Nicholas Kollerstrom

Nicholas Kollerstrom, Ph.D., holds degrees from Cambridge and London. For 11 years, he was a member of staff of the Department of Science and Technology Studies at University College London. A distinguished historian of science, he contributed three entries, including on Sir Isaac Newton, to the biographical Encyclopedia of Astronomers (2nd ed., 2014). An academician with a social conscience, Nick co-organized the Belgrano Inquiry in 1986, publishing The Unnecessary War (1988) as its proceedings, and co-edited The Case Against War (Spokesman, 2004). He is also the author of Terror on the Tube on the London 7/7 Subway bombings (4th edition, 2014), and spoke at the Vancouver 9/11 Hearings held there in 2012. He has furthermore edited, authored and co-authored, i.a.: Lead on the Brain (1982), Astrochemistry (1984), The Eureka Effect (1994), Newton’s Forgotten Lunar Theory (2000), Galileo’s Astrology (2004), Venus, the Path of Beauty (2009), The Life and Death of Paul McCartney 1942–1966 (2015), How Britain Initiated both World Wars (2016), False Flags over Europe (2018); his recent Who Did 9/11? (2019) .

  • Breaking the Spell

    Breaking the Spell shows that “witness statements” supporting the human gas chamber narrative clearly clash with the available scientific data. The author juxtaposes the commonly accepted ideas about a Nazi extermination policy toward the Jews with a wide array of mostly unchallenged, but usually unmentioned evidence pointing in a quite different direction, among them most notably German radio messages from the concentration camps intercepted and decrypted by the British…

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