I've noticed that the Holocaust historians like Nick Terry seem to like going around and around in circles with their old foes like Carlo Mattogno.
All the while, new writers are springing up outside these circles; people like Alan Hart and Paul Eisen, to mention two I found just with one search on other things altogether.
Not to mention Gilad Atzmon, who somehow seems to have intimidated Alan Dershowitz into pretending he doesn't matter (Atzmon offered to debate Dershowitz, Dershowitz didn't even acknowledge it, and Mearsheimer refused an offer from Dershowitz).
Since the HD thread has fallen off the frontpage, it took me a while to notice Major Major "noticing" me. Pretty much everything that MM has said, however, is wrong.
Firstly: I am more or less the only historian of the Holocaust currently taking an active interest in contemporary Holocaust denial; others don't bother. Academic research on denial is generally done by lawyers and specialists in right-wing extremism.
Secondly, you won't find me going 'round and round' with Mattogno since I've only ever written one piece (linked in my sig) and a few blog articles from 2006-7 about him, and Mattogno hasn't replied to them.
If you are referring to my co-authors on the critique linked below, then only Roberto Muehlenkamp actually seems to enjoy going 'round and round' with denier gurus, and then mainly to expose the fact that the gurus are the ones going 'round and round'. The other co-authors don't do this any longer.
Or if you are referring to the debates on JREF, then I think you'll find that plenty of people enjoyed going "round and round" with deniers for a time, until the local contingent of deniers became so tedious and incoherent they couldn't keep the ball in the air anymore. Which is why the thread has fallen off the frontpage.
Thirdly, your 'new writers' aren't actually new names but have been around for some time. One, Alan Hart, is vocally
against Holocaust denial and thinks it's a colossal distraction from their common cause, which is anti-Zionism.
It is really not difficult to work out that while almost all Holocaust deniers are anti-Zionists, very few anti-Zionists are Holocaust deniers. Paul Eisen, Gilad Atzmon and a few others such as Daniel McGowan are all fairly rigidly excluded from the mainstream anti-Zionist movement precisely because they cross the line over into denial, or consort with overt antisemites too frequently.
Fourth, all the 'new writers' you name are utterly dependent on the supposed authority of guru level deniers like Mattogno, Faurisson, Leuchter or Butz, since not a single one of them writes anything that can be vaguely considered to be history. All the guru deniers at least pretend to be historians whereas none of your new names can be bothered. They simply tout the virtues of 'revisionism'. Therefore there is nothing to 'debunk', since these soapbox rants are essentially content-free, and one might as well address the organ-grinders rather than the monkeys.
It so happens that I have just finished the formal write-up for academic publication of a conference paper I gave in 2010 that surveyed the contemporary denier scene and examined all the links and filiations from the extreme right, white nationalists, conspiracy theorists, anti-Zionists etc. The conference paper was deemed noteworthy enough that
the Jewish Chronicle interviewed me about it, and summarised my core arguments.
Denial is a tripartite phenomenon: there are a small number of gurus who 'research' the Holocaust, i.e. people like Mattogno; a slightly larger pool of cheerleaders like Paul Eisen, Bradley Smith, Bishop Williamson etc who trumpet the supposed virtues of 'revisionism'; and a somewhat larger group of footsoldiers, i.e. anonymous internet posters like Clayton Moore or the average member of CODOH forum, who spam weblinks, YouTube videos and generally act like any other internet advocate of a loony idea.
Compared to 10 or 12 years ago, the number of
active gurus has declined dramatically. A number have died, others have become little more than preaching cheerleaders (like Faurisson). There are now barely half a dozen pseudohistorians writing in the denier mode. The number of cheerleaders hasn't really increased, and for every 'new' voice, an old one vanishes. The base of support for denial, and the recruiting-ground for footsoldiers, is only slightly different, with more coming from a 'CT' background, but most still come from the far right.
I'm not convinced that the internet has actually really increased the prevalence of denial compared to the past; it's just drawn a little more attention to it. Website traffic figures for denier sites are not much different to the number of subscribers to their journals 20 years ago, i.e. a few thousand/month.
On the whole, the new base of support in the CT scene is not going to add coherence or relevance to denial, (a) because other CTs are much more appealing and relevant to contemporary affairs, (b) because crank magnetism means that advocates of multiple CTs are ineffective at propagating any of their ideas, and (c) because cranks suffering from crank magnetism are almost all incapable of dedicating themselves to their 'craft' and turning themselves into gurus or even effective campaigning bloggers.
The far right has realised that denial is a vote-loser, time-waster and dead end. This is very visible in Europe (think Nick Griffin and Marine Le Pen) but also apparent in the internet white nationalist scene, where people like Kevin Macdonald and Greg Johnson reject HD despite being fervent antisemites. One white nationalist blogger called HD "strategic buffoonery".
And so it is for the anti-Zionists, which is why Atzmon is relatively marginal in that movement. Incidentally, part of the 'base' for his popularity has recently been undermined by
the crisis in the Socialist Workers' Party in the UK. A senior SWP cadre who liked jazz and basically insisted that members go to Atzmon's shows has become the centre of a mini-Assange rape scandal, which is currently tearing the SWP apart. The much bigger Palestine Solidarity Campaign (with 2-3 times the number of members of the SWP) expelled Atzmonites a while back.
So these 'new voices' are cut adrift on the internet, where they can find an audience on sites like Veterans Today or Press TV, but those sites are repositories of every kind of crankery and politically motivated conspiracy theorising out there, and thus their 'support' is not going to increase the coherence of Holocaust denial as a movement or idea, especially not when Paul Eisen et al seem happy to refer back to the HD heroes of
a quarter of a century ago, like Leuchter and Zundel.
As to Atzmon debating Dershowitz: nothing compels anyone to live-debate anyone else. Atzmon has no political or academic standing, he is just a writer/saxophonist with a certain following. Other commentators, whether they are "just" bloggers or are mainstream journalists, can comment and criticise Atzmon for his views. Atzmon or his supporters can criticise them back. Live debates are for Presidential elections, internet forums or high schools/sixth forms, and are not that common in other parts of the public sphere.
Written debates are infinitely more common - someone writes something, someone else criticises, there are replies, and everyone else joins in. Thus, the blogosphere, op-ed pages and so forth.
Obviously, those written dialogues would include Alan Hart saying Holocaust deniers need their heads examining, which in turn led various antisemites to accuse Hart, a fervent anti-Zionist who would seem to be fairly happy to see Israel disappear from the map, of being a Zionist stooge.
See the comments on three recent blog posts by Hart for examples.
The fact that a number of the commentators on those blog posts turn out to be CODOH forum members, i.e. drawn from a group numbering barely past 700 people despite the forum being around for more than a decade, is a good reflection of the marginality of denial as an idea. Indeed, the same names or userhandles recur constantly when surveying denier activities on the internet. A whole bunch of them post at Stormfront, or CODOH, then troll JREF, Skeptics Society Forum or the New Statesman, or get themselves banned from The Guardian's Comment is Free section or the Daily Mail website. After a while, the frenetic activism drops off, and the denier troll gives up out of exhaustion, and does something else instead.