First published at 22:11 UTC on April 9th, 2020.
Documentary by Lady Michèle Renouf.
This is the complete two hour version - featuring all three chapters combined - of the 2006 film Jailing Opinions. From Telling Films, and produced by human rights campaigner Lady Michèle Renouf, the film examine…
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Documentary by Lady Michèle Renouf.
This is the complete two hour version - featuring all three chapters combined - of the 2006 film Jailing Opinions. From Telling Films, and produced by human rights campaigner Lady Michèle Renouf, the film examines the extraordinary assault on academic freedom currently under way throughout Europe.
Lady Renouf (born 1946) is an Australian-born British defender/activist of Holocaust Revisionism. She has participated in the trials of David Irving, Robert Faurisson, Bishop Richard Williamson, Germar Rudolf, Ernst Zündel, and Fredrick Töben. She's been a filmmaker since 2001. In 2002 she presented her first documentary, Palestine Scrapbook: a British veteran's very different story at both Houses of Parliament. Her second film's Prologue for a trilogy on Israel In Flagrante; Caught in Acts of Twistspeak was screened at the 2004 Cairo Conference. The trilogy is yet to be released. The Irving-Lipstadt trial in 2000 called her attention to the repression of Holocaust Revisionism, and she became an active supporter of persecuted revisionists, going on to release Jailed Opinions on DVD in 2006.
This ground-breaking documentary discusses the criminalization of historical expression, including first-hand accounts from those attending the trial of British historian David Irving for publishing information that challenged the Jewish narrative of an event from more than seventy years ago.
Should people be allowed to talk about historical subjects without going to prison, as has occurred with "thought criminals" David Irving, Ernst Zundel (who was torn from his American wife and deported), and Germar Rudolf (who was torn from his American wife and children, and deported)? This video dares to ask the questions that people who are concerned about our decreasing rights need to consider in these times when tyrants may dictate our very thoughts far beyond what Orwell envisioned in his novel "1984." It appears that "Big Brother" (or what some may deem the "Thought Police") is indeed alive and well today, and concerned citizens need to be alert with what is occurring to our ever-decreasing freedom.
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