Return of David Cole

Politics, History, & 'Conspiracy'
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Masato
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Return of David Cole

Postby Masato » Sun Jul 05, 2020 1:43 pm

Hey all

If you are familiar with David Cole this is very interesting...

David Cole is an annoying but very intelligent little twerp who somehow found himself in the position of investigating details regarding supposed gas chambers etc of Nazis at the end of WWII. He collaborated with several other researchers and WWII revisionist historians (including an infamous tour with David Irving in Canada), and compiled an extremely impressive case demonstrating the falsities of many claims. He wrote a book and received sudden attention on all fronts. He was a guest on the Phil Donahue show and was thus run out of town and threatened.

He disappeared for a while but popped up every now and then.

Now he's back again and has a new project:




The new project is a documentary of footage he claims he has of a lengthy interview with MEL GIBSON'S FATHER.

Image

According to Cole, Mel Gibson's dad was fascinated by Cole's work, and invited him to film an interview.

According to Cole, Mel Gibson's dad made Cole promise that he would only release the footage AFTER HE DIED.

According to Cole, a lot of the slander on Mel Gibson came as a result of 'not denouncing' his father over such sentiments, it was a backlash for being christian and questioning the H narrative in Hollywood.


Well Mel Gibson's dad is now dead, and Cole is honoring his promise. He is now supposedly releasing his footage.


He has a crowdfunder, only asking to raise $12K for the project, which leads me to believe he's honest about this and not just baiting for money.

Here is the link:
https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/hutt ... wn-words#/


After almost two decades, it can finally be seen!

February 2004: Mel Gibson's The Passion of the Christ was opening worldwide, and the media, always hungry for a scandal, zeroed in on Mel's father Hutton. Hutton Gibson was vilified by the press as a “racist,” “bigot,” “anti-Semite,” and “Holocaust denier.” He was condemned by so-called journalists who had never met or interviewed him.

And Mel himself was attacked for not “denouncing” his father.

The media hysteria and vitriol led many people to ask the question: who is Hutton Gibson? Who is this man who inspires hatred in some, but passionate loyalty and high esteem in others? For many Americans, the only thing they knew about Hutton Gibson, apart from the attacks in the press, came from a few call-ins Hutton had made to radio shows. But who was the man behind the voice? To those who knew him, he was an author, theologian, World War II veteran, and dedicated family man who lived his faith on a daily basis and garnered thousands of loyal friends and followers worldwide.

As the media firestorm swirled around him, Hutton reached out to a documentary filmmaker whose work he knew to be fair, and who had a history of tackling controversial topics. David Cole was invited to bring a camera crew to Tomball, Texas (where Hutton lived at the time) to spend a weekend and document Hutton's life and views. What resulted was a lengthy shoot that covered everything Hutton wanted to discuss, everything he wanted to preserve on the record for posterity: his faith, his personal history, his family, and his views on religion (not just Catholicism, but Judaism, Islam, and secularism), marriage, children, politics, the Holocaust, and the most pressing issues of the day.

It was at the time, and remains to this day, the only in-depth, sit-down, on-camera interview that Hutton ever allowed.

Hutton spoke as a scholar, a spiritual leader, and a family man. The wide-ranging interview included moments of rigorous intellectual discourse, and humorous personal anecdotes. No topic was off-limits. Cole was a passive interviewer; this was Hutton's film, a testament that would be released after his death.

Cole and Hutton stayed in touch for many years following the interview. Hutton's wishes were that, upon his passing, the footage would be released as a documentary film.

Hutton Gibson passed away on May 11th, 2020, three months before his 102nd birthday. The mainstream media, and the powers-that-be in Hollywood, rejoiced like vultures.

“Hallelujah! Neo-Nazi loving, anti-Arch Diocese, bizarre rogue Catholic Hutton Gibson is dead,” crowed “journalist” Roger Friedman on the Showbiz411 entertainment website. Friedman, who has covered Hollywood for Fox, NY Magazine, The New York Times, and The Washington Post, could not contain his ghoulish joy at the passing of a father, grandfather, and great-grandfather: “Hutton Gibson was a bad, bad guy who was a Holocaust denier and all around crazy person. Hell is too good a fate. So roast in Hell, Hutton.”

Yes, this man is considered a “serious journalist” in today's warped environment.

The New York Times called Hutton an “extremist anti-Semite” in its June 4th obituary. Stephen Silver of The National Interest marked Hutton's passing by calling him a “Jew-hating psycho,” and New York Magazine's Yashar Ali celebrated the death by vulgarly tweeting “Bye, bitch.”

More examples of “serious journalists.”

Right now, THESE are the people defining Hutton Gibson in the public mind. These cowards are heaping abuse on a man who can no longer defend himself.

But you can help him have the last word.

Hutton knew that after his death, the people and institutions he spoke out against and stood up to in life would attempt to control his legacy. That's why he shot the interview, the “video autobiography.” This would be his last word.

Our goal is to take that weekend of footage from 2004 and create a professional, engaging documentary film anchored by Hutton's words, and expanded in scope and context with additional interviews with the people who knew him personally or through his work. We have already filmed several supplementary interview with parishioners (including a filmmaker) who attend the Gibson family's church in Southern California. Additional interviews are being sought with family members and colleagues.

Ultimately, we want to create a high-quality documentary that will present an unbiased view of Hutton Gibson's life, in his own words, accompanied by the words of the people who knew him, and professionally presented in a documentary feature form for streaming services, DVD distribution, and other platforms, to give it the largest possible audience worldwide.

Were Hutton Gibson's views controversial? Indeed. But we as filmmakers believe that they should still be heard, and that everyone – Hutton's friends, his foes, and those who are not familiar with him – should have the opportunity to watch and decide for themselves. Hutton was an influential man, and his story, which is also the story of Mel and the entire Gibson family, is fascinating regardless of one's perspective.

Please help this project become a reality, so that this fair and respectful look at the life and beliefs of a truly fascinating and influential figure can be given the proper vessel in a well-produced and engaging documentary film that will do justice to its subject.

Who we are:

Robert Stark is a filmmaker, author, journalist, radio show host (1680 AM in Fresno), and podcaster (starktruthradio.com). He has a long history of interviewing prominent figures in the entertainment industry – Steve de Jarnatt (Miracle Mile), Éva Gárdos (Budapest Noir, Apocalypse Now), Everett Peck (Duckman), and Matthew Wilder (Dog Eat Dog) are some recent examples. He's also known for his fair and unbiased interviews with compelling and provocative figures in journalism, literature, and politics, including Peter Brimelow, Jared Taylor, Ron Unz, Aleksandr Dugin, former Congressmen Pete McCloskey, and Professor Robin Hanson of George Mason University and Oxford.

Robert's motion picture Supply won the award for Best Guerrilla Film at the Melbourne Underground Film Festival in 2018.

Matthew Pegan is a documentary filmmaker who has worked with Robert Stark on his podcast, and on a number of motion picture projects, including a recent documentary series about Los Angeles' most important historical shopping malls, and the culture that inspired them. Matt is also a screenwriter with several projects in the pipeline.

David Cole is a documentary filmmaker, author, and journalist. For the past five-and-a-half years, he's written a weekly column for Taki's Magazine, and his op-eds have appeared in The Los Angeles Times and The Agonist. He's the author of the Amazon bestseller Republican Party Animal (Feral House, 2014), and he's appeared on 60 Minutes, 48 Hours, The Phil Donahue Show, and a number of other television news programs.

* For any amount donated, you will receive a DVD of the final film, which will include in the special features the entire raw unedited footage of the Hutton Gibson interview sessions.

* For a donation of $100 or more, you will receive on-screen thanks in the movie itself.

* For a donation of $1,000 or more, you will receive on-screen Associate Producer credit, and an invitation to the private premiere of the completed film in Los Angeles.

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Postby Masato » Sun Jul 05, 2020 2:15 pm

Here is some of the stuff that got Cole into so much trouble/notoriety/fame

Thanks to Bitchute as his stuff is for sure being pulled off main sites






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Postby Masato » Sun Jul 05, 2020 5:28 pm

These testimonies seem to back Cole's theories:



Auschwitz survivors talk of organized soccer teams, musical instruments and bands, theatre plays, movies, painting murals with children, a working post office where they could write letters, etc etc etc. They speak kindly of the SS guards and talk of them as humane and fair as far as war camp conditions go, things getting easier as the war declined, not worse..

None of them speak of gas chambers.

How does one fit these testimonies into the official narrative? Its very curious imo

Spielberg apparently interviewed as many authentic survivors as he could to collect an archive of testimony and side-documentary for his film Schindler's List, but what he found was that a great deal of the testimony was like this, rather than the horror stories we are used to hearing. There is a great separate documentary of how Spielberg ignored those testimonies, and only included the most dramatic testimonies in his final cut. What's worse is that the people he highlighted the most, great tales of the gas chambers etc, were found later to have told different stories at different times, their testimonies changed and details skewed each time they told it on different shows etc, when you add them all up there is so much inconsistency she simply no longer becomes a credible witness.

Its possible that some of these ^^ testimonies were from that project but I'm not sure.

I'll see if I can find the one on Spielberg, it was fascinating iirc


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