• Pitchmen of the Satan Scare

    From Jim Singleton@RICKSBBS to All on Mon Apr 27 06:51:49 2026
    Pitchmen of the Satan Scare
    by Anson Shupe
    Published by the Wall Street Journal
    Friday, March 9, 1990

    Last Sunday Roman Catholics who attended services at St.
    Patrick's Cathedral in New York heard Cardinal John O'Connor
    lambasting heavy-metal rock music as "pornography in sound" that
    leads to spiritual entrapment and suicide among teenagers.
    Echoing a message dear to the hearts of Tipper Gore and her
    watchdog Parents Music Research Center, His Eminence called on
    the music industry to police itself more thoroughly.
    But Cardinal O'Connor went further. While not naming them, he
    linked rock groups like Judas Priest and Black Sabbath to
    cemetery desecrations, perverse sex, and demonic possession. His
    sermon even included readings from "The Exorcist." He claimed
    William Peter Blatty's best-selling novel was "gruesomely
    realistic."
    Unfortunately, the cardinal's sermon only added more hype to
    what has become a form of cultural hysteria in America. That
    hysteria is Satanism or, more accurately, a preoccupation with
    worrying about satanic influences in our music, our movies, our
    families, even in our high schools.
    From the occasional teen-age dabblers to purported
    conspiratorial rings of devil-worshippers in high places,
    Satanists are credited with promoting drug abuse, snatching kids
    off the street, organizing child pornography rings, breeding
    infants for ritualistic sacrifice and cannibalism, and mutilating
    cattle in the countryside. Groups such as the Cult Awareness
    Network, which formerly stuck to making life difficult for such
    unconventional religions as Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church
    and the Hare Krishnas, have now sounded the Satanist alarm in
    earnest.

    A Growth Industry

    Satanism-exposure-mania has become a growth industry in this
    country, as Arthur Lyons reveals in evenhanded but blunt terms in
    his 1988 book "Satan Wants You." The Satanic theme is profitable
    not just as a gimmick for rock bands and titillating Hollywood
    horror movies, nor simply for publishers, both secular and
    Christian, who churn out potboiler accounts of mass murders and
    disturbed young would-be Charles Mansons. It also is profitable
    for a growing cadre of self-proclaimed "experts" who are
    canvassing North America offering seminars to police departments,
    clergy, social workers, nurses and educators.
    Commanding between $500 and $1,000 (plus expenses) an
    appearance, these speakers purport to reveal the rituals,
    implements, beliefs, symbols and secret codes used by Satan's
    occult underground. Under the rubric of Satanism they draw
    connections among violence, mind control, sexual orgies, drugs,
    the lyrics of rock music, and even the fantasy game Dungeons and
    Dragons.
    The content of most of these seminars is pure rubbish from any
    kind of informed scholarly standpoint. Aside from
    unsubstantiated claims and sweeping generalizations, what is
    presented is a naive mish-mash of occult and mystical traditions
    confused with shamanism and the theatrical antics of such
    performers as rocker Ozzy Osbourne.
    Relatively benign and openly operating groups such as Anton
    LeVey's Church of Satan and Michael A. Aquino's Temple of Set
    (which offer syntheses of philosophy, unexceptional fraternal-
    organization gibberish, and exotic costumes for initiates, while
    never really acknowledging a personal devil figure such as
    Lucifer) are thrown together with the bloody drug-cult murders in
    Matamoros, Mexico, as examples of the imminent danger among us.
    It would all be laughable if serious, well-intentioned persons
    were not taking this Satanic threat at face value.
    Economics fuels the spread of the fear of Satanism beyond the
    popular culture of rock music and horror movies to professional
    audiences. Many middle-level educators, health and social-
    service workers, and law-enforcement officials across the country
    are required to attend a number of educational workshops each
    year to keep or upgrade their certifications or to be eligible
    for raises and promotions. Just as ex-Satanists have seemingly
    come out of the woodwork in recent years to give their gripping
    testimonies, so also the entrepreneurial experts of Satanism have
    emerged. Now they are offering workshops to enlighten service
    providers. As a result, Satanism has emerged as one of the most
    popular offerings in such continuing education. The lurid
    content of the presentations sure beats the generally dry fare
    otherwise provided at such conferences.
    How much money is involved? Likely no one is getting filthy
    rich, and mere millions, not billions, are involved on a national
    scale. But the fees typically come out of local taxpayers'
    pockets. Moreover, these new entrepreneurs have now spread the
    gospel of Satan-fear through all 50 states and in most large
    urban areas. Recently, according to J. Gordon Melton, director
    of the Institute for the Study of American Religion in Santa
    Barbara, Calif., and the nation's premier authority on _real_
    Satanic cults, these speakers have taken their workshops to such
    middle-size communities as Sioux City, Iowa; Sioux Falls, S.D.;
    and, in my Indiana backyard, the cities of Fort Wayne and
    Evansville.
    Such workshops are rarely publicized and are closely limited to
    specific audiences of professionals. One reason often given is
    that Satanists would try to find some way to disrupt the
    proceedings if they knew about them in advance. However,
    probably the better reason is the sad quality of their
    "information." Says Mr. Melton, "If what was being taught in
    these 'limited seminars' were revealed and became fair game for
    public discourse, the ridiculousness of it would be evident."
    But minus such open inspection, an entire generation of genuinely
    concerned professionals is being exposed, under the guise of
    technical training, to downright misleading, false and poorly
    assembled information.
    Ironically, this entrepreneurial expansion comes at a time when
    the Satanist hysteria may actually be losing some power.
    Cardinal O'Connor himself admitted Sunday that there were only
    two exorcisms in the entire New York archdiocese last year--not
    much of a body count for active Satanists or their opponents.
    And recently Harvest House Publishers, a Christian press, decided
    to cease publication of "Satan's Underground," a successful
    "autobiographical" best seller by Lauren Stratford, who claimed
    that as a Satanist she had deliberately bred three children for
    sacrifice. It seems reporters for the evangelical Christian
    magazine Cornerstone tracked down ambiguities and inconsistencies
    in her account and discovered that Ms. Stratford had made up the
    whole thing (which she later admitted).
    Likewise, some professionals who have been the largest audience
    for Satanism hysteria have become angry. Robert Hicks, a
    criminal justice as become vocally critical of the sloppy content
    of workshops supposedly informing his law enforcement colleagues
    about Beelzebub's current activities. Much of it, Mr. Hicks
    maintains, is based on sensational newspaper articles,
    undocumented secondary sources, or unsubstantiated claims.

    Skeptical Officers

    Police never find the tangible evidence to back up ex-
    Satanists' claims, such as one commonly repeated claim that about
    50,000 human sacrifices are perpetrated each year in this
    country. The absence of _any_ traces of such activity has begun
    to cause some reflective police, at least, to question if they
    have been conned. As a result, skeptical law-enforcement
    officers in Virginia are now boycotting workshops that offer
    Satanic conspiracies as a tempting way to "clear" the unsolved
    crimes on their blotters.
    Cardinal O'Connor cannot be blamed for being concerned about
    the hedonism, the decline in aesthetics, and the decay of
    civility in modern American society. But seeking its cause in a
    demonic influence loose among rock lyrics--just as professionals
    are now being told to seek the roots of abuse and maladjustment
    they see in their clients and patients in Satanic cult abuse--is
    to retreat to medieval thinking. History shows that human beings
    are perfectly capable of acting in evil, destructive ways without
    infernal help.

    ----
    Mr. Shupe is a professor of sociology at Indiana-Purdue
    University at Fort Wayne and is preparing a book on cult and
    Satanic phenomena in the U.S.


    Jim Singleton
    telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23
    http://ricksbbs.synchro.net:8080
    ---
    þ Synchronet þ Rick's BBS telnet://ricksbbs.synchro.net:23