3.91/5
Author: Richard Beck
Publication Date: Aug 4, 2015
Formats: PDF,Hardcover,Kindle
Rating: 3.91/5 out of 368
Publisher: PublicAffairs
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Jul 27, 2018
An incredibly well-researched and riveting overview of the satanic panic and preschool abuse scandals that rocked the 80s, as well as the cultural causes and results thereof. It is a dense book, and definitely a history text as opposed to a piece of investigative journalism, but the author says so at the very top, so if that's not your thing, you've been warned (twice). There are many incredible accounts of individual cases within this paranoid event in American history, but if you want an An incredibly well-researched and riveting overview of the satanic panic and preschool abuse scandals that rocked the 80s, as well as the cultural causes and results thereof. It is a dense book, and definitely a history text as opposed to a piece of investigative journalism, but the author says so at the very top, so if that's not your thing, you've been warned (twice). There are many incredible accounts of individual cases within this paranoid event in American history, but if you want an exhaustive resource of the whole tangled narrative to refer back to, this is it. I highly recommend it to anyone interested in satanism, ritual child abuse, recovered memories, multiple personalities, "witch hunts," the 80s, the nuclear family and its declining grip on American culture, or the structure of accusation and verification. Though the events the book covers are clearly very different from what is happening as I write this (it is 2018, and a lot of accusations of sexist abuse have come to light in the last year, but generally from adult women, and not typically "recovered" memories but living ones), it is a good message of warning that the human brain is fallible, and that the impulse to unquestioningly "believe the victim" is not without consequence. I couldn't help but think about this comparison consistently throughout, even as I regularly saw the dissimilarities as much as the similarities. Remembering history is, as ever, the responsibility of a person who wants to change the future. ...moreAug 31, 2015
A majority of American's can recall the national hysteria associated with the McMartin Preschool Daycare Scandal that resulted in the costliest trial in US history:(1987-1990), with no convictions against daycare providers, all charges dropped. "We Believe The Children: The Story of Moral Panic In The 1980s" by Richard Beck is an exceptional and important book examining a modern day witch-hunt often compared to the Salem Witch Trials in 1692.Feb 09, 2018
No clear or set protocol on how to interview children led to suggestive interrogations which led to truly off-the-wall accusations, social panic, and so on. This was a somewhat fascinating read, but it definitely could’ve been better organized. I’m not sure I’d recommend it. I think a quick google search might give you enough to get the gist of what occurred.Feb 12, 2019
Fascinating, horrifying, deeply depressing.Aug 19, 2015
There's been a bunch of other reviews, so I'll just add a few personal observations:Aug 15, 2015
On every page there is something to disturb, whether it’s depictions of satanic child abuse, coercive interrogation of minors or miscarriages of justice. What else could a reader want? The hysteria of falsely recovered memories, cult murder conspiracies and “What about the children?†moral repression is charted by Richard Beck in his book WE BELIEVE THE CHILDREN: THE STORY OF A MORAL PANIC IN THE 1980s with honesty, fairness and critical thinking that is unbiased and still has a point of view. On every page there is something to disturb, whether it’s depictions of satanic child abuse, coercive interrogation of minors or miscarriages of justice. What else could a reader want? The hysteria of falsely recovered memories, cult murder conspiracies and “What about the children?†moral repression is charted by Richard Beck in his book WE BELIEVE THE CHILDREN: THE STORY OF A MORAL PANIC IN THE 1980s with honesty, fairness and critical thinking that is unbiased and still has a point of view. That point of view is that the a shift in thinking about abuse as being made up of social-economic and political as well as psychological causes to strictly psychologic created unreliability and accusations based solely on faith. That abuse is based on a discrepancy of power, not sex, and the fundamental motivation for the overreaction to child abuse cases in daycare centers was a backlash against the dismantling of the nuclear family as women gained rights and equality. There is just so much to recommend about this book, from its ethical stance to its entertaining if tragic content. But don’t be too smug as you read of people’s craziness because we’re all capable of the same mass delirium. ...moreAug 29, 2015
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here. Have you ever seen someone ride a hobbyhorse? That's what this book was like. The author had his eyes fixed firmly ahead on his progressive ideas and he was riding determinedly towards them. Any day now. He just had to keep going. And going. And . . . never got anywhere.Apr 09, 2015
This book has an important story to tell - about how a case of social hysteria, aided by the media, can cause the destruction of many lives, as well as a lack of a more serious treatment of social issues and the people damaged by them. The book is very well-researched, but not very well edited. It has a fascinating story at its heart, but the amount of detail is overwhelming sometimes, and not all of it is necessary. It makes the book drag on a bit. Also, this is no light reading. I found it This book has an important story to tell - about how a case of social hysteria, aided by the media, can cause the destruction of many lives, as well as a lack of a more serious treatment of social issues and the people damaged by them. The book is very well-researched, but not very well edited. It has a fascinating story at its heart, but the amount of detail is overwhelming sometimes, and not all of it is necessary. It makes the book drag on a bit. Also, this is no light reading. I found it difficult to deal with some of the horrid descriptions and had to put it down from time to time to get away from it all. All in all, this book adds much to the understanding of what happened, and is important to read. ...moreJan 04, 2016
This was a really cool book. Richard Beck combines a lot of the facts and opinions around child abuse and mental health into an easy to understand format. The book isn't all that dark but it is raises some interesting questions about paranoia, abuse, and the reliability of children in court cases. Overall I think this book ties in a lot of confusing topics into an easy to follow book.Nov 29, 2018
A truly scary read. This is not about the McMartin child molestation case per se, but the sociological study that led to the trial. We Believe the Children: The Story of a Moral Panic is much more, it is about how a society can go into mass panic and those trying to do right end up doing so much harm in the name of good. Think of the Salem Witch Trials, but with cameras. Richard Beck wrote a truly haunting book that left me nauseated. He explains the background history that led to this moment in A truly scary read. This is not about the McMartin child molestation case per se, but the sociological study that led to the trial. We Believe the Children: The Story of a Moral Panic is much more, it is about how a society can go into mass panic and those trying to do right end up doing so much harm in the name of good. Think of the Salem Witch Trials, but with cameras. Richard Beck wrote a truly haunting book that left me nauseated. He explains the background history that led to this moment in time. It is both intense and convoluted, but it is also well documented and easy to follow. Politics are talked about, but this is not about politics. It is about the politics of society and how guilt of parents lead to the wrong conclusions.Aug 16, 2015
A fascinating mixture of history, sociology, psychology, and true crime (although in this case, the crime was perjury rather than child abuse). Why is it that we as humans are willing to believe the most horrible things about one another? What does this say about our ability for self-delusion, about the miasma of fears and anxieties concerning modern life that surround us? And in this case, it wasn't even an issue of "believing the children," but more of believing the disturbing fantasies we had A fascinating mixture of history, sociology, psychology, and true crime (although in this case, the crime was perjury rather than child abuse). Why is it that we as humans are willing to believe the most horrible things about one another? What does this say about our ability for self-delusion, about the miasma of fears and anxieties concerning modern life that surround us? And in this case, it wasn't even an issue of "believing the children," but more of believing the disturbing fantasies we had unconsciously put into their mouths... ...moreAug 12, 2015
I could hardly be a better target reader for We Believe the Children -- I was fairly obsessed with the satanic/daycare/child-abuse/recovered-memory panic(s) of the late '80s and early '90s and read every published exposé. And I was very much hoping that Beck would pull together these various cases (McMartin, Amirault, Friedman, Kelly Michaels, etc.) in a larger narrative that can help us understand why they happened at that particular time and what it says about us then and/or now. The raw I could hardly be a better target reader for We Believe the Children -- I was fairly obsessed with the satanic/daycare/child-abuse/recovered-memory panic(s) of the late '80s and early '90s and read every published exposé. And I was very much hoping that Beck would pull together these various cases (McMartin, Amirault, Friedman, Kelly Michaels, etc.) in a larger narrative that can help us understand why they happened at that particular time and what it says about us then and/or now. The raw material is still great, and Beck uncovers any number of choice details and quotations from the ludicrous investigations and trials. But too much of this book is undigested: dense chunks of reportage and legal narrative, with surprisingly little context. (Surely the most important thing about the McMartin case, twenty-five years later, isn't the details of the parents' witch-hunt credulity, excerpts from the investigators' clueless manipulations of the children, or the courtroom tick-tock.) At book's end, we still don't quite see how these various cases fit together, and Beck doesn't do enough to guide our understanding of them and offer perspective from 2015. ...moreJun 09, 2015
WritingAug 06, 2015
We Believe the Children: A Moral Panic in the 1980s by Richard Beck is a highly recommended examination of the panic over alleged horrific abuse by day care workers in the 1980's. Beck is primarily focusing on the history of the allegations, why it may have happened, and several other topics related to the discussion rather than presenting new information about this time in history. I vividly recall all the outrage and panic coverage over these cases in the 1980s when the McMartin Preschool We Believe the Children: A Moral Panic in the 1980s by Richard Beck is a highly recommended examination of the panic over alleged horrific abuse by day care workers in the 1980's. Beck is primarily focusing on the history of the allegations, why it may have happened, and several other topics related to the discussion rather than presenting new information about this time in history. I vividly recall all the outrage and panic coverage over these cases in the 1980s when the McMartin Preschool became a whispered household word and accusations of satanic ritual abuse was seemingly everywhere.May 26, 2015
We Believe the Children is about the spate of daycare child abuse cases which hit the news in the 1980s and, as its subtitle reveals, Richard Beck is not impressed at the way those cases were handled: by the police, by the mental health professionals, by the prosecutors, by the judges, by the news media, and even, or perhaps most especially, by the parents. Using the McMartin trial in California as his primary exemplar, Beck explores the political, social, and psychological underpinnings of the We Believe the Children is about the spate of daycare child abuse cases which hit the news in the 1980s and, as its subtitle reveals, Richard Beck is not impressed at the way those cases were handled: by the police, by the mental health professionals, by the prosecutors, by the judges, by the news media, and even, or perhaps most especially, by the parents. Using the McMartin trial in California as his primary exemplar, Beck explores the political, social, and psychological underpinnings of the hysteria surrounding the daycare child abuse cases, eventually concluding that this hysteria was driven by a conservative society trying to repress - to hide from itself - two unpalatable truths:First, the nuclear family was dying. Second, people mostly didn't want to save it.As an attorney, I was both fascinated and appalled by the conduct of those who investigated and prosecuted the McMartin case. I was particularly interested in the changes to the criminal justice process advocated by the McMartin parents, including a new hearsay exception which would allow the parents of alleged victims below the age of 8 to tell juries what their children had told them about the abuse, rather than the children testifying themselves. Beck suggests that such an exception would have violated the Sixth Amendment's Confrontation Clause, an argument with which I might have agreed before the Supreme Court's June 18 decision in Ohio v. Clark. (To be fair, the galley I reviewed pre-dated that decision, so Beck couldn't have taken it into account.)Jan 28, 2016
I have been on a legal injustice binge lately, thanks to the Making a Murderer documentary, so when I saw this book in my local library’s new non-fiction display, I picked it up, thinking I would get a few more hits on that vein. I’m not an avid follower of the cases, and I know only the basic facts. I remember reading about the day care cases in my grandmother’s stash of women’s magazines in the 1980’s. The allegations were lurid and hard to digest (I was in grade school), and they were I have been on a legal injustice binge lately, thanks to the Making a Murderer documentary, so when I saw this book in my local library’s new non-fiction display, I picked it up, thinking I would get a few more hits on that vein. I’m not an avid follower of the cases, and I know only the basic facts. I remember reading about the day care cases in my grandmother’s stash of women’s magazines in the 1980’s. The allegations were lurid and hard to digest (I was in grade school), and they were presented as a national epidemic. Also, I saw a documentary a few years ago following some of the former students of one of the schools who eventually recanted as they discussed how the experiences affected their lives. (The only detail I remember is one of the men could not bear to change his daughter’s diaper, fearful of losing her to accusations of sexual abuse.)Jun 20, 2018
This book is incredibly too long and I was pretty certain I wouldn’t finish it, but I ended up reading the whole thing. The cases are interesting, but there is a lot of depth to subjects other than just the daycare panic. There are extensive parts of (very long) chapters dedicated to Satanism, the anti-pornography movement, and multiple personality disorder/repressed memories. The mishandled interviewing of the children in these cases was covered very thoroughly, but still made for an This book is incredibly too long and I was pretty certain I wouldn’t finish it, but I ended up reading the whole thing. The cases are interesting, but there is a lot of depth to subjects other than just the daycare panic. There are extensive parts of (very long) chapters dedicated to Satanism, the anti-pornography movement, and multiple personality disorder/repressed memories. The mishandled interviewing of the children in these cases was covered very thoroughly, but still made for an interesting read. Most of what he covered happened to align with my interests so it was very readable, if very heavy-handed. I enjoyed the feminist interpretation and contextualization of a lot of events, but some parts went over the top even for me. There are some pretty bold claims made without much evidence. One I had highlighted was “The goal was to make women too insecure and anxious to make use of any of the freedoms they had won for themselves.â€Nov 19, 2018
In the 1980s, a strange kind of hysteria swept across the United States. Concerned parents would turn their children over to therapists or investigators, who would subject the children to repeated interviews until the children began to reveal horrific tales of sexual abuse, torture, and strange rituals. Fears of satanic ritual abuse at the hands of daycare workers and babysitters lead to hundreds of criminal charges and very long prison sentences that are not overturned until the late 1990s and In the 1980s, a strange kind of hysteria swept across the United States. Concerned parents would turn their children over to therapists or investigators, who would subject the children to repeated interviews until the children began to reveal horrific tales of sexual abuse, torture, and strange rituals. Fears of satanic ritual abuse at the hands of daycare workers and babysitters lead to hundreds of criminal charges and very long prison sentences that are not overturned until the late 1990s and early 2000s. In We Believe the Children: A Moral Panic in the 1980s, journalist Richard Beck takes several steps back to look at not only what happened in cases like the McMartin Preschool trials and its aftermath, but how it all came about in the first place. Reading the book was like standing in the middle of a hurricane as events spiraled out of control. Our vantage point shows us multiple points where the panic could have been stopped…but also shows us how powerless we are to actually stop the storm...Sep 21, 2018
I can't get enough of the history of satanic panic in the 80's/90's. This was my fourth nonfiction read on it. It was a deep dive. The McMartin Preschool trial is its focal point, but it covers all the peripheral hallmarks: the Country Walk Daycare case, the Wee Care case, Mike Warnke, Lawrence Pazdar & Michelle Remembers, the David Finkelhor report, Geraldo Rivera, the Friedman case...Beck accounts for them all in detail. The book is so comprehensive, in fact, that it became a little I can't get enough of the history of satanic panic in the 80's/90's. This was my fourth nonfiction read on it. It was a deep dive. The McMartin Preschool trial is its focal point, but it covers all the peripheral hallmarks: the Country Walk Daycare case, the Wee Care case, Mike Warnke, Lawrence Pazdar & Michelle Remembers, the David Finkelhor report, Geraldo Rivera, the Friedman case...Beck accounts for them all in detail. The book is so comprehensive, in fact, that it became a little daunting sometimes. I didn't quite understand the structure. It certainly isn't chronological. At a certain point I had to stop focusing on the direction and just go with the narrative flow. I was never bored, so it probably doesn't matter. He gives a lot of detail about Kee MacFarlane's life & career that I hadn't read before. In my view she was a core driving force of the panic, but most books & articles treat her like an incidental player. I came away from this feeling like I have a little bit of a grasp on her character for once.Oct 30, 2015
“We Believe the Children: A Moral Panic in the 1980s,†by Richard Beck, is a compelling book about the satanic ritual abuse, childcare sexual abuse, and repressed memory scandals that rocked the U.S. in the 1980s and early ‘90s. The autobiography “Michelle Remembers†and the McMartin preschool trial are thoroughly covered to highlight the hysteria and “witch hunt†against “epidemic†sexual abuse. Beck analyzes the legal, psychological, and sociological events that led to these scandals, and the “We Believe the Children: A Moral Panic in the 1980s,†by Richard Beck, is a compelling book about the satanic ritual abuse, childcare sexual abuse, and repressed memory scandals that rocked the U.S. in the 1980s and early ‘90s. The autobiography “Michelle Remembers†and the McMartin preschool trial are thoroughly covered to highlight the hysteria and “witch hunt†against “epidemic†sexual abuse. Beck analyzes the legal, psychological, and sociological events that led to these scandals, and the backlash afterwards.Feb 02, 2016
Control.Jul 12, 2018
I heard about this book in the context of “Pizzagateâ€, a fabricated scandal involving ritual child abuse by elites in a pizza shop, usually happening to be of the opposite political party. It was so silly I had no idea how anyone could possibly believe it. A quote about the panic in this book sums up my own response to this conspiracy theory quite well: “if you ask me to believe in a systematic network of fiends, then Goddamn it, I want facts and figures...And why, if these horrors are still I heard about this book in the context of “Pizzagateâ€, a fabricated scandal involving ritual child abuse by elites in a pizza shop, usually happening to be of the opposite political party. It was so silly I had no idea how anyone could possibly believe it. A quote about the panic in this book sums up my own response to this conspiracy theory quite well: “if you ask me to believe in a systematic network of fiends, then Goddamn it, I want facts and figures...And why, if these horrors are still going on, is the pseudonymous author writing a novel about it, instead of banging down the doors of every judicial office in the country?†(Letter to the Editor, Ms. Magazine, May/June 1993). Little did I know that in the 80s, accusations every bit as ridiculous were embraced by the media, law enforcement, and the country.Mar 14, 2018
A fascinating exploration of the Satanic Panic. I knew that the interviewing techniques used on the children were bad, but it's honestly astonishing to me how bad they were: at one point an interviewer told a child that not confessing is stupid and they don't want to be stupid, do they? An important take-home is that you can't take information about how often people lie in one context and apply it carelessly to every other context. It's probably true that children rarely spontaneously falsely A fascinating exploration of the Satanic Panic. I knew that the interviewing techniques used on the children were bad, but it's honestly astonishing to me how bad they were: at one point an interviewer told a child that not confessing is stupid and they don't want to be stupid, do they? An important take-home is that you can't take information about how often people lie in one context and apply it carelessly to every other context. It's probably true that children rarely spontaneously falsely accuse someone of raping them, and retractions of such spontaneous accusations can be assumed to be a result of threats or abuse from the rapist. However, that certainly doesn't mean that no child will falsely accuse someone of raping them when badgered and emotionally abused into doing so, or when deceived into believing the accusations are a game.Jan 25, 2018
I remember the daycare sex rings, the satanists sacrificing animals in parks after dark, people with hundreds of personalities fighting for airtime. Seemed reasonable, and it all made life seemed a little more exciting - the thought that beneath the facade of normalcy there were vast seas of perversion. But, then, nothing...I assumed that everyone snapped out of the psychosis and moved onto something else.Feb 07, 2019
I absolutely threw myself into this book. It was engaging, packaged entertainingly and frankly I desperately enjoyed it.Take your time and choose the perfect book.
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