Anonymous ID: 24643e July 13, 2026, 6:46 a.m. No.24821393   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1399

>>24821388

>9:37 am

937

Mar 10, 2018 6:19:23 PM EST

Q !UW.yye1fxo ID: fb1a66 No. 618344

GLIMPSE.

You cannot possibly imagine the size of this.

Trust the plan.

Trust there are more good than bad.

The WORLD is helping.

We are not alone.

We are all connected in this fight.

PATRIOTS UNITE.

We are winning BIG.

Watch the speech.

God bless.

Anonymous ID: 24643e July 13, 2026, 7 a.m. No.24821417   🗄️.is 🔗kun

IDF Blasts Gaza City Weapons Manufacturing Site From Where Hamas Terrorists Were Secretly Operating

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mFS4rdksXms

 

HAMAS having another bad day.

Anonymous ID: 24643e July 13, 2026, 7:28 a.m. No.24821509   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1526

Vatican sent children born out of wedlock to America as orphans for adoption

15 hrs ago

 

During the 1950s, the Catholic Church in Belgium separated thousands of newborns from their unwed mothers and put them up for adoption, often without the mothers' consent. The women were shamed into surrendering their babies by their families and a powerful church. In 2024, Pope Francis apologized for those forced adoptions. But Belgians weren't the only victims. From 1950 to 1970, the Vatican sent 3,500 Italian children to America on something called an orphan visa. The trouble was most were not orphans. Like their Belgian counterparts, they too were the children of unwed mothers. Many mothers later went searching for their children, only to discover they had been sent across an ocean. As we first reported in 2024, thousands of American adoptees are still struggling to piece together their lost lives.

 

It was a day he'll never forget. American adoptee John Campitelli was 28 years old when he was reunited with his Italian birth mother. He'd been searching for her for more than a decade—a mother he'd been told had abandoned him.

 

John Campitelli: My mom said you know, 28 years have gone by. I've never been able to bake a cake for you for your birthday. She says "I don't care what month it is, I'm gonna bake you a cake. We need to celebrate cause our prodigal son has finally come home.

 

John Campitelli was born Piero Davi in 1963 in Italy. His mother, Francesca, was unmarried and forced by her family to give him up. He was sent to a Catholic-run institution for the children of unwed mothers. Shunned and disgraced, Francesca handed her baby to the nuns. Immediately, her name was stripped from the birth records. With the stroke of a pen, Piero Davi became an orphan. Campitelli showed us the church documents that changed his life.

 

John Campitelli: It says here, "they abandoned since birth and their whereabouts are unknown." They knew damn well where my mom was. I mean she showed her documents when she handed me over. So, this is an outright lie.

 

A lie John Campitelli has spent his life unraveling. As soon as he was declared an orphan, he was eligible for adoption and a U.S. visa. He says his mother told him she had no idea. She had every intention of coming back for him.

 

John Campitelli: She said, "I never signed a paper anywhere saying that I was willing to give you up."

 

Bill Whitaker: She thought placing you in –in the institution was—was temporary?

 

John Campitelli:She thought that it would be her right to be able to get me back someday when she got her life together.

 

Bill Whitaker: She never signed you away?

 

John Campitelli: No. She said "I placed you, because I couldn't keep you at that point in time because of the family situation. But I never consented to the adoption or to the fact that you would leave Italy and you would be far from me for the rest of my life.

 

Piero Davi was one of thousands of children born out of wedlock that the Vatican repackaged as orphans. The church arranged the visas, helped by a 1950 U.S. law that broadened the definition of orphan to include a child with one parent, but one who couldn't provide care. With that leeway, the orphan program boomed. For Piero's mother—and thousands like her—it was devastating to learn the child she'd entrusted to the church had disappeared.

 

Bill Whitaker: It seems that many of these mothers had no idea that their children were being sent to the United States. Could they do anything about it?

 

Maria Laurino: No, absolutely not. You can't send a baby to the United States and then tell the adoptive parents that the, the birth mother wants the child.

 

Author Maria Laurino uncovered the Vatican's orphan program in her book, "The Price of Children." She pieced the story together from hundreds of documents in the Church's own archives in New York. Laurino told us the program hinged on a consent form the mothers were supposed to sign severing all rights to the child. But Laurino told us, doctors or lawyers sometimes signed the consent without telling the mother. Others were deliberately misled.

 

Maria Laurino: There were women who were trapped into this situation um and tremendous pressure to relinquish their children. There were women who were, were tricked, who signed forms they didn't understand. And, in the worst cases, there were women who were told their child had died.

 

Bill Whitaker: Told their child had died?

 

Maria Laurino: Yes.

 

 

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/vatican-sent-children-born-out-of-wedlock-to-america-as-orphans-for-adoption/ar-AA1sctJi?

 

ADOPTION SCAM

STATE CHILD TRAFFICKING

TAX PAYER FUNDING

GOVERNEMENT COMPLICIT