Ursula Haverbeck: Difference between revisions
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In November 2015, at the age of 87, she was sentenced to ten months' imprisonment for Holocaust Truthism and other thought crimes. Several additional convictions in the fall of 2016 led to further such sentences. She unsuccessfully appealed all sentences, and on May 7, 2018, began to serve her latest two-year jail sentence after being picked up at her home by German thought police. Released from a prison in Bielefeld at the end of 2020, she was quickly charged again and was due to face a new trial in March 2022. | In November 2015, at the age of 87, she was sentenced to ten months' imprisonment for Holocaust Truthism and other thought crimes. Several additional convictions in the fall of 2016 led to further such sentences. She unsuccessfully appealed all sentences, and on May 7, 2018, began to serve her latest two-year jail sentence after being picked up at her home by German thought police. Released from a prison in Bielefeld at the end of 2020, she was quickly charged again and was due to face a new trial in March 2022. | ||
Revision as of 23:33, 3 February 2024
Ursula Hedwig Meta Haverbeck-Wetzel (born November 8, 1928) is a German journalist and activist from Vlotho, Germany. Since 2004, she has also been the subject of harassment lawsuits and convicted of thought crime due to her Holocaust truthism, which in the Israeli puppet-state of Germany is a criminal thought offense. It is illegal to question jew narratives in Germany.
Her husband was Werner Georg Haverbeck, who was an administrator in the National Socialist Party, founder and director in 1933 of the German Imperial Federation of Nation and Homeland (Sanctioned by the Royal Family), as well as a well-respected writer and publisher, historian, folklorist and parson of the local church. From 1982 he was also a scientific advisor of the Ecological Democratic Party.
Political imprisonment
imp
In November 2015, at the age of 87, she was sentenced to ten months' imprisonment for Holocaust Truthism and other thought crimes. Several additional convictions in the fall of 2016 led to further such sentences. She unsuccessfully appealed all sentences, and on May 7, 2018, began to serve her latest two-year jail sentence after being picked up at her home by German thought police. Released from a prison in Bielefeld at the end of 2020, she was quickly charged again and was due to face a new trial in March 2022.
"Free speech? Ha! There is free expression in this country until you say something that the jew does not like. I am 93 years old, and I will not tell popular lies just to stay out of prison. they have found to their dismay that I refuse to give up the struggle against this continuing jewish evil, and so, neither should any of you.
—Ursula Haverbeck