Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell
See: Sodomy Alfred Kinsey Kissinger Kitchener British Concentration Camps (Boer War)
Book
Stalin's British Training by
Greg Hallett
Quotes
Baden-Powell (22 Feb. 1857–8 Jan. 1941) joined the
army in 1876 (21). Despite doing badly at school he
came second in the army exams, bypassed the officer
training, soon became an Honorary Colonel in India and
eventually become a Major-General (43).
In 1896 Baden-Powell was returning from the Ashanti
expedition on West Africa’s Gold Coast (later Ghana)
with the Ashanti Star (1895–96) under his belt.
He located two 16-year-old Irish soldiers,
accused them of cowardice, tied their hands behind
their backs, told everyone he was going to interrogate
them, cleared the carriage, sodomised the two bound
16-year-old Irish soldiers, then shot them both
in the back of the head, dead. Robert Baden-Powell was
39. At first Robert Baden-Powell was
awarded the Matabele Campaign Medal (1896–97)
but was then banished from England. He clawed his way
back into society, was promoted to the highest ranking
secular position in England, then elevated to
Sir in 1909, Baronet in 1922, Baron in 1929 and then
Lord the same year.---Stalin's British Training by
Greg Hallett
Karl Fischer, a homosexual teacher, began the Wandervogel (a German version of the boy Scouts), which became “The Hitler Youth” in 1933, under a well known pederast, Hans Blueher, who wrote of man-boy “love." Gerhard Rossbach, homosexual Nazi leader of the Freikorps gave over leadership of the Schill Youth to Edmund Heines, a convicted Nazi pederast, and murderer, all under the watchful eye of Adolf Hitler. THE PINK SWASTIKA AND HOLOCAUST REVISIONIST HISTORY by Judith A. Reisman, Ph.D.