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viernes, 30 de noviembre de 2012

SWITZERLAND´S DIRTY SECRET: SLAVE CHILDREN

By Salvatore Scimino
November 30, 2012


 
                                                                              Source: Childaware


Switzerland is depicted as a paradise in magazines, movies, TV and the news. But it is far from that. The truth is that this alpine country has got tonnes of secrets and a dark history like all European nations. 

It is not about laundered money, millionaires´ secret accounts nor the Jew´s gold. Neither is  about pedophilia or whether or not the Swiss are the depository of the Templar´s gold (Fig. 1), the lost treasure which was supposed to have been taken to Mexico or Oak Island in Nova Scotia in Canada by the Sinclair, a Scottish clan, before Christopher Columbus, according to some historians. 


                                 Figure 1. Swiss gold. Source: Swissinfo.ch.


Nevertheless, regarding the latter, we should add that this gold was brought to the Alps by the Templars in 1291 after the fall of Acre where these banking knights used it to fertilise their new project, the Old Swiss Confederacy (Fig. 2), which centuries later turned into modern Switzerland, the place where all of the mafiosi keep their fortunes: money, sweat and blood stolen from all of humanity around the world.


                             Figure 2. Federal Chapter of 1291.



No, it is not about any of the above. It is about the slave children, Switzerland´s lost generation, the "verdingkinder" (contract children) (Video 1):


                                         Video 1. Slave Children in Switzerland.


References

McColl-Sylvester L. & Ponticelli F. (2008). Secrets of Swiss Banking: An Owner´s Manual to Quietly Building a Fortune. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., NY. 272 p.

Sora S. (2006). El Tesoro Perdido de los Templarios. Editorial Planeta, Barcelona. 350 p.

Wohlwend L. & Honegger A. (2009). Gestohlene Seelen. Verdingkinder in der Schweiz. Hüber, Zürich. 196 p.

Yahya H. (2007). Templars and the Freemasons. Privately published. 176 p.

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