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In Australia government funded and supported institutions, and their clergy bound by doctrine and oaths of allegiance to a foreign Vatican sovereign daily act with impunity to pervert justice, minimise and cloak rape in eternal secrecy, prioritizing papal loyalty over truth, victims and national law.
#1006
Care-first compensation. Rights preserved.
PUBLISHED: December 26, 2025 01:16:11 AM UPDATED: No Updates
Win public and political commitment to a global, universal settlement of US$5M per survivor of clergy child sexual abuse, payable once the survivor has written support from two independent health professionals, without limiting the survivor’s right to sue for rape enablement, cover-up, obstruction, or related misconduct.
The demand (make it “clear and actionable”)
The campaign asks for a single, simple policy package:
Universal settlement: US$5,000,000 per survivor (indexed), payable via a dedicated global fund.
Access threshold: written confirmation by two independent health professionals that the person is a survivor and is impacted in a way consistent with serious harm (details below).
No gag / no waiver: settlement does not require NDAs, apologies-for-silence, or waiver of rights; survivors keep full rights to sue.
Time certainty: decision + first payment within a defined window (e.g., 90 days decision; staged payment schedule).
Independent administration: survivor-led governance with independent audit.
This “clarity” matters because movements with focused demands tend to be more effective, and protests often work via sustained engagement + electoral pressure rather than instant wins. The Guardian Robin Buller Fri 26 Dec 2025 01.00 AEDT
Why protest and why this structure (the theory of change) What the evidence suggests protests can do (and how we use it)
Shift elections and candidate behaviour: large protests can change who runs and how parties campaign; that creates leverage for legislative/regulatory action. The Guardian Robin Buller Fri 26 Dec 2025 01.00 AEDT
Build durable civic capacity: first participation increases future participation; campaigns should be designed as a ladder of engagement, not one-off marches. The Guardian Robin Buller Fri 26 Dec 2025 01.00 AEDT
Nonviolence is central: disciplined nonviolent tactics reduce backlash and increase sympathy/legitimacy. The Guardian +1
Be cautious with “disruption”: disruptive-but-nonviolent actions can sometimes depress support, depending on context and framing—so disruption needs careful testing, tight discipline, and strong moral narrative. claravdw.com
Moral clarity + mass participation + sustained civic pressure → political commitments + institutional isolation → fund creation and compliance.
Core principles (trauma-informed + survivor-led)
Survivor sovereignty: survivors control their participation level, identity exposure, and story use.
Do no harm: built-in supports (quiet zones, peer support, clinician-aligned guidance, safety plans).
No spectacle of trauma: avoid pressuring survivors into disclosure for media impact.
Nonviolent discipline: train marshals; set and enforce conduct standards.
Rights preserved: constant messaging that settlement is not “hush money” and not a waiver.
(If you want your broader theme embedded: frame this as personal sovereignty and national sovereignty—the right to justice and compensation without institutional interference, including foreign-influence dynamics where relevant.)
Eligibility design (two independent health professionals)
To prevent bureaucratic gatekeeping while still creating a credible threshold:
Not employed by the Church/defendant institution, its insurers, or a conflicted service.
Not a close relative/partner.
Ideally includes at least one clinician with relevant scope (GP, psychiatrist, psychologist, accredited mental health social worker). (Exact eligible professions will vary by country—write it as a principle and publish a country annex later.)
What the letters must confirm (minimal, dignity-preserving)
The clinician has treated/assessed the person and believes the person is a survivor of clergy CSA (or institutional CSA under clergy control).
The person experiences ongoing impairment/impact consistent with significant trauma.
The clinician supports settlement access as a health-protective measure (reducing retraumatisation from adversarial litigation).
Keep it minimal to avoid turning clinicians into courtroom proxies.
Vatican / Holy See leadership structures (moral authority + coordination)
National bishops’ conferences and major dioceses/orders
Church insurers / captive insurance structures
“Brand-sensitive” Church-linked institutions (schools, charities, universities)
National governments (consumer protection, charities regulation, criminal justice, treaty/foreign influence levers)
Philanthropic and institutional investors with exposure to Church entities
Major banks/payment rails servicing settlement structures
Professional bodies (medical/psychological associations re trauma-informed verification)
Human rights bodies and UN Special Rapporteurs channels (where strategically useful)
Campaign components (what you actually do)
A repeating rhythm beats one-off “big days”:
Monthly national action day (same date each month).
Quarterly “Global Day of Sovereignty & Justice” (largest coordinated action).
Local vigils outside cathedrals/diocesan HQ + government buildings.
“Silent lines” (low-risk, high-symbolism) + clearly marked marshals.
Story-light visuals: empty chairs, shoes, names (with consent), sealed envelopes labelled “2 Clinicians—Now Pay”.
Design goal: high participation, low barrier, low risk, because scale matters and nonviolent legitimacy matters.
The Guardian Robin Buller
Fri 26 Dec 2025 01.00 AEDT
Research, ideas, and leadership for a more secure, peaceful world
Candidate pledge: “I support a universal settlement framework that preserves survivors’ rights.”
Scorecards by electorate/region (simple green/amber/red).
Town hall questions and coordinated call-in days.
Survivor-safe lobbying teams (not requiring personal testimony).
This aligns with research and historical accounts that protest can shape elections and participation patterns. The Guardian Robin Buller Fri 26 Dec 2025 01.00 AEDT
“Reputational audit” releases: annual list of non-compliant dioceses/orders.
Donor and procurement pressure: letters to sponsors/partners where appropriate.
Boycott/withhold campaigns (careful: keep demands narrow and measurable).
Frame: “This is healthcare-adjacent justice—end adversarial retraumatisation.”
Core message: “Two clinicians. Pay. Rights preserved.”
Spokespeople mix: survivors (optional/consent), clinicians, retired judges, human rights advocates.
Rapid rebuttal kit: handle the predictable attacks (“fraud”, “too expensive”, “anti-faith”).
On-site: quiet area, peer supporters, de-escalation leads, water/food, transport planning.
Off-site: a helpline partner list; post-event check-in flow.
Participation options: anonymous attendance, mask policy where lawful, remote actions.
Steering group (survivor-majority) + independent ethics panel (clinicians + human rights + safeguarding).
Transparency: publish donations, budgets, and decision logs.
Safety protocols: written code of conduct; marshal training; no doxxing; no confrontation with worshippers.
Campaign charter (principles + demand + rights preserved clause)
Visual identity kit + core talking points
Safety plan + marshal handbook
Clinician letter template (1 page) + “independence” definition
Target map by country/region
Launch press conference + first national action day
Candidate pledge + scorecard framework
First “compliance list” publication (who has committed / refused / silent)
Partner onboarding (survivor orgs, clinician networks)
Parliamentary/legislative motions drafted (jurisdiction-specific)
Institutional pressure package (donor letters, partner briefings)
Formal proposal for fund governance and auditing model
Draft settlement framework (principles + operations + audit)
Country annexes (legal interface; payment mechanics; tax handling)
Monitoring dashboard (“commitments vs delivery”)
Backlash / “too disruptive” framing → keep nonviolent discipline; choose tactics that reduce public harm. The Guardian Robin Buller Fri 26 Dec 2025 01.00 AEDT
Survivor retraumatisation → opt-in storytelling; support infrastructure; shorter events; quiet zones.
Legal exposure (permits, defamation, privacy) → jurisdiction-specific legal review; publish carefully sourced claims; avoid naming individuals without proof.
Internal conflict → charter + decision rules + independent mediation.
What I would ideally need from you (to tailor this to your context without slowing you down)
If you reply with just bullet point answers, John@traumainreligion.com I can reshape the scope into a ready-to-publish campaign brief:
Your preferred primary geography (Australia-first, Vatican/Italy, US, or global-from-day-one).
The three institutions you most want to pressure first (e.g., bishops conference, specific dioceses, government departments).
Whether you would want the campaign to explicitly include your Sovereignty Segment framing in every release.
Below are ready-to-use templates tailored for Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand first, with Sovereignty embedded throughout (personal, legal, and national). They are written to be deployable immediately, trauma-informed, non-bureaucratic, and defensible under public scrutiny.
You can paste these directly into your campaign folder and brand them as needed.
Date: [Insert date]
Cities: [Canberra / Wellington / Nationwide]
Survivors Call for Universal $US5 Million Settlement for Clergy Child Sexual Abuse – Rights Preserved, No Gag Clauses
Survivors of child sexual abuse by clergy and church-controlled institutions today launched the 5M Justice Campaign, calling on the Australian and Aotearoa New Zealand governments to support a global, universal settlement of US$5 million per survivor, accessed through written support from two independent health professionals, without forcing survivors into adversarial legal processes.
The campaign is survivor-led and grounded in a simple principle: care-first compensation must not require survivors to surrender their right to justice.
“This is not about silence, forgiveness, or closure,” said a campaign spokesperson.
“It is about restoring dignity and sovereignty to people whose lives were shattered while institutions obstructed justice for decades.”
A universal settlement of US$5 million per survivor, indexed for inflation
Access based on written support from two independent health professionals
No non-disclosure agreements, no waivers, no limitation on a survivor’s right to pursue civil or criminal action for rape, enablement, cover-up, or obstruction of justice
Independent survivor-led administration, with transparent auditing
Timely decisions and payments that do not retraumatise survivors
Survivors in Australia and New Zealand have repeatedly faced:
institutional delay and legal attrition
opaque redress schemes with capped payouts
forced re-exposure to trauma through adversarial processes
unequal outcomes depending on jurisdiction, resources, or institutional power
“This campaign exists because justice delayed and filtered through institutional self-interest is justice denied.”
The 5M Justice Campaign affirms sovereignty at three levels:
Personal Sovereignty – Survivors retain authority over their bodies, stories, health decisions, and legal pathways. No institution may compel silence, compliance, or retraumatisation as a condition of support.
Legal Sovereignty – Settlements must not override or neutralise the rule of law. Survivors retain the full right to pursue civil or criminal accountability, including actions for obstruction, concealment, or foreign-enabled interference.
National Sovereignty – Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand must not allow foreign religious institutions, financial structures, or immunity doctrines to undermine domestic justice, human rights obligations, or democratic accountability.
All campaign actions are peaceful, trauma-informed, and non-violent. Survivors participate only to the extent they choose.
[Name / Campaign Office] [Secure phone / email]
Campaign statement & resources: [Website / placeholder]
(Non-Violent, Trauma-Informed, Survivor-Centred)
This checklist is designed to protect survivors, the public, and the campaig
☐ Marshals briefed on non-violence and de-escalation only ☐ Clear code of conduct circulated (no chanting at individuals, no confrontation with worshippers) ☐ Quiet / low-stimulus area identified ☐ Water, seating, and shade planned ☐ Exit routes clearly identified ☐ Local legal observer / support contact identified ☐ No survivor is required to speak, disclose, or identify themselves
Safety Lead: coordinates marshals, liaises with police if required
Wellbeing Marshal: watches for distress, offers quiet space support
Boundary Marshal: gently redirects confrontational behaviour
Media Marshal: ensures cameras do not pressure survivors
☐ Maintain calm, neutral body language
☐ Intervene early and quietly if tensions rise
☐ Do not argue theology, guilt, or doctrine
☐ Protect anonymity (no forced photos, no naming without consent)
☐ If police attend: one designated liaison only
☐ Remove audience pressure immediately
☐ Offer quiet space or exit support
☐ Never question, minimise, or analyse survivor reactions
☐ Follow survivor’s lead
✗ No violence or threats
✗ No doxxing or naming individuals without evidence and consent
✗ No forced storytelling
✗ No confrontation inside places of worship
☐ Check-in messages to known survivor participants
☐ Incident notes recorded (confidentially)
☐ Review safety improvements for next action
(Dignity-Preserving | Minimal Gatekeeping | Non-Forensic)
This template is not a diagnosis, not a legal opinion, and not a truth-finding exercise.
It exists solely to reduce harm and remove retraumatising barriers.
I am a [profession, registration number, country] and confirm that I have provided clinical care to the person named below.
I support their access to the 5M Justice Campaign universal settlement on the following professional basis:
In the course of my clinical work, I understand this person to be a survivor of sexual abuse experienced as a child within a clergy-controlled or religious institutional context.
They experience ongoing psychological, emotional, and/or functional impacts consistent with serious trauma.
In my professional opinion, requiring adversarial legal processes or repeated disclosure as a precondition for support would pose a foreseeable risk of harm or retraumatisation.
I consider access to a care-first, non-adversarial settlement pathway to be supportive of this person’s health and wellbeing.
This letter:
does not assess criminal liability
does not waive the survivor’s legal rights
It is provided solely to support access to a non-coercive compensation mechanism that preserves dignity and autonomy.
Signed,
Name: Profession & Registration:
Contact (optional):
No requirement to detail abuse acts
No requirement to name perpetrators
No requirement for duration, frequency, or corroboration
Survivor narrative is accepted as presented
2023 Findings in Spain found that 0.6% of the population of Spain had been sexually abused by Roman Catholic priests and laity. Up to 50 million alive on any day who have been raped or abused by Catholic clergy &/or Catholic laity
Current world population is 8 billion - 0.6% = 48 million alive today who are likely to have been raped by Catholics globally.
The church protected the perpetrators, not the victims
"This is a matter for the church and I respect the internal judgements of the church. I don't stand outside the church and provide them with public lectures in terms of how they should behave. I've noted carefully what his Holiness has said in the United States. Obviously that was a source of great comfort and healing in the United States. I'm like all Australians very much looking forward to what the Pope has to say here in Australia as well, as I am to my own conversation with the Pope later this morning." Kevin Rudd, Prime Minister of Australia, 17 July 2008. more
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Wednesday, 22 June 2022 - I may not have this down syntax, word and letter perfect or
with
absolute precision in every aspect; however time and the evidence will show that I am closer to the truth than
any religion has been or will likely be.
Let history be the standard by which that is measured.
Youtube - listen to Commissioner Bob
Atkinson get it wrong - again
The Commissioner informs us that the clergy sexual abuse issue was all over and that it had only been a
small statistical glitch around the year 2000. History shows this to have been a display of absolute ignorance
on the issue ...
Makarrata : a better future for our children based on justice and self-determination. The Uluru Statement from the Heart. See Yours, mine and Australia's children. I acknowledge the Traditional People and their Ownership of Australia.
Constitutional Reform Human Rights Living Constitution Constitution Field Guide Corruption Whistleblowers Medical Research Clinical Trials
Hegemony: The authority, dominance, and influence of one group, nation, or society over another group, nation, or society; typically through cultural, economic, or political means.


Mother and baby home survivors on redress delay:
'They are playing a game of wait and die'
Consultants
reported more than 520 conflicts of interest during audit of Australian aged care
2024 is the year of Survivor's High Court challenge of the legitimacy of the Catholic Church and its religion on the basis of its primary allegiance and obedience to a foreign state.
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