Carlos Whitlock Porter     6 March 1947 - 28 July 2023


 

Note by Raeto West   11 11 2023:—

I never met Carlos Porter, although it seems he lived fairly near me. I thought of him as another revisionist, and, like most of them, he did not get very far with his works. He was a translator, but also a researcher, in particular of the Nuremberg Trials. His books and translations included Christian material, as did many early revisionists.

No definitive list of his books seems to exist, partly (I expect) because translations of other people's works lack the status of full authorship. The best I could find is at https://www.goodreads.com/author/list/186317.Carlos_Whitlock_Porter. I have no information on his publishing arrangements with authors and in the countries for which he translated.
      I believe he was best known for Made in Russia—the Holoco$t which played some part in the work of Ernst Zündel and others. Another book is Requiem for Rhodesia, a 36-page self-published work which doesn't even include publication details beyond being a New 2015 edition. There was an online edition, which included photographs, but these seems to have gone.
      I've just rediscovered Porter on Africa, a 2000 version of Requiem for Rhodesia. Africa is largely areas near-ruin run by Jews with low-intelligence uncontrolled population growth. Jews tend to encourage and pay for move into built-up countries. It seems unavoidable that there will be much devastation—which will be controlled by the Jewish-controlled media.

He was of course moved off Amazon, always interested in telling lies about crimes if Jews like them. leaving scanty information. I believe his residual literary possessions and (presumably) computer materials may now be in the possession of David Steel, an ex-politician. Perhaps this work will be sold, preserved somewhere, or (as Mullins might have guessed) destroyed. There must have been many similar cases of life's work being hidden or lost.

An online website, claiming to be Porter's website, is
https://www.jrbooksonline.com/cwporter/two2.htm apparently hosted by Tom Metzger, of Indiana.

1996 online copy by AAARGH of Not Guilty at Nuremberg: The German Defence Case is a short, 56-page, booklet. I've loaded it on my site, here. It list about two dozen defendants and organizations, each given about a page. It has irritatingly little detail, for example, where the information was gathered, what happened in the process, and why the documents are not scanned in or photocopied. The whole production seems skimpy and negligent.

R.I.P. Carlos Whitlock Porter


 

29 books by Carlos Whitlock Porter.   List compiled by goodreads.com in their sequence of popularity. (no connection with myself)