RSS Date Posted : December 19, 2005 11:31:48 PM Comments
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Honoring the Truth: a Response to the Backlash
HONORING THE TRUTH: A RESPONSE TO THE BACKLASH by ELLEN BASS and LAURA DAVIS from THE COURAGE TO HEAL: A GUIDE FOR WOMEN SURVIVORS OF CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE THIRD EDITION, 1994 published by HarperCollins “Honoring the Truth” is a response to the current backlash against adult survivors of child sexual abuse. If you’ve watched TV, listened to the radio, or read newspapers or magazines in the past two years, it’s likely that you’ve heard about the “false memory syndrome” and have witnessed attacks on survivors’ memories and credibility. It is these attacks we are responding to here. As in the rest of The Courage to Heal, we have included the experiences of survivors as well as practical self-help information. Unlike the rest of the book, however, we also incorporate here the work of therapists, researchers, and other experts—and more than a hundred footnotes—to place this backlash in a historical and political perspective.1 A number of survivors and professionals have read “Honoring the Truth.” Most appreciated having clear information and an analysis of the issues. One survivor wrote to us, “I felt a lot of the cloudiness of the issue fall away—I felt reassured and validated.” Another said, “I am not as likely to get sucked into the fear and doubt that the backlash is trying to perpetuate.” Yet this same survivor said it had been a lot harder to read than she 1 In writing The Courage to Heal, we listened to survivors of child sexual abuse and presented what we learned in a clear, practical, and respectful way. -
Recantation and False Allegations of Child Abuse
Recantation and False Allegations of Child Abuse Prepared by David N. King, Ph.D. Maureen Drost, B.A. Selected Bibliography 2005 Updated 2011 Muriel K. Wells, MLIS This publication was supported in part by Grant No. SM 54259-01 from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Its contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Copyright © 2005, 2011 National Children’s Advocacy Center. All rights reserved. 1 ©National Children’s Advocacy Center, 2011 Recantation and False Allegations of Child Abuse Recantation and False Allegations of Child Abuse Selected Bibliography Introduction The issues pertaining to recantation and false allegations of abuse by children are among the more complex to understand psychologically and to interpret accurately. Ac-cording to Lipian, Mills and Brantman (2004), false allegations of abuse may derive from (1) submitting to suggestion by authority figures; (2) the result of "pseudo memories;" or (3) the product of evading honest answers. Recantation may result from the same reasons. Scope This bibliography focuses specifically on literature related to recantation and false allegations of abuse experienced in childhood. The relationship between disclosure, memory, truthfulness, fantastical storytelling, suggestibility, and coaching with recantation and false allegations is complex. To the extent possible, this bibliography does not, except in passing, delve deeply into those topics, preferring instead to provide guidance to publications that specifically address the core topic of false allegations and recanted accusation. -
Qanon and Facebook
The Boom Before the Ban: QAnon and Facebook Ciaran O’Connor, Cooper Gatewood, Kendrick McDonald and Sarah Brandt 2 ‘THE GREAT REPLACEMENT’: THE VIOLENT CONSEQUENCES OF MAINSTREAMED EXTREMISM / Document title: About this report About NewsGuard This report is a collaboration between the Institute Launched in March 2018 by media entrepreneur and for Strategic Dialogue (ISD) and the nonpartisan award-winning journalist Steven Brill and former Wall news-rating organisation NewsGuard. It analyses Street Journal publisher Gordon Crovitz, NewsGuard QAnon-related contents on Facebook during a provides credibility ratings and detailed “Nutrition period of increased activity, just before the platform Labels” for thousands of news and information websites. implemented moderation of public contents spreading NewsGuard rates all the news and information websites the conspiracy theory. Combining quantitative and that account for 95% of online engagement across the qualitative analysis, this report looks at key trends in US, UK, Germany, France, and Italy. NewsGuard products discussions around QAnon, prominent accounts in that include NewsGuard, HealthGuard, and BrandGuard, discussion, and domains – particularly news websites which helps marketers concerned about their brand – that were frequently shared alongside QAnon safety, and the Misinformation Fingerprints catalogue of contents on Facebook. This report also recommends top hoaxes. some steps to be taken by technology companies, governments and the media when seeking to counter NewsGuard rates each site based on nine apolitical the spread of problematic conspiracy theories like criteria of journalistic practice, including whether a QAnon on social media. site repeatedly publishes false content, whether it regularly corrects or clarifies errors, and whether it avoids deceptive headlines. -
American Monsters: Tabloid Media and the Satanic Panic, 1970-2000
AMERICAN MONSTERS: TABLOID MEDIA AND THE SATANIC PANIC, 1970-2000 A Dissertation Submitted to the Temple University Graduate Board In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY by Sarah A. Hughes May 2015 Examining Committee Members: Kenneth L. Kusmer, Advisory Chair, History Carolyn Kitch, Journalism Susan E. Klepp, History Elaine Tyler May, External Member, University of Minnesota, American Studies © Copyright 2015 by Sarah A. Hughes All Rights Reserved iii ABSTRACT “American Monsters: Tabloid Media and the Satanic Panic, 1970-2000,” analyzes an episode of national hysteria that dominated the media throughout most of the 1980s. Its origins, however, go back much farther and its consequences for the media would extend into subsequent decades. Rooted in the decade’s increasingly influential conservative political ideology, the satanic panic involved hundreds of accusations that devil-worshipping pedophiles were operating America’s white middle-class suburban daycare centers. Communities around the country became embroiled in criminal trials against center owners, the most publicized of which was the McMartin Preschool trial in Manhattan Beach, California. The longest and most expensive trial in the nation’s history, the McMartin case is an important focal point of this project. In the 1990s, judges overturned the life sentences of defendants in most major cases, and several prominent journalists and lawyers condemned the phenomenon as a witch-hunt. They accurately understood it to be a powerful delusion, or what contemporary cultural theorist Jean Baudrillard termed a “hyperreality,” in which audiences confuse the media universe for real life. Presented mainly through tabloid television, or “infotainment,” and integral to its development, influence, and success, the panic was a manifestation of the hyperreal. -
Ritual Abuse: the Under-Recognized Problem Author: Svali Published On: March 8, 2000
Untitled URL: http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/6554/35043 Suite101.com Inc. <www.suite101. com> Ritual abuse: the under-recognized problem Author: Svali Published on: March 8, 2000 **If you are a survivor of ritual abuse, please be aware that reading about it may be triggering. Please take care of yourself, and be in a safe place before reading Ritual abuse. The word conjures up images of people in robes, chanting, or perhaps a grade D horror flick. But what is the reality? First, let's look at a definition of ritual abuse: Ritual abuse is the systematic, repetitive abuse of both children and adults by either an individual or a group. It may involve psychological, sexual, physical and/or spiritual abuse, and the effects are devastating on the individual who undergoes it. Often survivors of this type of extreme abuse cope by dissociating, and as adults may continue the cycle of amnesia and abuse. The key word here is : repetitive. Ritual abuse is done repetitively, in a consistent pattern, over time. This may be done in the name of a religious belief, or simply out of patterned cruelty. Any idealogy can and has been used to justify the pattern of abuse. Most of the victimization begins in early childhood, and is done by adults who were themselves abused. The cycle continues because people often do not realize that they can stop it; often, they feel "trapped" in the pattern of abuse. What is the incidence of ritual abuse today? Statistics vary, depending upon the source. When I lived in a large metropolitan city in the Southwest, population close to 2,000,000 , the group that I was affiliated with, known as the Illuminati, had 24 sister groups. -
Child Sex Rings: a Behavioral Analysis for Criminal Justice Professionals Handling Cases of Child Sexual ~ Exploitation
If you have issues viewing or accessing this file contact us at NCJRS.gov. NATIONAL CENTER FOR MISt.f9IN(. 1~"I"j('lrl'l~I) -----1.---' CHI L D R E N Child Sex Rings: A Behavioral Analysis For Criminal Justice Professionals Handling Cases of Child Sexual ~ Exploitation In cooperation with the Federal Bureau of Investigation ------------------ 149214 U.S. Department of Justice National Institute of Justice This document has been reproduced exactly as received from the person or organization originating it. Points of view or opinions stated in this document are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official position or policies of the National Institute of Justice. Permission to reproduce this copyrighted material has been grantedNaElona1 by • center f'or Mlsslng . & Exploited Chi1dren/DOJ/FBI to the National Criminal Justice Reference Service (NCJRS). Further reproduction outside of the NCJRS system requires permission of the copyright owner. Child Sex Rings: A Behavioral Analysis For Criminal Justice Professionals Handling Cases of Child Sexual Exploitation April 1992 Second Edition Kenneth V. Lanning Supervisory Special Agent Behavioral Science Unit Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI Academy Quantico, Virginia © National Center for Missing & Exploited Children Dedication This book is dedicated to the victims of child sex rings and to the memory of two FBI agents who devoted their professional lives to helping sexually exploited children. Leo E. Brunnick FBI Boston, Massachusetts Alan V. MacDonald FBI Boston, Massachusetts Contents Author's Preface v 1. Historical Overview 1 "Stranger Danger" 1 Intrafamilial Child Sexual Abuse 2 Return to "Stranger Danger" 2 The Acquaintance Molester 3 Satanism: A "New" Form of "Stranger Danger" 3 2. -
<---BACK to INDEX
8/17/2020 Pedophilia Defined <----- BACK TO INDEX ------- (c) 2007-2019 Derek W. Logue. No part of this website may be used in any way without expressed written consent of the site owner. REGISTERED CITIZENS vs PEDOPHILES vs “SEX OFFENDERS”: UNDERSTANDING THE DIFFERENCES Derek W. Logue of OnceFallen.com Published 14 July 2019 INTRODUCTION The mainstream media and American society as a whole tends to use the terms “sex offender” and “pedophile” interchangeably. At times, news reports use the erroneous term “convicted pedophile.” This article examines the differences between people diagnosed with pedophilia and people convicted of a sexual offense. People can be forced to register without having a clinical diagnosis of pedophilia, and a clinically diagnosed pedophile is not listed on the public sex offense registry if he or she has not omitted a sexual offense. SEMANTICS MATTERS The major premise needs to be stated repeatedly: “Pedophile” is a clinical term, "Sex Offender" is a legal term. You cannot be convicted of “pedophilia” but you can be convicted of a sex offense. There is no such thing as a “convicted pedophile.” You can be a pedophile without committing a sex offense. You can commit a sex offense and not be a pedophile. In order to understand the differences, we must begin with a proper definition of each term. “Sex Offender” The definition of the term “sex offender” is pretty straightforward—“A person who has been found guilty of one or more sex crimes.”[1] This means anyone convicted of adult rape, a prostitute or person paying for prostitution,[2] a teenager engaging in various sexual acts with a teenager,[3] a public urinator,[4] a teenager engaging in sexting,[5] or someone who viewed a nude picture of someone ages 16 or 17 (even if it is legal to engage in sexual intercourse with the person in the picture)[6] can be classified as “sex offender” without engaging in sexual activity involving a prepubescent minor. -
PLM5340 Fringe Politics and Extremist Violence
1 From Wewelsburg to Project Monarch: Anatomy of a Fringe Violence Conspiracy Alex Burns ([email protected]), June 2005 Abstract In 1982 the Temple of Set (ToS) a pre-eminent ‘Satanic’ religious institution faced an initiatory crisis. Its senior initiate Dr. Michael A. Aquino travelled to Heinrich Himmler’s Wewelsburg castle to reflect on the ethical and philosophical implications of the crisis. The resulting document, a reflective meditation known as the ‘Wewelsburg Working’, later became controversial when it was leaked to Christian fundamentalist, Patriot militia, the Larouche movement and cult awareness communities. This essay examines the Wewelsburg Current as a case study in how social diffusion of ‘forbidden knowledge’ may create unforeseen effects and why the document was interpreted differently by new religious groups, media pundits, law enforcement officials and extremist political subcultures. The sources include publicly available literature, hermeneutic interpretation of internal documents, and reflexive heuristic inquiry (this addresses issues of research subjectivity given the author’s ToS membership between 1996 and 1998). It also draws on insights about the broader ‘Nazi Occult’ subculture by Joscelyn Godwin, Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke, Mark Jonathan Rogers, Stephen Edred Flowers and Peter Levenda. The essay identifies four key problems for future research. First, researchers of extremist politics will need to be familiar with reflexive embodied research. Second, critical layered methods are required to evaluate different interpretations of knowledge claims. Third, the social diffusion of ‘forbidden knowledge’ often creates crises that rival the nuclear proliferation debate. Fourth, the ‘Wewelsburg Working’ has ethical implications about confronting the ontological nature of radical evil in an era Michael Ignatieff defines as ‘virtual war’. -
Satanic Panic
BOOK REVIEW: Satanic Panic: Pop Cultural Paranoia in the 1980s RODGERS, Diane <http://orcid.org/0000-0002-3117-4308> Available from Sheffield Hallam University Research Archive (SHURA) at: http://shura.shu.ac.uk/23113/ This document is the author deposited version. You are advised to consult the publisher's version if you wish to cite from it. Published version RODGERS, Diane (2016). BOOK REVIEW: Satanic Panic: Pop Cultural Paranoia in the 1980s. Cinema Retro. Copyright and re-use policy See http://shura.shu.ac.uk/information.html Sheffield Hallam University Research Archive http://shura.shu.ac.uk Satanic Panic: Pop Cultural Paranoia in the 1980s Ed. Kier-La Janisse & Paul Corupe (2015) Spectacular Optical Publications www.spectacularoptical.ca ISBN: 978-0992-146313 $29.95 CAN / £17.95 UK Review by Diane Rodgers Those around in the 1980s may well remember hysteria about 'video nasties' and the fevered destruction of records in America bearing the (then new) Parental Advisory: Explicit Lyrics label, fuelled by fears of a pervading obsession with evil amongst youth and popular culture. Satanic Panic studies this moral frenzy from a vast array of perspectives in fascinating depth, outlining the fears of anxious parents and a confused mainstream culture about teens supposedly embroiled in Satanic cults and potentially carrying out ritual abuse, devil worship, suicide or murder at any given moment. Following the rise of interest in the occult from the 1960s onward, it's easy to see why Reagan's America, still reeling from the confusion of Vietnam and the implications for the 'American Dream', morality and family values, latched onto something so easily sensationalised as a scapegoat to blame for all of society's problems. -
Who Are the UFO Abductees and Ritual-Abuse Survivors?
Supernatural Support Groups: Who Are the UFO Abductees and Ritual-Abuse Survivors? CHRISTOPHER D. BADER In the 1980s two different groups emerged that exhibited a strikingly similar combination of the quasi-religious and psychotherapeutic—UFO abductees and ritual-abuse survivors. Both movements focused on healing members from victimization they had experienced at the hands of beings of often supernatural power. Further, both movements attempt to use techniques developed in psychotherapeutic circles, such as hypnosis, art therapy, and role playing, to recover “repressed” memories at the hands of these abusers. This article presents the results of surveys of 55 UFO abductees and 51 ritual-abuse survivors. Both UFO abductees and ritual-abuse survivors are compared to the general population in terms of their gender, age, race, marital status, education, and occupation. It is determined that the demographics of these two fledgling movements closely mirror those of other NRMs. In the 1980s two different movements emerged that exhibited a strikingly similar combination of the quasi-religious and psychotherapeutic—UFO abductees and ritual-abuse survivors (Paley 1997). Both movements focused on healing members from victimization they had experienced at the hands of beings of often supernatural power. Further, both movements use techniques developed in psychotherapeutic circles, such as hypnosis, art therapy, and role playing, to recover “repressed” memories at the hands of these abusers. In the mid-1980s an increasing number of support groups appeared that were centered around so-called UFO abductions. UFO abductee support groups attempt to help people recover re- pressed memories of victimization at the hands of extraterrestrials. Also in the mid-1980s an increasing number of therapists and support groups focusing on “ritual abuse” began seeking clients/members. -
They Couldn't Get My Soul': Recovered Memories, Ritual Abuse
Studies in Religion / Sciences Religieuses 1–19 ª The Author(s) / Le(s) auteur(s), 2018 They Couldn’t Get My Reprints and permission/ Reproduction et permission: Soul: Recovered sagepub.co.uk/journalsPermissions.nav DOI: 10.1177/0008429817748138 Memories, Ritual Abuse, journals.sagepub.com/home/sr and the Specter(s) of Religious Difference Megan Goodwin Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA Abstract: During the 1980s and early 1990s, hundreds of women recovered memories of suffering extraordinary and nefarious torments at the hands of loved ones and trusted authority figures—a phenomenon that came to be known as satanic ritual abuse (SRA). In this article, I argue that late twentieth-century satanic ritual abuse discourse helped perpetuate intolerance toward non-Christian religions and foreclose conditions of possibility for benign religious difference in the United States. Psychological diagnoses related to satanic ritual abuse fueled popular anxieties regarding the sexual peril of American minority religions. Perpetuating diagnoses of satanic ritual abuse reinforced popular suspicions that religious minorities are dangerous, particularly when it comes to matters of sexuality. Re´sume´ : Au cours des anne´es 1980 et 1990, des centaines de femmes ame´ricaines ont raconte´ avoir e´te´ victimes de violences religieuses extraordinaires de la part de leurs proches (famille et figures d’autorite´). Ce phe´nome`ne a e´te´ de´signe´ par le terme de SRA (satanic ritual abuse). Cet article avance l’hypothe`se selon laquelle ces re´cits d’abus sataniques rituels ont soutenu et encourage´ un discours d’intole´rance envers les religions non-chre´tiennes aux E´tats-Unis. -
Qanon As a Variation of a Satanic Conspiracy Theory: an Overview
Theory and Practice in English Studies Volume 9, No. 1–2, 2020 E-ISSN: 1805-0859 QANON AS A VARIATION OF A SATANIC CONSPIRACY THEORY: AN OVERVIEW Miroslav Vrzal Abstract This text deals with the phenomenon known as “QAnon” as a variation of a Satanic conspiracy theory. This form of conspiracy operates with evil forces and their agents on Earth in secret Satanic networks. In the case of QAnon, it is mirrored in the narra- tive which says that prominent Democrats, certain celebrities, financiers and other influential figures are a part of a secret global Satanic and paedophile ring which rules the world. The U.S. president Donald Trump is considered to be secretly fighting against this conspiracy and plans to arrest the evil elites during an expected event known as “The Storm.” With a generalized enemy that is Satanized and considered dangerous (as a threat to the American nation) and amoral on the one side, and Trump as a messiah-like hero on the other side, QAnon resonates primarily with the Repub- lican movement. This enemy also became part of a political struggle. QAnon mobi- lized some Republicans and their supporters in the campaign for the re-election of Donald Trump in 2020 by turning the Q followers into warriors to fight in this important battle of the QAnon cosmic war between good and evil. Nevertheless, QAnon is only one instance of this kind of mobilization in the United States against the imagined inner secret Satanic enemy. Another powerful mobilization could be observed in the connection with the phenomenon of Satanic panic.