Mr. Tea
Let's Talk About Ceps
Actually, all this talk of Podesta, 'spirit cooking' and so on, as well as discussion of the 'conspiracy theory mindset', got me thinking today. One of the most prevalent themes in modern conspiracy theories is that of occult or Satanic ritual child sex abuse and/or sacrifice. It's not hard to see why, when you consider the way it combines so many of our deepest phobias and obsessions, along with two absolutely classic conspiracy tropes: the unspeakable depravity of the elite, and infiltration of the top levels of aristocracy/government/big business (to say nothing of the church) by occult practitioners.
Now while the sexual abuse of children is depressingly common, and runs right through society from top to bottom - from Cyril Smith, Nick Fairbairn and Ted Heath (allegedly) to the Asian grooming gangs of Rotherham, Rochdale and so on - verified cases of so-called 'ritual' abuse are extremely rare, and a number of high-profile cases, most infamously in Orkney, have turned out to be completely baseless, and have raised questions about the use of hypnotic interrogation of 'victims' and false memory implantation.
I wouldn't be at all surprised if some truly dedicated conspiranauts have hypothesized that completely false Satanic abuse cases have been concocted, propagated and then eventually (after garnering a sufficient level of public attention) allowed to be exposed as total fabrications - precisely for the purpose of discrediting the very idea of 'Satanic abuse'. This brings me back to the conspiracy theory mindset, which tends to build theories that are the exact opposite of falsifiable, in the Popperian sense: any fact that seems to support the existence of a conspiracy is held up as incontrovertible evidence, any absence of evidence where you would expect there to be some is interpreted as evidence of the cover-up, and anything that seems to debunk the theory is evidence of a disinformation scheme, a red herring or 'false flag' of some sort.
Now while the sexual abuse of children is depressingly common, and runs right through society from top to bottom - from Cyril Smith, Nick Fairbairn and Ted Heath (allegedly) to the Asian grooming gangs of Rotherham, Rochdale and so on - verified cases of so-called 'ritual' abuse are extremely rare, and a number of high-profile cases, most infamously in Orkney, have turned out to be completely baseless, and have raised questions about the use of hypnotic interrogation of 'victims' and false memory implantation.
I wouldn't be at all surprised if some truly dedicated conspiranauts have hypothesized that completely false Satanic abuse cases have been concocted, propagated and then eventually (after garnering a sufficient level of public attention) allowed to be exposed as total fabrications - precisely for the purpose of discrediting the very idea of 'Satanic abuse'. This brings me back to the conspiracy theory mindset, which tends to build theories that are the exact opposite of falsifiable, in the Popperian sense: any fact that seems to support the existence of a conspiracy is held up as incontrovertible evidence, any absence of evidence where you would expect there to be some is interpreted as evidence of the cover-up, and anything that seems to debunk the theory is evidence of a disinformation scheme, a red herring or 'false flag' of some sort.