But.. it is the Protestants who are running England, its church as well as 
Australia and NZ. 
I correct my selves: Being Christian in any form is a mask.. It is the Bank of 
England indeed which is enslaving the whole world.. since 300 years 

=======
  S1000+ 
  =======



--- On Thu, 11/19/09, Rebel <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Rebel <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: 500,000 children kidnapped by the BOE to whiten Australia
To: "World-thread" <[email protected]>
Date: Thursday, November 19, 2009, 2:28 PM


The catholic Church in Australia issued an apology, Guess that is all
they do nowadays. The British Government shipped them out because they
did not want the burden of looking after them, and also to introduce
White stock into the population.

Again we are looking at the Catholic organization that has been using
these children as sex slaves and work surfs, No one care today what
happens, people are now programmed to accept this as the norm,

On Nov 16, 3:30 am, "Sumerian.." <[email protected]> wrote:
> BOEE: Bank Of  E. England..
> This apology reminds me of a scene in a film. There was a fight in a steam / 
> SONA room between some gangs, and one guy hit by a knife another in his back, 
> but while that man was falling he realized that he hit the wrong man, and he 
> said to him: "Sorry for that". .. What is the benefit of saying sorry.. 
> without any criminal consequences..
> It is a kind of a game to keep free the criminals..So why they - the same men 
> of this evil empire- executed those Germans following WWII trials..
> Shouldn't there be trial, and maybe execusion.. Most likely Churchill bones 
> to be thrown to the sharks for example, including 50 meters  in 3 dimensions 
> of the polluted soil which was responsible to bury his evil soul all these 
> years.S1000+
>
> Tears flow as nation hears apology
> Posted 4 hours 9 minutes ago
>
> Updated 2 hours 59 minutes ago
>
> Remembering the forgotten:
> the Prime Minister says it is important to acknowledge "great evil has
> been done" (ABC News: Jeremy Thompson)
>
> Many tears were shed today as Prime Minister Kevin
> Rudd delivered the historic apology to the hundreds of thousands of
> Forgotten Australians.
>
> Almost 1,000 men and women travelled from around Australia to hear
> Mr Rudd and Opposition Leader Malcolm Turnbull apologise for the abuse,
> neglect and suffering they endured in foster care and orphanages
> between the 1920s and 1970s.
>
> Mr Rudd also extended the nation's remorse to the 7,000 child
> migrants, most of whom travelled to Australia from the UK under the
> mistaken belief that their parents had died.( In fact Radio NZ said clearly 
> that children were kidnapped from their families and sent abroad .. Sure 
> people or criminals like Churchill were in the core of such English  empire 
> related decision S1000+)
>
> Addressing the crowd who gathered in Parliament House's Great Hall,
> he says the apology should mark a turning point in the nation's history
> to ensure it is never repeated.
>
> Mr Rudd says it is important to acknowledge "great evil has been done".
> Mary Smith says she is glad she made the effort to come from Western 
> Australia to hear the apology.
>
> "It made me cry. I said it wasn't going to make me cry but it did," she said.
> "Both political parties were exceptionally good with their speeches.
>
> "After listening to the speeches, they were excellent. Got right down to the 
> nitty gritty.
> "It takes a bit of the pressure off you, really."
>
> Ms Smith says she likes the idea of the Government's pledge to give
> Forgotten Australians special care in old age and a national service to
> help people find their families.
>
> "I think it's a brilliant idea, if it goes ahead," she said.
> But Ms Smith says she is not seeking compensation.
> "It's all too late," she said.
> Healed
> Around 500,000 children, including thousands of child migrants, grew
> up in government-run institutions and foster care and many had been
> lobbying for for an apology from the Federal Government since it was
> recommended by a Senate committee in 2004.
>
> Rayleene O'Hehir and her two sisters were forced into an orphanage in 
> Sydney's south-west in the 1950s when she was nine.
>
> Ms O'Hehir watched the apology from home and said it had a huge impact on her.
> "I don't think I have ever felt such a relief, because now everybody out 
> there knows exactly what happened," she said.
>
> "I now know my sisters and my family will be so solid with each
> other because we know we are human and that should not have happened.
>
> "I just thank the Government with all my heart to have let people
> know this and help us. We certainly need the help because it's a thing
> you can't forget and a thing you can't put behind you.
>
> "We can now go forward with all our hearts - not half broken - healed."
> Sexual abuse
> Melbourne resident Sue Wilson, who was sent to an orphanage near
> Albury run by the Mercy nuns, was in Canberra to witness the apology.
>
> She says she was more fortunate than most others, including her two brothers.
>
> "A couple of years ago one mentioned something and I brought
> something up with the other one and I've had a lot of problems
> communicating with him since. He just doesn't want to know," she said.
>
> "I can believe it was sexual abuse. In what form I don't know. I
> know one was mildly, if you can call it mildly, sexually abused.
>
> "And the other one, I think it might have been a lot more and he was in 
> BoysTown and an orphanage in Goulburn."
> Too little, too late
> The British High Commissioner to Australia, Baroness Valerie Amos,
> says the UK Government will also say sorry early next year for its role
> in sending children to Australia.
> "We're going to go out for a period of consultation because we think
> it's really important that we get the terminology right," Baroness Amos
> said.
>
> "We acknowledge that this has been a shocking period in our history and it's 
> important that we say sorry."
>
> Like the British children sent to Australia and Canada, many of
> those who also arrived in New Zealand ended up in orphanages or foster
> care and were neglected and abused.
>
> Some of New Zealand's child migrants say a formal apology from the
> UK government will be a positive step, but it will come too late for
> many.
>
> A total of 549 British children were sent to New Zealand between 1920 and 
> 1967, often without their parents' consent.
>
> Malcolm Axcell came to Auckland in 1949 and was treated appallingly.
> He told Radio New Zealand that he is happy the Australian government
> has apologised.
>
> "This could be a start for, not a new life, at least a start towards
> helping them get over the trauma of what happened to them," he said.
>
> Tags:
> community-and-society, child-abuse, government-and-politics, 
> federal-government, world-politics, australia, act, united-kingdom, england
>
> =======
>   S1000+
>   =======




      
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