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  • From the Editor

    This issue of The Journal of Historical Review, the forty-fourth, completes Volume Eleven. Its two feature articles, Dr. Andreas Wesserle's passionate critique of George Bush's “New World Disorder” and Dr. Charles Lutton's survey of half-a-century's study (and evasion) of the facts beyond the December 7, 1941 “Day of Infamy,” signal an advance and a return,…

  • A New Cycle

    That marvelous entity, the human body, goes through a process whereby it constantly renews its cells. Old, injured, or malfunctioning cells die off and new ones replace them. After a cycle lasting approximately seven years, the human body is completely renewed; all the cells are brand new, and the body starts a fresh cycle. The…

  • Christmas Letter 2013

    Bradley R. SmithPO Box 439016San Ysidro CA 92143Desk: 209 682 5327Founder’s Page: http://codohfounder.com/CODOH: www.codoh.com December 2013 Dear Valued Supporter and (in many, many cases) Friend: Once again, the end of the year is upon us. For me and for CODOH it’s the time to take stock of the past year’s work and to plan for the…

  • Hyper-Productivity

    This issue contains five papers and one review by John Wear, who has been one of the major contributors to both The Barnes Review and increasingly also to Inconvenient History. If you subscribe to the former, you may notice that some articles are featured in both periodicals. While The Barnes Review is a subscription-based print…

  • Notebook

    Three young men, students at colleges in Ohio and Pennsylvania, drove down to Baja the other day to say hello. All have done revisionist work on their campuses; one while he edited his campus newspaper. They wanted to pass a couple days overdosing on revisionism. A good time was had by all. It was interesting…