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A Look Back at the War of 1812, by Harrell Rhome, Ph.D.

A Look Back at the War of 1812, by Harrell Rhome, Ph.D.

Was the War of 1812 an unavoidable war? Was it a just war, unlike so many of America’s wars? What were the real issues that caused the conflict, and were they resolved by the bloodshed? In this article, written upon the 200th anniversary of the conflict, TBR editorial board member Dr. Harrell Rhome takes a look at the War of 1812—called by some America’s Second War for Independence—and finds that this was a war America could most likely not have avoided. Except for the Revolutionary...


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A Straight Look at World War II, by Willis A. Carto

A Straight Look at World War II, by Willis A. Carto

What follows is an attempt to set the historical record straight, without influence fromthe powers that be. By this phrase, I do not exclude the influence and power of organized Jewry, which is heavily involved in the sad history of the Aryan West. Further, I believe that liberals who do not recognize this influence are a part, knowing it or not, of the cosmopolitan array dedicated to exterminating our race forever.1 Reader comments appreciated. It is now 67 years after the holocaust known as...


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Italy Divided, by Joaquin Bochaca

Italy Divided, by Joaquin Bochaca

The Last Days of Mussolini & Fascist ItalyIt was a tragic time in history, the Italian civil war of 1943-45. The bitter struggle was between the Fascist Repubblica Sociale Italiana (RSI), allied to the Axis, and a mixed bag of Communist partisans and monarchist soldiers on the other hand. After the RSI surrendered, as many as 30,000 Italians were rounded up and murdered by the Communists. Here Catalan-Spanish author Joaquin Bochaca offers this recounting of the tragicomic collapse of...


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Stroke of Luck Saves Europe, by Peter Strahl

Stroke of Luck Saves Europe, by Peter Strahl

Angel of Death to thank for defeat of Mongols in 1241?For centuries, the Poles have celebrated April 9, 1241 as a day of great victory over the Golden Horde of the Mongols (called at that time “Tartars” or “Tatars”) near Liegnitz—a day that turned back forever the threat of Central Asian conquest. But was it really so? TBR looks at how Europeans ironically snatched “victory” from the jaws of defeat. The Mongols began invading Russia and Europe in the year 1237. In A.D. 1240, with...


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The Hidden Origins of the Bank of England, by Stephen Goodson

The Hidden Origins of the Bank of England, by Stephen Goodson

As the financial crisis worsens in America and across the globe, people want to know: “When did it all start”? In fact, the privately owned Federal Reserve Bank in the United States is a spinoff of the Bank of England, established in the 1694. And, as the earl of Anglesey presciently observed in 1658: “It is dangerous to the peace of the kingdom when it shall be in the power of half a dozen or half a score of rich, discontented or factious persons to make [an accumulation] of our own coin...


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Vladimir the Great?, by Pete Papaherakles

Vladimir the Great?, by Pete Papaherakles

Vladimir Putin is back as president of Russia after a landslide victory in March where 64 percent of Russians voted for him. “I told you we would win, and we won!” exclaimed Putin in his teary-eyed victory speech. “Glory to Russia!” This victory has huge significance for not only Russia, but also the world in general as Putin is looked upon by many as a staunch nationalist and a potential counterforce to the new world order. Although things are often not as they appear in theworld of...


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Who Were the Hittites?, by William White

Who Were the Hittites?, by William White

A great Indo-European civilization ruled Anatolia (in Asia Minor) for centuries, and it spread all the way to northern Syria. But this great Aryan civilization was virtually forgotten for three millennia, until rediscovered in the 1800s… During the great migration of the Indo-European peoples off of the Central Asian plains, a branch of the Indo-Iranian family shot out into Anatolia—modern Turkey—and founded an empire that would last a millennium, and which would profoundly reflect both...


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