Debunking Dangerous Myths About World War Two
Mark Weber* to Address Meeting in Baltimore, July 2
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Historian Mark Weber |
More than sixty years after the end of World War Two, our schools, motion pictures and politicians still present a systematically distorted and hate-filled view of that conflict.
At a special meeting in Baltimore, Maryland, historian Mark Weber will tackle enduring myths about World War Two, including lies about how the conflict began.
He will also pull apart the myth that the global conflict was a morally clear-cut fight between "good" Allies and an "evil" enemy. And he’ll explain why the official US mythology about World Two is not just bad history, it’s also very harmful. Weber will also provide an update on the IHR and its work.
Join us Wednesday evening, July 2, 2008 from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m.
This meeting will be at a private home in Baltimore. For security reasons, the precise location is not being made public. Details are being mailed to select persons in the Baltimore area, and to known friends of the IHR.
Requested donation of $15 per person, at the door.
This is a great opportunity to meet with men and women who share our concern for our people and the world. Join us for a memorable evening. Bring a friend!
For further information, contact the IHR.
INSTITUTE FOR HISTORICAL REVIEW
P.O. Box 2739, Newport Beach, CA 92659, USA
www.ihr.org Tel. 949-631-1490
Mark Weber is an accredited historian. He is currently the Director of the Institute for Historical Review. He was born in October 1951 in Portland, Oregon, where he was also raised. He studied history at the University of Illinois (Chicago), the University of Munich (Germany), and Portland State University, from where he received a bachelor's degree in history (with high honors). He then did graduate work in history at Indiana University (Bloomington), where he served as a history instructor and received a master's degree in European history in 1977.
He has traveled widely in Europe and northwestern Africa. He lived and worked for two and one-half years in Germany (Bonn and Munich), and for a time in Ghana (West Africa), where he taught English, history, and geography at an all-Black secondary school.
He moved to southern California in early 1991 to work for the IHR. He was the editor of the IHR's acclaimed Journal of Historical Review from April 1992 to December 2000. He has often been condemned by Zionists because of questions he has raised about the popular history of World War II as it has been recorded by the allies.
