Page 48 - The Disasters Darwinism Brought To Humanity
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48             T T H E   D I S A S T E R S   D A R W I N I S M   B R O U G H T   T O   H U M A N I T Y Y
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                   employers. Although evicted from at least one property, she shortly
                   returned home with her specimens.
                   A New South Wales missionary was a horrified witness to the slaughter by
                   mounted police of a group of dozens of Aboriginal men, women and chil-
                   dren. Forty-five heads were then boiled down and the 10 best skulls were
                   packed off for overseas. 35
                                                                         th
                   The extermination of the aborigines continued in the 20 century.
              Among the methods employed in this extermination was the forcible
              removal of aborigine children from their families. A news story by Alan
              Thornhill, which appeared in the 28 April 1997 edition of the Philadelphia
              Daily News, recounted this method used against the aborigines in this
              way:
                   ABORIGINE FAMILIES RECOUNT SEIZURES
                   Associated Press - Aborigines living in Australia's remote northwest deserts
                   used to smear their light-skinned children with charcoal, hoping to keep
                   state welfare agents from taking them away. "The welfare just grabbed you
                   when they found you," one of the stolen children reported, many years later.
                   "Our people would hide us, paint us with charcoal."
                   "I was taken to Moola Bulla," said one cattler worker who was stolen as a
                   child. "We were about 5 or 6 years old." His tale was one of thousands heard
                   by Australia's Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission during
                   its heart-wrenching inquiry into the "stolen generation." From 1910 until the
                   1970s, some 100,000 aboriginal children were taken from their parents...
                   Light-skinned aboriginal children were seized and handed out to white
                   families for adoption. Dark-skinned children were put in orphanages. 36
                   Even now, the pain is so great that most stories were printed anony-
              mously in the commission's final report, "Bringing Them Home." The
              commission says the actions of the authorities at that time amounted to
              genocide as the United Nations defines it. The government has refused to
              follow the inquiry's recommendation that a tribunal be set up to assess
              compensation payments for the stolen children.
                   As we have seen, the inhuman treatment, massacres, cruelty, sav-
              agery, and exterminations carried out were all justified by Darwinism's
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