Turnbull's Fondest Memory of Whitlam
- Jul 7, 2017
- 3 min read
In 2014, Patricia Hewitt, former general secretary of the NCCL (National Council for Civil Liberties), was humiliated by the public for her role in supporting PIE (Pedophile Information Exchange) during the 70's and was forced to make an open apology.
For the benefit of those who have never heard of either: NCCL was a major driving force behind the gay-liberation movement and PIE was a parasite political party trying to legalise pedophilia on the back of the gay movement.
Australia's most recent connection to the organized international pedophile exchange came to light when the 1979 disappearance of 15 year old Martin Allen, the son of chauffeur to the then Australian High Commissioner, was recently reopened in the UK.
It was further reported more recently an Australian secret service report may hold clues to Allen's disappearance but the Australian government remains tight lipped on the topic. Which is not entirely unusual behaviour... given the history of zero government transparency in modern times.

During Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull's 2014 tribute to Gough Whitlam, he says he proudly defended Hewitt in a conversation with Whitlam, which raised more than a few eyebrows at Aussie Insider. So, here's the full scoop.
Turnbull's Defining Moments
In the late 70's, while working for Australian media mogul Kerry Packer, Turnbull obtained the rights to bring the controversial adult magazine "Playboy" to Australia.
The controversy was less about adult-pornography and more about the magazine's pro-pedophile articles and regular publishing of child pornography which, under Turnbull's proud advocacy, brought Brooke Shields and Eva Ionesco's 10 year-old naked bodies to Aussie pedophiles.
In the 80's, Turnbull was barrister to former MI5 intelligence officer and whistle-blower, Peter Right, in the infamous Spycatcher Trial where he defended "innocent organisations" (such as the Pedophile Information Exchange and Pedophile Action for Liberation) - by claiming they were illegally surveilled.
In the 90's, Turnbull joined the Republican Party and supported the Whitlam government during a time when Whitlam, Keating and Kerr were alleged to have held after-hours child-sex-orgies at parliament house, allegations that were automatically buried by the succession of governments until 2014, and then dropped completely on the basis that some of the suspects had since died.
In 2008, Turnbull came to the public defense of 'artist' Bill Henson, whose art exhibition was raided by NSW Police and more than 20 photographs of naked children were confiscated. Then Shadow Treasurer, Turnbull attacked the police suggesting they should stay out of art galleries and further purported that naked photos of children should be accepted as part of 'artistic freedom'.
Whilst Communications Minister, Turnbull asserted his ongoing support for 'artistic freedom' by allowing child pornography to pass Australian TV censorship - depicting the full frontal nudity of children, the promotion of group-sex in the school grounds, the stories of child nymphomaniacs and other pedophile material - seemingly setting the scene for his next defining moment.
Within 12 months of becoming Prime Minister, Turnbull almost immediately set about pushing his wife's highly controversial HPV teen-sex-vaccine, which was linked over 10 years ago by the American FDA to thousands of serious side effects, including seizures, paralysis, blindness, speech problems, Guillain-Barré Syndrome and even death. This grave mistake is currently costing the US tax-payer billions in liability damages.
Isn't it time we had an open apology from Malcolm Turnbull whose track record of 'getting it wrong' has far exceeded Patricia Hewitt's to date?
But oh, that's right, we don't have a democracy here anymore!
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