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View Full Version : Self-inflicted Hell, and rarely, extinction.



danbaron
31-07-2011, 06:48
I read this whole thing.

http://www.angelfire.com/space2/light11/nmh/dark1.html#first

Concerning an afterlife, it makes the most sense of anything I have read.

If true, then, no one escapes punishment for the cruelty he/she inflicts here (Wouldn't that be, "a kick in the pants", if true? Those who are absolutely convinced there will be no consequences for their actions, are wrong? Cosmic justice will be dealt, down to the finest detail? What could be better?).

You can find the name, "Irma Grese", in the article.

She is supposedly one of the very few souls who have been "recycled" - not rehabilitated.

The woman (1) is a black magician and will be ‘liquidated.’ She had to incarnate first. Why, I don’t understand, but, before you can be ‘annulled,’ you have to re-incarnate – perhaps as a last chance. (Philip Gilbert, PTW, 107-8.)
(1) Irma Grese, an SS supervisor at Bergen Belsen, a Nazi concentration camp. See “Irma Grese,” the Angel of Death,” http://www.history.ucsb.edu/faculty/marcuse/classes/33d/projects/naziwomen/irma.htm, downloaded 15 Jan. 2008.)
The most evil, Irma [Grese], was absorbed at once into what is her kind, a descending whirlpool of, as it might be called, sewage. They tell me that there are, very, very rarely, entities who get so low that they can only descend – and be liquidated. We don’t like to think of it here. ...
Irma was an ‘old soul’ in the bad sense – she had been forced to re-incarnate as a last chance. (Philip to his mother, Alice Gilbert, in PTW, 197.)

I guess it could explain how someone could be so filled with hatred for other life, and at such a young age, who can say?

http://www.history.ucsb.edu/faculty/marcuse/classes/33d/projects/naziwomen/irma.htm

http://www.capitalpunishmentuk.org/nazigirls.html

(http://www.holocaustresearchproject.org/trials/grese.html)In her testimony (link below), she did not exactly, "gush", with emotion - is something wrong here?

In the first photograph, do you see any anything in her expression approximating remorse?

http://www.holocaustresearchproject.org/trials/grese.html