Other Losses by James Bacque (1989)

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James Bacque’s Other Losses exposes one of the darkest Allied war crimes of WWII—the deliberate starvation and murder of up to 1 million German POWs in U.S. and French camps (1945-1948). This systematic extermination, covered up by Western historians, reveals the hypocrisy of "Nazi genocide" narratives while Allied atrocities were ignored.

Key Findings & Evidence
Eisenhower’s Death Camps
"Other Losses": A coded term in U.S. military records for POWs who "disappeared" (starved, executed, or left to die).

Rheinwiesenlager (Rhine Meadow Camps):

No shelters, no food, no medical care—prisoners forced to sleep in open fields.

Death rates up to 30%
Deliberate Policy:

Eisenhower denied Red Cross inspections.

Reduced rations to 900 calories/day (starvation level).

2. French Torture & Mass Graves
POWs sent to France as slave labor (violating Geneva Convention).

Thousands buried in unmarked mass graves (later bulldozed to hide evidence).

3. The Cover-Up
U.S. & British historians ignored evidence (still rarely taught in schools).

Red Cross records were suppressed (only released decades later).

Jewish media (NYT, BBC) never investigated—unlike their obsession with "Nazi crimes."

4. Why This Matters Today
Proves the Jew-led Allies were Talmudic, Germany wanted their own country.

Exposes the hypocrisy of "Never Again" rhetoric (only applies to Jews).

Shows how history is written by victors—German suffering is erased.

Why Is This Book Censored?
Challenges the "Good War" myth (Allies = heroes, Axis = monsters).

Exposes Jewish-led revenge atrocities (Eisenhower was surrounded by Jewish advisors).

Undermines HoloH propaganda (if Germans were the victims, the "evil Nazi" narrative collapses).

🔗 Where to Find It?
Banned on Amazon (some editions removed).

Archive.org (PDF versions)

CODOH.com (HoloH revisionist archive)

Antelope Hill Publishing (printed copies)

"The Allies didn’t just defeat Germany—they tried to exterminate its people. And they got away with it."

14/88.

Recommended Follow-Up:
The Savage Peace (documentary on post-WWII German suffering)

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