Lucas Quierelli Quierelli itibaren Ciuslea, Roemenië
Gha. Repetitive and boring. Huge swathes of the book are just lists of ways in which jews are connected to various media outlets, communist parties, etc. These sections suffer from very weak inductive reasoning. Other parts (the holocaust section) bring up interesting questions and points. However the answers to most of these can be found on google pretty quickly. Others arent so easy to answer, and warrant further inquiry. The section on immigration was the worst though. One thing which I did appreciate was his defense of free speech. Its hard not to feel sympathy for peaceful individuals who are jailed in Europe for printing books similar to this one. He also does a good job of pointing out the injustice and hypocrisy of the Nuremberg trials, and the barbarism which the Allies engaged in during WW2. Really the chapter on the holocaust is the only one worth reading because its probably what he is most well known for, and contains not-wrong-things about ww2. Also, this guy is largely mistaken in his beliefs but hes a lot less insane than you might think based on his reputation. He's one of those "omni-nationalist" types. He won't say that white people are superior to other races, only that there are cognitive and behavioral differences linked to ethnicity. He also claims not to support forced segregation or expulsion, although this is completely at odds with his immigration policy.