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Paula S. Fass, Professor of History at University of California, Berkeley is lying to us. Her book is a hoax, a taxpayer-funded one that has met with not one iota of substantial disapproval from her colleagues: the experts on the history of the American family who are also the professors who prepare future leaders in public policy.

Professor Fass’s industrious effort to replace the truth with ideologically fueled deceptions is hardly the first such effort; in deed her particular historical fraud is but one additional brick in a grand scheme to erect a false edifice that has been underway at least since 1877, when a New York lawyer and amateur ethnologist invented the erroneous theory that the nuclear family is a recent historical development – a theory quickly snapped up by Frederick Engels (co-author of the Communist Manifesto) and folded into his grand scheme for perfecting mankind through what is asserted to be “science.” While proven wrong time and time again, the followers of Marx and Engels who dominate the field of “social history” still perpetuate the Anti-Family prejudice to this very day in universities throughout the land.

Fass claims that 1874 was the year America when parents all of a sudden started being concerned about the dangers of having their children kidnapped – a concern that Fass and many of her collegues regards as socially irresponsible, because parents should, according to “socially responsible” ideas espoused by intellectuals, care for and care after for everybody’s children – “equally.”

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* THIS TEXT IS IN PROGRESS *

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 1873 – “Children As Slaves – The Little Ones Kidnapped in Italy and Sold in New-York – Horrible Treatment by Their Masters,” The New York Times (N.Y.), Jun. 17, 1873 {Child Kidnapping}

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 (LINK)

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On June 23, 1874 a federal law – written specifically in response to the New York Padrone child slavery scandal was passed (“An act to protect persons of foreign birth against forcible constraint or involuntary servitude.”)

 1874 – “Padroni. – Their Recent Immigration to Brooklyn. – How They Live – Interview with an Italian Slave Child – Suffering and Starvation – Horrible Cruelties – A Truthful Expose.” & “Senor Moreno’s Appeal to the Authorities of Brooklyn, for the Suppression of the Padroni.” The Brooklyn Daily Eagle (N.Y.), Feb. 23, 1874 {Child Kidnapping}

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 1862 – (Greenan case), “Recovery of a Child Stolen By Gypsies,” The New York Times (N.Y.), Jan. 5, 1862 {Child Kidnapping}

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 1872 – “Child Stealing in New York,” (originally in New York World, N.Y.), The Saturday Evening Post (Philadelphia, Pa.), Apr. 13, 1872 {Child Kidnapping}

(LINK)

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 1905 – (Koveleff case), “Found a Pocketbook and His Lost Daughter – Little Girl Who Was Kidnaped by Gypsies Restored to Her Parents by What Seemed a Miracle – Foster Parent Given Rich Reward,” The Evening Telegram (Fort Worth, Tx.), Jan. 16, 1905 {Child Kidnapping}

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1924 – (Mahfood case), “Seeks Kidnaped Son In Woodland; Ohio Father Asks The Aid Of Marshall Lawson; Believes Gypsy Band Here Are Thieves,” Woodland Daily Democrat (Ca.), Jul. 24, 1924 {Child Kidnapping}

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 1868 – “One of Chicago’s Horrible Mysteries – Kidnapping of Children.” The New York Times (N.Y.), Aug. 19, 1868 {Child Kidnapping}

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 1792 – (Hogan case), “A Child Lost.” (advertisement), The Boston Gazette and Country Journal (Ma.), Nov. 26, 1792 {Child Kidnapping}

1792 – (Wolford case), “A Child Stolen!” (advertisement), The Boston Gazette and Country Journal (Ma.), Nov. 26, 1792 {Child Kidnapping}

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1819 – Chapman, Eunice, letter dated Feb. 1819, published in, Dyer, Mary Marshall (as “Mary Marshall”), excerpt from Preface to A Portraiture of Shakerism … , Jun. 1823 (”1822″), book {Parental Alienation}

1819 – (Pool case), “Interesting Case,” Jul. 3, 1819, American Beacon (Norfolk, Va.) {Ransom Child Kidnapping}

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 1827 – (Clark case), Flint, Timothy, “The Lost Child,” The Western Magazine and Review (Cincinnati, Oh.), May 1827 {Child Kidnapping}

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1835 – (Gannard case), “Heartless Abduction,” Richmond Enquirer (Va.), Aug. 18, 1835 {Child Kidnapping, Family Abduction}

1835 – (Gannard case), No Title, Vermont State Paper (St, Albans), Oct. 6, 1835 {Child Kidnapping, Family Abduction}

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 1836 – (Green case), “Kidnapping,” Zion’s Herald (Boston, Ma.) (reprinting from New York Commercial Advertiser (N.Y.)), Dec. 7, 1836 {Child Kidnapping}

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 1847 – (Hamilton case), “Extraordinary Developments. – Child Stealing.” The Sun (Baltimore, Md.), Dec. 7, 1847 {Child Kidnapping}

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1870 – (Digby case), “The Lost Found. Discovery of the Digby Child – At New Orleans – Story of Its Abduction – Two Arrests Made.” (from New-Orleans Picayune), The New York Times (N.Y.), Aug. 15, 1870 {Child Kidnapping}

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1817 – (Dredden case), “Kidnapping!!” Poulson’s American Daily Advertiser (Philadelphia, Pa.), Jul. 24. 1817 {Child Kidnapping}

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1837 – (Bullock case), “Kidnapping of Caroline, A White Child,” The Philanthropist (Cincinnati, Ohio), Mar. 24, 1837 {Child Kidnapping}

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1855 – (Langdon, Mary, novel; Review) “The Story of Ida May,” The Farmers’ Cabinet (Amherst, N. H.), May 1, 1855 {Child Kidnapping}

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1852 – (Coniff case), “The Child Stealing.” Oshkosh Democrat (Wi.), May 7, 1852 {Child Kidnapping}

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 1857 – “Our Philanthropists,” Syracuse Daily Courier (N.Y.), Jan. 30, 1857 {Child Kidnapping}

 

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 1870 – “A Strange Case. – A Boy Sent to the West Without the Knowledge of His Parents. – The Children’s Aid Society and Its Method of Doing Business,” The Brooklyn Daily Eagle (N.Y.), Aug. 11, 1870 {Child Kidnapping}

 

 

 

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 1829 – (Hook case), “Stolen Child,” Norwalk Reporter (Oh.) (originally published in Buffalo Journal, Oct. 20), Oct. 31, 1829 {Child Kidnapping}

 

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 (LINK)

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1911 – “Babies Sold As Slaves – Chicago Official Makes Charge Against Institutions. – Children Taken From Their Mothers and Turned Over to Farmers – Profit in the Traffic.” The Washington Post (D.C.), Apr. 21, 1911 {Baby Farming, Child Kidnapping}  

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 (LINK)

 

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 1925 – (Geisen-Volk, baby farmer), “Baby Farm Owner Remanded As Toll Of Death Grows – Child, Taken to Hospital by Father, Succumbs; Other Infants Unclaimed. – Mothers Relate Vain Search For Children – Police Say Mrs. Geisen-Volk Once Faced Manslaughter and Kidnapping Charge.” syndicated (AP), The Washington Post (D.C.), May 10, 1925 {Baby Farming, Child Kidnapping}

 (LINK)

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1934 – “Probe Charge of Sale of Babies – Hollywood To Have Probe of Accusation Babies Are Sold At Birth,” syndicated (International News Service), New Castle News (Pa.), Sep. 28, 1934 {Child Kidnapping}

 1940 – (De Patie, Baby Farmer), “Nab 2 Women in Trailer Camp for Baby Quiz,” Chicago Tribune (Il.), May 6, 1940 {Baby Farming, Child Kidnapping}

 (LINK)

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Cesarean Kidnapping Checklist (LINK)

 

 

 

 

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 (LINK)

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 1907 – “Crippled Father Fought For Son – Aged Indian Held Two United Sates Marshals at Bay With a Club.” Manitoba Free Press (Winnipeg, Canada), Aug. 23, 1907 {Child Kidnapping}

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 (LINK)