Anonymous ID: b109b4 Feb. 24, 2025, 10:39 a.m. No.22647701   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7945 >>8217 >>8367

Trafficking of children by NGOs and Child Protective Services feeds child sex abuse industry in the USA

 

Rhonda Miller is an independent analyst of some of the worst abuses that have afflicted children throughout the Western world. She began working with Dr. Judith Reisman, another independent analyst and dear friend of ours who took on Alfred Kinsey and his popular books aimed at destroying the moral fibre of our sexual life and who tortured children in the name of proving their sexuality.

 

She has succeeded in defunding the Kinsey Institute at Indiana University but is now finding resistance in getting it closed and in exposing its files confirming the criminal abuse of children by Alfred Kinsey and the people who worked with him and for him.

 

She has branched out into much broader studies of how global forces, toward the goal of destroying America, have been corrupting our schools and educational system and even turned the network of child and protective services into child trafficking.

 

Her examination discloses the efforts of Bill Gates, the Rockefellers and the UN in corrupting America’s children on every possible level. This podcast is an eye-opener on many levels of the abuse of children around the globe.

 

It delves deeply into the pattern of the close relationship between concentrations of power in institutions and people and the inevitable accumulation of evil in these power centres, often marked by child abuse, sex trafficking and enslavement followed by murder.

 

Rhonda Miller, the CEO of Purple for Parents United, has been working to unmask Alfred Kinsey’s evil work which has been influential in shaping modern attitudes towards sex and child abuse in the USA.

 

The Kinsey Institute, founded by Alfred Kinsey, published two books in the 1950s: ‘Sexual Behaviour in the Human Male’ in 1948 and ‘Sexual Behaviour in the Human Female’ in 1953, which were influenced by CIA funding, promoted the idea that humans are multi-sexual and sex beings from birth.

 

The books were based on experiments on child abuse and data gathered from paedophiles and rapists, which Rhonda Miller and her mentor Dr. Judith Reisman have been working to expose as part of the CIA’s MK Ultra experiments, also known as the LSD experiments, funded by the Rockefeller Foundation.

 

The experiments involved sexually stimulating young boys around the clock to determine how many orgasms they would have in 24 hours. They also included testing the sexual appetite of women and children before and after lobotomy, which is a horrific and inhumane practice.

 

The Kinsey Institute, located at Indiana University, was at the centre of these experiments. The Institute was defunded in 2023 due to the efforts of Purple for Parents United which worked to educate the public and put pressure on legislators to take action.

 

Alfred Kinsey’s work, Miller said, has contributed to the explosion of pornography use in America, making the country the number one consumer and producer of pornography.

 

https://expose-news.com/2025/02/24/trafficking-of-children-by-ngos-and-cps/

Anonymous ID: b109b4 Feb. 24, 2025, 10:43 a.m. No.22647731   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7945 >>8217 >>8367

Leader of the H-2 Drug Cartel Extradited from Mexico to Face Narcotics Trafficking, Firearms and Money Laundering Charges in Brooklyn Federal Court

 

https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/leader-h-2-drug-cartel-extradited-mexico-face-narcotics-trafficking-firearms-and-money

Anonymous ID: b109b4 Feb. 24, 2025, 10:52 a.m. No.22647786   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7790 >>7826 >>7831 >>7945 >>8217 >>8367

Judge Blocks Education Department, OPM From Sharing Data With DOGE

 

A federal judge on Feb. 24 blocked two agencies from sharing sensitive information with employees of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).

 

“The U.S. Department of Education; Denise L. Carter, the Acting Secretary of Education; and their officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys are ENJOINED from disclosing the personally identifiable information of the plaintiffs and the members of the plaintiff organizations to any DOGE affiliates,” U.S. District Judge Deborah L. Boardman wrote in a 33-page order.

 

The Office of Personnel Management (OPM) and its employees are also forbidden from disclosing the same information to DOGE workers, the judge said.

 

The temporary restraining order is in effect until March 10 as the case proceeds. It could be extended, converted into a preliminary injunction, or allowed to expire.

 

The American Federation of Teachers and other groups recently asked the court to block officials with the OPM, Department of Education (DOE), and U.S. Department of Treasury from conveying sensitive records to DOGE employees.

 

Allowing DOGE access to the records endangers the privacy rights of veterans and other people represented by the groups, the organizations said in their request to the federal court in Maryland.

 

Government lawyers argued that the judge should reject the motion for a restraining order because government officials have not violated the plaintiffs’ privacy.

 

“At the heart of Plaintiffs’ theory is the baseless allegation that ‘DOGE representatives’ at the Defendant agencies are somehow outside the category of federal employees, or outside the category of federal employees in their respective agencies. Neither criticism withstands scrutiny. The Privacy Act therefore expressly allows disclosure of information protected under that statute in the circumstances of this case,” the lawyers wrote in a filing.

 

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/judge-blocks-education-department-opm-sharing-data-doge

Anonymous ID: b109b4 Feb. 24, 2025, 11:05 a.m. No.22647856   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Trump lifts ban on US weapons companies bribing foreigners

 

By freezing enforcement of the FCPA, he risks reopening the door for more corruption in the domestic arms industry

 

On February 10, President Trump issued an executive order that directed Attorney General Pam Bondi to pause the enforcement of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. The FCPA was the first law in modern history to ban a country’s own citizens and companies from bribing foreign officials.

 

Citing the law as one of the “excessive barriers to American commerce abroad,” President Trump has instructed the attorney general to — at her discretion — “cease the initiation of any new FCPA investigations or enforcement actions.” The executive order further requires the DOJ to provide remedial measures for those who have faced "inappropriate" penalties as a result of past FCPA investigations and guilty verdicts.

 

This move by the Trump administration to pause enforcement of the foreign bribery law now and allow it to be put on the shelf later risks a revival of the pre-1970s period, when bribery was a routine practice among major U.S. arms contractors.

 

In the post-Watergate reform period in Congress, in late 1975 and early 1976, Idaho Senator Frank Church’s Subcommittee on the Conduct of Multinational Corporations of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee exposed widespread foreign bribery on the part of U.S. oil and aerospace firms, with the starring role played by Lockheed Martin, which bribed officials in Japan, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, Indonesia, Mexico, and Colombia in pursuit of contracts for its civilian and military aircraft.

 

The revelations caused political turmoil in the recipient countries, led to the resignation of Lockheed’s two top executives, and prompted Congress to pass the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977.

 

The repercussions were most severe in Japan, where Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka was arrested and convicted of receiving bribes in the scandal — the first time a sitting Japanese prime minister had been arrested, in what one analyst called “Japan’s biggest scandal of the postwar era.”

 

Sen. Church made it clear that in his mind, the problem went far beyond the question of corruption: “It is no longer sufficient to simply sigh and say that is the way business is done. It is time to treat the issue for what it is: a serious foreign policy problem.”

 

Among the issues he cited were potential destabilization of democratic allies and closer ties with reckless, dictatorial regimes driven by financial motivations rather than careful consideration of U.S. security interests.

 

As noted above, President Trump’s primary reason for freezing enforcement of the anti-bribery law is that he believes it has been used unfairly, to the detriment of U.S. companies and U.S. security. This argument does not hold up to scrutiny.

 

First of all, there is no evidence that outlawing bribery has hurt the U.S. arms industry. The United States has been the world’s largest arms supplier by a large margin for 25 of the past 26 years, and major U.S. arms offers reached near record levels of $145 billion last year.

 

The real issue is how to stop dangerous, counterproductive arms transfers, not how to make it easier to cash in on sales that too often undermine U.S. interests.

 

https://responsiblestatecraft.org/foreign-corrupt-practices-act/