Brian Ruhe’s description:

Germar Rudolf opens up about his trauma after being arrested in the US, the day after his marriage. He committed no crime but was put in jail and extradited to Germany. This has left him with a feeling of trauma and he freaks out when having to deal with German or US authorities. This is entirely justified since they have and could again, arrest him after committing no crime.

Germar really knows his stuff! I started off, asking him a chemical question and he replies in great detail.

He goes into pre and post WW I history, explaining how Poland and Germany’s borders were changed.

At 31:15 Germar explains why he decided in 1991 to investigate the chemistry of the Holocaust- because he was surprised that nobody else was doing it!

A volunteer coordinator is what they need and Germar goes into very important details about what volunteers and donors can do. People just do not understand what it takes to help such an origination and why should they? I encouraged Germar to discuss this in his other interviews with pod-casters, in the future.

Germar Rudolf was born on October 29, 1964, in Limburg, Germany. His personal website is http://germarrudolf.com/en/please-read-this-note/ . He studied chemistry at Bonn University, where he graduated in 1989 as a Diplom-Chemist, which is comparable to a U.S. PhD degree. From 1990-1993 he prepared a German PhD thesis at the Max Planck Institute for Solid State Research in conjunction with the University of Stuttgart, Germany. Parallel to this and in his spare time, Rudolf prepared an expert report on chemical and technical questions of the alleged gas chambers of Auschwitz, The Rudolf Report, in 2017 republished in an expanded, revised edition as The Chemistry of Auschwitz (updated in 2020). He conclude in it that “the alleged facilities for mass extermination at Auschwitz and Birkenau were not suited for the purpose as claimed.” As a result he had to endure severe measures of persecution in subsequent years. Hence he went into British exile, where he started the small revisionist outlet Castle Hill Publishers. When Germany asked Britain to extradite Rudolf in 1999, he fled to the U.S.. There he applied for political asylum, expanded his publishing activities, and in 2004 married a U.S. citizen. In 2005, the U.S. recognized Rudolf’s marriage as valid and seconds later arrested and subsequently deported him back to Germany, where he was put in prison for 44 months for his scholarly writings. Some of the writings he got punished for had been published while Rudolf resided in the U.S., where his activities were and are perfectly legal. Since not criminal under U.S. law, he managed to immigrate permanently to the U.S. in 2011, where he rejoined his U.S. citizen wife and daughter. He currently resides in Texas.

Germar Rudolf – Part 2 of 2 – Trauma Dealing with US and German Authorities

Brian Ruhe