The ‘Satanic Panic’ Is Back: How a Bygone Moral Crisis Returned With Queer Artists In Its Crosshairs - Puritanical accusations of “Satanic” imagery from Grammys performance called “evil” and “demonic“

Archive | Article
satanic_losers.png

On Feb. 6, 2022, certain corners of the internet could not stop talking about Sam Smith and Kim Petras. The night prior (Sunday, Feb. 5), the pair took home a Grammy Award for best pop duo/group performance, marking the first-ever victories for a transgender or non-binary artist in the category, respectively.

That historic victory, however, was not the main topic of discussion online. The next few days of Twitter discourse were instead fueled by puritanical accusations of “Satanic” imagery from their performance of “Unholy” at the ceremony. Sen. Ted Cruz and Rep. Marjorie Taylor-Greene called it “evil” and “demonic“; the FCC received over a dozen complaints regarding the performance’s hellish imagery; even the actual Church of Satan felt obliged to weigh in. The rumblings of a “culture war” from far-right political pundits grew to a deafening cadence.

02/16/2023

This particular brand of outrage felt eerily familiar for writer and editor Paul Corupe. “You saw a lot of this same stuff in the ’80s,” he tells Billboard. “Everyone kind of distanced themselves from all of that for a while, and it seemed like we culturally agreed that this was a stupid concern in the first place. But in the last three or four years, these concerns have risen up again.”

Corupe, who co-edited the 2016 book Satanic Panic: Pop Cultural Paranoia in the 1980s, is far from the only one to take notice of this trend in our current cultural discourse; over the last few years, as claims of Satanic conspiracies within pop culture continue to earn renewed relevancy, many have noted the similarities to the infamous Satanic Panic of the 1980s. What many thought to be an antiquated witch hunt now dominated internet discussions, especially when it comes to LGBTQ artists.

GLAAD president and CEO Sarah Kate Ellis tells Billboard that this ages-old backlash to queer artists is not only unsurprising — it’s expected. “LGBTQ people are not aligning with Satan, we are people of faith and anyone who uses some stage costumes or a music video to make generalizations about LGBTQ people is falling into outdated and debunked fear tactics that are rooted in inaccuracies and anti-LGBTQ animus,” she says.

Dr. Joseph Uscinski, a professor at the University of Miami who studies conspiracy theories and their proliferation, agrees with Ellis; as queer and trans people become a political topic, outrageous accusations follow. “The beliefs [of the Satanic Panic] never went away, they just weren’t salient anymore to the national conversation,” he explains. “It feels like it’s coming out of nowhere today, but it’s largely being driven by politicians, pastors and pundits.”


Back in the late ’60s and ’70s, there was a growing fascination in the supernatural — horror films like Rosemary’s Baby, The Exorcist and Suspiria were gaining mainstream popularity, while tabletop roleplaying games like Dungeons & Dragons had grown dedicated followings. With the rise of interest also came concern. “By the time the ’80s came around, more parents were having to both work, leaving kids home alone. There came this parental anxiety about, ‘What are my kids doing, what pop culture are they absorbing when I’m not around?'” Corupe says.

“Experts” began to weigh in, claiming that Satanism is pop culture was poisoning kids’ minds — the since-discredited tell-all Michelle Remembers promoted the use of “recovered-memory therapy” to unmask a vast network of ritualistic abuse pervading modern society. By the mid-’80s, the Satanic Panic was in full effect.

One of the most famous targets of the ongoing conspiracy of the ’80s was metal music — bands like Black Sabbath, Mötley Crüe, Ozzy Osborne and many others were accused of promoting devil-worship, drug use and even violent crime to the many young people listening. Corupe argues that outrage only drove more teens to listen. “It was huge wigs, makeup, vaguely Satanic symbols … it was all about rebellion, right?” he says. “It was a big shift for people who were already primed to think that these kinds of things were exposing children to ideas that they might otherwise not have, and therefore might make them turn to Satanism.”

The most-cited example of that “big shift” was the creation of the Parents Music Resource Center (or PMRC) by Tipper Gore and the other “Washington Wives” in an attempt to crack down on vulgar content in music. Creating their list of the famous “Filthy Fifteen” and conducting one of the wildest Senate hearings in the chamber’s history, the PMRC managed to convince the RIAA to create the now-famous “parental advisory” label.


Both Uscinski and Corupe agree that, while there was much fanfare and outrage at the time, the PMRC’s greater cultural impact was minimal. “Are Gen-Xers worse off because of what they listened to in the ’80s? No,” Uscinski says. “There’s no evidence whatsoever for that.”

When he looks back at the Filthy Fifteen, Corupe can’t help but notice a troubling similarity to the artists being lambasted today. “A lot of those artists were playing around with gender and sexuality, even if it was just in their image,” he says. “That’s precisely what Prince was doing at the time. All of these glam metal bands were wearing makeup and sometimes wearing dresses. There was definitely a connection there, I think, between non-typical gender representation and the way that those bands were targeted.”

As time wore on and more substantial evidence finally began to dismantle the baseless paranoia of the age, the Satanic Panic subsided in the mid-’90s. In researching for his book, Corupe says he couldn’t help but find the whole situation laughable. “It just seems totally ridiculous in hindsight. All of these people, these ‘experts’ who came forward with claims about Satanism, were exposed as frauds.” And yet, he can’t deny that the mentality has returned nonetheless. “It’s back, and it’s more overtly politically charged this time.”

Two decades after the “end” of the Satanic panic, conspiracy theories like Pizzagate and QAnon took shape online, once again asserting that the world was run by a cabal of cannibalistic, Satanic child abusers. While many theorize that these conspiracies would go on to warp unsuspecting minds, Dr. Uscinski’s research shows it’s really the opposite that’s true.


“Pizzagate and QAnon are both outcomes from the same thing driving all of this — what QAnon and Pizzagate did was take advantage of beliefs that were already widely held and package them in a way that made sense to people following it,” he explains. “A lot of the people who have bought into QAnon and who think there are Satanic sacrifices happening in pizza shops, they probably thought things similar to that prior.”

The data backs up Dr. Uscinski’s assertion — in his polling conducted for the London School of Economics’ USAPP, Uscinski found that 25% of Americans polled thought that Satanic ritual abuse was widespread across America; 33% said that members of Satanic cults were regularly abusing thousands of children every year; 28% said that there was a “secret gay agenda” to convert children to gay or trans lifestyles.

While ideas of Satanic abuse and queerness may seem entirely separate, Dr. Uscinski points out the conspiratorial through-line — the false narrative of queer and trans-identifying people as “groomers.” “The rhetoric coming from the top down is very Manichean in nature, in the sense that it’s saying, ‘These people are evil,'” he says. “It’s clearly calling out very specific groups in society, especially the LGBTQ+ community.”

This wave of fear and paranoia, naturally, began showing up in LGBTQ pop culture. When Lil Nas X unveiled his music video for “Montero (Call Me By Your Name)” in 2021 — depicting himself pole-dancing down into hell and giving Satan a lap-dance — right-wing outrage was deafening. When Demi Lovato unveiled the bondage-meets-crucifixion album art for Holy Fvck in 2022, evangelicals were horrified enough to get the Great Britain’s Advertising Standard Authority to ban posters bearing the image in the UK.


The most common refrain in these discussions of controversial queer art comes directly from the paranoia of the ’80s — parents claiming that they don’t want their children to be “turned” or influenced negatively by Satanic, sexually-explicit imagery.

Ellis, for one, rejects that narrative from “concerned parents” entirely. “Trying to censor or degrade out music artists is not about parents or the safety of children. It’s a tactic that anti-LGBTQ activists know builds support for their views by playing on the worst anxieties of parents,” she says. “Their goal, it seems, is to turn parents against each other and make music, classrooms, and other cultural institutions a battleground so they can further their anti-LGBTQ animus.”

Now, with Smith and Petras becoming the latest targets of the bolstered Satanic Panic, it’s become clear that our political reality — in which a record-breaking number of anti-LGBTQ bills have already been introduced around the country in 2023 — is bleeding into the music world.

“There does seem to be this correlation in people’s minds between using music as a gateway to Satanism and a gateway to ‘alternative’ sexuality,” Corupe says, exasperated. “I’ve seen the videos, and the performance at the Grammys, and it’s just theatrical expression of rebellion. It’s been in pop music for 100 years — if you want to talk about songs about the devil, go back to the blues in the ’30s. To think that this is something different or insidious is just wrong.”

While Ellis urges social media users to “report content that maligns our community” as a means of slowing misinformation, Dr. Uscinski says there is no simple “solution” that will “end” our current Satanic Panic. But he’s also quick to point out that this kind of reaction to what’s popular has persisted throughout most of history.

“Whether it was Elvis, or Ozzy and Judas Priest, or now Lil Nas X, this has always been the reaction to popular culture — that the ‘new culture’ is always dangerous. Pop culture makes for an easy punching bag, specifically for politicians and pundits, but ultimately, in order for popular culture to be popular, there needs to be some edge to it. Otherwise, it’s just more of the same stuff being repeated.”

But Corupe points out that ultimately, queer artists are not the ones who will ultimately have to suffer the consequences of this paranoia — as shootings, fire-bombings and armed protests all continue to occur at the expense of the LGBTQ community, Corupe knows from historical precedent that the true victims of the raging “culture war” are the non-famous members of the community being targeted.

“The artists in the ’80s emerged from this basically unscathed. The people who really got affected by this were the kids who were forced to get up on the witness stand and say ‘Iron Maiden made me do it,’ or kids who were wearing heavy metal jackets got targeted by bullies, or daycare workers who were falsely accused of abusing kids,” he says. “It isn’t the celebrities who are going to end up hurt here, it’s the regular people.”
 
Didn't the Satanic Panic erupt over the Finders case? I was reading an interview by a Journalist from like 20 years later that said a higher up CIA person privately told her it was a CIA project but no longer operational.

A Satanic Panic would make sense to obfuscate.

McMartin Pre-School, there is some maps / descriptions of the tunnels in the Finders files, mentions the pentagrams too. Pt. 1 46 - 47

1676597636211.png1676597679385.png
 
Satan Satan Satan! Im going to go play Dungeons & Dragons now.
Jokes aside.....

I remember from my good boy Southern Baptist days, there where people in my church who saw Satan in everything. Is it a 5 point star with a ring, but obviously not connected to Devil worship? Satan! Roleplaying game? Satan! A famous band playing on this meme to be ? Satan!. This behavior has taken ahold of Twitter too. Someone posted a picture a mirror with frame carved in a common European hunting motif, with a poorly carved deer head? Obviously its Satan! Point out the obvious, diagram it with red circles to show the points, tines which no Baphomet image never displays? ITS SATAN!
I cant believe we are having to deal with these weirdos again. Some people never catch on that they are being fucked with.
In all honesty Id take that in a heartbeat over current political correctness.
Didn't the Satanic Panic erupt over the Finders case? I was reading an interview by a Journalist from like 20 years later that said a higher up CIA person privately told her it was a CIA project but no longer operational.

A Satanic Panic would make sense to obfuscate.


Unfortunately I am the option you are correct and that the three letter place have been and are in bed with the devil. You can decide if that's metaphorical or literal but their actions have not been particularly moral.


This vid was very good and felt pretty authentic with the interviews and testimony. I couldn't finish past the description of mk ultra... Its pure evil.
https://www.bitchute.com/video/2UUg0rPWrPIp/

You want to know what it's all about? Why the CIA would put it's dick in crazy? It's about the greatest sin of all. Control.

It provides a steady stream of Blackmail material on anybody that uses it.

Say they throw a party on satanic shit, maybe they buy it, maybe they tell themselves they don't and think it's window dressing. Doesn't matter, they have a bunch of compromised and fucked up people who will now do anything for them now to get more of their fix and not be outted.

Mk ultra is just a way to cut though the bullshit and go right for the jugular. I have no doubt it works, it's probably just too impractical to mass produce the results. So they throw devil partys sell drugs, kidnap foreign kids and put their fingers in everybody's ass so they get everything they could want. Because at the end of the day, some people want it all.
 
In all honesty Id take that in a heartbeat over current political correctness.



Unfortunately I am the option you are correct and that the three letter place have been and are in bed with the devil. You can decide if that's metaphorical or literal but their actions have not been particularly moral.


This vid was very good and felt pretty authentic with the interviews and testimony. I couldn't finish past the description of mk ultra... Its pure evil.
https://www.bitchute.com/video/2UUg0rPWrPIp/

You want to know what it's all about? Why the CIA would put it's dick in crazy? It's about the greatest sin of all. Control.

It provides a steady stream of Blackmail material on anybody that uses it.

Say they throw a party on satanic shit, maybe they buy it, maybe they tell themselves they don't and think it's window dressing. Doesn't matter, they have a bunch of compromised and fucked up people who will now do anything for them now to get more of their fix and not be outted.

Mk ultra is just a way to cut though the bullshit and go right for the jugular. I have no doubt it works, it's probably just too impractical to mass produce the results. So they throw devil partys sell drugs, kidnap foreign kids and put their fingers in everybody's ass so they get everything they could want. Because at the end of the day, some people want it all.

Oh I forgot about the instagram post by Britney Spears that was briefly up, then taken down.

ciabr.jpg

 
I'm not saying the CIA infiltrated the Finders. I'm saying they were the Finders. Remember MKUltra? CIA does fucked up shit all the time we probably don't even know about. Crowley doing his Satanic tours and the newspaper stories might have been part of the whole psyop to draw attention away from the actual stuff going on.

Course I can never prove it, all this is speculation.
I am more familiar with psychological warfare and propaganda methods as a whole, than MKultra as a C.I.A. project. The CIA is terrible at keeping secrets, thats why I say more is speculated about CIA involvment, than actually occurs in boring reality. This is why CIA urban legends are so prevalent. Its fun to speculate, until some retard takes it seriously and starts shooting. The evidence of the CIA "being" the Finders is thin at best.

Crowley? Alister Crowley?
 
I am more familiar with psychological warfare and propaganda methods as a whole, than MKultra as a C.I.A. project. The CIA is terrible at keeping secrets, thats why I say more is speculated about CIA involvment, than actually occurs in boring reality. This is why CIA urban legends are so prevalent. Its fun to speculate, until some retard takes it seriously and starts shooting. The evidence of the CIA "being" the Finders is thin at best.

Crowley? Alister Crowley?

Sorry I got Crowley mixed up with Lavey
 
To be fair, Crowley is in the mysticism shit. And it just so happens our elites are into that big time.
Alister Crowley was a CIA agent, it all makes sense now! kek

Mysticism was more popular during Crowley's time than today. Everybody was doing it. Seances, mediums, it was the in craze at the time. Crowley was interesting figure, his book on Tarot "The Book of Lies" is hardest book that I have read. It made "Mein Kampf" read like a childrens book. Elites have always been into weird shit, why everyone is thinks its a recent phenomenon is puzzling.
 
Mysticism was more popular during Crowley's time than today. Everybody was doing it. Seances, mediums, it was the in craze at the time. Crowley was interesting figure, his book on Tarot "The Book of Lies" is hardest book that I have read. It made "Mein Kampf" read like a childrens book. Elites have always been into weird shit, why everyone is thinks its a recent phenomenon is puzzling.

While I agree I think thats been a common theme of the elites. But in the past say 30-40 year. The media comes out with ridiculous crap like D&D can get you possessed by demons or Pokemon is about summoning ghosts. Just over the top stuff that dismisses the, actual real life stuff people are seeing. So I suspect it's all astroturfing.

I mean during Pizzagate people found the Instagrams of people high up in the art and photography world, with links to other celebrities, links to the ultra wealthy, and their feeds were filled with creepy stuff. Like this

feet.jpg D2L9HlxWkAApL_t2.jpgK663fFsuASI.jpg
 
Last edited:
Two separate things going on here:

1. People using satanic imagery.
2. Those same people believing in Satan.

Number 1 is a real thing: they all are using satanic imagery. It's #2 what it's up to debate and what should worry us. Some edgy moron wearing horns to trick the conservatards doesn't bother me, but people trying to act in Satan's behalf it does.
 
I am more familiar with psychological warfare and propaganda methods as a whole, than MKultra as a C.I.A. project. The CIA is terrible at keeping secrets, thats why I say more is speculated about CIA involvment, than actually occurs in boring reality. This is why CIA urban legends are so prevalent. Its fun to speculate, until some retard takes it seriously and starts shooting. The evidence of the CIA "being" the Finders is thin at best.

Crowley? Alister Crowley?

Just go look at thread from when the FBI released the files on it

Shit fuckin' glew, they had internet access stuff going on with their van, the dc tunnel maps among other things.

Alister Crowley was a CIA agent, it all makes sense now! kek

Mysticism was more popular during Crowley's time than today. Everybody was doing it. Seances, mediums, it was the in craze at the time. Crowley was interesting figure, his book on Tarot "The Book of Lies" is hardest book that I have read. It made "Mein Kampf" read like a childrens book. Elites have always been into weird shit, why everyone is thinks its a recent phenomenon is puzzling.

More akin to the Illuminati with him, he had the ear of a lot of powerful and famous people, also a brit spy.

1676602016567.png


While I agree I think thats been a common theme of the elites. But in the past say 30-40 year. The media comes out with ridiculous crap like D&D can get you possessed by demons or Pokemon is about summoning ghosts. Just over the top stuff that dismisses the, actual real life stuff people are seeing. So I suspect it's all astroturfing.

Exactly, that shit was all meant to discredit the actual legit stuff.
 
All these CIA stories all lack the same element. What was the objective of the CIA?. Its never there, why the need obfuscate, whatever it was. There is never anything concrete about these stories, just ramblings of journo. All these stories point that the CIA was up to something, but never clearly lays out why. Alot like flat earthers, they say that NASA is obfuscating the the truth about flat earth, but they never say why NASA is doing it. If they try, flat earthers always circle back to the Jews, its always the Jews. These CIA stories follow a similar pattern.
If the CIA did infiltrate the Finders, there wouldnt be a need to for a CIA operation to spread Satanism across the nation, as quickly as the panic spread in the 80s.
I know for a concrete fact the CIA can be full of shit. But this smells of the fantastical fables of a journalist. Journalists are the ones to blame for the Satanic Panic of the 80's.
The CIA set up the group (which was meant to be a spy ring ring operating out of Russia) which eventually became the Finders. It got out of control because the CIA always fucks shit up, as they always do
 
While I agree I think thats been a common theme of the elites. But in the past say 30-40 year. The media comes out with ridiculous crap like D&D can get you possessed by demons or Pokemon is about summoning ghosts. Just over the top stuff that dismisses the, actual real life stuff people are seeing. So I suspect it's all astroturfing.
Are you saying that the deal with D&D being labeled as satanic was part of a astroturfing secret plot by elites to cover up rumours of their sex orgies? Holy shit that's crazy, and completely unbelievable. I was there when it was going down, I remember it being talked about in church. It being a created and propagated by church mom Karen's is far more logical and realistic and from what I saw and heard during this time, most likely the case. People who are already believe in witches and ghost easily influenced to believe outlandish things. That has been repeated through out history, satanic panics and mass hallucinations are nothing new, and always accompanied by conspiracies, mostly involving the jews the elites.
 
Last edited:
Are you saying that the deal with D&D being labeled as satanic was part of a astroturfing secret plot by elites to cover up rumours of their sex orgies?

You know of the Finders case right? That they found what appeared to be Satanic objects, books, videotapes, restraints, and evidence of animal sacrifice. Among other things. Oh and those malnourished unidentified children.
 
You know of the Finders case right? That they found what appeared to be Satanic objects, books, videotapes, restraints, and evidence of animal sacrifice. Among other things. Oh and those malnourished unidentified children.
That has nothing to do with D&D or widespread hysteria. You can find all of those things in any backwood redneck area too. They do sick shit out there too, but its not a problem as they are not the elite it would seem. Finally thing I will say, if all of this Satanist shit was real, that means Satanists would have actually mystical powers and I could use fortune cookies to communicate with the Devil. No shit, a preachers wife told me that fortune cookies where tools of Satan.
 
Finally thing I will say, if all of this Satanist shit was real, that means Satanists would have actually mystical powers and I could use fortune cookies to commnicate with the Devil. No shit, a preachers wife told me that fortune cookies where tools of Satan.

It's not about whether Satan is real or not. What would you think of someone who spends their spare time doing stuff like organizing children to do mock sacrifices on a pentagram they set up with candles for a photoshoot, then wears a Pentagram necklace everywhere. And wears Devil horns for fun. Clearly thats someone that believes in the antithesis of Christianity. Which is the basis of the Western value system and social structure.

Do you think such a person might do whatever they can to destroy that structure?
 
Last edited:
Exactly, that shit was all meant to discredit the actual legit stuff.
Like that one news about South Korea being controlled by a kiked turbo-feminist org called the Megalians who happened to sacrifice an entire boat full of people to appease their God and their standing president outright admits she was groomed by said weirdo cult to run Worst Korea.

And with Journos, if they can't spin it, they simply memoryhole it.
 
That has nothing to do with D&D or widespread hysteria. You can find all of those things in any backwood redneck area too. They do sick shit out there too, but its not a problem as they are not the elite it would seem. Finally thing I will say, if all of this Satanist shit was real, that means Satanists would have actually mystical powers and I could use fortune cookies to communicate with the Devil. No shit, a preachers wife told me that fortune cookies where tools of Satan.

Well, some kid tells you they saw all this shit, most people are just gonna write em off as kids being "imaginative"

Also go back to reddit faggot, we provided some proof for you dumb nigger ass. Not my fault if you don't wanna read shit and just keep blabbing the standard shit even though I just legit cited the fucking FBI it's fucking self admitting to the shit.
 
Well, some kid tells you they saw all this shit, most people are just gonna write em off as kids being "imaginative"

Also go back to reddit faggot, we provided some proof for you dumb nigger ass. Not my fault if you don't wanna read shit and just keep blabbing the standard shit even though I just legit cited the fucking FBI it's fucking self admitting to the shit.
It has been an honor to have triggered you that so intensely you took the time out of your life to write that for me.
Is it that important for you, for the CIA to be Satanist or whatever? So what if I told you none of this shit was real, just some weird fantasy that you were gullible enough to get sucked into, because some other weirdo said it was true. And you believed them. If its on the internet, it has to be true, amirite?
 
Last edited:
Back