Church doubles its pleasure and doubles its fun.
The Catholic clergy still loves its sex slaves. And the Catholic clergy is the first to cover it up.
Similarly, the Catholic Church loved its old-fashioned slaves too, right through the 20th century. It was okay having slaves because they weren’t Christians. They didn’t accept Jesus as the Messiah so they were going to Hell anyway, so the Church figured live on Earth might as well be Hell too.
As recently as the 1940s, 776 Catholic institutions had Jewish slaves working in them.
Unfortunately, after commissioning this document entitled: “Forced Labor in the Catholic Church 1939-1945,” I have been able to verify only one person who has been allowed to see it. Cardinal Lehmann is that one person and he’s hardly an objective or analytical.
Even now, the Catholic Church makes light of it. Cardinal Karl Lehmann, the Church’s spokesman on this, said
“The comparatively small number of laborers, many of whom spent barely a year working in Catholic institutions, doesn’t even amount to a thousandth of the estimated total of 13 million forced laborers employed throughout the Reich… There is no collective guilt, but as Christians and as a church we are aware of the responsibility that results from the burden of the past.”
To date the Church has refused to post the document on the Internet.
Here’s what Cardinal Lehmann said about it:
“We shouldn’t hide the fact that the memory of the Catholic church was blind for too long to the fate and the suffering of the men, women, young people and children dragged to Germany from all over Europe to be put to forced labor.”
He says the Church was blind. How could it have been blind. 776 institutions had Jewish slaves. You can’t blindly have slaves at that many places. Sounds like the Church gladly and knowingly aided and abetted treating Jews as lower lifeforms.
And now, still insensitive to its behavior, it weasels its way out with a double-talk about a double-blind study (that’s been only been seen by blind entities, the authors and the cardinals).



