• spinnetrouble
    link
    12
    edit-2
    11 months ago

    There was a whole ass Satanic Panic during the '80s and '90s in which parents were afraid of their kids playing Dungeons & Dragons, listening to Judas Priest records, and participating in human sacrifices. A lot of sociopathic behavior (like the “human sacrifices” that were garden-variety murders and animal torture) was blamed on it. Like, this nonsense was written about in newspapers without journalists saying, “But before we start looking at ritual human/animal sacrifice, we should probably look at who hated the dead person/look for patterns of animal torture first”

    It was a really weird time to be a rational kid.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      1111 months ago

      Yeah, makes sense that it’s just a general commentary on the moral panic of the time.

      I remember my (amazing) grandma giving me birthday money and saying “but it’s not for Magic (the Gathering) cards. I’m afraid those are Evil.”

      Even at 10, I was just thinking “money is money, I’ll just spend different money on MTG cards…”

      • spinnetrouble
        link
        511 months ago

        Yes!! Hahah that was exactly how weird it was. A friend of mine bought a D&D monster compendium, and his mother gave him a bible to keep him safe after buying such a sinful witchcraft manual.

        • @JungleJim
          link
          611 months ago

          I got in a pretty big argument as a kid while volunteering at achurch garage sale I found a DnD card game(?) that was for sale. I was willing to pay for it but some other kid started on about how it was satanic. I could tell the youth pastor thought he was being a shit, but he also didn’t want a bunch of satanic panic making his job harder, so it went into the shitcan. All it did was make me think the other kid was dumb and so maybe his beliefs were too. It definitely feels like something that allowed me to open my eyes and find my own (lack of) faith.