The 80's were definitely the era for it, what with that kind of thing and the Geraldo "Satanic Sacrifices and Ritual Abuse" specials. This piece very cleverly links the same types of moral panics/sexual hysterias [of every era] and points out this generation's bugaboo - the internet.
Type of thing annoys me as "for the children" is used as the rallying cry for no end of retarded and civil rights abridging legislation.
Sex Panic! — An Interview With Debbie Nathan - 10 Zen Monkeys:
"...When I read the interviews of the kids, I could see the way the cases went forward forensically. The adult interviewers, whether they were detectives or social workers or psychologists, brainwashed the kids. They interjected their own fantasies into those kids by asking them leading questions over and over and over and over. I heard some of the tapes of kids who would walk into the room loving their teachers. And they would walk out utter basket cases, thinking that they'd been brutalized by Miss Mickey or somebody that they loved before. And I would cry. I would say — these kids have been brutalized by the investigation and by this whole panic. So were the women that were working in public daycare. That pained me to no end, the fact that public child care was under such assault. And it pained me to see women so guilty about going to work. But the thing that really got to me was the fact that relationships that were really beautiful were destroyed. You could hear it on the tapes. It was horrible to hear those interviews. And then you're like, 'Oh my god. I have to tell the world about this.'
...In fact, what's happening right now is a panic about kids and the internet. And there is a panic about teenagers having sex with each other. Those two things are working off each other. Did I predict those? No! I didn't predict them. And it seems to be happening since 9/11, actually. I think that the most proximate thing is fear of the internet. There's always a panic over a new technology. There are moral panics all the time. I mean, there was a moral panic over the telephone when it was first introduced.
SB: That's right! Because strangers would call you...
DN: Yeah. Male voices would call up young women in their homes.
SB: And god knows what would happen from there.
DN: There was a panic about comic books. There's always a panic about new technology. We're looking at it in hindsight. We're looking at a panic, and we're looking back and saying, "Oh, the internet."
SB: Oh yeah. Remember when that was such a big fright? And now it seems like nothing. That's what always happens as soon as the technology ages.
DN: But it's not nothing for a lot of people with kids today, you know?
SB: Well, I had another interview on our show with a social scientist named Mike Males. And he has these great papers that say, "Look, your kid statistically is in greater risk being in church or at the shopping mall than they are on their MySpace page." The notion of the actual risk that young people are facing on the internet is completely blown out of proportion."
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