You're Wrong About - The Satanic Panic
Episode Date: May 3, 2018The 1980s were real but the Satanists weren't. Sarah tells Mike about why America spent a decade worried about witches running daycare centers. Support us:Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PaypalBuy ...cute merchWhere to find us: Sarah's other show, Why Are Dads Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseSupport the show
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And I'll finally give my Ted talk about Ted Bundy
That's a very like Sarah Marshall Ted talk
So
Satan wise yeah start me off. How did uh, how did all this begin? Well, can you describe it to me?
What is the satanic panic so my understanding is that in the 80s?
There was this thing where we thought that there were satanic cults that were
murdering children and
It was the parents that got together and they were worshiping Satan and they were sacrificing their kids and
it was all very
pagan and
very
I want to say true detective, but of course it was before true detective, but it was this it
Seemed like it was much bigger than what the actual I guess the act of right isolated
But it kind of became this thing that the whole country was very concerned about you're you're right in the
overarching description of it and then wrong on two
Interesting points and what hadn't struck me until you said that is that as far I can't think of any allegations that I've read about
So far about actual child murder. There were a lot of stories about animal sacrifice
But what the accusations were mainly about were child sexual abuse
So it was sexual abuse and then
Overwhelmingly it wasn't parents who were being accused of it, but it was teachers and daycare workers and
especially daycare employees the case that started this all off was the McMartin
preschool case where there was a preschool in
Manhattan Beach, California where the McMartin trial started in 1983 and went until 1990 and was the most
Expensive criminal trial in US history cost 15 million dollars. There was in the end essentially no result
There was no actual evidence. Everyone got acquitted. What was the case? What was the crime?
So what happened was that the mother of a
Four-year-old boy who was enrolled there her son had had painful bowel movements
their conflicting accounts that came
during the trial and in one version of the story he
Accused a teacher of molesting him and then later took it back and another version of the story
He didn't take it back and one of the things he also said about
Worker at the preschool was named Ray was that he flew through the air and so the mother
Takes her concerns to the police the police
write a letter and send it out to
Parents of about 200 other children at the preschool and I can read you some of it
What's interesting about this is that there's from the beginning a lot of leading
Was this before we sort of knew about false confessions?
the prevailing attitude at the time and the slogan that became attached to the McMartin trial and then to the other
accusations and trials that followed was
believe the children and
You can see how that is a form of backlash against the fact that previously children
We're not really believed about this kind of thing and we can take it as far back as Freud
Having his patients talk about their father's committing father daughter incest with them as it would be known for
Decades still and just being unable to believe
That his patients were really being molested by male family members and we were coming off of
Decades and generations of being able to look abuse dynamic squarely in the eye and
Simply not accepting them and not believing people who came forth about this kind of thing and I think that the the need to
To say no a child would never make this up a child can't lie was in to some degree
Reparations for all that so the pendulum swung back, but then we didn't temper it with believe children
But don't ask the leading questions
Yeah, the impetus to believe children folds in on itself and turns into an inability to believe children who say that they weren't abused if
the adults involved in the situation
believe that abuse had to have happened and so it happens in
The McMartin case is that the police send a form letter out to parents of about
200 children and the letter says
Please question your child to see if he or she has been a witness to any crime or if he or she has been a victim our
Investigation indicates that possible criminal acts include oral sex fondling of genitals buttock or chest area and sodomy
Possibly committed under the pretense of quote taking the child's temperature. Oh my god
So they just send out this letter this extremely inflammatory letter to a bunch of parents
Yeah, and imagine if you're a parent and you have a four-year-old enrolled in preschool and you're told we have we have arrested a
worker at this preschool and the accusations against him are
These horrific things that every parent is
Terrified beyond almost anything else. How are you not going to assume that terrible things could very well have happened to your child
So what happens of course is that parents question children and the parents also become suspicious because their children are exhibiting
signs of what these see what they see is
Of them being disturbed following maybe some form of abuse and it's things like bedwetting and nightmares and suddenly not liking foods
That they liked before and things that's like what every four-year-old
Constantly does what every four-year-old constantly does I was thinking also while I was researching this about I was
Baby sitting for a three-year-old a few weeks ago
we were
Like in a messy like a garage area and she was in her socks and got down and got her socks
Dirty which I hadn't realized she wasn't supposed to do and then her grandmother came back in and was like
Oh, you got your socks dirty and I said, oh, it wasn't I that was my dad
I didn't know I'm sorry and the three-year-old goes. No, it wasn't her fault. It was someone else
Which I would which I really loved because
Like that's someone I want on my crew right like someday when I'm doing a heist someone who knows it's three
Yeah, no, she's she gets it
But also I was thinking if you came in to that if you just heard a three-year-old say that and you had an idea
Well, children can't lie three-year-olds can't lie three-year-olds can't conceive of lying
Who was the someone else person and then if you are convinced as an adult and have some kind of confirmation
Bias like you would if someone sent you a horrifying letter
Then you can take, you know a three-year-old a four-year-old and sit them down and kind of poke them in Prada and say who was someone else
tell me about someone else and
Kids tend to not immediately recant and so if I had been you know for a three or four and someone had said who is someone else
I would make something up and come up with who this someone else person was and then I would do long-term thinking as a
Three-year-old you're not thinking through. Hey if I tell a lie now, I'm gonna have to stick with that lie
So it's better to just rip the band-aid off and tell the truth now. You don't think in that way. You just keep telling lies
Yeah, just saying especially what somebody wants to hear too
I mean so much of child behavior at that point is about
Impressing your parents or telling people something that will make them happy or make them laugh
Yeah, and so what we see in the the transcripts from some of these cases and from the questioning that these children are put
Through is adults saying things along the lines of we know that your teacher did something bad to you
Because you've got a confession or a description from one child and then you bring it to another child who corroborates it
And then it becomes truth in the minds of the adults. So we have
social workers and police officers saying things to kids like
We know that your teacher is bad and
Scary and she can't hurt you anymore and you have to help us put her in jail
So that she can't hurt any more kids. So just tell us we know that you know X thing happened
And if you're a kid and an adult is telling you
That you have to make them happy by saying that something happened
It would take an incredibly strong will child to not do that
The McMartin case goes to trial that becomes
Attracts a lot of media attention because it's the kind of story that you know if it bleeds it leads and this is
The allegations are absolutely horrifying
And then this is something that other parents across the country can look at and say if it could happen in this perfectly nice place
in California
Then who's to say it can't happen at this perfectly nice place where I take my child every day so
one of the
Police statements in the form letter is your child may have been
Sodomized under the pretense of taking their temperature and so across the country in New Jersey
a mother takes her four-year-old son to the doctor who takes his temperature temperature rectally and
The boy says oh my teacher does that to me at school and later clarifies that he means
She takes his temperature and what the mother is
Extremely ready to assume is that that means that he's being sexually abused and so that becomes the Kelly Michaels case in New Jersey
Where is the victim she's the alleged perpetrator
And so the same thing happens in New Jersey has happened in California where one child
Makes an innocuous statement to a parent
the parent interprets it as a description of abuse and
Then talks to the other parents the other parents question their kids
The police get involved and then we haven't even gotten into the satanic element of it too because in the McMartin case
The mother who initially makes the accusations, you know, she gets the accusation that Ray flew through the air the alleged
Perpetrator flew through the air and then that there are these tunnels underneath the preschool where they're taking children to do their
Rituals the other interesting thing about kids is that they will say astoundingly bizarre shit
If we're we've created a dynamic where adults are ready to believe
The whatever they say if it's an accusation against a teacher or an authority figure in their life then
These will become criminal accusations and kids also are
Obsessed with bodily functions and so a lot of the accusations of all they would be forced to eat shit
Or they would pee on each other or they would all
There was a case in Austin
About a daycare center where a couple that ran at Fran and Dan Keller were also accused of satanic ritual abuse and one of the stories
That a child told under questioning was that the killers and quoting from a Texas monthly article on this quote
Kidnapped a baby gorilla from Zilker Park after which Fran cut a finger off the gorilla and drained the blood in a water bucket
But there's never been a zoo at Zilker Park much less a gorilla
There's something funny about these suburban parents coming up with these outlandish
Accusations and then somehow convincing themselves that they're true
Of course, it's not funny at all because these people's lives are in the balance
But it's hard not to laugh at this stuff. Yeah, it's absolutely absurd
And I mean and the Kellers did hard time for this even if people were acquitted
Even if they were never formally indicted then they were publicly accused. They lost their jobs. They lost their money
It's amazing to me that no one would check up on this because it would be so easy
You're like, okay, so they got a beat they kidnapped a baby gorilla
That's legit and then cut off the finger and drain the blood into a bucket
Like there's not that much blood and a baby gorilla's finger. There's a finite number of baby gorillas in the United States
One of them went missing and its finger was cut off that in itself would be a story
That could be tracked down by some enterprising reporter
It's interesting too that American parents are are hyper vigilant about this very real and this very unreal thing
We've recently discovered that child sex abuse exists
Like this is also something that there was very little literature on until the 70s and so in 1983
We're still reeling from this idea that there is such a thing as quote father daughter incest
And are feeling hyper vigilant about it and the thinking at the time that received a lot of
societal support and federal funding in the form of group therapy programs primarily was that
It's the integrity of the family that is at fault and there also emerges this idea of the family romance and that the problem
Is that all of these women are going and working outside of the home and not being sexually available enough to their husbands
And at the same time their daughters are entering puberty and who could blame a man whose wife is giving him the cold shoulder
For just molesting his daughter a little and so that's the way that we conceive of child sexual abuse in the 70s
What we see with that methodology is this this extreme hesitance about
pathologizing the American patriarch and saying well, you know dads do this sometimes but they're it's it's not their fault
We were confronted with the fact that sexual abuse was occurring within the home
Which is I think statistically where it's most likely to occur. We couldn't see the father as
Dangerous it was seen more as like a mistake
Rather than
Evil is that what you mean? Yeah, and the solution to this was not
Questioning the nuclear American family where the father is in charge and where we have this power dynamic
You know the horror that we now feel for the figure of the child molester in America
We couldn't quite do it and it reminds me of the way that in the 70s
You know Ted Bundy is arrested and there's a lot of very concrete evidence suggesting that he's killed a lot of women and
The police charged with guarding him just can't they look at him. They're like yeah, but but but you just seem
Like such a regular guy. You seem like a regular middle-class guy
How could you really be dangerous and so he escapes from police custody twice?
We couldn't quite take it seriously
And so I think that we put a lot of that on to Satan who's good for this kind of thing and witches
Who are also good for that kind of thing one of the allegations?
Against the woman who ran the McMartin pre-school and who did serve a couple of years in custody
While this case was progressing police did a search and found a black robe among her belongings
Which there had already been allegations about witchcraft and
Satanism and people flying through the air and they were like yes
This is evidence and the black robe turns out to be a graduation robe
So at the end of this long trial they go to prison
They are acquitted because ultimately there's no actual evidence and it's funny because you can see us thinking through all of these
Important questions about criminal and legal procedure or where we're struggling with how to deal for example with the question of a case
In which the only evidence against the accused is testimony from a small child
Which is a serious thing to think about because there are cases where the only
Evidence is testimony from a small child and something horrible has happened to them
and so what happens too is that the children become mouthpieces for the parents and for the anxieties of the parents and the
confirmation bias of the
Investigating police and the social workers where as a society it seems like during this time we had this lofty goal
We wanted to take our children seriously and protect them and understand the threats that were in their lives
But we also were quite sure we wanted the threat to be outside the home
I mean the previous estimates about sexual abuse and
The frequency of quote incest put it at about one per million
That would mean in America there would be 300 people who had been molested
Which is I think we can all be pretty confident saying there's more than 300 people in the United States that have been molested some of the
For example the the Kinsey research
There's a lot of verbiage in that when they talk about incest cases or cases where children
Were experienced something sexually violent or coercive
There's a lot of description of well, you know, but it it didn't negatively affect them
There's a quote in the the Kinsey paper is something to the effect of
You know a child who has experienced for example someone
an adult exposing themselves to them
Will react only as negatively as they do if they see something like a spider like that's a normal response
Yeah, to sexual predation and there's just section overwhelming need to believe that okay, it doesn't
Happen or it happens very very occasionally and when it does it's not traumatic
The tone that people took at the time because the argument then is if someone is a survivor of sexual abuse and is
Having you know a difficult adulthood then maybe that actually is a sign of the issues and problems that they had
Before the abuse incident so almost the abuse is a symptom of all the other stuff that was going on in their life
Yeah, like you were already screwed up and that's why you got abused and the abuse didn't have any negative effect on you
It was yeah symptom of of your problems that pre it's pre-existing condition
It's interesting that there's also this conception that the only people that could ever do any molestation are
Evil to a profound extent, right? They're not just
Sexual predators, they're literal Satanists because there's no way that normal humans who weren't under the control of some dark
Sauron could ever do this. Yeah, the pre-existing fear of Satan which we had throughout the 70s
And you know, there's the fear of heavy metal bands putting satanic secret
backward satanic messages and their songs and and this idea of
You know America becoming a less Christian country and
Paganism and the dark side of the hippie movement because now in America
We have a similar inability to believe that the real danger is within the home within the system that we need to be worried about
mass incarceration we need to be worried about
Middle what's happening within a middle-class
American family we need to be worried about people who are well integrated into our communities as humans
We exhibit the same behaviors that led us to need to believe, you know, the problem is not within the American home
The problem is Satan. I think you can probably tell a lot about a society from what people don't need evidence to believe
And I think it's very telling that people didn't need great evidence to believe
Satanic abuse was going on which is fascinating to me because you would think it's such an extreme
Case it's such extreme human behavior. Yeah, and one one of the things that Kelly Michaels
I think responded to in terms of the allegations against her because one of the claims that emerged was that she had
30 children in her care and she would strip all of them naked and they would have to you know
Corrals naked together basically and one of the things she said was do you know how long it takes to undress and then dress
again 30 children if you were the adult in the room
It is impossible. I mean, I think it would take about four hours
So this letter that the cops sent out to the parents is that remotely standard procedure?
I don't know what police department's best practices are around this kind of allegation today
I think it would probably vary a lot state by state but department by department
one of the things that I think
Affected this as well is that when investigating
Allegations of these in the 70s when we really started having a national conversation about this and conceiving of it as something that happened and therefore
prosecuting it occasionally
Was that standard procedure in I think many departments at the time was to not
And also the phrase that you see a lot and this is the girl child which just seems weird to me
You know, it's like that. Are you the key master? Are you the girl child?
You know, it's the the terminology becomes weird and dated so quickly
So the girl child who had made
Allegations of abuse against her father because that was the kind that we sort of started noticing first
would not be questioned by the police and they would bring in a female social worker so that she would be
Unintimidated and be able to open up and which is again, you know, these were decisions made with
With humanist intentions and with the desire to not further traumatize a traumatized child
But the other issue with that is that if you have a social worker who's an expert on speaking with children
Or at least whose line of work that is then they are
At the time were not trained in police procedures
They weren't trained in how to question a witness or a victim about a crime that they had witnessed or had been perpetrated against them
And so the police were farming out part of their work to people who were not part of the legal system
So what are some of the things that they weren't asking that they should have things like what was the date on which he molested you?
You know one thing that as a social worker if you weren't trained as an operator within the legal system
Is that you really wouldn't you wouldn't know what kind of evidence would be admissible or not generally at trial?
You wouldn't necessarily be trained in the kinds of behaviors that can lead someone to
Confirm something that you're suggesting might have happened to them as opposed to having them introduce the information to begin with
And then of course we had social workers still
Doing a lot of questioning of kids and the McMartin case the the Kelly Michaels case the other cases that proliferated at this time
I think it would be so easy to have a sense and you know people who
Were involved in these cases have written about themselves in these terms
That you were a crusader and you were saving this kid from the forces of evil
And if they were clamming up and refusing to talk and refusing to say anything bad about this person who you believed
sincerely had done these terrible things then
You would do anything that you had to to get them to say
Something because you would feel that you were helping them to overcome their fear of this monster in their lives
If you especially if you think that sexual assault
Against children has been under reported so long and has been this sleeping giant
Underneath the culture for so long you're gonna say we're finally gonna get these people
We're finally gonna bring justice to this issue
And so I can see how that would become a runaway
Crusade for people. I think Satanism was less scary than the reality in a weird way
What we now know is that sexual abuse of
children and other
Vulnerable members of society is something that can happen
within an organized system like a church
and go on
Sometimes indefinitely with the soft collusion of many many responsible adults and community members and can be something that
We just don't see and that's scarier
Then the idea that it's yeah that we can recognize
That anyone who would sexually abuse a child would be just as likely to kidnap a baby gorilla and use its blood in a ritual
And these two things are equally unimaginable on the spectrum of human behavior and equally equally conspicuous
And then when the tide starts to turn one of the things that causes that is that people start
Very tentatively coming forward and saying is it really possible that there is this
cabal of
thousands of Satanists in the United States and they are
Infiltrating preschools and daycare centers primarily in order to abuse children and use them in their rituals and convert them to Satanism
You know why children for a start they don't have any money like if you want to get someone involved in your evil
cult then
Ideally you target someone who can help subsidize your stuff, you know rogues cost money
By the end of the 80s so many of these cases have actually been brought to trial
And there have been so many allegations that it becomes clear that for any of this to actually be happening or you know for 98%
Of it to be happening then a significant percentage of adults in America are
Members of some sort of organized satanic cult that also manages to completely avoid detection
by adults and
Only children are the ones who are seeing any of this happening and this is and it's so ornate because it involves breaking into zoos and
Kidnapping animals and building tunnels underneath preschools and taking
Children away in planes and all of this all of these things that you would think would leave some trace of physical evidence and all these
Logistics, yeah, I guess if there really wasn't a large organized group of any kind there'd be a magazine
There'd be a membership drive
There'd be at that point maybe not a website, but there would be catalogs that you could send away for
there would be all the accoutrements of
Like people that are really into golf have like an annual meeting and they have
They have a newsletter
Yeah, if there was this big of a satanic subculture then you would not have to Jerry where your graduation rose
Up into something you use for rituals. There would be something nice that you could buy
From a catalog. I've always thought one thing that's really weird about Satanism is that just like racist
No one self identifies as a Satanist because Satan is a Christian deity
So to believe in Satan to worship Satan you sort of have to believe in the Bible
But if you believe in the Bible, why would you be rooting for the bad guy?
My understanding is there are self-identified Satanist
But they're extremely small and there's the church of Satan which essentially only exists to bring free speech cases
Yeah, and I that always seemed weird to me
I remember watching Rosemary's baby when I was way too young my impression was okay
So if Satan literally exists and you're using him to impregnate someone then God exists
So that's kind of nice because if you know that Satan's there then God is there and so
And why if you have that knowledge like what's the payoff?
I've read the Satanic Bible and essentially Anton LeVe in the Satanic Bible is like look
We do not really believe in Satan. That's not a thing what this is about is
essentially this iron randy and objectivism and
Do for yourself and don't worry about other people so much and there's a whole chapter
He's like here's some spells you can do they're silly, but they're fun
Have a naked lady lie on a table and write shit on a scroll and then burn it and have some candles
And he's just saying none of this is real, but it's neat. That's a very secular viewpoint
I mean secular people can look at that and think it's jokey and fun
Whereas I think Christians would be totally horrified of that because if you actually believe in Satan then you wouldn't toy around
With his name you wouldn't throw his name around and sort of jokingly cast spells and so the entire
viewpoint of the
Satanist is that none of it's really real and so that's the only way in which you can be a Satanist
That's the thing. I mean, that's what I come back to just thinking about
Criminology is this idea of
The need to believe that there are people out there who say I'm evil and I love being evil and this is a side
I want to be on I don't think anyone really wants that I think there's probably you know
there's some rogue
teenagers and and disturb people out there who get some
sense of control or
Or satisfaction from the bravado of saying to themselves or other people. I'm I'm evil
I'm in league with Satan. I'm in league with with human evil whatever
But I don't think it's anything that any of us truly want and and yeah
And Anton LeVe could be the godfather of Satanism because he didn't actually believe in any of it. What happened to the victims
Did the victims eventually recant?
It's hard to know because a lot of them had their identities protected
and weren't
Named publicly. I have not found anything on a case falling apart because
Victims came forward and said no this actually didn't happen
I mean victims did
Alleged your victims did start to recant
You know or attempted to recant while these cases were going to trial and the line at the time was you know
You say you're saying that because you're afraid of what this person will do to you
we can't believe you if you're saying this didn't happen and so the confirmation bias of
Prosecutors during cases like this allowed them to see both silence and claims that abuse didn't happen as
Reinforcing their belief that there had been abuse which is wild in the in the absence of forensic evidence
It's interesting that they that they kept on it for that long
Yeah, unless there's just none to find in the Kelly Michaels case one of the things that was taken as forensic evidence was a child had told the story about
The about Kelly Michaels using peanut butter as a tool for sexual abuse that she would put it on her body and make the kids lick it off
I think which is exactly the kind of thing that a child would say under pressure
I think along with the gorilla finger and so
One of the investigators went into the kitchen of the day Karen found a jar of peanut butter and you know
That was like the bloody glove moment and it's like the story checks out. There's peanut butter
There's peanut butter like why would you have peanut butter if you weren't gonna use it to abuse a child?
This is like the argument that I've been having with my parents for like 50 years about whether or not the Bible is true
Which is a completely pointless argument to have but they oftentimes will bring up that there's actually
Very good evidence that there were floods
In that part of the world at that time and I'm always like that is the least difficult to believe
Part of that story like the fact that there were floods is very easy to believe
The fact that somebody took two animals of every kind and put them on a boat
That's the hard part the fact that there were floods is not really evidence that the Noah's Ark story is true
That's interesting too because I feel like so many of the aspects of the Bible that have always
Given me trouble as someone who takes things fairly literally and you know made me as someone who grew up in a secular home never particularly
prone to believe Bible stories where that they very quickly get into you know
If you're thinking about it logistically, you just think so is Noah out there catching two of every nat to get on the Ark and
How does this work and it's the same kind of logistical problems that you have with Satanism
But I guess if you're if your religion requires you to just accept
Literally as gospel things that physically don't really make sense then Satanism works out well, too
Do you think that we're at a point now where this wouldn't happen?
I don't know. I feel like I mean another really interesting aspect of this is that and I didn't really realize this until I was
researching the OJ Simpson trial a few years ago and one of the things that happened there was that
Juries really didn't know what to do with DNA evidence. They didn't know what DNA was
I think that as Americans we really didn't
Honestly in general start having a basic understanding of DNA until Jurassic Park came out
And then we all kind of figured it out and we could use it in criminal trials
March at Clark at a certain point had to in a very
painstaking
basic way explain what DNA was and explain like look our
Defendant cut himself and got his blood all over the crime scene and the odds of that blood not belonging to OJ
Simpson are literally statistically impossible and the jury at that time was able to be like I
Don't know but what another thing that's interesting though
Is that there there was an alleged form of forensic evidence in the Kelly Michaels trial and in other trials where they would bring in?
Physicians who would examine the child and say I don't know that the hymen of a
Girl was in a strange what they took to be a strange shape or they had a
Different different sized or shaped hymen or a hymen that suggested
Penetration or you know that doctors in these cases at the time believe suggested
Sodomy which is if the the anus winked they called it winking. I don't I'm not sure exactly what that
Like if if you if you prodded it it would move I guess or contract or something and that sign that you've been molested somehow
Or that you've stuck something up your butt or maybe nothing because what happens is you know after
some of these people have been convicted the
science that allegedly supports it is
debunked and
More substantive studies are conducted on you know getting a decent sample size of what a child's
Hymen or anus will do or look like which really had not been studied that much before apparently and they're like oh
actually it turns out that there's
All sorts of things that children's
Anuses and genitals do and none of them actually correlate that directly to abuse and the you know we just didn't know this before
You know we are still vulnerable as juries to junk science and there are still trials in America where bite mark evidence
Is used by prosecutors and that's something that's notoriously unreliable. There is
A lot of forensic you know non-dna forensic evidence that's brought in as evidence supporting someone's guilt that actually is
Not particularly reliable or unreliable under certain circumstances, but is presented to a jury as you know if
this is present then
this 100 percent means that defendants guilt and
Curries were not experts in this believe it. So
I think we are still vulnerable. How did this all
End did it just trail off? Did it just disappear slowly from the newspapers?
I think it did. I think we just got scared of other stuff. There are echoes of it. I the the west Memphis 3
Yeah, that was satanism, right? That was yeah, and that was satanism
They were satanists because damien eckles liked metallica
Which is also great because metallica's music is about feelings
Yeah, they're basically eighth graders
I was really into metallica when I was in eighth grade and that like music really spoke to me that in nine inch nails
Were like my shit and then looking back like listening to them now
I'm like, oh wow these this is eighth grade. This is exactly how I felt in eighth grade
But it's not particularly satanic. It's not particularly
Ideological, I think that is just the inability of old people to be interested in what young people are doing
I think that is a that is a fundamental
and constant problem that whenever you look into anything it's like
My parents parents being shocked that the Beatles hair touched their collars
every generation has a version of that and
In the 90s. It was metallica. Yeah, does this intersect with the whole recovered memories thing?
Yeah, there was a book a canadian book that came out in 1980 called michelle remembers, which I've read and is
fascinating
And is uses this repressed memory. I want to say technology, but that's not a repressed memory therapy
where basically this
And you know the circumstances around it are really interesting too a young woman named michelle
was
Happily married and just started
I forget where precipitated this exactly
But I think started exhibiting signs of psychological distress and didn't know why and felt like she'd had like a good childhood
And had a perfectly nice marriage and started seeing a psychiatrist who started doing repressed memory therapy on her
She starts recounting memories of her mother having been abusive and then that turns into memories of her mother having been in a coven
and
I think
Killed a baby or they there was something involving them using a baby or an aborted fetus in a ritual
And her having been forced as a young child to take part
Uh in all of these
Again these elaborate satanic rituals that they that she then remembered with the help of the psychiatrist who then married her and helped
Write a book about it and they
Went on the the lecture tour and made I think probably you know a lot of
Literal and cultural capital off of this
It's a very it's a weird case. It's like a pigmalion a satan is pigmalion or something
Did she eventually recant no, no
I mean at least not publicly and that and she just sort of disappeared
the sky disappeared and then and
There was nothing on the scale of these accusations and these trials that was
You know a kind of a moment of public reckoning of us saying like oh fuck
We fucked up and I think probably that had to do
With the breadth of all this because there were relatively few people involved in investigating and prosecuting these cases
but
Potentially a majority of americans were willing to believe this in some way or another and it's just it's hard to have a
public momenting of reckoning and essentially recanting
With this kind of a thing and I mean repressed memory therapy
has been significantly
debunked since then but
it also seems to me
Very possible that someone could have
Disassociated memories of prior abuse
and
in order to
to say my
My parent my family member someone in my community
Abused me and then if they're being guided through this by a professional who's willing to believe certain things and is
Guided by a general belief in in that satanic cults for example that it's it's it's easier to say
in a way that
Your mother was like a satanic grand wizard and that's why she abused you than to say that she was a human being who
Wasn't able to be the parent that you needed. So what do you think is the legacy of these cases?
What did it leave us with?
I mean it put a lot of people in prison
something that
I didn't initially think of until I had been researching this for a while is what did this do essentially to
hundreds thousands of of america of children at this time
who
Not only were led to believe that they had been abused in
Awful ways by members of their community and adults that they and their families trusted
inevitably some of them
If we're talking about hundreds
Maybe a couple thousand of kids inevitably some of them still
Believe that all of these things really did take place
and if they
Came to not believe it then that could lead
To some kind of rift with their family, you know, I wonder about
what effect this had on
You know the relationship between children parents
There was at least there was a mother in the kelly michaels case who published a book
About you know, this her crusade against her daughter's abuser and then of course later
Kelly michaels turned out to be a perfectly nice aspiring actress who just wanted to get a job in new jersey
You know, it's it's another horror story about manhattan real estate really
What effect would it have on you if as a child your basic perception of reality
Was screwed with this much and the adults in your life the authority figures
I mean, there's kind there's really a sick doubling of what allegedly took place in a way really was took plate really
Was what happened because
children
were
Psychologically abused really in the end by
The adults in their lives and the authority figures the parents and the social workers and the police officers and the attorneys who they should
Have been able to trust
and who ultimately
used them as
tools and created helps create these these memories and these
traumas for them that
allowed them to
Craft a narrative about their own anxieties and their own fears. I don't know what effect that would have on you as a human being
I think it would be
potentially
deeply traumatic because now we believe in trauma
We don't think that being sexually abused is just like seeing a spider and we can even
Conceive of a reality. We're having you know, your sense of what happened to or what didn't
Altered in in sexual way could be traumatic as well
So we finally found a good legacy of this that we finally believe the sexual trauma is real
Yeah, we probably believe kids a little bit more. So that's a good thing. I mean, maybe
Maybe every episode of the show is going to end up being about the messy process of learning things as a society
That learning that sexual trauma exists is good
But it's this messy process
where for a while we believe kids too much
Or we believe them when they say it happened
But then we don't believe them when they say it didn't happen and it becomes
This thing where we want to redeem ourselves for the 50 years that we didn't believe them by over believing them
and finding these new villains like satanism and
daycare centers when that really wasn't where the abuse was taking place
that
finally
absorbing these things as a society is really hard and it kicks off all these
shitty unintended consequences like
Thinking that there's a huge contingent of random satanists running daycare centers
It just seems like you're never going to get everybody all the way there, you know
A 51 percent of the country finally believes something that's true. That's a victory in a way
But you still have 49 percent believing the wrong thing and also maybe that we
We have to be really wrong about something to be right about it eventually
The spotlight investigation happens in 2001
and I feel as if that was
Suddenly being able to conceive of the fact of systemic
Abuse within churches and within the catholic church right institutions are capable of this
Yeah, and we mean and then you look back at the satanic panic and it's like you can see that that's this
Bizarro version of the catholic church that we're really talking about or of you know church
Sanctified abuse and systemic abuse
We were seeing things that did actually happen and significant abuse that went on
Without anyone noticing and and with children not being believed. It was because that you know, you were accusing
priests instead of
satanic worshippers. So it all worked out in the end
Not really but
That's our like fake happy ending to all of this. That's our fake happy ending
You