Ritual Abuse And Extreme Abuse Clinician’s Conference 2013 to be Held in Connecticut in August

By on 7-25-2013 in Child Abuse, Conference, Connecticut

Ritual Abuse And Extreme Abuse Clinician’s Conference 2013 to be Held in Connecticut in August

Many of our How Could You? Cases like Hana Williams and Nubia Barahona fall into this category. Last year’s conference used Jerry Sandusky as an example of how these cases can be covered up for many years.

“The conference will be held on August 9, 2013 from 9 am until 5 pm at the DoubleTree near the Bradley International Airport, 16 Ella Grasso Turnpike, Windsor Locks, CT. A free shuttle is available to and from the airport.”

See here for more details.

The website also includes information from previous conferences.

 

REFORM Puzzle Piece

4 Comments

  1. I don’t know. I’m skeptical of anything that includes a speaker who makes statements like “Entire families have been implicated in the ritual abuse of children which proves the fact that generational Satanism exists.” While ritual*ized* abuse certainly occurs, I don’t believe in wide spread conspiracies or mind control (if mind control were as easy as these groups claim, governments would be using it). Even in Sandusky’s case, it was a localized cover-up that consisted mostly of people refusing to acknowledge it. Additionally, kids with prenatal alcohol are easily confused, making them vulnerable to exploitation by people pushing these ideas.

  2. These groups do exist. Some families pass this down through generations. Look at all the cults and churches covering this up for years. The news has lots of Satanists convicted for killing people in groups. Fetal alcohol has nothing to do with this. These groups work in secret until the police catch them and expose them.

    • Janelle W.,

      I’m not saying they may not exist, but 1) there aren’t that many Satanists to begin with and 2) Satanists on the whole don’t usually gather to live in the right kind of sociologically isolated-from-the-world communities in which “generational abuse” can flourish. Like FLDS enclaves, for example, or the Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh’s communes.

      In Torey L. Hayden’s ‘Ghost Girl’, the theory was advanced that survivors of “Satanic” abuse were actually victims of makers of occult-themed child porn. Not that it makes a difference in terms of the trauma experienced by survivors, but it DOES explain the absence of evidence for enclosed communities where Satanism has been passed down as a family faith for several generations.

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