459 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
459 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
To: alt.pagan,alt.religion.all-worlds
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From: tyagi mordred nagasiva <tyagi@HouseofKaos.Abyss.com>
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Subject: Re: Views on Satanism: Neopagan (LONG Review of CAW doc)
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Summary: This is one of a series of docs examining the Neopagan perspective
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on Satanism. This particular review is of a publication by the
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Church of All Worlds.
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Keywords: Satanism, Neopaganism, criticism, review
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Date: Kali Yuga 49940211 (slight revision 49940927)
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*** 3 of 5 ***
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Do what thou wilt.
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What follows is a critical review of a document I found in a publication
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distributed by the Church of All Worlds (CAW). It is somewhat
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representative of the common Neopagan attitude toward Satanists and Satanism.
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This will be a multiple-part series which also examines the meaning of
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'Satan' and 'Satanism' to Christians of various types and to those who
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apply the term to themselves (or until recently did so).
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tyagi nagasiva
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tyagi@houseofKaos.Abyss.com
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The Order of K@s Under Satan (TOKUS)
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___________________________________________________________________
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Section 1.3 : Neopagans => Church of All Worlds
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From:
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|_Witchcraft, Satanism and Occult Crime: Who's Who and What's What_
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| A Manual of Reference Materials for the Professional Investigator.
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| (Fourth Edition - October 1991)
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|Edited by Otter G'Zell, Church of All Worlds
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Article:
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|'A Brief History of Satanism'
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|by Don Hudson Frew
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|[much omitted]
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|...
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|History of Devil Worship
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|...what we now understand as Satanism came into being and developed
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|during [the Middle Ages], and reached its first real flowering during
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|the final years of the Renaissance and beginning of the Enlightenment.
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This is very interesting, for it seems to legitimize Satanism as a rather
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contiuous phenomenon, something which at the very least had a start-
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point. As with much of Frew's latter comments, this straight out
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distinguishes between Satanism and 'ritual violation'.
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|The archetypal image of Satanism, the Black Mass, first appeared in
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|France in the 17th Century, during the reign of Louis XIV. It was a
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|bored and jaded aristocracy, looking for new thrills and caught up
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|in court intrigue, that first thought of combining a blasphemous
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|inverted Christian Mass with a secret ring of poisoners to do away
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|with rivals at court [known as the 'Chambre Ardente Affair'].
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Here Satanism is equated with typical anti-Christian origins.
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There is some debate as to whether or not Satanism began earlier than
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this, perhaps known by other names.
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|It is in the Chambre Ardente Affair that we see for the first time the
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|familiar combination of: defrocked priests, inverted crosses, poison,
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|sacrificed children, desecrated sacraments, communion chalices of
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|urine and excrement, naked women as altars, and the sexual abuse of
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|young girls.
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It is interesting to consider the possibility that this sort of practice
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was less about opposing Christianity than about counteracting taboo
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and social conditioning. Given this, what is here being called 'Satanism'
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might indeed be a form of 'tantra'.
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|From this time on, Satanism would include the parody of
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|Christianity with which it has been so identified, and so become the
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|illicit thrill of anyone with negative feelings toward the church.
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I wonder how supported the claim is that all Satanists opposed 'the'
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Church. Perhaps the priests were defrocked because they had found a
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new *form* of Christianity which assisted their practice. In this way
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I wonder whether Satanism isn't an *advance* on Christianity as
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practiced in the 17th Century, in that those who took it up were quite
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thoroughly indoctrinated to the Christian faith and sought to reach
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an equilibrium by engaging taboo activities.
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|During the Enlightenment, groups of young noblemen could often be
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|found dabbling in "Satanism" as members of clubs such as "The Blasters"
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|and "The Sons of Midnight," confining themselves mostly to riding around
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|at night and scaring the citizenry, and to throwing wild, orgiastic
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|parties.
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It is interesting how similar this sounds to modernday American youth and
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their counter-cultural habits. Could it be that Satanism arises out of
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the mindset popularly called 'adolescent'?
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|Aleister Crowley
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|...
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|Aleister Crowley was not a Satanist, which is not to say that some of his
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|magical writings haven't been used by Satanists, among others.
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This is quite a strong comment. Crowley seems to have identified his Holy
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Guardian Angel, Aiwass/Aiwaz, with Satan or Set in some ways, and many of
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his editors and/or biographers seem thoroughly convinced of his Satanic
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leanings. I wonder whether Frew was not here attempting to make good with
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the more conservative Thelemites and Crowleyphiles.
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|Anton LaVey
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|Satanism did, indeed, "enter its modern era in this country just about 25
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|years ago under the theatrical guidance of Anton LaVey..." But it is
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|important to understand that the Satanism of Anton LaVey bears little
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|resemblance to anything discussed above, and that the world "theatrical"
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|well chosen.
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There are certainly some elements which have been kept intact. My
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understanding (and I'm still seeking confirmation on this) is that LaVey
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and the Church of Satan have, at times, enacted 'Black Masses' which used
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nude women as altars and could be said to 'desicrate the liturgy of the
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Christian Church'. This might prove transformational for some of those
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who have been raised within strict Catholic backgrounds.
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|LaVey, a former lion tamer, circus and revival show organist, and police
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|photographer, among many other things, founded the Church of Satan, the
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|largest Satanic organization in the world, on the eve of May 1st, 1966.
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There are all sorts of rumors about the occupations which LaVey has
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held prior to his settling into the Church. Some claim that one or more
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of the above are false stories. I hope so. The more legends and trivial
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deception about the man, the better.
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|Having long been disillusioned with conventional religion, LaVey had
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|studied the occult in both the famous books of magic (including Crowley's)
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|and the carny side-show. He had developed a philosophy of "man as just
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|another animal, sometimes better, more often worse than those that walk
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|on all fours..." And he saw that, like an animal, man has engaged in the
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|same life or death struggle; the survival of the fittest.
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I doubt he developed it. Even his 'Nine Satanic Statements' are supposed
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to have been derived from popular political writings (Rand). More likely
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he merely adopted this philosophy of life as his own and began to call it
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Satanism.
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|What was "good"
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|was to indulge the animal nature of man and to be one of the fittest;
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|a kind of Nietzchean hedonism, if you will, with a bit of P.T. Barnum thrown
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|in for fun. With his background in the carny and his readings in psychology,
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|LaVey realized that a little psychodrama can go a long way towards making
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|a person feel good about himself.
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The last is an interesting point, and may indicate the connection between
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what is called 'stage magic' and 'occult magick'.
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|LaVey's philosophy and its racy trappings appealed to both the rich and
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|successful, who found a justification for the steps they had taken in order
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|to succeed, and the poor and powerless, who wanted to identify with such
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|a group and thereby acquire the same aura of power.
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I suggest that it also attracted (and may still attract) those who are
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interested in exploring the nature of taboo and attempting to break their
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cultural conditioning. It may also have attracted those who wished to
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indulge themselves to enlightenment (often rejected by the puritanical
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and ascetic as an 'impossible' or 'ridiculous' task).
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|LaVey's main
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|philosophical treatise, _The Satanic Bible_, was written as a polemic
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|for adults similarly disillusioned with the mainstream and was not
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|intended for teenagers, much less to be taken "literally" by them.
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This sounds like some sort of protection clause, especially when Frew
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begins to talk about the 'self-styled Satanists' that are not part of
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some sort of serious organization. Note how the activities and thoughts
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of individuals are downplayed as inferior to those of organizations
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(especially below).
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|(In fact, LaVey has recently expressed great regret for how young people
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|are misrepresenting his book, and is taking steps to clarify his message.)
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I wonder what, exactly, he thinks that they are misunderstanding.
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|Michael Aquino was a good friend of LaVey, and a respected member of
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|the Church of Satan until he and LaVey split over theological differences.
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My understanding is that this is false, that it was a concern about LaVey
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wishing to begin charging for various Church activities. At least these are
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the assertions of Michael Aquino, who is much more publically vocal about
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the split-up. I don't remember the LaVey story on this bit of history.
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|Aquino left the church and founded the Temple of Set, the second largest
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|Satanic organization in the world, in 1975. The Temple is much more
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|focused on a disciplined approach to magic as a means for succeeding in
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|life, but otherwise bears a great resemblance to the Church of Satan.
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Some organized Satanists might disagree with this, but I have little or
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no information about the Church of Satan, so I can't be sure.
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|*It is important to understand four things about both of these groups:*
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|1) While both groups have adopted the image of Satan as rebel-against-
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|authority, neither group practices the inverted, anti-Christianity
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|associated with the Black Mass. In fact, the Church of Satan dogmatically
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|*dis*believes in the existence of the Devil.
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I can't find a more potent point of contention between the Aquino and LaVey
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clans, an issue which, to me, more firmly supports LaVey as a trickster and
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therefore as more unique in his approach. In claiming to disbelieve in the
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existence of that which one worships, what could be more twisted, more
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representative of that Being who is associated with deception?
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|2) A large percentage of the membership of both groups is mail-order
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|members, about whom the group's administration knows little and over
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|whom they have little control (e.g. a teenager who scrawls Satanic
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|graffiti and claims to be a member of the Church of Satan is acting
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|without the group's knowledge or sanction).
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I'll bet this is true for many groups, and yet it is interesting how
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membership in a 'Satanic' organization is given so heavy focus as
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instigator of rebellion, rather than a symptom of said quality.
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|3) Both groups routinely expel persons if they are found to be breaking
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|the law, e.g., using drugs.
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I wonder how true this is. Most of the more liberal occult and religious
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groups only care about the usage of psychoactives when their members
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are actually convicted of said activity. Prior to that they tend to
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consider it the member's private business unless it impacts the org.
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|4) Although these are the two largest Satanic groups in the country,
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|the *total number of Satanists in America* has been estimated by
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|reliable scholars to be *less than 10,000*.
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I wonder what constitutes a 'reliable scholar'. It would have been
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nice if Frew were to use *notes* to his cited bibliography. Then many
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more of his 'facts' could have been checked.
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|Both groups, and the other smaller ones like them, are commonly called
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|"religious Satanists."
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This designation is a compliment, it seems, to the organized Satanists,
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in that they are classed alongside Neopagans and Jews and Christians.
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Note, however that it is only the groups which are legitimized by Frew's
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classification.
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|The kind of twisted, criminal practitioners that
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|Geraldo, Donahue, and others tend to focus on are known as "self-styled
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|Satanists." It is this latter category of individuals who, getting their
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|"occult knowledge" from pop occult books, Creature Feature movies and
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|(most significantly) Christian anti-Satanism and anti-occult books,
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|live up to the stereotype image of the devil-worshipper.
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I find this very interesting. The argument against it is one which I think
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I've heard Michael Aquino give. Why aren't criminals who use the symbols,
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trappings and mythos of Christianity called 'self-styled Christians'?
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I.e. why are they included with 'Satanism' at all except as a result of bias
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that runs very deep in a traditionally Christian culture?
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I do find it wonderful that Frew associates the ideas of those who use
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'Satanic' symbols and concepts with Christian anti-Satanist and anti-
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occult propaganda. It points out some of the problem which is being
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created by the political (and enterprising) campaign.
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|These individuals
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|are not motivated to commit crimes by Satanism; they are disturbed
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|persons inclined toward criminal behavior who find a justification for
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|their actions devil-worship.
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Here perhaps Frew justifies his usage of the 'self-styled' adjective.
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Those people aren't *really* Satanists, they just *pretend* (i.e. they
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just fake it in order to justify their amoral misdeeds). I think that
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while there is some substance to this, it is more likely that the
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motives of the people (often teens) are much more complex.
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|Witchcraft
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|...Satanists often invert and parody the religions of others. A Christian
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|Priest sometimes wears a black robe, as does a Witch, and so the Satanist
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|does too. A Christian wears a cross, a Witch a pentacle, and a Satanist...
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|an inverted cross and an inverted pentacle.
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This is of course an overbroad generalization. Perhaps some Satanists
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do this, but I'm not sure that the Church or Temple followers do, nor
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that all solitaries engage this kind of reactionary attitude. It seems
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to me that this is simplistic overstatement.
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|Current Status
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|The current presentation of Satanism in the popular media is inaccurate
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|and misleading.
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I think that, aside from a large portion of Frew's article, the majority
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of this document, which purports to be a *REFERENCE MANUAL* on Satanism,
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in many ways equates it with ritual abuse, child abduction and molestation,
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and, in general, violence.
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As such, _Witchcraft, Satanism and Occult Crime: Who's Who and What's What_
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is an unfortunate EXAMPLE of this 'popular media'. Why this is the case may
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be cleared up when I begin to quote correspondence that I had with Otter
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directly as a result of beginning this critical review series.
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| It fosters an image of a single nation-wide cult or network
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|(as Ted Gunderson has put it), existing unchanged since the Middle Ages,
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|and consciously and deliberately plotting on the lives and minds of our
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|children. This is hysteria-mongering at its worst. The facts do not
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|support the theory.
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This is what I have discovered also.
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|All that can be said with certainty is that...
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|1) There is something in our society that is inclining our children towards
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|violent and anti-social behavior.
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It is unfortunate but understandable that Frew would leave the 'something'
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ambiguous here. He does go on to suggest that the cause may be found in the
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homes of the people involved, but never begins to examine what that might
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be. Also, this statement seems to support the assertion that some sort
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of *unusual* inflammation of anti-social or counter-cultural feeling
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is emerging from 'our society's' teens. I'm not sure this is the case.
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|2) Parents and other caretakers are ignoring the obvious warning signs
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|of the problem until it erupts into violence.
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This presumes that there is a problem (yet to be shown), that it has
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'obvious warning signs' (undescribed), and that parents et al are aware
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of them and intentionally ignoring them. I'd like to hear some debate
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on these presumptions.
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|3) Once an individual has "snapped" and committed a crime, parents and
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|others are much more willing to look for the cause and affix blame on an
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|evil enemy on the edge of society than they are to look inside the home.
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As other K@s Haus denizens have suggested, Frew is content to put the
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blame on the *home* in regards influence toward criminality, rather than
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on *social institutions* like School, Government, and Church.
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|Related to this, it's a lot easier to accept that your child was molested
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|by a Satanic cult than to think that it might have been Uncle Frank.
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This perpetuates the (possible) myth that children rebel as a result of
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being violated. While this may be quite true, I would suggest that
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restrictive parenting and an oppressive society might contribute more
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toward rebellious attitudes and criminal activity than any more specific
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and unusual violation.
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What passes for 'parenting' these days is quite violating to the child.
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>From being confined to a desk and forced to listen to droning adults for
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six hours a day, to not being respected enough to have the right to
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determine whether one shall engage in physical intimacy, imbibe psychoactive
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substances, or watch 'graphic' art, children are treated like owned
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animals without sufficent common sense or sense of self to make important
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decisions about their life experiences.
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It is perhaps no wonder that they become frustrated and strike out at the
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society which they may well view is violating or enslaving them.
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|Satanism and devil-worshipping are real and they are present around the
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|country, but they make up such a small part of the problem of violence by
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|and against children that we shouldn't let it distract us from looking
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|where the problem is much more likely to be caused... in the home.
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Never does Frew address what 'devil-worshipping' is or what may be
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problematic about its engagement. His link here regarding child violence
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seems to support the assumption that 'Satanism' in *some* form, may indeed
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involve this kind of criminal activity.
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Again, that he redirects the attention toward the *home* rather than to
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society at large says more about his audience and what he is trying to
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accomplish (dissuading fundamentalist Christians from bashing supposed
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'criminal Satanists').
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|Biblography
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|Satanism
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|_The Magicians: A Study of the Use of Power in a Black Magic Group_
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| by Gini Graham Scott, Irvington Publ., New York 1983.
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Interesting that Frew mentions 'Black Magic' only once in his article
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and this with respect to 'Middle Age Satanists'. Along with so many
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other key terms, he *never* defines it.
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|_Mephistopheles: The Devil in the Modern World_, by Jeffrey Burton
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| Russell, Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY 1986.
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|_Satan Wants You: The Cult of Devil Worship in America_, by Arthur
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| Lyons, Mysterious Press, New York 1988.
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|_The Satanic Bible_, by Anton Szandor LaVey, Avon Books, New York,
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| 1972.
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|_The Satanic Rituals_, by Anton Szandor LaVey, Avon Books, New York,
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| 1972.
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|_Satanism_, by Ted Schwartz and Duane Empey, Zondervan Books, Grand
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| Rapids, MI 1988 (Note: Recommended solely for material on LaVey
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| and Aquino.
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|_Satanism in America: An Interim Report_ by Shawn Carlson & Gerald
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| Larue, issued by the Committee for Scientific Examination of Religion,
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| Berkeley, CA 1988.
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I'm impressed at Frew's willingness to look beyond conservative
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Christians to discover his information. I wonder why it is that Otter
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G'Zell doesn't take the same approach and research the tomes which
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Frew references here, adjusting his focus away from such a strong
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support of Satanism = Ritual Abuse.
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=================================================================
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This review was originally transmitted to alt.satanism,
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alt.religion.all-worlds, alt.pagan, talk.religion.misc, and sent email
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to Green Egg. :> I
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I intend no hard feelings on any count, even while my criticism may be
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rather terse. I intend to hit fairly and hard the expressions of all
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who say something about Satanism, from Neopagans to Christians to the
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those who use the term 'Satanist' to describe themselves, and do not
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assume that I have the last word on the matter.
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As usual, I encourage response to and debate with my review.
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(C) 1994
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tyagi nagasiva
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tyagi@houseofkaos.abyss.com
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TOKUS
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EOF
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