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| Subject: Mel Gibson and David Duke Rally Americans Against Jews | |
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Author: Lieutenant Moxley |
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Date Posted: 22:53:55 07/31/06 Mon In reply to: Lieutenant Moxley 's message, "Why does Mel Gibson want to kill all the Jews?" on 22:42:01 07/31/06 Mon Hutton Gibson (born August 26, 1918) is the father of actor Mel Gibson and a writer on religion. He was born in Chicago, Illinois, the son of businessman John Hutton Gibson and Australian opera singer Eva Mylott. He currently resides in Summersville, West Virginia, after living many years in Texas. [1] According to Wensley Clarkson's biography of Mel Gibson, Hutton spent time in a Catholic seminary during the late 1930s. According to one friend of the family, he left out of disgust with the Modernist doctrines taught there. Hutton Gibson served as a US Army Officer in the Pacific Theater during World War II after graduation from an OCS program. He was wounded in action at the Battle of Gualalcanal and invalidated home in [[1944]. Following a victory on the Jeopardy! game show, he moved his family to Australia in 1968, reportedly out of a desire to protect his sons from being sent to the Vietnam War and because he believed that changes in American society were immoral. After the promulgation of the Novus Ordo, the Gibson family home in Sydney, Australia was used as a secret chapel where the Tridentine Mass was offered. Also, Hutton used the house to store statues and altar relics which were being discarded by Catholic parishes at the time. Hutton was reputedly the secretary of the Latin Mass Society of Australia, but was ousted after becoming increasingly vocal about his belief that the See of Peter is vacant due to the Popes embracing heresy (see Sedevacantism). Hutton Gibson is a Traditionalist Catholic. He goes further than many, however, embracing Sedevacantism. He has also stated that the Second Vatican Council was illegitimate and was the result of a secret anti-Catholic plot orchestrated by both Masons and Jews.[2] It has been incorrectly claimed that Hutton Gibson holds to the Siri Thesis. Gibson adheres to the theory that the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks were not carried out by Islamist terrorists aboard the planes, but rather by an unknown party using a "remote control," a view he has expressed on The Alex Jones Show.[3] Hutton Gibson with Holocaust denier Fredrick Töben, head of the Adelaide Institute, at the 2003 International Conference on Authentic History, Real News and the First Amendment Many of Hutton Gibson's beliefs and actions, including his promulgation of Holocaust revisionist theories, his association with known Holocaust deniers and his contention that malevolent Jewish conspiracies exist within the Catholic Church and around the world, are consistent with traditional anti-Semitism. Echoing the claims of numerous other Holocaust deniers, he questions aspects of the Jewish Holocaust, especially the commonly accepted statistic that between five to seven million Jews were killed, arguing that it would have been impossible for the Nazis to have disposed of so many bodies.[4] He further claims that most of the Holocaust was "fiction," [4] that the thousands of Jews who disappeared from Poland during World War II "got up and left",[4] and that census statistics prove there were more Jews in Europe after World War II than before (a claim that is disputed by mainstream historians).[5] In support of his father, Mel Gibson claims that his father's beliefs do not amount to Holocaust denial. (Mel Gibson also says that he will not speak out publicly against his father.) Hutton Gibson publishes a quarterly newsletter called The War is Now! in which he details many of his views.
Established in 1994, the Adelaide Institute was formed from the former Truth Mission that was established in 1993 by Dr Gerald Fredrick Töben.. The Adelaide Institute is a Holocaust revisionist group in Australia and is considered to be both a hate group and Anti-Semitic by Australian and international human rights groups. Members of the Institute have in the past been active in organisations such as Australians For Free Speech, which held a rally in 1994 . The Institute has also been implicated in distributing Holocaust denials through mainstream and alternative publications. Letters to the editors and talk back radio appears to be a favourite means of disseminating the worldview of the Institute. Prior to the opening of the film Schindler's List in Adelaide, members of the institute were implicated in distributing Holocaust Denial pamphlets on the street and through the mail to individuals, particularly those of Jewish background. In addition the members of the institute sent Holocaust Denials to prominent Australian newspapers masquerading as objective movie reviews, some of which reached publication. These actions are typical of those that the Institute undertakes in its stated goal of exposing "the Holocaust myth". The activity of the Institute seems to have declined since its initial burst of activity in the middle 1990s. The Institute does however still maintain a website on which statements on various issues are regularly posted. The Adelaide Institute website, triggered the arrest of Fredrick Toben in Germany in April 1999. Toben was sentenced to 10 months in prison, but since he had already served seven months since his arrest, he was released upon payment of a $5000 bond. It was also this website that drew the attention of the Australian Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (HREOC) in 2000. HREOC found that the Adelaide Institute had breached section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act by publishing material on the website, the consequences of which were 'vilificatory, bullying, insulting and offensive' to the Jewish population and ordered Toben to close the site and apologise to people he has offended. Because rulings of the HREOC are not enforceable at law, the case was also brought before the Federal Court of Australia, which ordered in 2002 that certain material be removed from the Adelaide Institute web site. The Order of the Federal Court of Australia was that Adelaide Institute should remove from its website any other material which conveys one or any of the following imputations: (A) there is serious doubt that the Holocaust occurred; (B) it is unlikely that there were homicidal gas chambers at Auschwitz; (C) Jewish people who are offended by and challenge Holocaust denial are of limited intelligence; (D) some Jewish people, for improper purposes, including financial gain, have exaggerated the number of Jews killed during World War II and the circumstances in which they were killed. It has been noted by human rights organisations that the Institute has failed to fully comply with the order of the Federal Court of Australia and still publishes materials that it was ordered to remove in the 2002 judgement. However so far no organisations have taken legal action against the institute since it is regarded as a somewhat inconsequential organisation.
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