British Army Soldier - Wounded that the 1815 Battle of Waterloo - Guilty of "Vagrancy" Despite His Untreated Wounds!

UK: 1824 “Vagrancy Act” Repealed By UK Parliament – But What Does It Mean? (28.6.2026)

During the late 1800s, this age was raised initially to “13” and then a few years later to “16” (a Christian-led investigation found that Parliamentary MPs were routinely engaging in sexual activity with young, poor street children). At aged 16 in the UK, a youth remains a minor who cannot vote or drink alcohol – but can consent to sexual intercourse, can get married (with parental permission), and join the British Army (to fight and die in wars they cannot vote for or against). It is only at “18” that an individual becomes an “Adult” in the UK. However, children used to go to work at “5”, and were sexually abused by adults – usually employers or caregivers. Working-class children were rarely educated. Middle-class children experienced idyllic upbringings – often attending boarding school at 8 years old (at least for the boys). These public schools were rife with homosexual abuse – and still are. The 1948 Welfare State effectively copied the Soviet Union and transformed UK society until the election of Thatcher in 1979 – an odious woman who destroyed a thriving UK society (we lost our free education in 1988). There was no need to abolish the Vagrancy Act in 1948 as the Labour government successfully tackled all the reasons that created homelessness. Yes – there were the odd “tramp” as we called them – but these were assumed to have chosen this lifestyle (although in reality these individuals are probably suffering from mental health issues). It is a tricky situation, as many young adults (during the 1960s) voluntarily “went on the road” as a means of self-discovery, hitch-hiking across the UK and Europe (the UK is NOT part of Europe). I suspect that new legislation will take the place of the Vagrancy Act – but that incoming migrants will be looked-after – whilst already settled British will be punished for being poor.

The Bishop of Northampton, Bishop David Oakley, has been charged with two counts of rape involving a girl under the age of 16, Staffordshire Police have announced.

UK: The Latest in a Long Line of Catholic Clerics Charged with “Child Sexual Abuse”! (26.6.2026)

Of course, it is not just the Catholic Church that has indulged in this type of behaviour – as reports emanating from within the Protestant Church reveal much the same situation. Although Protestant Priests are not celibate and can get married – instances of sexual child abuse are recurrent from one generation to the next. Some of this abuse evolves around the thorny issue of homosexuality – with other abuse involving same-sex exploitation between adults and children. These acts are committed by adult Priests who preach against homosexuality whilst they secretly participate in its behaviour. The British Establishment tends to ring-post these incidents to give the false impression that each example is the only manifestation of its type – and that very few (or no) examples have happened in the past. Each example is treated as a “one-off” that “came out of nowhere” – when in fact these incidents are regular, continuous, and diverse. It must be stressed that on available knowledge, we do not know whether the offenses in question were committed before or after this individual was ordained. These details will come-out during the trial.

Ancient Greece: How Amazon Women Altered Their Bodies to Prepare for War! (26.7.2022)

An obvious etymology of their name, “breastless,” suggested the belief that they used to burn off the right breast that they might the better draw the bow. In the Iliad Priam tells how he fought against their army in Phrygia; and one of the perilous tasks which set to Bellerophon is to march against the Amazons. In a later Homeric poem, the Amazon Penthesilea appears as a dreaded adversary of the Greeks at Troy. To win the girdle of the Amazon Queen was one of the labours of Heracles. All these adventures happened in Asia Minor; and, though this female folk was located in various places, its original and proper home was ultimately placed on the river Thermodon near the Greek colony of Amisus. But Amazons attacked Greece itself. It was told that Theseus carried off their Queen Antiope, and so they came and invaded Attica. There was a terrible battle in the town of Athens, and the invaders were defeated after a long struggle. At the feast of Theseus the Athenians used to sacrifice to the Amazons; there was a building called the Amazoneion in the western quarter of the city; and the episode was believed by such men as Isocrates and Plato to be as truly an historical fact as the Trojan war itself. The battle of the Greeks with Amazons were a favourite subject of Grecian sculptors; and, like the Trojan war and the adventure of the golden fleece, the Amazon story fitted into the conception of an ancient and long strife between Greece and Asia.’