Post by PeelerOn Thu, 05 Oct 2023 19:11:32 +0100, clinically insane, pedophilic, serbian
bitch Razovic, the resident psychopath of sci and scj and Usenet's famous
sexual cripple, making a total ass of herself as "† The Rectum", farted
WAIT! I got[sic][SIC!!! LOL] to get past the Foreskin PEELER fairy
first, as he LEAPS to the defence of his slant-eyed gook fiancee!
{{{{{{{shudder}}}}}}}!
You STILL can't get past me, my psychopathic pwnling! LOL
Grab Foreskin PEELER by his grubby grik neck and give him a swift
kick in the bum!
You WISH, you hilarious housebound impotent WIMP! LOL
<fluhs grik skata>
Post by Michael EjercitoPost by PeelerIOW, another Jew you are jealous of because SHE got what YOU want, you
totally fucked up gay neo-nazitard! Fuck those Jews, they ALWAYS got what
YOU want so much! LOL
That is just so fucking obvious.
That is just so fucking inane: another Oriental 'me too' straight
...projects of course the grand-master of inane "contributions", pedophilic
serb psychopath Razovic herself, Usenet's "famous" sexual cripple! LOL
Post by Michael EjercitoNote that he reserves the vilest insults for the Judenfrau (Judith
Bergman, Mirjam Bruck-Cohen, Danielle Haberman, Natalie Hershlag, Sara
Katz-Scher, Deborah Sharavi, Amandla Stenberg, Elizabeth Wagmeister, St.
Mary)
Note that only the judendreckunterhuren are capable of excreting yet
more jews and deserve the vilest insults for that alone. And there
WAS no jew St. Mary or Virgin Mary in Christianity.
LOL Poor psycho is getting more and more desperate! Shall we go easier on
you, our battered pedophilic punching bag? Just say the word! Yes, or no?
LMAO
--
"Are you telling me that a 13-year old who spends 15 hours a day on Facebook
is incapable of consent?"
Are you hoping some 13-year-old would be willing to "consent" and let you
diddle him, filthy old pedo swine?
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Wednesday senior bureaucrats are reviewing the Deschenes Commission report — a 1980s-era independent inquiry that looked at alleged Nazi war criminals in Canada — with an eye to making more of it public.
Governor General Mary Simon also said today Rideau Hall is sorry for honouring Peter Savaryn — a former chancellor of the University of Alberta who served in the same Nazi unit as Yaroslav Hunka — with the Order of Canada.
"We express our sincere apology to Canadians for any distress or pain his appointment may have caused," a spokesperson for Simon said.
The vice-regal office is also examining the Golden and Diamond Jubilee medals previously awarded to Savaryn, who also served as president of the Ukrainian World Congress, a group that represents the Ukrainian diaspora.
Struck by former prime minister Brian Mulroney, the Deschenes Commission's final report was released in 1986 and is composed of two parts.
The first, which included recommendations to make it easier to extradite war criminals, was released publicly. The second was marked secret and the names of alleged Nazis in Canada were never released.
Jewish groups, including B'nai Brith and the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Centre (FSWC), have said the second part should be unredacted and disclosed publicly so that Canadians can learn more about the country's shameful history of admitting an untold number of Nazi collaborators after the Second World War.
They've said that in the wake of the Hunka affair — when a 98-year-old veteran of a Nazi unit was honoured in Parliament — Canada needs to reckon with questionable post-war immigration decisions that allowed Hunka and others like him to settle here and live in relative peace.
"There are top public servants looking very carefully into the issue, including digging into the archives," Trudeau told reporters. "We're going to make recommendations."
Reports suggest as many as 2,000 Ukrainian members of Hitler's Waffen-SS were admitted to Canada after the war — after some British prodding. The commission said the number is likely lower than that.
In an interview with CBC News, Michael Levitt, the president and CEO of the FSWC, said the country needs to know if thousands of war criminals were admitted to Canada.
"The expression 'sunlight is the best disinfectant' could not be more relevant to this situation. If there was ever an issue in Canadian history that requires disinfecting, it's our shameful record of covering up Nazi war criminal immigration to Canada in the 1940s and 50s," he said. "It's long overdue."
Asked if he had insight into why the government concealed details of post-war Nazi migration, Levitt said "the only way we're going to get the kind of answers we're looking for is for the unredacted files to be opened."
Quebec Liberal MP Anthony Housefather said it's a delicate issue because the government doesn't want to "bring pain to a lot of Eastern European communities." (Greg: I thought Mr. Aboriginal Jewish M.P. we were Canadians in this country. What about the families of the captured CDN soldiers executed by the SS those whose relatives fought the nazis for 6 years far from home and hearth the Jewish and JW and Roma and Slav communities in Canada whose communities were targeted for death by the SS. The Polish govt is pissed by this Hunka affair deport the guy. Hey M.P. Housefather Poland is about as East European a nation you can get the Hiel Hitler volk killed about 6 million of them slaughtered the Warsaw Ghetto. )
Hunka, for example, has framed his war service as a fight for Ukrainian independence.
The unit he fought for, the 1st Galician division, is also memorialized by Ukrainian expatriate groups at different sites across the country.
They claim the Waffen-SS troops were fighting not to advance Hitler's racist and genocidal agenda but to push back against the totalitarian Soviet Union. (Greg: Waffen SS guarded the concentration and death camps.)
The Deschenes report has also concluded that allegations of war crimes committed by this division have "never been substantiated."
That finding conflicts with what the post-war, Allies-led Nuremberg trials concluded about SS units like that one.
For that reason, Jewish groups say they want to see all that the Deschenes commission compiled to better understand its conclusions. (Greg: I agree.)
"We have to recognize we have a horrible past with Nazi war criminals. We opened our country to people after the war in a way that made it easier to come if you were a Nazi than if you were a Jew," Housefather said.
"We have to look at what the redactions are in the Deschenes report. I'm sure there's much of it that can be unredacted. We just need to find a consensus. You can't just willy-nilly say, 'Release everything,' because I don't know what's exactly there and there are privacy interests."
Housefather, who is Jewish, said he's been in contact with community groups and has brought their arguments back to his Liberal colleagues.
'History is history,' Tory MP says
Conservative MP Melissa Lantsman, the party's deputy leader, said Canadians need to know more about the country's "dark history" of "letting Nazis through the door to live here in peace and security."
Lantsman represents the Toronto-area riding of Thornhill, a riding with one of the country's largest Jewish communities.
In an interview with CBC News, Lantsman said the party supports revisiting the Deschenes report and its findings in some way.
"I think the victims of the Nazi regime, victims of the Holocaust — Jews, Poles — deserve answers. We have a past to reckon with and it's time we look at that past very seriously," she said. "We are going to support opening up the discussion."
Asked if it might be too painful for some communities to revisit alleged Second World War-era crimes, Lantsman said "history is painful but that doesn't mean we don't need to reckon with it."
"It's unfortunate it took the government allowing a Nazi to come into this House to get us here," she said of former Speaker Rota's decision to invite Hunka to the Commons and celebrate him as a "Canadian hero."
But the Conservative caucus isn't united on the issue.
Quebec Conservative MP Gérard Deltell, Poilievre's environment critic, said Wednesday he's not open to revisiting the issue right now.
"I don't think so," he said when asked if the secret report should be released for all to read.
"I don't think it's the occasion to review it. At this time — I'm not there. I don't think it's time to review everything. History is history," he said.
Deltell said that as the son of a Canadian Second World War veteran, the ill-fated celebration of Hunka was a painful moment for him personally.
"I can't imagine what would have been his reaction to his son giving a standing ovation to a Nazi," Deltell said of his late father, who lived with German shrapnel lodged in his head until his recent passing.
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said he supports releasing the commission's report.
"We absolutely need to have more transparency," Singh told CBC News.
"We would support the calls for having more transparency around who was let in."
Green Party parliamentary leader Elizabeth May is also a proponent of reopening the Deschenes commission report.
In a media statement, May said it was "unquestionably very late" to be releasing these decades-old documents but it must be done.
"Apologies are not enough. We must atone for Canada's history of allowing Nazis to live here," May said.
The above was a CBC report. Release the report already taxpayers paid for it.