Actress Kirstie Alley Warns Modern Entertainment Has U.S. on Road to Pedophilia Acceptance.
(resistthemainstream.org)
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Its definitely the skeleton in many cupboards. Been going on in many families but never talked about openly. 'My father was my grandfather' Tilda Swinton's ex-partner reveals he is the product of incestuous relationship: https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/entertainment/celebrity/my-father-grandfather-tilda-swintons-10052687
Secret traditions in some places: I seem to remember reading that in remote Scottish isles the father of the bride gets to have her first to preserve the bloodline.
You either serve God and keep his commandments, or you serve the dark side. Millstones will be is short supply before long.
Historically, if memory serves, the age of ascension to adulthood was often linked to the estimated lifespan of humanity at large.
When life expectancy of a serf was ~34 (60 my eye), survival of the species demanded as early procreation as possible. Religion by and large kept relations monogamous (at least openly), but ages were related to more "practical" needs.
For example, in much of Europe, with no formal education. The old holdover of boys becoming men at 13-16 and girls becoming women at first menstruation, early or pre-teens were often married off to start having kids of their own.
Edit: I'm not supporting this, quite the contrary. Just providing a historical perspective.
Quite true, this makes interesting reading: Lady Margaret Beaufort https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lady_Margaret_Beaufort
That said, adults having sex with children in this day and age is perverse and evil.
Agreed. With life expectancy being what it is for various reasons, and mortality rates of infants and children being practically non-existant, there is no good reason to have it like it was. And the extreme young stuff is just evil murder and should be punishable by death.
Yes, but they lived in an anarcho-syndicalist commune, where they take it in turns to act as a sort of executive officer for the week, but all the decisions of that officer have to be ratified at a special bi-weekly meeting by a simple majority in the case of purely internal affairs, but by a two-thirds majority in the case of more major decisions.
I do not know of a Scottish tradition like that. The overloards maybe would claim that right but some say it was a bridal tax they claimed.
Not sure its an actual Scottish tradition as such, may be narrowly confined in a few places. Read about it in a magazine article, wish I could remember who the article was about.
Ty its frustrating sometimes isn't it?!! All my research tends to get jumbled up sometimes.