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In this video, the speaker discusses various issues related to compromised institutions in Australia. They mention a former prime minister being involved in a police document, as well as the compromise demonstrated by 60 Minutes in the UK. The speaker appeals for the inclusion of the institution of law in the terms of reference for the Royal Commission into the Institutional Treatment of children. They also highlight their efforts to remove a judge from the bench and express their concerns about the treatment of children in the family law court. The speaker mentions the Wood Royal Commission and the legal fraternity's involvement in a brothel club. They emphasize the need to clean up the act and give consideration to the victims. The speaker concludes by discussing the surveillance of a judge and the lack of cooperation between the AFP and the New South Wales Police.

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The UK is uncovering vast pedophile networks that operated between the 1970s and 1990s, involving over 1,400 men, including 261 high-profile individuals. The country is questioning why it turned a blind eye to such widespread scandals. The numbers are staggering, with over 100,000 children believed to have been abused. One victim, Nick, testified that his father regularly abused him and delivered him as a sex slave to a group of politicians, affecting 15 to 20 other boys. More cases are emerging, with 1,433 suspects reported to the police. Among them, 216 have died, but there are still 76 politicians, 43 individuals from the music industry, 135 from television, radio, or film, and 7 from the sports world. This scandal follows the Jimmy Saville case, where a BBC presenter was revealed to have abused hundreds of children without consequences.

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The speaker suggests including the institution of the law in the terms of reference, providing documents to justify their case. These documents, seen by the Royal Commission and various Attorney Generals, include police documents that name 28 people as alleged pedophiles, signed off by Gary Crook QC. The speaker refrains from commenting on the Commission's thoughts but mentions that they believed it was outside their terms of reference. The speaker highlights a compromise at the highest levels in Australia, with a former prime minister being mentioned in the police document.

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The speaker suggests including the institution of the law in the terms of reference, presenting disturbing police documents that name 28 alleged pedophiles, including prominent individuals. They mention that the Royal Commission has seen these documents, but it was deemed outside their terms of reference. The speaker highlights a compromise at the highest levels, with a former prime minister being mentioned in the police document.

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The speaker suggests including the institution of the law in the terms of reference, presenting documents that justify this. These documents, seen by the Royal Commission and various Attorney Generals, are police documents that name 28 alleged pedophiles, including prominent individuals. The speaker refrains from commenting on the Commission's thoughts but mentions that they believed it was beyond their scope. The speaker highlights a compromise at the highest levels, with a former prime minister being mentioned in the police document.

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The speaker suggests including the institution of the law in the terms of reference, supported by documents seen by the Royal Commission. These documents, including police records, name 28 individuals as alleged pedophiles, including prominent figures. The speaker refrains from commenting on the Commission's thoughts but mentions that they deemed it outside their terms of reference. The speaker highlights a compromise at the highest levels, with a former prime minister being mentioned in the police document.

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The speaker suggests including the institution of the law in the terms of reference, presenting disturbing police documents to justify this. These documents name 28 people as alleged pedophiles, including prominent individuals, and were signed off by Gary Crook QC, Counsel assisting an earlier Royal Commission. The speaker refrains from commenting on the Commission's thoughts but mentions that they believed it was beyond their terms of reference. The speaker highlights a compromise at the highest levels in Australia, with a former prime minister being mentioned in the police document.

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The speaker suggests including the institution of the law in the terms of reference, providing documents to the Royal Commission that name 28 people as alleged pedophiles, including prominent individuals. They mention that the Royal Commission deemed it outside their terms of reference. The speaker highlights a compromise at the highest levels, with a former prime minister being mentioned in the police document.

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In Australia, there are high-level compromises involving a former prime minister and police documents. The speaker raises concerns about the legal system's integrity, including disturbing cases and the need for accountability. They emphasize the importance of addressing institutional failures and supporting victims. The speaker also highlights the work of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse. They stress the need for cleaning up the system and ensuring justice for all. The discussion concludes with a reminder that nobody is above the law and the importance of taking allegations seriously and involving the police when necessary.

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The speaker delivers a stark account of a grave moral failure in British history: for decades, children across the United Kingdom, some as young as four, were groomed, trafficked, raped, beaten, tortured, drugged, impregnated, criminalized, murdered, and psychologically destroyed by organized groups. These were not isolated incidents or expressions of sexual gratification; they were sustained campaigns of exploitation against terrified, vulnerable children who were systematically trapped. Children were degraded, humiliated, and controlled through violence, threats, drugs, alcohol, and terror. They were forced to fight to carry weapons, sell drugs, and commit murder, with some made to dig their own graves. Extreme abuses are described, including petrol poured over victims and set on fire, scriptures from the Koran read during gang rapes, young children placed inside microwaves, ovens, and freezers in attempts to murder them, ouija boards used to call spirits, and animals killed in sexual acts against children. Some were passed from rapist to rapist, and not all survived; survivors faced suicide, substance abuse, or murder. The abuse extended beyond sexual exploitation, reflecting a pursuit of power and domination and the systematic destruction of a child’s sense of self. The speaker emphasizes that, years later, professionals pressured survivors to take medication or risk losing custody of their children, and victims were told they were too damaged to care for their own kids. They were removed from families, placed into the care system, and trafficked, with rapists invited into the lives and custody of the next generation. Children born from these crimes were forced into contact with their mothers’ rapists by social workers and the family courts. The professionals who should have protected them did not, and some still do not. The inquiry is exposing the scale of institutional failure: warning signs, reports, patterns, and evidence ignored or destroyed; victims dismissed as troubled, promiscuous, or consenting; children in care raped by staff and sold to gangs; parents threatened with fines or arrests for attempting to safeguard their children. The speaker notes that whistleblowers were targeted and silenced, and politics played a role. Political parties sacrificed children for votes, and leaders hesitated to confront abuse due to discomfort or concerns about appearing racist or Islamophobic. The inquiry will follow evidence into institutions, systems, cultures of silence, and places where truth has been buried, with no race, religion, profession, or agency exempt from scrutiny. Survivors are acknowledged: they were children, not to blame but failed by the system. The true scale of what happened and continues to happen is described as too large for the inquiry to fully resolve quickly; many victims may never receive justice, but the inquiry aims to be ambitious in pursuing truth. The speaker thanks MP Rupert Loh for establishing the inquiry andextends gratitude to the participants, survivors, and the team for their bravery and resilience in confronting this evil crime.

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The speaker suggests including the institution of the law in the terms of reference, supported by documents seen by the Royal Commission. These documents, which have been viewed by every Attorney General since Ruddock, include police records that name 28 individuals as alleged pedophiles, including prominent figures. The speaker refrains from commenting on the Commission's thoughts but mentions that they deemed it outside their terms of reference. The speaker highlights a compromise at the highest levels, with a former prime minister being listed in the police document.

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In Australia, there is a 90-year suppression order hiding the names of 28 VIP pedophiles, including a former prime minister. Documents have been presented to the Royal Commission, implicating high-level officials in disturbing crimes. It is crucial to monitor the responses of those in power, as silence in the face of attacks on Australian sovereignty will not be tolerated. The guilty will face consequences. Remember their names and actions.

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The speaker suggests including the institution of the law in the terms of reference, supported by documents seen by the Royal Commission. These documents, including police records, name 28 individuals as alleged pedophiles, some of whom are prominent figures. The speaker refrains from commenting on the Commission's thoughts but mentions that they deemed it outside their terms of reference. The speaker highlights a compromise at the highest levels in Australia, with a former prime minister being mentioned in the police document.

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The speaker asserts that discussions of child abuse and child trafficking are avoided in the UK Parliament, implying that avoidance signals a problem. They claim there is no separate crime of satanic child abuse in the UK; they say it’s simply child abuse, and suggest that the Netherlands similarly erases the subject. The speaker relates local discoveries in Leicester, described as the nearest city to their area, where they found extensive child abuse linked to both historic and current politicians and to the police. They state they gave evidence against the head of police about “industrial child trafficking.” A central claim is that there is industrial-scale trafficking of children from Ukraine via Moldova to the UK for sexual abuse and organ harvesting. The speaker says this information came from two Ukrainian secret service agents who independently reported the same scheme, without knowing each other. They alleged that Ukrainian secret services collected children during the conflict in the Donbas and handed them over to UK secret services. The two informants reportedly named individuals and were appalled by the task of collecting children for trafficking. The speaker recounts that one whistleblower was killed in a cafe when a bomb was placed under his table, and the second survived a car bombing after being warned by a car park camera clip showing the explosion as he approached his car. They claim the whistleblowers named people very close to President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and his regime, asserting that those individuals purportedly benefit financially from the war by enabling child trafficking. Further claims include that there is more money in child trafficking and sex trafficking than in drugs or weapons because of the trafficked children’s organs. The speaker contends that the trafficking scheme involves selling the children multiple times, and that victims disappear after organs are harvested, which is why victims are not found in the end. Throughout, the speaker emphasizes the alleged connection between wartime activity, Ukrainian whistleblowers, assassination attempts, and a broader network that allegedly profits from child trafficking and organ harvesting.

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Senator Heffernan discusses disturbing documents presented to the Royal Commission, highlighting issues of abuse, judicial bias, and compromised institutions. He calls for cleaning up the legal system and addressing abuse cases separately from family court matters. The need to protect victims and address systemic problems is emphasized.

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The speaker suggests including the institution of the law in the terms of reference, supported by documents seen by the Royal Commission. These documents, including police records, name 28 individuals as alleged pedophiles, some of whom are prominent figures. The speaker refrains from commenting on the Commission's thoughts but mentions that they believed it was beyond their scope. The speaker highlights a compromise at the highest levels in Australia, with a former prime minister being mentioned in the police document.

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reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker suggests including the institution of the law in the terms of reference, supported by documents seen by the Royal Commission. These documents, including police records, name 28 people as alleged pedophiles, some of whom are prominent individuals. The speaker refrains from commenting on the Commission's thoughts but mentions that they believed it was beyond their scope. The speaker highlights a compromise at the highest levels in Australia, with a former prime minister being mentioned in the police document.

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reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In this video, the speaker discusses various issues related to compromised institutions in Australia. They mention a former prime minister being involved in a police document, as well as the Royal Commission into the Institutional Treatment of children. The speaker expresses concern about the culture within institutions and the need for cleaning up the act. They also mention instances of judges displaying bias and making inappropriate comments. The speaker emphasizes the importance of addressing these issues and supporting the work of the Royal Commission. The Attorney General responds by acknowledging the support for the Royal Commission and stating that nobody is above the law. The speaker concludes by highlighting the need to consider the victims and the problems with surveillance and cooperation between police agencies.

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The speaker suggests including the institution of the law in the terms of reference, supported by documents seen by the Royal Commission. These documents, including police records, name 28 individuals as alleged pedophiles, some of whom are prominent figures. The speaker refrains from commenting on the Commission's thoughts but mentions that they deemed it outside their terms of reference. The speaker highlights a compromise at the highest levels, with a former prime minister being mentioned in the police document.

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Investigation in Australia revealed 27 names of child abusers, including ex-prime ministers. The investigator expressed shock and called them cowards and evildoers. He prayed for justice and vowed to rescue the children, even if it meant sacrificing himself.

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The speaker suggests including the institution of the law in the terms of reference, supported by disturbing police documents that name 28 alleged pedophiles, including prominent individuals. The Royal Commission has seen these documents, but it was deemed outside their terms of reference. The speaker highlights a compromise at the highest levels, with a former prime minister being mentioned in the police document.

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reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker suggests including the institution of the law in the terms of reference, presenting disturbing police documents to justify this. These documents name 28 people as alleged pedophiles, including prominent individuals, and were signed off by Gary Crook QC, Counsel assisting an earlier Royal Commission. The speaker refrains from commenting on the Commission's thoughts but mentions that they believed it was beyond their terms of reference. The speaker highlights a compromise at the highest levels in Australia, with a former prime minister being mentioned in the police document.

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Former Labour adviser Scarlett Maguire and political commentator Amon Bogle discuss front-page claims about the grooming inquiry, framing it as sabotage by Labour and a government-controlled process. - Speaker 1 (Amon Bogle) says the Telegraph front page alleges the grooming inquiry was sabotaged by Labour, and argues the inquiry from the outset was a follow-up of a cover-up spanning three decades, noting Labour initially refused a national inquiry. He asserts the government is manipulating the inquiry by refusing victims and survivors the chance to name perpetrators as Pakistanis, and by preventing examination of religious aspects of the abuse. - Speaker 2 (Scarlett Maguire) contends the issue is not an “Asian grooming gangs” problem but a Pakistani problem in the UK, with the vast majority of perpetrators from Mirpur in Pakistan. She says two women removed themselves from the inquiry because they were being silenced by the government from looking into race. - Speaker 0 (host) remarks on the broader fear of addressing the issue, recounting community knowledge of grooming in shops, gyms, and corner shops, and says he knows the abuse continues and no one is doing anything about it. - Speaker 2 adds that the country has been too scared to discuss the perpetrators, noting that police, social workers, and care workers were afraid of being labeled racist if they spoke out. - Speaker 3 (another participant) notes that there were conflated timelines and that early on, victims faced police or social workers who could be perceived as perpetrators in some cases. He mentions Kirsty Dahmer as the person who first brought grooming cases to court and reopened cases that had been closed, stressing the difficulty of running any inquiry that listens to all parties. - Speaker 3 emphasizes the challenge of conducting an inquiry where social workers and police are involved, and argues that victims and vulnerable young women in care were abused by social workers, the men who did it, and later by the police. He underlines the horrific nature of these events and notes that what happened is still happening today. - The discussion notes the ongoing impact on young women in care, with a final, emotive remark that reading a certain girl’s book would break one’s heart, signaling the lasting harm and urgency of the issue.

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The speaker suggests including the institution of the law in the terms of reference, presenting disturbing police documents to justify this. These documents name 28 people as alleged pedophiles, including prominent individuals, and were signed off by Gary Crook QC, Counsel assisting an earlier Royal Commission. The speaker refrains from commenting on the Commission's thoughts but mentions that they believed it was beyond their terms of reference. The speaker highlights a compromise at the highest levels in Australia, with a former prime minister being mentioned in the police document.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker suggests including the institution of the law in the terms of reference, supported by documents seen by the Royal Commission. These documents, including police records, name 28 individuals as alleged pedophiles, some of whom are prominent figures. The speaker refrains from commenting on the Commission's thoughts but mentions that they deemed it outside their terms of reference. The speaker highlights a compromise at the highest levels, with a former prime minister being mentioned in the police document.
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