Post by FilmFlaneur on Nov 17, 2020 13:51:00 GMT

What you "showed" was that you are incompetent to discuss the topic. Did any of your links list even one case? No. They just listed the judgement calls of uncoordinated researchers who were too distant from any cases to read them properly.
A book I can personally recommend in connection with this scare is Speak of the Devil: Tales of Satanic Abuse in Contemporary England, (1998) which is indeed an instance of well respected, co-ordinated research.
www.amazon.co.uk/Speak-Devil-Satanic-Contemporary-England/dp/0521629349/ref=sr_1_6?dchild=1&keywords=satanic+child+abuse&qid=1605620708&s=books&sr=1-6
for which the blurb is:
"Allegations of satanic child abuse became widespread in North America in the 1980s. Shortly afterwards, there were similar reports in Britain of sexual abuse, torture and murder, associated with worship of the Devil. Professor Jean La Fontaine, a senior British anthropologist, conducted a two year research project into these allegations, which found that they were without foundation. Her detailed analysis of a number of specific cases, and an extensive review of the literature, revealed no evidence of devil-worship. She concludes that the child witnesses come to believe that they are describing what actually happened to them, but that adults are manipulating the accusations. She draws parallels with classic instances of witchcraft accusations and witch-hunts in sixteenth and seventeenth-century Europe, and shows that beneath the hysteria there is a social movement, which is fostered by a climate of social and economic insecurity. Persuasively argued, this is an authoritative and scholarly account of an emotive issue."
As others have pointed out this is all in stark contrast to the child abuse scandal which is still plaguing the church, featuring connivance and a conspiracy of silence which in some cases reached, and still reaches, to the top.

