Proving the Religious Right

Pagan Ritual

Contra the media-brainwashed NPCs who parrot the Satanic Panic zombie meme, reality keeps proving the religious right … right.

EAST GREENWICH, R.I. (AP) — Several animal heads found in a plastic bag in East Greenwich last month appear to be related to some sort of religious animal sacrifice ritual, the Rhode Island Society for the Prevention of Cruelty said Tuesday.

The bag, originally brought to the attention of police on Feb. 25 near a boat launch, contained a calf’s head, several rooster heads, a lamb head, and a kid goat head, the animal welfare group said in a statement.

“It is believed that animal remains that were found were from animals that were sacrificed as part of a religious ritual,” the nonprofit organization said.

The bag also contained grains and colored cloth material “associated with previous animal sacrifice investigations,” and two hand-drawn pictures, the organization said. One looked like a letter D with an arrow through it and one looked like a smiling theater mask.

The RISPCA asked anyone with information about the bag or the significance of the drawings to contact their investigators.

Dear normies – including normie Conservatives – who dismissed the threat of Satanism because hysterical 80s moms shrieked about D&D groups calling demons: You’ve been had.

The press, which is the PR department of the Death Cult, which is under demonic influence, loves misdirection. Their go-to move for covering up stories contrary to their narrative is distracting the public with red herrings.

Did you already forget how the media buried the serious allegations of child sex abuse plaguing Clinton’s team back in 2016? They went out and found the nuttiest tinfoil hat cranks on the fringes of Pizzagate and associated everyone raising substantive allegations with them. They’ve used the exact  same tactic to neutralize every dissident political movement till now.

This is not a new tactic. The lie, in all its ugly forms, is the only play in the enemy’s book.

Stop being fooled. Put down your phone. Turn off the TV. Go outside.

And stop paying attention to people who hate you.

Don't Give Money to People Who Hate You

8 Comments

  1. Rudolph Harrier

    Off topic, but more info on the Generation Y. I found this article from 2006 describing generation Y. Notably the terms used makes it clear that “millenials” was still not used at this time (the closest we get is the “Millennium generation”.)

    https://www2.oberlin.edu/stupub/ocreview/2006/12/08/features/Understanding_Generation_Y.html

    Let’s consider the defining events given in the artlce, using the average birth years of 1984 and 1995:

    -Challenger explosion: Gen Y 2, Millennial not born
    -Fall of the Soviety Union: Gen Y about 5 or 6, depending on how you count it, Millennial not born. Gulf War is about the same.
    -OJ Simpson Trial: Gen Y 11, Millennial just born
    -Death of Princess Diana: Gen Y 13, Millennial 2
    -Bill Clinton Impeachment: Gen Y 14, Millennial 3
    -Columbine: Gen Y 15, Millennial 4
    -Y2K: Gen Y 16, Millennial 5

    With the exception of the Challenger explosion (which the article says is something that would only be remembered by older members of Generation Y) all of these are events which would have shaped the childhood of someone born in 1984. But for someone born in 1995 only Y2K and maybe Columbine would have made any impact at all.

    The discussion of pop culture tells a similar tale. For example, it stresses AOL instant messenger as a major means of communication. But AIM flourished around 1997-2003. For someone born in 1984 that would mean ages 13-19 which does make sense for a time to be online. But for the person born in 1995 it would correspond to 2-8, meaning that he would have only seen the very tail end and probably would have been using Skype instead. Similarly techno(i.e. big beat and EDM) is cited as a big part of musical culture. But both of those genres went into severe decline by the early 2000’s. Likewise the last kid’s show mentioned is Pokemon, which aired in the US in 1998 (13 for Gen Y, 3 for millennial.)

    It’s also said that in 2006 “the younger members of Gen Y are getting ready to ship off to college” which only makes sense if Gen Y ends at latest around 1991 or so.

    Every time I stumble across an article about Gen Y from pre-2010 it always lines up with your description and not the modern one. I had similar experiences with “Gen Jones.” To be honest, at first I thought you made up the name in order to fit another “lost generation” into the scheme. That is, until I happened to find a message board thread from about 2003 where the people were eagerly talking about Gen Jones and how it is clearly different from being a Baby Boomer.

    • Man of the Atom

      @Rudolph Harrier
      Life experience says, “yes, it exists.”

  2. D Cal

    Animal cruelty—it’s only evil when Christians do it.

  3. If anyone wants to learn more about the “panic” then I would suggest reading Ross E. Cheit’s book “The Witch-Hunt Narrative” in which he goes through the original cases that the media covered before dumping them for reasons we can only speculate on.

    This is further expanded on in Apollo’s Artifacts videos in which he digs into even more of the claims and the connections behind the people of the time. Hint: most of them turn out to be pornographers with CIA connections. https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLV11Bw6e4qQX6T65VwsELYzSNSYobR13F

    If after that point you aren’t convinced this was all a scam then there is simply no helping you. There is far more to this than backwards Judas Priest records and Dungeons and Dragons in underground tunnels.

  4. Hardwicke Benthow

    “Dear normies – including normie Conservatives – who dismissed the threat of Satanism because hysterical 80s moms shrieked about D&D groups calling demons: You’ve been had.”

    I think that those “hysterical 80s moms” were part of a psyop intended to distract the public from real Satanic activities.

    The “Satanic Panic” originally started due to various reports of Satanic ritual abuse of children (most famously the McMartin preschool case, which became the biggest of the bunch although it was not the first), but eventually morphed into something different. I suspect that this was by design.

    The mainstream narrative of the McMartin case is that it was hysteria. None of those accused in the case were convicted of any crimes. However, FBI documents later released due to the Freedom of Information Act seem to provide evidence that the children may have been telling the truth about the existence of tunnels under the school, among other details.

    These documents also include evidence that similar crimes were carried out by a widespread group called The Finders, which had ties to the CIA.

    Here is an article with some of the highlights from these documents, a link to the full documents, and a compelling video of former Los Angeles FBI Chief Ted Gunderson laying out evidence of widespread Satanic ritual abuse:

    https://centipedenation.com/analysis-and-reports/fbi-document-dump-from-the-vault-the-finders/

    But then, the focus shifted from being about Satanic ritual abuse, and turned toward a different direction, almost as if people were getting too close to something and someone helped steer them in a different direction.

    On June 9, 1982, Irving “Bink” Pulling shot himself in the chest with a revolver. His devastated mother Patricia Pulling found some Dungeons & Dragons items in his possession and blamed the game for his demise. She formed a group called “Bothered About Dungeons and Dragons” (or BADD for short) and published a book called “The Devil’s Web”.

    The most interesting thing about all of this is that Patricia Pulling got quite a bit of mainstream media attention. She was invited onto “Geraldo”, “Sally”, “The Phil Donahue Show”, and “60 Minutes”. Tipper Gore also joined in on the D&D-bashing. And Pulling was eventually joined in various appearances by Dr. Thomas Radecki, a psychiatrist and chairman of the National Coalition on Television Violence, who helped lend her an air of credibility. It was as if Pulling and her anti-D&D crusade were being promoted by the Powers that Be.

    My guess is that some people in powerful places wanted people to stop focusing on Satanic abuse in preschools and the like, and were looking for red herrings to get them to chase instead. Then Patricia Pulling showed up and provided a perfect red herring, so they promoted and propped her up with such assets of theirs as the mainstream media, Tipper Gore, and Dr. Radecki (who was later revealed to be a sexual predator) in order to mislead a movement that was initially concerned about actual dangers into becoming the paranoid laughing-stock that it is generally regarded as today. This is just a theory, but I wouldn’t be surprised if it’s true.

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