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Archives

These archives are a selection of previous Barnes Review stories. This is not a comprehesive collection, and we encourage readers order our back issues by calling 1-877-773-9077. We will  be adding to the stories below periodically, so please keep checking!

Volume XI, Number 2
March/April 2005

In This Issue:

Why Thomas Jefferson Opposed The Creation of a Central Bank

By Thomas Jefferson

A Founding Father’s Opinion Concerning the Constitutionality of a Federal Bank, 1791

Islam & Judaism: Some Surprising Similarities

By Harrell Rhome

This writer is sure some readers will take issue with this article. It is presented in the interest of truth and understanding in a time of violent and horrible conflict on the world scene

Land of the Long White Cloud: Secret History of a Lost World

By John Tiffany

Much of the history and prehistory of New Zealand—“the Other Land Down Under”—remains hidden
 

Volume XI, Number 1
January/February 2005

In This Issue:

The Destiny of America

By Francis Parker Yockey

Francis Parker Yockey is well known for his tome Imperium.  With the rise of Zionist power across the globe,  its pertinence will be obvious to TBR readers.

Together, We Can Take Back America

By Edgar J. Steele

Following is the full text of a recent speech by Edgar J. Steele. It is a powerful indictment of the ruling classes in America for their desire to “remake” America for the sake of super profits.

The Smoke & Mirrors of ‘The Holocaust’

By Alex S. Perry Jr.

What do we know best about World War II? What stands out the most in most people’s minds? Do they know how many American soldiers were killed and wounded?
 

Volume X, Number 6
November/December 2004

In This Issue:

George Washington Wasn’t Our First President

By Vance Beaudreau

Contrary to the thinking of the public today, the United States of America was not formed in 1789 with the adoption of the Constitution after the ratification process had been successful.

Life in the Third Reich

From a speech given by Friedrich Kurreck

What was life like under the National Socialists? Hitler radically reformed the German economy bringing German industry and production to even higher levels while the other countries were suffering massive unemployment.

The Nuremberg Mock trials

Compiled by Ralph Forbes

The greatest statesmen, jurists and patriots of the 20th century condemned the Nuremberg trials as the worst kangaroo court.


Volume X, Number 5
September/October 2004

In This Issue:

Tolkien’s Mythos

By Stephen Goodson

While many aficionados are content to treat The Lord of the Rings as merely an epic fantasy, some critics have detected deeper meanings, such as an underlying repugnance for the industrialization of the countryside...

The Fight Against Usury

By Juri Lina.

Lending money at interest has been condemned by men such as Plato, Aristotle, Plutarch, Seneca and Cicero, early fathers of the Christian church; the majority of popes and councils up to 1830...

The Nazca Lines Still a Tantalizing Mystery

By John Tiffany

Three hundred trapezoids and other geometric figures, were carved into the stony desert of southwestern Peru, one of the driest places on Earth...
 

Volume X, Number 4
July/August 2004

In This Issue:

Archeoastronomy of the Ancient Egyptians

By John Tiffany

Impacts of massive objects from outer space—meteorites, comets and asteroids—have played a key role in the prehistory of Earth, and have also affected historical times—such as ancient Egypt.

Professor App Exposes The Foulest Allied Atrocity

By Dr. Austin J. App Ph.D.

Because of repeated requests, this report on mass Red rape of German women, first published as a lone-voice-in-the-wilderness protest nearly 60 years ago, in 1946, is herewith printed again.

Adolf Hitler: An Overlooked Candidate for the Nobel Prize

By Alex S. Perry Jr.

If anyone deserved the Nobel Peace Prize, it was Adolf Hitler. Hitler did not want war. World War II was forced on Germany.
 

Volume X, Number 3
May/June 2004

In This Issue:

Nuremberg: In the National Socialist Mind

By SS Gen. Leon Degrelle

The National Socialist Congress had become an annual session of a giant parliament composed of a million and a half representatives of the people, coming from the most varied regions. Politically, it was the most “colossal” (as the Germans say) expression of democracy that had ever been organized anywhere in the world.

Hitler’s Declaration of War Against the United States

Hitler declared war against the United States on December 11, 1941. Interestingly, Hitler’s position on the war with America has had few individuals interested in analyzing it.

The Cambridge Apostles

By Robert K. Logan

The Soviet Union’s Pipeline to Britain’s Worst-Kept Secrets
 

Volume X, Number 2
March/April 2004

In This Issue:

Old Hickory’s Farewell Address

Andrew Jackson was president from 1828 to 1836. This address was his final as a politician, delivered on March 4, 1837. Its significance lies in its prophecies. He warned against the expansion of the federal government, the debasement of the currency, the income tax and the perils of foreign intervention.

The New South Africa

By Robert Logan
 
The end of European colonization and white rule in Africa has not benefited the indigenous peoples at all. Even South Africa, a First World and first-rate nation a decade ago, is gradually reverting to barbarism.

The Fraud Of The Iraq War

By Charles Grasser

There can be no debate now: the western ruling classes lied, lied and lied about Iraq.


Volume X, Number 1
January/February 2004

In This Issue:

The Racial Makeup of the Original Egyptians

By John Tiffany

The “afrocentric” view of the history of Egypt matched against the facts is not only interesting to all historical Revisionists but vividly displays a lesson to present-day Americans.

Conquest to Collapse: The Luftwaffe in WWII

By Trevor Constable
 
History repeats itself. That is true not alone in the great affairs of nations, but also in the great unfolding ribbon of life at every level.  Revisionism has among its tasks the accurate cataloging of such historical debacles.

Robert Monteith: Casement's Captain

By John Garton & Moira O’Sullivan

Few know the exploits of the great Irish patriot Robert Monteith.


Volume IX, Number 6
November/December 2003

In This Issue:

The Rockefellers’ Agents Frame ‘Tailgunner Joe’

By Dr. Emmanuel Josephson
 
The average person today has no idea how much economic and political power this family, their agents and dupes acquired and wielded in the establishment of a virtual dictatorship over the United States and its people. Here is but one example.

Eisenhower Silences McCarthy

By Earl Denny
 
Dwight Eisenhower Ordered Fort Monmouth Files Destroyed That Would Have Vindicated
Senator Joseph R. McCarthy.

Just what is a ‘Just War’?

By Warren Baldwin Jr.

Just war is actually a technical term that describes attempts by concerned philosophers, theologians and even warriors to lessen the tragic and brutal affects of warfare.
 

Volume IX, Number 5
September/October 2003

In This Issue:

Hispaniola: A Case History in Multicultural Madness

By Robert Logan
 
Many problems have ensued from the United States’ new immigration policy. Perhaps America should examine life in already existing multicultural nations and consider a revision in its quota allotments.

The Epic of Vidkun Quisling

By Michael McLaughlin
 
“A Nordic union between Scandinavia and Great Britain... would take away the sting of any communist combination and secure European civilization and peace for the foreseeable future.”

Injustice for All

By Edgar J. Steele

At the Fourth International Conference on Authentic History, hosted attorney Edgar J. Steele, who held the audience in the palm of his hand discussing federal tyranny and racial issues in America.
 

Volume IX, Number 4
July/August 2003

In This Issue:

I Was There When Robert F. Kennedy Died

By Anonymous
 
Here’s a first-hand account of the events of that fateful evening that may explain why Kennedy inexplicably altered his long-time habit of greeting his admirers and walked into an ambush.

Great Britain Builds ‘The Great Wall of India’

By Stephen Martin
 
Perhaps the greatest unknown building project of all time is the great customs barrier built by the British across the length and breadth of India in the 19th century.

Garet Garrett & U.S. Imperialism

By Michael Collins Piper

Long before Pat Buchanan was proclaiming that America was “a republic—not an empire” there was Garet Garrett—one of America’s foremost advocates of traditional Constitutional republicanism.
 

Volume IX, Number 3
May/June 2003

In This Issue:

Populist Nationalism Developing In Western World

By Kenneth J. Schmidt
 
This article is the text of a speech given by Ken Schmidt at the Third Annual Conference on Authentic History and the First Amendment, held in June of 2002.

Al Capone: The Man and the Myth

By Michael Collins Piper
 
The real bosses of organized crime in America have found the legend of Al Capone a convenient cover to redirect public attention from their activities.
 
Eisenhower: The Military ‘Wizard’ & The Normandy Invasion

By Alex S. Perry Jr.

Alex Perry continues his critique of Tom Brokaw’s The Greatest Genera tion, his work on the “glories of the Second World War from an American perspective.”

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