Pamela Perskin Noblitt

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Pamela Perskin Noblitt



Average rating: 4.21 · 34 ratings · 5 reviews · 7 distinct works
Cult and Ritual Abuse: Narr...

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3.89 avg rating — 36 ratings — published 1995 — 14 editions
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Ritual Abuse in the Twenty-...

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4.12 avg rating — 25 ratings — published 2008 — 3 editions
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Cult and Ritual Abuse: Narr...

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it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 2 ratings
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Navigating Social Security ...

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Navigating Social Security ...

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Cult and Ritual Abuse: Its ...

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“The above is stereotypical FMS rhetoric. It employs a formulaic medley of factual distortions, exaggerations, emotionally charged language and ideological codewords, pseudo-scientific assertions, indignant protestations of bigotry and persecution, mockering of religious belief, and the usual tiresome “witch hunt” metaphors to convince the reader that there can be no debating the merits of the case. No matter what the circumstances of the case, the syntax is always the same, and the plot line as predictable as a 1920's silent movie. Everyone accused of abuse is somehow the victim of overzealous religious fanatics, who make unwarranted, irrational, and self-serving charges, which are incredibly accepted uncritically by virtually all social service and criminal justice professionals assign to the case, who are responsible for "brainwashing" the alleged perpetrator or witnesses to the crime. This mysterious process of "mass hysteria" is then amplified in the media, which feeds back upon itself, which finally causes a total travesty of justice which the FMS people in the white hats are duty-bound to redress. By reading FMS literature one could easily draw the conclusion that the entire American justice system is no better than that of the rural south in the days of lynchings and the Ku Klux Klan. The Salem witch trials of the seventeenth century are always the touchstone for comparison.”
Pamela Perskin Noblitt, Ritual Abuse in the Twenty-First Century: Psychological, Forensic, Social, and Political Considerations



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