Ahhhhh, Sumerian, you need a little education son. The bank of
England ? tut tut.

On Nov 19, 9:58 pm, "Sumerian.." <[email protected]> wrote:
> 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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