| [Images
added by this website] Mr
Irving was savvy enough to be polite about Jews and
ingratiatingly grateful to his hosts, but he came
across as a broken, paranoid
man.
London, November 29, 2007  David
Irving comments: | SINCE I am basically a
polite person, I shall forego the
temptation to post here copies of the
reviews of all my books, without exception
uniformly favourable, which The
Economist, always anonymously,
published between 1963 and 2000. The magazine did not
have a journalist in the Oxford Union
chamber, so the report is based at best on
hearsay, or at worst on imagination and
wishful thinking. Quoi de neuf. As
for me: What changed? Not my
abilities, nor my objectivity. What
changed?
"IN
devoting a book to this one violent moment
of the war, with its antecedents and
something of its aftermath, Mr. David
Irving has rendered the British people a
great service. They have to know. The
Dresden event is a part of British (as
well as of German, and European, and
human) history. It is a piece of the
mosaic that makes up the British character
and a brush-stroke, out of many, in the
image that Britain presents to foreign
peoples -- an image the British are at
best imperfectly aware of, and that has
consequences which they often find it
difficult to understand. Dresden also has
lessons necessary to an understanding of
the nature of war. What is necessary is to
know what happened and to understand how
it came to happen, and the only way is to
read Mr. Irving's excellent and terrible
book." -- The Economist |
Freedom
of speech A tussle at the
Oxford Union ends in a creditable draw
Invite and
insult From The Economist IT WASN'T hard to distinguish
the men of the right-wing British National Party
(BNP) from the members of the Oxford Union debating
society on November 26th. The students who came to
hear Nick Griffin, the BNP's leader, speak
alongside the
Nazi
apologist David
Irving were mostly fey public-schoolboy types
with plummy voices and the odd corduroy jacket,
plus some fashionable young women. The BNP
goons,
for their part, wore standard-issue crypto-fascist
leather coats and unnecessary black ski hats,
except for one who sported a neo-tsarist
beard. The students and other protesters who gathered
outside the Oxford Union building to try to prevent
Mr Griffin and Mr Irving from speaking were rather
rowdier. The chanting, intermittently rapping crowd
had a case. Their chequered pasts -- Mr Griffin was
convicted in 1998 of incitement to racial hatred;
Mr Irving was imprisoned in Austria for denying the
Holocaust [Website
comment: Not so, the offence was
Wiederbetätigung, Literally "Reactivating" --
The Nazi Party, that is. Go figure. The "Banning
Law" of 1945 was enacted during Stalin's occupation
of Austria] -- do not obviously make
the men experts on the limits of free speech, the
subject of the debate; they are entitled to their
opinions, but not to a privileged platform for them
at Oxford. Nor do they represent large
constituencies or hold high office as does, say,
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Iran's president, who
spoke at Columbia University in September. On balance, however, the Oxford Union members
who had voted to stage the debate had a better
case. Free speech, they argued, is like a muscle
which needs to be exercised to remain useful; the
extremes of its terrain must be staked out to stop
it shrinking. That seems a better attitude than
Austria's, which by imprisoning Mr Irving boosted
his notoriety (and his appeal to the Oxford Union).
It is also preferable to that of the British
government, which pursues the impossible goal of
protecting the feelings of Muslims, gays and other
groups who officially loathe each other. In the end, both sides made their point.
Protesters managed to climb the railings and break
into the debating chamber to stage a sit-in.
("Wagner, perhaps?" shouted a young man as he
commandeered a piano.) They scarpered when the
police got involved. Introducing Mr Irving, the
president of the Union described his views as
"despicable and abhorrent", adopting Columbia's
"invite and insult" approach. So
the Union honoured its avowed commitment to free
speech (Harold Macmillan once described it,
with perhaps a little hyperbole, as "the last
bastion of free speech in the Western world"). It
also, of course, generated the sort of controversy
that is another part of its historic mission --
witness the infamous 1933 debate on a motion that
"This House will under no circumstances fight for
King and Country", and a more recent invitation
to O.J. Simpson. The only people to emerge
with little or no credit from the occasion were the
chaotic police, Mr Irving and Mr Griffin.
Mr Irving was savvy enough to be polite about
Jews and ingratiatingly grateful to his hosts, but
he came across as a broken,
paranoid man. As for Mr Griffin --
regurgitating bile, flanked by his beefy bodyguards
for protection -- he looked no more than a nasty
clown. 
YouTube
video of David
Irving speaking at the Oxford
Union
(furtively filmed, 8 mins: poor sound: note the
two Lefties silently flouncing out at 4:50)
|with links to more video
Those
nice folks next
door:
Nixon
Papers recall Concerns on Israel's
Weapons:
Kissinger
said, This is one program on which the Israelis
have persistently deceived us and may even have
stolen from us
Lefty
Peter Hitchens (brother of the admirable
Christopher H.) equivocates in the Daily
Mail about Mr Irving -- a good historian,
but... "Free
speech is for nasty people, not nice
ones"
David
Irving, a Radical's Diary: After thirty
years, I finally speak at the Oxford Union. Not
everybody is happy about it
The
debate at the Oxford Union: a student's full
eyewitness account | and Mr Irving's mild
rebuke to Luke
Tryl
|
Cherwell
(the Oxford student newspaper) posts a video of
street interviews taken outside-
MORE
STORIES ON OUR SPECIAL INDEX: DAVID IRVING
AND THE OXFORD UNION-
|