![]() ![]() And while some people self-identify as Satanists, the sort of Satanist described in the literature of satanic panic has never existed in any period of human history. īut of course there's no such thing as demons. By the end of the '80s, the fear was international, spreading into the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, the Netherlands and South Africa. Satanic panic spread through word of mouth and the feeding frenzy of popular media, as well as through the professional criminological and therapeutic literature of the time. Not only were helpless children and impressionable teens at risk, but each of us faced the possibility of ritual satanic abuse in our past - blasphemous, sexual rites so perverse that only a gifted therapist could possible exhume them from the soil of our repressed memories. ![]() Welcome to the world of satanic panic, a perceived reality of the 1980s and early '90s that situated the average American's life as a sort of ground zero in the war between traditional values and demonic perversion. ![]()
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