Pedophilia is a big problem these days, and has been for a while. For decades, and more recently with the Harvey
Weinstein case,
Corey Feldman’s
revelations and more, people in positions of great power
have been
implicated in this type of activity, but it doesn’t stop in Hollywood.
Pedophilia and child trafficking has plagued the world of politics as
well as the military industrial complex for a long time. The recent Pizzagate scandal involving long time high ranking politician Jon Podesta forced many people to look into it more. Jeffrey Epstein is another classic example, or the fact that a recent NBC news report claimed
that Hillary Clinton, while acting as secretary of state, shut down an
investigation into an elite pedophile ring in State Department ranks in
order to avoid scandal and protect the careers of high ranking officials
and an ambassador. James Grazioplene, a high ranking retired army general who worked in the Pentagon and as the Vice President of DynCorp, is currently facing six rape charges of underaged persons. As far back as 2005, U.S. congresswoman Cynthia Mckinney grilled Donald Rumself on private military contractor’s (DynCorp) child trafficking business of selling women and children.
The list literally goes on and on, from
Hollywood, to politics and within the military industrial complex, all
the way up to the hub which seems to be in charge of it all, the
Vatican.
Many people have known about the
problems of pedophilia, child abuse and violence that has plagued the
vatican for a long time, but this information started to become more
mainstream only a few years ago, and it coincided with Pope Benedict’s
resignation, something that hasn’t happened for more than 600 years.
The amount of recent pedophilia cases is
enough to make you cringe, which, apart from the examples mentioned
above, include the FBI/Europol
case,
in which 350 pedophiles were busted soon after the arrest of Playpen
creator, Stephen Chase; the prominent Vatican official Cardinal George
Pell, who was found to be connected to child pornography and pedophilia;
and the 70,000-member
pedophilia ring uncovered in Norway.
Pell is a top Vatican official, and has
been an advisor to Pope Benedict, as well as Pope Francis. He’s one of
the Vatican’s most powerful officials, and is
currently facing an Australian court,
again, on charges of historic sexual assault. Last June he was charged
by detectives from Victoria Police, and is currently fighting multiple
allegations of sexual abuse, despite the fact that the details of the
charges have not been made public.
Below is a picture of Pell with pope Benedict.
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In
even more recent news, a massive amount of decades of sexual abuse was
reported in a choir that was led by the retired pope Benedict’s brother.
It’s
interesting that all of these revelations and accusations of violence,
child abuse and pedophilia coincided with the time of the pope’s
resignation, when the people closest to him were being investigated and
looked into, and at a time where it was becoming clear that child abuse
within the Vatican is just a mere ‘conspiracy theory.’
Perhaps
the most recent, is the case of approximately 600 members of a Catholic
boys’ Domspatzen choir in Regensburg, Germany, where physical and
sexual abuse ruled from 1945 to 1992. Georg Ratzinger, former Pope
Benedict’s brother, was the choir’s head from 1964 to 1994.
In
2015, a lawyer by the name of Ulrich Weber was tasked with filing a
report on what happened, and uncovered the startling fact that during
the 30 years that the choir was run by Benedict XVI’s elder brother,
approximately 600 boys with a “high degree of plausibility” were
victims of sexual and physical abuse, or both. The report identified
500 cases of physical abuse, and 67 cases of sexual abuse committed by a
total of 49 people in a position of power.
“At
the choir’s preschool, “violence, fear and helplessness dominated” and
“violence was an everyday method,” it said. “The whole system of
education was oriented toward top musical achievements and the choir’s
success, “the report said.” Alongside individual motives, institutional
motives – namely, breaking the will of the children with the aim of
maximum discipline and dedication – formed the basis for violence.” (source)
The
report implicated the pope’s brother for “looking away” and “failing to
intervene.” It’s not far fetched to believe that he was actually
involved, and perhaps this mounting pressure was the reason for
Benedict’s early retirement, and shifted attention away from them and
onto Pope Francis.
Ratzinger
did not admit anything, except for slapping pupils after he took over
the choir, and that these types of punishments and discipline were
commonplace in Germany at the time.
“He
also said he was aware of allegations of physical abuse at the
elementary school and did nothing about it, but he was not aware of
sexual abuse.”
Most
people reading this who have investigated elite level child abuse will
find it hard to believe that Ratzinger was not heavily involved. Child
abuse, murder, organ harvesting and more are a few of many rumours that
plague the vatican, and it’s almost, literally, unbelievable to fathom
that these types of things may actually be going on, and yet a large
portion of the world looks to, not only them, but the entire political
establishment to represent and guide them.
The
vatican has announced plans to offer victims ‘compensation’ between
5,000 and 20,000 euros each by the end of this year, but there is no way
to compensate for what’s been done, and it’s erie to think about how
much as gone unreported, and the gruesome, horrifying details that may
be involved.
Where
does all of this stem from? Most likely, in my opinion, from the fact
that these “leaders” went through the same thing as children, and
believe it to be perfectly normal.
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