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Both the Pope and the Prime Minister made apologies, but they lacked action and were not very sincere. The Pope used complicated sentences, blamed others, and didn't hold the church accountable. The Prime Minister spoke facts, but it seemed like he had a legal team behind him. Both apologies avoided addressing the atrocities that occurred. Apologies are a start, but justice is needed. Now it's Scott's turn to speak. The scene about the apologies from both the Pope and the Prime Minister is a lot of words but not any action, and not even very good words. The Pope used non-needless words over complicated sentences, drifted off topic constantly, blamed it on members of the church, not the church itself, and the clergy who committed these acts have not been convicted. And the Prime Minister was speaking facts but he definitely had a whole legal team on it when you think about how he added adverbs to every fact. And each of the apologies ended with God bless you, when Christians were the ones who ran the church. Both of these apologies deflect, avoid, and sugar coat the atrocities that happened. Apologies are a start but they need to end in justice. Now I'll pass the talking sticks to Scott.