Interview Conspiracy theory
In 1978, a pamphlet entitled
The Hidden Tyranny included an interview conducted by Walter White purportedly with Rosenthal that claimed Jewish Americans had implemented a
Protocols of the Elders of Zion-style plan to take over the world. The pamphlet was republished in the 1990s and distributed in Idaho by the
11th Hour Remnant Messenger, funded by wealthy entrepreneurs
Vincent Bertollini and
Carl E. Story.
[8] The Anti-Defamation League has called it
"a fabricated document" and questioned why the author would "wait to first publish the booklet until 1978, 18 months after he had spoken with Rosenthal, who was murdered in 1976."
[9] Tom Metzger reported in the
White Aryan Resistance website "that interview never took place. Walter White operated free and loose on some subjects, like this one... that interview is bogus."
[10] Daniel Levitas in his book
The Terrorist Next Door: The Militia Movement and the Radical Right attributed the bogus interview to White's wife, Opal Tanner White, an aide to
Gerald L. K. Smith, writing "since Rosenthal was dead, White was free to attribute anything she wished—however scurrilous or hateful—to the onetime Javits aide."
[11]
Roman flew his jet to Israel, evacuating the non-critically injured passengers. But it was too late for Harold Wallace Rosenthal, a promising
29-year-old American-Jewish aide to a New York senator.
Two years later, the “Rosenthal interview” was printed in an obscure white supremacist newsletter. Subsequently turned into a pamphlet called The Hidden Tyranny and posted online, the interview has since has become infamous in neo-Nazi and conspiracy theory circles. It claims Rosenthal was not murdered by Jihadi terrorists, but rather executed by his fellow Jews after he supposedly gave an interview in which he revealed plans for Jewish world domination.