic - Increasing web traffic, Web traffic - Traffic overload, Web traffic - Denial of service attacks, Web traffic - Sudden popularity, Web traffic - Top web sites

Read more here: » Web traffic: Encyclopedia II - Web traffic - Controlling web traffic

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Ernst Zündel - Zündel's ancestry

According to Toronto Sun columnist Mark Bonokoski, Zündel's mother was Gertrude Mayer and his maternal grandparents were Nagal and Isador (Izzy) Mayer. Izzy Mayer was a union organizer for the garment industry in the Bavarian town of Augsburg. According to Bonokoski, Ernst's ex-wife Irene Zündel said that the possibility of being at least part-Jewish bothered Zündel so much that he returned to Germany in the 1960s in search of his family's Ariernachweis, a Nazi-era certificate of pure Aryan blood, but ...

See also:

Ernst Zündel, Ernst Zündel - Background, Ernst Zündel - Holocaust denial, Ernst Zündel - Trials, Ernst Zündel - Detention and deportation, Ernst Zündel - German trial, Ernst Zündel - Zündel's ancestry, Ernst Zündel - Quotes

Read more here: » Ernst Zündel: Encyclopedia II - Ernst Zündel - Zündel's ancestry

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Web traffic - Measuring web traffic

Web traffic is measured to see the popularity of web sites and individual pages or sections within a site. Web traffic can be analysed by viewing the traffic statistics found in the web server log file, an automatically-generated list of all the pages served. A hit is generated when any file is served. The page itself is considered a file, but images are also files, thus a page with 5 images could generate 6 hits (the 5 images and the page itself). A page view is generated when a visitor requests any page within the web site – a visitor will always generate at least one pa ...

See also:

Web traffic, Web traffic - Measuring web traffic, Web traffic - Controlling web traffic, Web traffic - Limiting access, Web traffic - Increasing web traffic, Web traffic - Traffic overload, Web traffic - Denial of service attacks, Web traffic - Sudden popularity, Web traffic - Top web sites

Read more here: » Web traffic: Encyclopedia II - Web traffic - Measuring web traffic

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Ernst Zündel - Background

Zündel emigrated to Canada from West Germany in 1958, when he was 19, in order to avoid being conscripted by the German military. He married a French-Canadian, Janick Larouche, in 1960 with whom he had two sons, Pierre and Hans. During the 1960s he came under the tutelage of Canadian fascist Adrien Arcand. In the mid 1960s while living in Montreal he was an organizer among immigrants for the Ralliement des créditistes. In 1968 he joined the Liberal Party of Canada and ran in that year's leadership convention using it as a platform t ...

See also:

Ernst Zündel, Ernst Zündel - Background, Ernst Zündel - Holocaust denial, Ernst Zündel - Trials, Ernst Zündel - Detention and deportation, Ernst Zündel - German trial, Ernst Zündel - Zündel's ancestry, Ernst Zündel - Quotes

Read more here: » Ernst Zündel: Encyclopedia II - Ernst Zündel - Background

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Ernst Zündel - German trial

German prosecutors charged Zündel on July 19, 2005, with fourteen counts of inciting racial hatred. His trial was scheduled for five days beginning November 8, 2005, but ran into an early delay when Judge Ulrich Meinerzhagen ruled that Horst Mahler, whose license to practice as a lawyer was withdrawn in 2004 and who, in January 2005, was sentenced to nine months in prison for inciting racial hatred, could not be part of the defense team. Mahler had been associated with the violent far-left Red Army Faction in the 1970s, but has since become ...

See also:

Ernst Zündel, Ernst Zündel - Background, Ernst Zündel - Holocaust denial, Ernst Zündel - Trials, Ernst Zündel - Detention and deportation, Ernst Zündel - German trial, Ernst Zündel - Zündel's ancestry, Ernst Zündel - Quotes

Read more here: » Ernst Zündel: Encyclopedia II - Ernst Zündel - German trial

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Ernst Zündel - Detention and deportation

In 2003, Zündel was arrested in the United States for violating that country's immigration rules, specifically visa waiver overstay, which he argues was a "trumped up" charge. After two weeks he was deported; although he is a German citizen, a warrant for his arrest for Volksverhetzung (incitement of the masses) had been issued in Germany in the same year and he sought refugee status in Canada, despite the fact that his permanent residency status in Canada had expired due to his prolonged absence from the country. At his heari ...

See also:

Ernst Zündel, Ernst Zündel - Background, Ernst Zündel - Holocaust denial, Ernst Zündel - Trials, Ernst Zündel - Detention and deportation, Ernst Zündel - German trial, Ernst Zündel - Zündel's ancestry, Ernst Zündel - Quotes

Read more here: » Ernst Zündel: Encyclopedia II - Ernst Zündel - Detention and deportation

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Noble savage - Origins

Around the 15th century certain European states began expanding overseas, initially in Africa, later in Asia and in the Americas. In general, they sought mineral resources (such as silver and gold), land (for the cultivation of export crops such as rice and sugar, and the cultivation of other foodstuffs to support mining communities) and labor (to work in mines and plantations). In some cases, colonizers killed the indigenous people. In other cases, the people became incorporated into ...

See also:

Noble savage, Noble savage - Modern denial, Noble savage - Origins, Noble savage - Literature

Read more here: » Noble savage: Encyclopedia II - Noble savage - Origins

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Noble savage - Literature

The noble savage as protaganist or, more often, as companion to the protaganist has long been a popular type of literary character. Perhaps the most notable early example is the character Friday from Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe. Other examples inclide Dirk Peters from Edgar Allen Poe's A Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym, Chingachgook from James Fenimore Cooper's Leatherstocking Tales, Queequeg from Herman Melville's Moby Dick, and Umslpoagaas from H. Rider Haggard's King Solomon's Mines. Tonto from the Lone Ranger radio and television programs is one of the ...

See also:

Noble savage, Noble savage - Modern denial, Noble savage - Origins, Noble savage - Literature

Read more here: » Noble savage: Encyclopedia II - Noble savage - Literature

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Noble savage - Literature

The noble savage as protagonist or, more often, as companion to the protagonist has long been a popular type of literary character. Perhaps the most notable early example is the character Friday from Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe. Other examples inclide Dirk Peters from Edgar Allen Poe's A Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym, Chingachgook from James Fenimore Cooper's Leatherstocking Tales, Queequeg from Herman Melville's Moby-Dick, and Umslpoagaas from H. Rider Haggard's King Solomon's Mines. Tonto from the Lone Ranger radio and television programs is one of the ...

See also:

Noble savage, Noble savage - Modern denial, Noble savage - Origins, Noble savage - Literature

Read more here: » Noble savage: Encyclopedia II - Noble savage - Literature

Denial: Encyclopedia II - Cat Stevens - Controversy

Cat Stevens - Salman Rushdie. On February 21, 1989 Yusuf Islam addressed students at Kingston University in London about his journey to Islam. He was asked to describe the controversy in the Muslim world and the fatwa promising Salman Rushdie's execution. Islam claims to have only stated the legal consequences from the Qur'an and not actually have made any claims of support for the fatwa. Newspapers quickly denounced Yusuf Islam's "support" for a possible assassination of Rushdie. Shortly afterwards Islam released a statement clarifying that he was not personal ...

See also:

Cat Stevens, Cat Stevens - Biography, Cat Stevens - Early life, Cat Stevens - Early musical career, Cat Stevens - Conversion and life as Yusuf Islam, Cat Stevens - Current musical career, Cat Stevens - Controversy, Cat Stevens - Salman Rushdie, Cat Stevens - Denial of entry into the United States, Cat Stevens - Awards, Cat Stevens - Discography albums, Cat Stevens - As Cat Stevens, Cat Stevens - As Yusuf Islam

Read more here: » Cat Stevens: Encyclopedia II - Cat Stevens - Controversy




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