Skeptic Ginger
Nasty Woman
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2005
- Messages
- 96,955
I'm going to go out on a limb here and say, I bet the men had a lousy defense attorney.
That was tongue in cheek, I hope? It's not that the alleged ritual abusers abuse the ritual, they have a religious ritual in which they abuse children.I'm looking for a definition of ritual abuse, and I can't find one that states it is exclusive to satanist groups. It's an odd phrase to use anyway, I think people abuse rituals all the time.![]()
Do you have evidence of the first? My impression is that most, if not all, child abusers are lone wolves. They may have an accomplice who helps them perpetrate the crimes - like Marc Dutroux and his wive, or Robert Mikklsons and his husband. But I'm not aware of child abusers who operate in groups.People do abuse children in group settings, I can't figure out why it seems incredible to some that perpetrators would also incorporate ideological and ceremonial aspects, especially if they're trying to rationalize their criminality.
Thanks for the links; yes it appears robes and chanting was all part of this one as well, which I was also unfamiliar with until now.
But again we're left with naught but a claim. I think it's interesting that the interviewed woman described being raped by literally dozens of men and didn't mention any women at all save her aunt; and yet only this man (the leader) and three women were ever arrested; there seems to be something missing there.
And in another one:Despite having operated in Kidwelly for years, the cult had seemingly gone unnoticed by the rest of the town.
According to wiki, we're talking here of a town with 3,289 inhabitants. Maybe British (Welsh?) culture is different, but in a Dutch town that small size everyone knows it the next day when you park your car on the wrong side of the street.Geraint Thomas, Kidwelly town council clerk, said: "The first we knew about this matter was when it was publicised in the newspapers.
That was tongue in cheek, I hope? It's not that the alleged ritual abusers abuse the ritual, they have a religious ritual in which they abuse children.
Do you have evidence of the first? My impression is that most, if not all, child abusers are lone wolves. They may have an accomplice who helps them perpetrate the crimes - like Marc Dutroux and his wive, or Robert Mikklsons and his husband. But I'm not aware of child abusers who operate in groups.
Similarly small cults abusing their own children happens relatively often and is one justifiable reason why people have bad associations with cults. However they don't tend to kidnap outgroup children and molest them.
ddt said:That was tongue in cheek, I hope?
- Ritual Abuse has been defined as psychological, sexual, spiritual and/or physical assault on an unwilling human victim, committed by one or more people whose primary motive is to fulfill a prescribed ritual in order to achieve a specific goal or satisfy the perceived needs of their deity.
- The term ritual abuse is generally used to mean repeated, extreme, sadistic abuse, especially of children, within a group setting. The group’s ideology is used to justify the abuse, and abuse is used to teach the group’s ideology. The activities are kept secret from society at large, as they violate norms and laws.
- Repeated physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual assaults combined with a systematic use of symbols, ceremonies, and machinations designed and orchestrated to attain malevolent effects.
- Abuse that occurs in a context linked to some symbols or group activity that have a religious, magical or supernatural connotation, and where the invocation of these symbols or activities are repeated over time and used to frighten and intimidate the children.
- Repetitive and systematic sexual, physical, and psychological abuse of children by adults as part of cult or satanic worship.
ddt said:Do you have evidence of the first? My impression is that most, if not all, child abusers are lone wolves. They may have an accomplice who helps them perpetrate the crimes - like Marc Dutroux and his wive, or Robert Mikklsons and his husband. But I'm not aware of child abusers who operate in groups.
Rochdale police and council 'repeatedly warned' about sex abuse risk in town
NHS team made 83 referrals to borough council from 2004-10 in town harbouring gang of nine finally jailed over child sex ring
Charlie Wilkes said:I can't imagine why police and prosecutors in the US railroaded hundreds of innocent people for crimes that never really happened, but they did. The Mondale Act affords a partial explanation... the bigger the problem, the more money was available to the agencies charged with addressing the problem.
Charlie Wilkes said:In the UK, I suspect this may be a partial explanation:
victims-and-witnesses/cica
If child sexual abuse rates are pandemic, as many studies show, yet only a small percentage are reported to authorities, where is the over-zealousness?
Hundreds, who are these hundreds?
How did you determine that no crimes happened in the cases?
If child sexual abuse rates are pandemic, as many studies show, yet only a small percentage are reported to authorities, where is the over-zealousness?
That's really stretching it. The program covers all violent crime and the money goes to victims.
Do you have anything besides speculation about how and why members of various institutions in the UK might be colluding to perpetrate a hoax about ritual abuse?
Why do you consider kidnapping outgroup children a required marker of ritual abuse?
In the UK, I suspect this may be a partial explanation:
http://www.justice.gov.uk/victims-and-witnesses/cica
Perhaps it might be useful to establish a working definition of ritual abuse, as it apparently means different things to different people.
Here is a selection I found through a search. Common themes are repetitive, psychological, physical and/or sexual abuse, and/or torture in family/group settings, in service of a belief system (not necessarily Satanism).
The idea that the Criminal Injuries Compensation scheme causes a really quite narrow category of childhood sexual assaults to be falsely reported is a bit unlikely. Criminal injuries compensation payments are not particularly generous, and there is no reason why someone wishing to make a false claim should invent one particular kind of scenario. The numbers of complainants involved in these cases also, I think, make the idea that their complaints are intentionally false unlikely.
The existence of a criminal injury compensation scheme is not a good reason to doubt people who claim to have been victims of crime.
First, I think you have overestimated the breadth of the criticism in this thread. The suspicion is, I think, of a much narrower category of cases. Cases, like the cornwall case, which involve:
(a) allegations of sexual ritual abuse of child
(b) allegations made many years after event
(c) allegations for which there is no direct physical evidence
In particular, the idea that the abuse is subjectively a ritual seems difficult to believe. There are, as you have noted, instance of subjectively ritual abuse in the UK - that is abuse which the abuser believes to perform some sort of ritual function, like child exorcism. But those abuses occur in communities with a long tradition, for example, of child exorcism.
The suspect cases are different because they claim the existence of previously undiscovered belief system which mandates the abuse.
As I noted above, even in the instant case it is unclear whether this was argued as a case of ritual abuse or rather of abuse dressed up as ritual.
I agree with (a) and (c). As to (b), I think there are two distinct categories.First, I think you have overestimated the breadth of the criticism in this thread. The suspicion is, I think, of a much narrower category of cases. Cases, like the cornwall case, which involve:
(a) allegations of sexual ritual abuse of child
(b) allegations made many years after event
(c) allegations for which there is no direct physical evidence
An interesting twist to the Satanist angle was given by Regina Louf, a.k.a. "Witness X1", who came forward in the Belgian Dutroux case. She claimed an extensive network of Belgian politicians, bankers and industrialist holding perverse sex parties with teenage girls. She alleged they performed Satanic rituals merely for disorienting their victims.In particular, the idea that the abuse is subjectively a ritual seems difficult to believe. There are, as you have noted, instance of subjectively ritual abuse in the UK - that is abuse which the abuser believes to perform some sort of ritual function, like child exorcism. But those abuses occur in communities with a long tradition, for example, of child exorcism.
The suspect cases are different because they claim the existence of previously undiscovered belief system which mandates the abuse.
As I noted above, even in the instant case it is unclear whether this was argued as a case of ritual abuse or rather of abuse dressed up as ritual.
Yes, the UK's Criminal Injuries Compensation scheme does award money to victims of violent crime, including childhood sexual abuse. However, all that victims need to do is to show that the crime has been reported to police, and show medical evidence that they have sustained physical or mental injuries as a result of the crime. No further evidence is required. Full details here.That's really stretching it. The program covers all violent crime and the money goes to victims.
Yes, the UK's Criminal Injuries Compensation scheme does award money to victims of violent crime, including childhood sexual abuse. However, all that victims need to do is to show that the crime has been reported to police, and show medical evidence that they have sustained physical or mental injuries as a result of the crime. No further evidence is required. Full details here.
There's also no time limit set on 'historic' child abuse (unlike all other crimes, which have to be reported with a certain number of years); this makes it disturbingly easy for victims to get compensation for abuse that may never have happened.
GC, you may want to get hold of a copy of Richard Webster's The Secret of Bryn Estyn. It's not about ritual abuse, but is a good examination of a case of "sex abuse panic".
ETA: I see that Charlie Wilkes has also pointed out the 'compensation for mental injury' aspect of such cases. In the Bryn Estyn case, which involved allegations of historic sexual abuse in a childrens' home, the CIC payout to victims was £3,000 each. Not a great deal perhaps to some people, but a fortune to young men who were homeless and umemployed.
Also of interest is a Larry King segment on Youtube, where he talks to a pair os sisters who "recovered" memories of abuse by their mother and sued her. This program, which also features the opinions of a skeptic, is in three segments. Here are the links:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mhJC_wq7kxM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oauqOedMCRg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rlEYyE5_6tw
As it stands I'm not entirely convinced that the motivation behind the claims being dealt with here is financial, assuming they're fraudulent.
Am I mistaken? Is it plausible that they are really remembering things that happened from infancy?
I haven't watched the clips, but I doubt that very much.
At age 10 (as in one case in Cornwall, IIRC) I can believe.
Often patients come out of the ICU with horrifying memories (of being tortured, raped, assaulted, or imprisoned) and don’t know what happened to them. Not only are the patients debilitated by the physical illness, they are traumatized by the false memories resulting from delirium.