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Lol imagine living in 18th century Scotland

  1. #1
    Warcry Certified lover boy
    but hey maybe the age of consent was super low?

    https://youtube.com/shorts/mMB-PD8Y53k?si=UnG1sSaU4UFkyqQn
  2. #2
    Warcry Certified lover boy
    damm was it really called the nasty bucket?
  3. #3
    Warcry Certified lover boy
    https://www.ice.org.uk/what-is-civil-engineering/what-do-civil-engineers-do/edinburgh-sewers
  4. #4
    Ghost Black Hole
    I would take a boat to Victorian england and molest homeless children from the workhouses, they are already tired from working all day so they put up little resistance
  5. #5
    Warcry Certified lover boy
    imagine before 1749 when they made a law where you had to yell a phrase when thworing the shit from a bucket out your window and only at night before this imagine walking down narrow streets and beaing smeared in shit from above.
  6. #6
    Ghost Black Hole
    Back then it was illegal not to rape children, true story
  7. #7
    Warcry Certified lover boy
    what was the age of consent. look it up. and prostitution age.
  8. #8
    Ghost Black Hole
    it was 1877

    minutes
  9. #9
    Warcry Certified lover boy
    https://earlyamericanists.com/2018/06/27/part-of-the-long-history-of-child-trafficking-18th-century-french-louisiana/
  10. #10
    Warcry Certified lover boy
    „ With the high mortality rate that came with moving bodies to, and across, the Atlantic, the Company realized that they still had an overabundance of males, making it necessary to import more females to Louisiana. At first, the Mississippi Company tried to use economic incentives to create a more favorable gender ratio by arranging for any girl who moved to the Louisiana colony to receive a sizeable dowry of 100 livres, payable to her husband on her wedding day. To the dismay of the Company, only 3 girls, all suspected prostitutes, volunteered to move to Louisiana in 1719.[6] Since there was little interest in migrating to the territory, the Company realized they would have to round-up vulnerable girls from Paris and Marseille to move to the Mississippi.

    But, these girls did not go to Louisiana without a fight. In November 1719, for example, 150 girls, all of whom had been rounded up in Paris by the Company, rioted as they awaited to board a ship. Throwing themselves on guards, ripping out hair, biting, scratching, and even gauging out one guard’s eyes, about a dozen girls were able to escape. Company archers killed another six girls as they tried to flee the docks. The remaining girls, fearful for their lives, boarded the ship to the Mississippi. For many of them, the voyage was a death sentence—only 69 of the girls who boarded survived the trip.[7]

    Another riot, this time involving both boys and girls, occurred in January 1720, when approximately 50 boys and girls were preparing to leave Paris for La Rochelle. Just as the guards were beginning to load children onto the ship, 20 boys and 18 girls attacked two archers and four Company guards, seizing the keys to the shackles that bound the boys and the keys to the carts that carried the girls. In total, 48 boys and girls escaped and avoided being sent to Louisiana. By March 1720, two more riots broke out, either when transporting people to La Rochelle or immediately before embarkation. 127 children out of 210 escaped in these two incidents.[8] Rumors of rampant disease, harsh living conditions, hostile natives, and high mortality rates in Louisiana likely convinced many boys and girls that their forced migration was a death sentence.”
  11. #11
    Instigator Naturally Camouflaged [the staring tame crusher]
    Imagine if we used our hand like they in Pakistan or India or Chicago?
  12. #12
    infinityshock Black Hole
    Originally posted by Warcry what was the age of consent. look it up. and prostitution age.

    You're an idiot
  13. #13
    Ghost Black Hole
    Originally posted by Warcry „ With the high mortality rate that came with moving bodies to, and across, the Atlantic, the Company realized that they still had an overabundance of males, making it necessary to import more females to Louisiana. At first, the Mississippi Company tried to use economic incentives to create a more favorable gender ratio by arranging for any girl who moved to the Louisiana colony to receive a sizeable dowry of 100 livres, payable to her husband on her wedding day. To the dismay of the Company, only 3 girls, all suspected prostitutes, volunteered to move to Louisiana in 1719.[6] Since there was little interest in migrating to the territory, the Company realized they would have to round-up vulnerable girls from Paris and Marseille to move to the Mississippi.

    But, these girls did not go to Louisiana without a fight. In November 1719, for example, 150 girls, all of whom had been rounded up in Paris by the Company, rioted as they awaited to board a ship. Throwing themselves on guards, ripping out hair, biting, scratching, and even gauging out one guard’s eyes, about a dozen girls were able to escape. Company archers killed another six girls as they tried to flee the docks. The remaining girls, fearful for their lives, boarded the ship to the Mississippi. For many of them, the voyage was a death sentence—only 69 of the girls who boarded survived the trip.[7]

    Another riot, this time involving both boys and girls, occurred in January 1720, when approximately 50 boys and girls were preparing to leave Paris for La Rochelle. Just as the guards were beginning to load children onto the ship, 20 boys and 18 girls attacked two archers and four Company guards, seizing the keys to the shackles that bound the boys and the keys to the carts that carried the girls. In total, 48 boys and girls escaped and avoided being sent to Louisiana. By March 1720, two more riots broke out, either when transporting people to La Rochelle or immediately before embarkation. 127 children out of 210 escaped in these two incidents.[8] Rumors of rampant disease, harsh living conditions, hostile natives, and high mortality rates in Louisiana likely convinced many boys and girls that their forced migration was a death sentence.”

    pedophile quoting
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