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Weronika Kuzniar-Clark has a master’s with honors in military history and excels at contextualizing World War II and the Third Reich. She is the author of more than thirty books and articles on this subject and has been a guest on numerous podcasts.

The ultimate purpose of her publications and podcast appearances is to demonstrate how Third Reich history, in particular, is being used these days as a weapon by both the Left and the Right to curtail or eliminate free speech and free thought.

And if there were ever a time to learn more about World War II and National Socialist Germany, it is now. That’s because, according to Weronika, the current situation in the Middle East is directly attributable to what happened in that war.

As well, the “holocaust” story has enabled Jews and Zionists, post-World War II, to commit crimes against humanity, censor free speech, and extract resources from non-Jewish nations with impunity.

In her years of doing independent research, Weronika has come to believe that unless we understand how foundational National Socialism’s persecution of Jewry is to Jewish and Zionist behavior today, we will never understand the full picture correctly.

Below are Weronika’s credentials:

Weronika Kuzniar-Clark received her bachelor’s degree with high honors in Liberal Studies with Global Political Science in 2005 from California State University San Marcos and her master’s degree with honors in Military History in 2009 from Norwich University in Vermont. In 2010, she completed one year of doctoral (PsyD) courses with a 4.00 GPA at the University of the Rockies.

She offers exclusive research centered on World War II and the Third Reich. She is knowledgeable, open-minded, and inquisitive—three keys that set her understanding of history apart from the rest. One result of her voluminous research is this impressive fact: Weronika has translated, edited, written and/or published more than 35 scholarly works and books to date.

Her books, CDs, and podcasts appeal to knowledge-seekers interested in unconventional Third Reich and World War II history and in understanding the basis of anti-Western sentiment today. She is equally conversant with omitted black history pertaining to World War II.

Unlike most academic historians, Weronika writes and speaks in congenial language that is both serious and humorous. (Her penchant for lightheartedness is visible in the photographs featured in her videos.) Her writing and conversations are understandable to readers and listeners at all levels of higher learning.