AN ARISTOCRATIC UPBRINGING:There are many people who write about sex slaves on the plantation and it surely did exist but it was also the norm in Europe for many centuries. The Polos were not the first who went off to get the prized Tartar women who fetched a large multiple over ordinary men slaves. The Church was full of reprobates using concubines and producing children that sometimes were harvested for their useful ritualistic ingredients. Josephine (Rose per the next author) had a family with a long history of such things."More concrete were the queries about the paternity of many of the mulatto women who worked in the house, like Rose's nurse, Marion. Was she fathered by Blanque, the overseer? Grandfather de Sannois? Joseph? {Her father.} Or some other white man from some other plantation? There was little doubt about the paternal identity of the pretty mulatto slave Euph?mie, who eventually accompanied Rose to Paris: it was widely accepted that she was the illegitimate daughter of Joseph de La Pagerie." (3)There is little doubt as to the fact of Josephine having been 'apolitically' inclined and yet her having been doing the networking that spies must do. The 'apolitical' nature of the Physiocrats headed by Pierre Dupont de Nemours in the political arena is not truly 'apolitical' at all but it is expressed in their slogan 'the government that governs best is the one that governs least'. This Royal intrigue had been started with John Locke and Adam Smith with the backing of the Stuart (Hibernian) Royal Society whose membership often provided the leadership for Paris's Priory of Sion. Some of those leaders include Sir Isaac Newton, Robert Boyle and Robert Fludd. It is easy to demonstrate the need for this Enlightenment did exist in all areas of science and society but the secrecy has been maintained beyond its usefulness as I see it. Let us return to our Stuart biographer and contemplate a time when Josephine's husband was a General in the Revolutionary Army." During this frightening period, Rose spent much of her time, according to her friend Mme. de R?musat, 'busying herself with helping as many people as possible and although her reputation for conduct is questionable, that of her sweetness, her grace and the gentleness of her manner is not'. She had learned to be a skilful networker.