Anonymous ID: 3ad774 Aug. 19, 2018, 12:19 a.m. No.2664181   🗄️.is 🔗kun

There might be some connections here.

 

https://www.killingkittens.com

"A Network for the Sexual Elite"

 

World Famous Hedonistic Parties

A World Where Women Come First

A Global Movement Founded in 2005

by Emma Sayle…

 

Killing Kittens created the world’s most exclusive, decadent and hedonistic parties, fully focused on the pursuit of female pleasure for girls in control who know what they want as well as empowering adventurous couples the world over. Since 2005, Killing Kittens has moved beyond organising parties and has grown an online kommunity of over 100,000 women, gentlemen and couples – chatting, flirting and meeting up all over the world…

 

EMMA SAYLE (FOUNDER, CEO)

When we started there was nowhere women could go, feel in control and explore their sexuality in a safe environment. Ten years in an all-girls school certainly teaches you that anything men can do, we can do too. In this environment, if you’re not judged, you feel amazing, in control … To me that’s everything, and that’s why I do it.

 

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2014/sep/28/members-only-sex-club-killing-kittens-emma-sayle

 

"In 2006 she founded The Sisterhood, a charity fundraising rowing group that briefly counted Kate Middleton as a member."

 

The Sisterhood

@TheSisterhoodUK

Ordinary girls achieving Extraordinary things both in and out of the sporting arena all to raise money for various charities.

Anonymous ID: 3ad774 Aug. 19, 2018, 12:31 a.m. No.2664242   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>2664203

A little bedtime reading:

 

In general, executions were designed to fit the crime. The authorities often burned heretics and witches, ostensibly in an attempt to purify them. Fire cleansed the soul and, when coupled with a sincere confession, gave the individual one last chance to reach heaven.

 

Of course, some heretics suffered other fates. During the Reformation, the Anabaptists, who practiced a second baptism while adults, suffered execution by drowning, a penalty referred to as their “third baptism.” Jan of Leiden, a radical reformer in Münster, was attached to a pole, had his body pierced with red-hot tongs, and his tongue ripped out, after which he was executed by having a burning dagger thrust into his chest. To complete the ritual, his body, along with two of his fellow reformers, was hung in a gibbet from the church tower for the next fifty years. Although the bodies were removed, the gibbets remained in place into the twentieth century.

 

Commoners were typically hanged. The goal was not to break the neck immediately, but rather to let the individual slowly strangle to death while he or she struggled to escape. This lengthy death would complete the humiliation of the victim who would typically flail about and, eventually, lose control of their bowels. To further punish the family of the victim, the state might display the body on a gibbet or give the body to the local medical college for dissection. Since the taboo on dissection remained fairly strong during this time period, this action further disgraced the family of the criminal.

 

Some people condemned for more heinous crimes were broken on the wheel. This entailed attaching the criminal to a large wheel and then beating him or her with iron bars over a period of time until the criminal died.

 

Regicides were tortured and then drawn and quartered. This occurred during an extended ceremony designed to emphasize the particularly awful nature of the crime. François Ravaillac, who assassinated the French King Henri IV in 1610, had molten lead and boiling oil poured on him. His arms and legs were then tied to four horses, each of which literally pulled him apart as they set off in different directions.

 

https://ultimatehistoryproject.com/executions-the-guillotine-and-the-french-revolution.html