https://www.bioscience.co.uk/products/human-plasma
https://www.bioscience.co.uk/find/?&productgroupid=11&attr[]=303&rows=25&start_row=0
https://www.bioscience.co.uk/products/human-plasma
https://www.bioscience.co.uk/find/?&productgroupid=11&attr[]=303&rows=25&start_row=0
Do we know anything about this org?
https://www.openlunar.org/
1) Steal the Stone of Destiny backfrom sassenach
2) Substitute the duplicate stone prepared in advance.
3) Arrange for the dramatic public return of the duplicate rock.
4) Claim the Stone was stolen because muh Scottish nationalism
5) Years after the infamous theft, Ian Hamilton said: “When I lifted the Stone in Westminster Abbey, I felt Scotland’s soul was in my hands.”
"Although Ian Hamilton was studying law at the University of Glasgow, on that night, he jeopardized his future career by carrying out one of the most famous thefts in the history of England. Joined by Kay Matheson, Alan Stuart, and Gavin Vernon, Hamilton broke into Westminster Abbey and stole a 336 pound piece of red sandstone: The Stone of Scone."
…Commissioned by Edward I of England, the Coronation Chair was specifically built to hold the Stone of Scone. The Stone sits beneath the seat of the chair, in a small rectangular space closed off by a wooden grille. Somehow, none of the thieves had considered how heavy the Stone is and how awkward it would be to remove it from this small space. Wrestling with the grille, the men broke one of its wooden slats: in addition, they managed to break part of the oak chair itself. As they finally pulled the Stone free of the chair, it fell to the floor, landing on one of the men and breaking two of his toes. Worse still, the Stone itself split into two uneven pieces. "
…ey chose to hide the portion of the Stone they had carried away. They succeeded in driving into Kent where they buried the Stone in an empty field. Later, returning to dig it up, they found that a group of Romany had settled into an encampment on the site. The four conspirators did eventually recover this portion of the stone and transport it to Scotland. As soon as they crossed the border into Scotland, the three men doused the Stone in whiskey as part of a homecoming ritual. Then they had the stone secretly repaired."
…Unfortunately for the four students, the police were professionals. They visited libraries in Scotland, asking if anyone had shown a special interest in the Stone of Scone. They hit pay dirt at Glasgow’s Mitchell Library"
…ernon, Stuart, and Hamilton arranged to meet the councilors at the ruins of the Abbey of Arbroath. On April 11th, 1951, the two councilors stood at the entrance to the Abbey, waiting. When the three students appeared, the councilors moved forward and helped them carry the heavy stone block in a wooden litter up the nave of the ruined Abbey. There they placed it on the floor where the high altar once stood. The students quickly left, and the councilors went directly to the police to report the presence of the Stone at Arbroath Abbey.
Meanwhile, the custodian of the Abbey, James Wishart, immediately locked the gates of the Abbey and stood guard over the Stone until the authorities arrived. The Stone was promptly removed to safety in Forfar police headquarters where it was locked into a cell. "
The substitute stone was returned to Scotland where it is displayed today.
…"While the Stone was returned to its place beneath the Coronation Chair, it no longer resides in England. Queen Elizabeth II of England and the I of Scotland, as she is properly titled, used the coronation chair and sat above the Stone in 1953. However, in 1996, the English authorities returned the Stone to Scotland on condition that they may ‘borrow’ it for any future coronation ceremonies. The Stone of Scone is now displayed with other Scottish royal regalia in Edinburgh Castle."
http://ultimatehistoryproject.com/an-infamous-theft-the-stone-of-scone.html
http://ultimatehistoryproject.com/the-kingrsquos-stone-rocks-and-ritual.html
Baby Framing in England
… In England, the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834 prohibited parishes from granting unwed mothers what was called “outdoor relief.” Poor unwed mothers could be given food, money, or clothing from the parish only if they went to live in the workhouse. Workhouses provided a bleak existence for mother and child alike. Not surprisingly, many of the women eligible for workhouse placement chose to place their children elsewhere so that they could continue to work and earn money – outside of the workhouse."
…But, from the mid-nineteenth century on, industrialization and urbanization combined with stagnant wages to create a different type of fosterage. Beginning in this period, advertisements looking for children to foster or “adopt,” as well as ads searching for a place for newborns, proliferated."
Big score for ye pedovore
…"Because the countryside was universally regarded as healthier, mothers preferred nurses whose homes were in the countryside. At the same time, the mothers preferred to work in the city, where wages were higher and the opportunities for work more plentiful. As a result, more and more women placed their children in villages and towns that were some distance from their places of work. Thus, complete strangers cared for children in villages and small towns with little oversight by the mothers."
http://ultimatehistoryproject.com/baby-farmers-and-angelmakers-childcare-in-19th-century-england.html
It's about the execution…
…In Renaissance Venice, for example, the punishment of lower-class criminals who had committed the worst crimes sometimes combined elements of public humiliation, mutilation and execution. Often a criminal was taken to the scene of the crime. At this point, he or she might undergo a ritual mutilation related to the offense. Thus, a murderer might have his or her hand, typically the one used to commit the crime, cut off. The hand would then be hung around the criminal’s neck. As the criminal wound his or her way to the execution site, the procession sometimes stopped as authorities announced the crime; this tactic ensured that bystanders knew what had happened and what the penalty for the crime was. "
…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. ".
..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."
…oseph Guillotin, a medical doctor and member of the revolutionary National Assembly, championed the guillotine, proposing its use to the state in October 1789."
…With the guillotine, death could now be nearly instantaneous, with considerably less pomp and circumstance. Executions by guillotine were certainly well attended, but they lacked some of the extended spectacle of earlier execution rituals. Now the executioner simply pulled a cord, the blade fell, and it was all over except, perhaps, for a display of the head to the crowd."
..However, what the guillotine lacked in overall drama it certainly made up for in volume. "
….Under this system, at least 40,000 people were killed. As many as 300,000 Frenchmen and women (1 in 50 Frenchmen and women) were arrested during a ten month period between September 1793 and July 1794. Included in these numbers were, of course, the deaths of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. Although all social classes and professions were targeted, the death toll was especially high for both clergy and aristocrats. "
…Many of the leaders of the Terror were themselves put to death including, most notably, Robespierre himself. Curiously, Robespierre had argued against war for most of his career, but he had then gone on to lead France into the age of Terror.
Robespierre tried to commit suicide before being guillotined but failed. Although he had obtained a gun and fired it at his head, he wound up only with a mangled jaw. There was to be no mercy, however. To fit his head in the window for the guillotine, the executioner had to first rip off his bandages."
…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.
Image: 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. "
http://ultimatehistoryproject.com/executions-the-guillotine-and-the-french-revolution.html
Yes.