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Ron Paul See other Ron Paul Articles Title: American Pravda: Holocaust Denial Reason Magazine and Holocaust Denial A few years ago I somehow heard about a ferocious online dispute involving a left-leaning journalist named Mark Ames and the editors of Reason magazine, the glossy flagship publication of Americas burgeoning libertarian movement. Although I was deep in my difficult programming work, curiosity got the better of me, so I decided to take a look. During the Immigration Wars of the 1990s, Id become quite friendly with the Reason people, frequently visiting their offices, especially during my English campaign of 1998, when Id located my own political headquarters in the same small Westside LA office building they used. As my content-archiving software project began absorbing more and more of my time during the early 2000s, Id gradually lost touch with them, but even so, the 40-odd years of their magazine archives had become the first publication Id incorporated into my system, and I was now pleased to discover that both sides in the ongoing feud had put my system to good use in exploring those old Reason issues. Apparently, the libertarians grouped around Reason had successfully been making political inroads into Silicon Valleys enormously wealthy technology industry, and had now organized a major conference in San Francisco to gather together their supporters. Their left-leaning rivals decided to nip that project in the bud by highlighting some of the more unsavory ideological positions that mainstream libertarian leaders had once regularly espoused. Perhaps Ron Paul and other libertarians might oppose overseas wars and drug laws, and support cutting taxes and regulations, but they and their Republican Party allies were unspeakably vile on all sorts of other issues, and all good thinkers should therefore stay very far away. The debate began in rather mundane fashion with an article by Ames entitled Homophobia, Racism, and the Kochs denouncing Reason for sharing a platform with a high-ranking Republican Congresswoman of Christian conservative views, as well as the magazines reliance upon Koch funding and its alleged support for Apartheid South Africa during the 1970s and 1980s. The response by the Reason editor seemed quite persuasive, and he rightfully dismissed the guilt-by-association attacks. He also outlined the gross errors and omissions in the charges regarding South Africa, and ridiculed Ames as a notoriously error-prone conspiracy theorist. Surely few outsiders would have paid any attention to such a typical exchange of mudslinging between rival ideological camps. But then things took a very different turn, and a week later Ames returned with a 5,000 word article bearing a title sure to grab attention: Holocaust Denial. He claimed that in 1976 Reason had published an entire special issue devoted to that explosive topic. Surely everyone on the Internet has encountered numerous instances of Holocaust Denial over the years, but for a respectable magazine to have allotted a full issue to promoting that doctrine was something else entirely. For decades, Hollywood has sanctified the Holocaust, and in our deeply secular society accusations of Holocaust Denial are a bit like shouting Witch! in Old Salem or leveling accusations of Trotskyism in the Court of the Red Czar. Progressive Sam Seders Majority Report radio show devoted a full half-hour segment to the charges against Reason, and Googling Reason Magazine+Holocaust Denial today yields thousands of hits. This substantial explosion of Internet controversy was what caught my own attention at the time. My initial reaction was one of puzzlement. Reason had been the first periodical I had digitized in my system a dozen years earlier, and surely I would have noticed an entire issue promoting Holocaust Denial. However, I soon discovered that February 1976 had been excluded from the supposedly complete set the magazine had shipped me for processing, an omission that itself raises serious suspicions. But Ames had somehow located a copy in a research library and produced a full PDF, which he conveniently placed on the Internet to support his accusations. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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