By Rory Carroll
The Guardian
May 3, 2013
Republican Party Animals operator David Stein says he is really David Cole, and that he still holds controversial views
To those who knew him, or thought they knew him, he was a
cerebral, fun-loving gadfly who hosted boozy gatherings for Hollywood's
political conservatives. David Stein brought right-wing congressmen,
celebrities, writers and entertainment industry figures together for
shindigs, closed to outsiders, where they could scorn liberals and
proclaim their true beliefs.
Over the past five years Stein's organization, Republican Party Animals, drew hundreds to regular events in and around Los Angeles, making him a darling of conservative blogs and talk shows. That he made respected documentaries on the Holocaust added intellectual cachet and Jewish support to Stein's cocktail of politics, irreverence and rock and roll.
There
was just one problem. Stein was not who he claimed. His real name can
be revealed for the first time publicly ~ a close circle of confidants
only found out the truth recently ~ as David Cole. And under that name
he was once a reviled Holocaust revisionist who questioned the existence
of Nazi gas chambers. He changed identities in January 1998.
"That was when David Cole officially expired," he told the Guardian in an interview this week. "That was the end of Cole. Or so I thought. That was when David Stein was brought into this world.
"For 15 years I have been David Stein. Now the genie is out of the bottle. I'm done. I'm finished. I'm not going to try to remain as David Stein."
Cole's
brazen reinvention as a social networker and political pundit deceived a
roll-call of conservative politicians, filmmakers, journalists and
broadcasters who had no clue about his past. A falling out with a friend
led to his unmasking in his social circle two weeks ago, when a group
of former supporters was shown YouTube clips of Cole's incendiary ~ and
until then forgotten ~ television appearances in the early 1990s.
As a combative twentysomething with tousled black hair, he was a vilified guest on chat shows hosted by Phil Donahue, Montel Williams and Morton Downey, among others, and was depicted as a neo-Nazi on news shows such as 60 Minutes and 48 Hours.
"My friends are horrified," said Cole, now aged 44 and with greying hair. "They rang and emailed to ask if it really was me. The Hollywood types are the ones hurting the most right now because they could be harmed by this. I'm feeling a certain amount of guilt."
The unmasking
shocked and angered the small, tight-knit community of Hollywood
conservatives, setting their Facebook groups ablaze and prompting
emergency meetings.
Some of Stein/Cole's erstwhile friends are
media figures with blogs, newspaper columns and syndicated radio shows.
They put a lid on the story. Not a word has been published or broadcast.
"When people found out it was, 'Oh my God, get the fuck away from him.' There was debate about whether everyone would look guilty by association," said one entertainment industry artist, a member of Republican Party Animals, who requested anonymity. "The reason we were all so pissed at him is it plays into every horrible stereotype about the right."
Cole, and the half-dozen former friends and
acquaintances interviewed for this article, stress that no one suspected
his secret and that no one should be tarred with his views.
An
additional reason for trying to contain the story, said the artist, was
to deprive Cole of further limelight.
"No one wants to give him the satisfaction of making him feel grander than he really was."
Cole,
who insists he is a genuine conservative, said his betrayal would sting
all the more because conservatives in Hollywood are a "persecuted
minority" who must hide their political convictions from the intolerant
liberals who dominate the industry:
I don't blame them for jettisoning me. Everyone is scared to death. They don't want this to range beyond Facebook.
Cole
agreed to meet the Guardian in order to give his side of the story. He
was rueful at being outed and wry about his future. "I don't expect many
people at my birthday party this year," he said.
Born in 1968 in
Los Angeles to liberal, secular-minded Jewish parents, Cole's father,
Leon, was a doctor who became controversial for introducing Elvis
Presley to Demerol. "He was accused of hooking Elvis on drugs, of
killing Elvis."
Cole did not go to university ~ "I wanted to begin
working" ~ but by the 1980s he had become fascinated by political
ideology, especially the work of fringe scholars known then as Holocaust
revisionists, subsequently renamed denialists.
He became
convinced that on some points they were right and that as a Jew, he
would undertake a quixotic quest to "correct" the historical record,
arguing that Auschwitz was not an extermination camp in the manner of
Treblinka, Sobibor, Belzac and Chelmno ~ which he acknowledged were part
of a genocidal programme against Polish Jews; that the Holocaust ended
in 1943, when the Nazis realized they needed Jewish slave labour for
factories; and that there was no overarching, genocidal plan, but an
evolving, morphing policy which claimed perhaps 4 million, rather than 6
million, Jewish lives.
The young Cole became a notorious
celebrity, the turncoat Jew, ferried from studio to studio, gleefully
clashing with historians and Jewish representatives. However he grew
uneasy when white supremacists and Islamic radicals appropriated his
"work", he said, and he halted public appearances after the Oklahoma
City bombing in 1995.
Another factor was a death threat from the Jewish Defense League, a militant, violent group. In January 1998, wanting to start anew, Cole wrote a letter to the JDL, recanting his views.
The
threat was lifted. Cole, his credibility shredded on all sides, adopted
the name Stein, chosen because it was simple and short, he said. Only a
few close friends knew the secret.
'I haven't changed my views'
The recanting was fake, he said. Cole today still challenges established Holocaust scholarship, including the certainty about Nazi gas chambers. "The best guess is yes, there were gas chambers" he says. "But there is still a lot of murkiness about the camps. I haven't changed my views. But I regret I didn't have the facility with language that I have now. I was just a kid," he said this week.
As Stein,
however, he shielded his views, not least during the next stage of his
career odyssey: the maker of respectable, conventional Holocaust
documentaries. He knew the subject, needed an income and US schools and
universities had budgets to commission such projects. He said:
"I gave mainstream audiences what they wanted."
At the same time, he
started writing op-eds under Stein and other pseudonyms, expressing what
he said was his growing fervour for a hawkish foreign policy, a strong
Israel and conservative social policy. Posts on his acerbic blog were picked up by mainstream news outlets.
When
Barack Obama was elected president in 2008, Cole sensed opportunity.
Inspired by the writer PJ O'Rourke's brand of rollicking, liquor-fuelled
conservativism, he said he launched Republican Party Animals, a
networking circle for libertarians and social conservatives which
promised spice ~ "scantily-clad women, drink, fun, loud music" ~ but not
too much. There would be no cocaine or illegality.
"Do you like
your conservative politics mixed with a healthy dose of whiskey, fine
cigars and kickass rock n' roll?" its website asked. "Do you live in a
city filled with morons wearing Che T-shirts as they mindlessly cling to
tattered, faded 2008 'Hope and Change' posters? Then WELCOME, friend ~
this is the group for you!" Blog posts assailed Obama, Occupy protestors
and alleged anti-semites.
It was a hit. Congressmen such as Thaddeus McCotter and Mike Kelly attended events, as did neo-con luminaries such as Frank Gaffney.
A
2011 summer bash off Hollywood Boulevard included Larry Elder, a
syndicated radio host; Bill Whittle, a commentator and screenwriter;
Stephen Kruiser, a comedian; Lloyd Lee Barnett, a visual effects artist
for Avatar; Nick Searcy, an actor; and William Sachs, a director. Other
Hollywood guests kept their attendance at such events discreet, to avoid
the conservative label.
Cole's mistake, he said, was to confide
his secret to a friend with whom he fell out. The friend went "nuclear"
and outed him to their conservative circle.
Besieged by followers demanding answers, Cole last week shut down much of his online presence and retreated from view. A farewell note on his blog
announced the end of his involvement with Republican Party Animals,
saying he had been "assassinated" by "an exceptionally vindictive young
lady". The note did not elaborate or confess his deception.
Former
friends and acquaintances, most speaking on condition of anonymity,
challenged elements of Cole's account to the Guardian and called him
pathologically duplicitous, alleging he padded his film resume on the
IMDb database with fictitious entries. His purported production company,
Nistarim, is Hebrew for The Concealed.
Scott Edwards, an
Oregon-based businessman, said he founded Republican Party Animals in
2009 and that Cole, claiming to be a Hollywood big-shot, took over the
website and was involved in organist just a few events. "He never ran
the group. Things started happening behind the scenes so I kicked him
out in February 2012." Cole, however, continued controlling the website,
networking and organizing events under the Republican Party Animals
banner until last month.
Holocaust experts and Jewish groups who
remembered Cole from the 1990s expressed astonishment that he had
resurfaced and still professed Holocaust revisionism.
Michael Shermer,
a historian who publishes Skeptic magazine, said Cole's views on the
the Holocaust were simplistic and appeared designed to stir controversy.
Shermer
debated and interviewed Cole several times in his youth. "I found him
to be very smart and on some level likeable, though a little irritating.
But he was too smart for his own good. He had no training as a historian. I had the impression he liked to stir things up just for the hell of it, to be a contrarian for contrarian's sake.
Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate
dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre, said Cole's views on the Holocaust
could no longer be attributed to youthful naivete.
"I'm very disappointed that someone who abused his Jewishness to get his five minutes of notoriety still stands by his lies. It's disgusting and puts him in the camp of bigotry."
ED Noor: For the first time ever, I agree with Rabbi Cooper. Only I see things differently ~ what saddens me is that Cole, the creator of such positive discourse, then spent decades creating films that were intended to push the formal party line on the event. However, I understand his going underground and recreating himself after the threats from the dastardly ADL. The responses of his shallow Hollywood associates is no surprise but their over the top response is rather disgusting.
Interestingly, just last week I reposted his excellent work at the camps! This article is, of course, coming from the Jewish media, is slanted towards the false history that is swallowed, alas, by the masses and misses no opportunity to push that narrative.
Interestingly, just last week I reposted his excellent work at the camps! This article is, of course, coming from the Jewish media, is slanted towards the false history that is swallowed, alas, by the masses and misses no opportunity to push that narrative.
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