Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
October 25, 2015
Recently, Bibi Netanyahu came out and endorse Holocaust revisionism, claiming that Hitler had no plan to kill Jews, and that Arabs directed him to do so. Granted, he still claims that the hoax is real, but this is revisionism nonetheless, as he blames the Grand Mufti, which is not the position of any mainstream holo-historian.
Actually, I have no idea where he is claiming to have gotten this theory from. He did not cite a source regarding his claim that the Mufti was the puppeteer of Hitler. I think he just made it up. But this was not off the cuff, it was in a written speech he delivered to a major Zionist group.
Here on DS, I noted that the idea of Hitler being a puppet of Moslems is goofy and dumb, Bibi was correct in his statement that Hitler had no plan to kill Jews, and did cite sources, including the Transfer Agreement and the Madagascar Plan.
The Times of Israel got mad:
An American neo-Nazi website has backed comments made by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu earlier this week that Adolf Hitler had never planned to systematically murder the Jews of Europe until it was suggested by the leading Muslim cleric in Jerusalem, open Nazi sympathizer Grand Mufti Haj Amin al-Husseini.
“Hitler didn’t want to exterminate the Jews at the time. He wanted to expel the Jews,” Netanyahu told the World Zionist Congress on Tuesday. “And Haj Amin al-Husseini went to Hitler and said: ‘If you expel them, they’ll all come here.’ ‘So what should I do with them?’ he asked. He said: ‘Burn them.’”
Netanyahu was trying to illustrate his claim that Palestinian incitement goes back decades, and is not related to any Israeli policies.
But in doing so, the prime minister won the support of neo-Nazis.
“His [Netanyahu’s] statement is completely factual. Hitler never had any plan to exterminate Jews,” writes Andrew Anglin in an article on The Daily Stormer website entitled Netanyahu Comes Out in Defense of Hitler. “He lobbied continually before and during the war to have them shipped out peacefully, giving them fair payment for their properties and so on.”
This is “historical fact,” says Anglin, adding that Hitler “helped Jews get to Palestine.”
They don’t bother to link my article or mention my reasons for claiming this is “historical fact.” Unless they are denying that the Transfer Agreement and Madagascar Plan existed, they would also have to admit that it is a fact Hitler spent a great deal of energy trying to deport Jews, and was even supported by Zionist organizations – even after the war started.
Is The Times of Israel denying this? Why is “historical fact” in quotes?