Stuff You Should Know - Pagans, Neo-Pagans, Wiccans – Let’s Sort It Out!
Episode Date: June 3, 2025Paganism was the set of original ancient religions around the world. They all had plenty of gods, loved nature, sometimes sacrificed things, and so on. Then the Big Three religions came along and took... over. But today paganism has come roaring back!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an iHeart Podcast.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart Radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh and there's Chuck and we both have antlers on our
head and this is Stuff You Should Know. Just a couple of wooded pagans.
Yeah. I'm excited about this one, man.
Yeah. You know, we'll reference some previous episodes.
We covered Wicca and our witchcraft up,
and there's some Alistair Crowley in here, of course.
Yeah, for sure.
You knew he was going to make an appearance.
And it seems like there was something else, too.
But we'll, if you want the full picture, you know, go back and listen to all those together just for a spooky,
oh, why do I say spooky? This is not even spooky. That's the whole problem.
Yeah, for sure.
With the misconception.
Yeah, but it's so ingrained that even after you know about it, you know, it's hard not
to just shake that stuff.
I was a church kid. I was raised Baptist.
Exactly.
Pagans were spooky, they killed and sacrificed
things.
Yeah, I ran across a couple of websites, Christian websites, that essentially still think all
of the same things that the church originally said about pagans back, you know, 1,500 years
ago.
Yeah.
So it's still alive and well.
It's cool to know this story now, having, you know, left the Baptist Church many, many
years ago to finally understand, like, oh, at a certain point in history, they were just
like, this is the religion and everything else is the devil.
Right.
Yeah, and in retrospect, looking at this now, it's like, gosh, talk about getting your wires
crossed.
Yeah, that's funny.
In a way. your wires crossed. Yeah, that's funny. Anyway. Yeah, so we're talking about paganism, everybody.
And hats off to Dave, too, first of all, for helping us with this.
This is a huge, big lump of a topic that almost every one of the things we're going to talk
about could be broken out into its own episode.
So we're going to have to summarize in a lot of ways.
We're gonna get a lot of stuff wrong,
so apologies already to all of our pagan listeners out there.
And let us know, correct us about what we do get wrong,
but we're gonna try our best not to get stuff wrong
because it's a really interesting set of religions.
We should say that's what paganism is.
It's not a religion, it's a set of religions. We should say that's what paganism is. It's not a religion, it's a set
of typically nature-based religions that before the original ancient paganism predated any of what
we call the Abrahamic religions, the monotheistic religions of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.
And that's my definition of paganism.
Can we stop there?
Yeah.
We haven't gotten anything wrong so far, so yeah.
Yeah.
Well, you mentioned those religions, and it's pretty key to mention the Abrahamic religions
because basically anything else outside of that was considered pagan historically.
The word pagan actually was pretty much an insult at first when Christianity was on the
rise and we'll talk a lot about that here in a second.
In the Roman Empire, if you did not convert to Christianity, you were called paganus,
which is Latin for country dweller, which is basically like, hey, if you're not a Christian,
you're a bumpkin, aka pagan, which is interesting.
Oh, yeah,, which is interesting.
Oh yeah, it's definitely interesting.
It's funny because that means that at some point in time,
and we'll talk about when that happened,
Christianity suddenly leapt forward
as like a sophisticated thing.
So the tables basically turned because originally
some of the Greek and actually Roman
pagans were very suspicious of Christianity and said all sorts of libelous things against them.
And then as Christianity rose to prominence, it used that same playbook against pagans.
But yeah, it makes sense that it's like you were considered a hick or not up to date
if you were still a pagan once Christianity became a thing in the Roman Empire.
I think bumpkin summed it up nicely.
I thought so too, I like bumpkin.
Cause it's like, it's an insult,
but it's just so round and happy
that it's hard to be angered by it
if somebody calls you a bumpkin.
Yeah, for some reason, bumpkin does have just sort of a,
like I feel like bumpkins are happy.
Right, they don't care what you think of them.
All right, so should we talk a little bit about...
You know, there's kind of two parts to this.
There's ancient paganism,
which is one thing that we're gonna speak about now,
and then later we're gonna talk a little bit about modern paganism,
but the kind of key distinction here is
modern paganism isn't like, hey, we just brought back
everything they were doing back then
because it went away for a long time,
and now we're gonna do that same stuff.
It was inspired by some of this stuff,
but as you'll see, not a lot of text survived,
so modern paganism is basically its own new thing.
Yeah, and we'll talk about where it came from, but there's a lot of, well, just incorrect facts on the internet
that basically says this tradition has continued uninterrupted in secret.
It had to be driven into secret by the rise of Christianity, and that just does not seem to be true.
Yeah, but if we're going gonna go back to ancient paganism,
we can talk about some of the different elements of,
because like you said, this is a lot of different things
that are wrapped up under the term paganism.
But animism is the first one,
and that is the belief that every object on the planet,
basically, has a spirit.
People do, my dog does, your dog does,
which I totally believe. The rivers, trees,
everything in nature does animate or inanimate, which is why it's called animism. And they thought
that nature can be like a great thing, it can help protect us, or it can be a dangerous thing, it can
cause us harm, and it's up to us to influence that through sacrifice and these rituals that we perform. Yeah, a good example of this just real quick is there's no absolute good and evil.
That's one of those Abrahamic religious ideas, and paganism does not believe in that.
So for example, if you are crossing a raging river, that river might kill you and drown
you, but it's not like the river is evil and wants to do that.
It just can happen, so there's a risk,
but it can also be a neutral thing.
You can increase your chances of successfully crossing
that river by maybe praying to it,
the spirit or the god of that river,
or maybe offering a sacrifice.
But it's not, there's no evil rivers
in any of the pagan religions.
Except for the River Styx.
Yeah, I guess maybe, but I think even then,
it's not necessarily absolutely evil.
Yeah.
We've got shamanism, which is sort of like animism plus animism
with a mascot, in that the shaman is the person who steps forward
and says, all right, we've got all these objects that have spirits
and I'm the person that can communicate with them.
I will enter a trance, may take some drugs,
may do a little singing and dancing to get there,
don't you worry about that,
but I'll get there in that trance state
and I'll be able to communicate with these spirits,
like go through me.
Yeah, I think the singing and dancing
is subsequent to taking the drugs.
Hey, I went to a rave or two in my day.
Exactly, every single person there
was a shaman at that moment.
That's what it felt like at the time, probably.
Right.
So there's a couple of things just
from the ancient pagan religions that are still
carried on today.
Ancestor worship is another big one, especially
as we'll see in the neo-Pagan Norse traditions.
But it's essentially, you can see evidence of this in the fact that we buried people in the way that
we started burying people, as if they're venerated, as if we understand that they need grave goods
because there's an afterlife. And so it's not like a hard leap to the idea that those ancestors can help
us out now that they're in the spirit world and so you can worship them.
That's a big part of it too.
Yeah, for sure.
Then we're going to get into this whole idea that, and something I found that looking through
a lot of these pagan rites and religions is that they looked at women very differently than early
Christian and some might even argue late Christian religions do. In that women
were were worshiped and venerated. They were the Earth Mother was a big part of
the early deities and worshiped and they found Venus figurines, these clay and
stone figures from like 35,000 years ago that
are clearly like probably used in fertility rites because they have exaggerated breasts
on these figures and wide hips.
And so the whole idea of the Earth Mother has been around for a long, long time.
Yeah.
And then you can pretty clearly demonstrate that the Earth Mother
eventually evolved into Gaia from the Greek pantheon. Gaia is the mom of all the other gods,
which brings up another point, polytheism. It's not monotheistic. There is not one single God. Even if there's a head of the gods like, say, Zeus or Odin or something like that,
there's still plenty of other gods who are gods. They're not saints, they're not angels,
they're not assistants.
They are gods in and of themselves.
And so polytheism is a huge, huge part
of any pagan religion, ancient or modern too.
And I've never looked into this,
but I mean, the idea of mother nature,
that probably is kind of a trickle down
from goddess mother, earth mother, right? I would think so too yeah for sure yeah I'm just taking
a stab at that though so you gotta be right you know I mean it's not like that
was just coincidental somebody came up with that in the 60s or something yeah
that's true what about sacrifice the stuff that
pagans don't like to talk about yeah I mean this is a can of a can of worms that, you know, we can't fully open because there's
a lot of debate about how much sacrifice there has been in all religions throughout ancient
world history.
A lot of times, the people that say like, oh, they were just killing babies left and
right are written by the enemies of these people.
In this case, Christian and Roman accounts about how widespread it would be because they're
trying to paint them in a certain way. But there definitely has been sacrifice,
whether it was human or your finest crop or your best sheep.
Yeah, I mean we know for a fact that Germanic and Celtic tribes sacrificed
humans just from the presence of bog bodies and the state that they were,
the way that they died. They're pretty much proof positive that there was sacrifice.
And even outside of Europe, I mean, you know, the Inca maiden, the Lulea, no, Lulealo, Lulealo.
I think you mean Leilani.
The maiden, you remember the Inca maiden that has like your knees pulled up to her chest and she looks like she's sleeping but she was sacrificed 500 years ago?
I mean like it did happen but the idea that it was widespread or that they like drank
baby's blood or that kind of stuff, that was the exaggeration that really kind of were
smears.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, I finally watched the other day, it was about a month ago, I guess, the Mel Gibson.
Apocalypto?
Yeah, I'd never seen that for some reason.
I finally watched it.
How was it? Did you see it?
No, but I've seen the scene that made you think of that.
Right.
You know, it was pretty good.
You know, I'm not like a championing Mel Gibson,
of course, but I just hadn't seen that movie,
and I had a... I guess Emily was clearly not with me.
And I was like, oh, I've got a window, and it popped up,
and I was like, you know what, I never saw that,
let me check it out.
Very gross and gory in its depictions,
but, you know, it was okay.
Yeah, Mel Gibson is basically into snuff porn.
Right. Like, he loves that basically into snuff porn. Right.
Like, he loves that stuff.
Have you ever seen We Were Soldiers?
Uh, I did not see that, but that's supposed to be pretty gory, too, right?
It's one of the most violent, yeah, goriest war movies I've ever seen in my life.
Yeah.
And I've seen The Guns of Navarone.
Yeah.
Oh, was that Telly Sabalas? No.
He was in... The Dirty Dozen. That's what you're thinking. Yeah. Was that Tely Sibalas? No.
He was in The Dirty Dozen.
That's what you're thinking.
That was good.
Or Force 10 from Navarone?
Was he in that one too?
I don't know if he was in that one.
He was definitely in The Dirty Dozen.
That was a great one.
Yeah.
All right.
We're getting away from off topic here though, because we need to talk about idol worship
and tree worship.
That's another pretty common element in a lot of different pagan religions.
You know, it's right there in the 10 Commandments,
do not worship false idols.
Idolatry was a big no-no to Christians,
and that's basically any physical representation
of a God or a spirit.
We usually, you know, growing up,
Baptist thought of them as like statues and stuff
from biblical stories, but it can be a rock or something.
And then trees, trees are big in many, many,
most pagan religions, they love their trees.
Yeah, they love them, for sure.
So yeah, those are some high points, or basics, I guess,
is a better way to put it, of ancient pagan religions.
And because, as we said before,
there's not really a lot that survived from the ancients to today.
A lot of that stuff has been gleaned by archaeologists, anthropologists, and it's from that base of knowledge that modern pagans draw from to create the newer versions of the pagan religions.
Yeah. It feels like a break time, right?
Yeah, I guess so.
All right, we'll take a break
and we'll come back and talk about
when Christianity decided that's it,
we're gonna change the narrative, right after this.
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All right, so we promised talk of Christianity, stamping out paganism, or trying to at least,
and that started with Constantine, who was the first Roman emperor to convert to Christianity.
Officially, I think you sort of hinted earlier that Christianity was a pretty smallish, persecuted
sect of people at first, until Constantine came along and said, actually, I'm Christian
now. And all the other Roman elites were like,
well, if Constantine, the emperor, is Christian,
then maybe we should look into this a little more.
Right.
And so the tide turned on pagans
basically right out of the gate,
but Constantine himself didn't do anything to persecute.
He didn't use his official position as emperor
to persecute pagans.
Yeah, he dipped his toe in the pool publicly.
Yeah, yeah, exactly. So, actually, I think he was fully immersed in the baptismal font instead.
Well, yeah.
His son, though, went full bore after pagans and outlawed paganism.
He passed the first laws, Constantinus, Constantius,
yeah, not Constantinople.
Constantius.
Yes.
Yeah.
He passed the first laws that made paganism and practices of paganism illegal.
It was basically amounted to any public displays of paganism were outlawed,
but not too long after, a couple of decades, his successor
Theodosius, he said Christianity is the state religion of the Roman Empire, and if you do
anything pagan, including in your own home, like your toast, don't let us see you go anywhere
near a chicken, or you're in big trouble.
And they said, what is toast?
And they went, you know when your bread gets too close
to the fire and it tastes better?
That's toast.
I hadn't tried that.
So Christianity is on the rise, and they
started to stamp out pagan religions all over the Roman
Empire through the laws that you mentioned
and through a pretty brilliant plan, which
was literally demonizing them.
I never really have thought about that word much
until this, as like, you know,
that demon is the root there.
But that's literally what they did.
They were like, you know what?
Everyone that you have been worshiping,
they are the devil in disguise.
Like the literal devil, Satan.
Yes.
And they actually took some of the existing gods
and just basically copy pasted them into the conception
of the devil, of Satan.
And again, keep in mind here, these pagan religions,
they don't have anything even approximating Satan.
Like gods can be good or evil, protective or dangerous,
but there's no like one evil polar foil to God
because there is no one God.
It's not dual, it's plural.
That's part of pagan religion, right?
So it's ironic that they're like, your God is Satan.
And they're like, which one?
They're like, the one with the horns,
the one with the antlers.
And so that's basically how the modern conception
of Satan came along.
And so basically any god would just be equated with evil,
with a demon, with Satan himself.
And if you were caught practicing this,
now you started to risk being killed by the people in charge.
Yeah, Dave found this one pretty prominent Celtic god,
Ser Nunoz, yeah?
Yeah.
Okay, C-E-R-N-U-N-N-O-F-F-F.
It's like a mashup of Michael Cera,
John Cena, and John Ser Nunoz.
Yeah, man, I almost said it wrong again. Ser Nunoz was, like I said, Sarah, John Cena, and John Sununu.
Yeah, man, I almost said it wrong again.
Sununos was, like I said, a prominent Celtic god, and it was the antler god, had antlers,
and they basically look back now and say between Sununos and the Greek god Pan, like it's not
a far leap to go from antlers to horns,
and that was basically probably the model
for the Christian devil that once they decided,
hey, we're just gonna be binary from now on.
Right, but Sir Nounos was wearing antlers
because they indicated protectiveness,
not necessarily of humans, but of the forest
and the countryside, and you could be in Sir Nounos' good graces
by taking care of those things,
or you could run afoul of Sir Nounos
and if you, say, just stepped on a bunch of docks
for no good reason.
But he became Satan eventually, or he was one of the ones.
I think they went basically local religion
by local religion
and identified who could be Satan,
and then demonized them and all the others.
Yeah, that makes sense.
Like, who do they identify with?
Like, who's going to scare them?
Exactly.
So now, because your God, your ancient pagan God,
is Satan, if you are worshipping that God or any God,
or any kind of polytheistic, pagan religion,
you're now in league with the devil.
And again, you can be put to death for that kind of thing, and that developed into witch trials, the Inquisition,
all sorts of terrible stuff that was essentially the Christian church persecuting in an effort to stamp out.
It's like any local rival religions.
Yeah, well stamp out is one thing they did
and with the Christian armies and colonialism
and missionaries, that was what they were doing
all over the West.
And then what they couldn't stamp out,
or I don't know if it was what they couldn't stamp out,
but they were stamping out everything they wanted to
and then they also said, but actually,
this Halloween and Christmas and Easter
are pretty fun, and those are pagan based,
so we're just gonna tweak those and make them our own
because who doesn't like Halloween?
Yeah, everybody likes Halloween,
which started out as Samhain, as we'll see.
I think we've talked about that probably 15 times.
Yeah. You know what I think actually've talked about that probably 15 times. Yeah.
You know what I think actually triggered this,
me thinking of this topic?
What movie?
No, it was Easter.
No.
I was thinking about, I happened to be up and out
around sunrise on Easter, and it reminded me as a kid
being raised Catholic of going to Sunrise Mass in Easter.
And I was like, dude, you're standing there celebrating
a religious service, watching the sun rise
on a specific day in the spring.
Like it is so pagan based and it's in like,
in every single way.
I think even Easter is like a shifter,
an adaptation of like, Oster, which I believe
was one of the polytheistic pagan gods.
Yeah.
Like, it was, it's just there,
out in the open basically,
and that made me wonder about the whole thing.
Yeah.
You know, growing up in Stone Mountain, Georgia,
the most dedicated would hike up Stone Mountain
in the dead of night to go to the sunrise service
on top of Stone Mountain.
Yeah, pretty cool.
Yeah.
So they were basically stamping with one foot,
giving back rubs with the other, with their hands.
Stamp, stamp, rub, rub.
That's what the Christians did to basically win the PR war
of the religions and take over essentially.
Yeah.
If you're looking at the pagan comeback,
which we're gonna get into now, if you're looking at the pagan comeback,
which we're gonna get into now,
you can go back to the Renaissance when they said,
hey, the Greek and Roman philosophers
and all those books they were writing,
it's like super interesting, we're into that stuff again.
And we have the printing press now,
so we can really print this stuff up and disseminate it.
And there were Renaissance painters
painting all these amazing romantic paintings
of like mythological creatures and gods.
And then the Enlightenment came along and said,
Renaissance, hold my mead.
So yeah, the Enlightenment was like,
in a couple of strange ways,
it was really fertile ground for like an interest
in paganism to come along.
For one, the enlightenment thinkers just essentially
as a first step just rejected Christianity
and monotheism in particular.
And they also were like, I really like the philosophy
of these ancient Greeks and ancient Romans.
They were polytheistic, maybe I could be too.
So it kind of arousedoused an intellectual interest in that.
Yeah.
But it also, it created an interest in paganism
in a different way too, because the Enlightenment created
such rational thinking that some people were kind of repelled
by it, and they were like, I'm gonna go seek answers
and purpose in nature instead.
And that, probably more than anything, is how'm gonna go seek answers and purpose in nature instead.
And that, probably more than anything, is how the Enlightenment led to an interest in
paganism.
Yeah, and I also thought it was super interesting how much the arts played into all this.
You know, I mentioned the Renaissance painters, but also romantic poets.
Like you can't read Wordsworth and Keats and Shelley without wanting to go out into the woods
and be among nature.
They were very, just very moving poems
about the world, the natural world around us
and the sort of unseen magic in nature.
Yeah, you've never wanted to take your clothes off
in the woods?
Read some Keats.
Right.
See how you feel after that.
Ooh, I'm not a big naked in the,
I'm not a big naked guy, period.
I think it's been established,
but probably because of the Baptist upbringing,
but I feel too vulnerable out there in the woods.
Yeah, no, I get that.
There's mosquitoes and beetles
and those worms that crawl up your pee hole.
Yeah, I'll just, you can find me in my skivvies, at least.
Are you a never nude? Yeah, I shower just, you can find me in my skivvies at least. Are you a Nevernude?
Yeah, I shower in a bathing suit.
In cut-off jeans.
Yeah, the cut-off, oh man, so great.
Oh, what else?
Oh, oh, there was another thing that kind of created,
it might have grown out of this interest essentially.
Like, kind of scholarship on paganism.
Some was good, some was the kind of stuff that you would equate with finding
on the History Channel today.
You know, that was in the article,
and we talked about it a little bit offline.
I did not know, I don't watch enough History Channel.
I thought the History Channel was just like,
we used to call it the War Channel,
because it was always just black and white
World War II documentaries,
but I know there is another side of the history channel
where with the aliens guy,
like did they have a lot of that kind of stuff?
I think it's pretty much all, yeah, that.
Is it really? Okay.
Yeah, pretty much.
And I think it has been that way for a really long time.
And I mean, not to bag on the history channel,
it's interesting,
but I guess what I'm equating it to
is really interesting, unsupported theories
that like if you're an actual scientist
and you look into it, you're like, this is just made up.
They're trying to make the entertaining television,
basically.
Yes, but the problem is, is they present it factually
and it gets taken factually by a lot of people.
So they've caused a lot of problems.
They essentially have ruined the world single-handedly,
the History Channel has.
Well, I'm glad I know this because I'm gonna stop saying,
well, the History Channel said.
I would stop that, yeah.
But yeah, there were a couple of key people
that came out of this that you kind of referenced.
One was a guy named James Frazier.
He was an anthropologist who wrote a book,
very influential book in 1890 called The Golden Bow.
B-O-U, I'm sorry, yeah, U, W, Jesus.
What's going on with me?
B-O-U-G-H.
I'm going with bow.
It's pronounced bow.
I think that's a History Channel type argument.
No. Okay, we're not gonna argue over this,
because who cares, but that's the way it's spelled.
And his argument was that, you know,
all religions basically go back to this one pagan myth
about a king that was sacrificed
to bless the land with fertility.
And you can kind of trace them all back to this.
Yeah, and so modern historians have said,
that's a great theory, Frazier, but it's not correct.
Frazier is not a History Channel type.
He was a legitimate anthropologist,
and one of the reasons the golden bow figures in
is that he did an amazing amount of exhaustive research that in the book he
describes a lot of ancient pagan traditions and beliefs and stuff. So the Golden Bough
became kind of like a handbook for the modern pagan movements that followed.
Do you know what I feel like inserting here?
What?
The way that you pronounce the word be like, why did they get count Dracula to who is that guy? I?
Don't know what was this like a book on tape you heard once no no no this is the YouTube guy when you look up pronunciations
Oh one gentleman that talks like he came from Transylvania. Yeah, he really does doesn't he I never thought about it
He's great well now this is saying bow, but I looked it up earlier, and it said bow
Okay, bow I thought about it, he's great. Well, now this is saying bow, but I looked it up earlier and it said bow. Bow.
Bow.
Bow.
Bow.
I don't know if I believe that lady.
Like when the bow breaks, wouldn't you just sit up
and tell your mom that she got it wrong
if she's saying when the bow breaks?
Yeah, I've always said bow, but you know,
maybe I'm wrong, or maybe the internet's wrong,
that'd be a first.
How about buh?
Yeah, hey buh. What was that, buh? maybe the internet's wrong. That'd be a first. How about Buh? Yeah, hey Buh.
What was that?
Buh.
When the Buh breaks.
And then there is a History Channel type person
that we should talk about, the Egyptologist Margaret Murray.
She's definitely on that side of things, right?
Yeah, she came up in the Bella and the Witch Elm episode
because she was saying like Bella was murdered
by a witch cult. Right. And she's one in the Bella and the Witch Elm episode because she was saying Bella was murdered by a witch cult.
And she's one of the people who argued
that the modern European witches trace their lineage unbroken
back to a fertility feminist cult
that's been in the British Isles ever since time immemorial.
And that's one of the things that's been debunked
is that it's just not true.
Like, the Christian Church,
and in their turn, Judaism and Islam as well,
did such a thorough job of interrupting the transmission
from the ancient world to the modern world,
that it's just, like, that's just not really possible.
Now, that's not to say that, like,
in certain like super,
you know, rural local areas,
there's like not folk traditions
that actually do date back really far.
I mean, everybody's seen Wicker Man.
But the thing is like Wicker Man
would be actually a bad example
because that like is an actual ritual.
They knew exactly what they were doing.
They were performing rites, that kind of stuff.
This would be more like,
hey, we're dancing around the maypole,
but we don't necessarily know
every single thing that's going on.
We're not performing every single aspect
of this ancient ritual,
even though the ritual in some form or fashion
still survived to today,
it's not the full, the full um.
Monte?
It's not the full Monte of the actual pagan folk religion that they're, they're kind of
venerating still.
Yeah.
Does that make sense?
Yeah, absolutely.
Okay.
Should we take our second break?
Yeah.
All right.
We're going to take that break and we're're gonna move into the world of modern paganism
right after this.
["The Star-Spangled Banner"]
Are there any pictures of you online?
I'm not just talking about Google, I'm talking anywhere.
Clearview scrapes together images from Facebook,
from LinkedIn, from Venmo accounts.
That database is now being used by police departments
all across the country to match criminal suspect photos.
And sometimes it makes mistakes.
So in this one case, two of their search results,
I think we're in the top 10 of the search results,
were Michael Jordan, a picture of Michael Jordan.
But cops are still using it to make arrests.
Police, they are trusting the software
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But you're not even being told that it was used,
let alone given any of the details about how it works.
This is not a minority report.
This is happening right now.
People are getting arrested and doing actual time in jail
after being picked out by a computer. I'm Dexter Thomas, host of Kill Switch, where every Wednesday we explain
the right now of living in the future. You can turn off the computer, but do not let
the computer turn you off. Listen to Kill Switch in the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts. Well, by the way, Chuck, Yumi and I have a friend named Alex Mary, who's an artist,
and she does something called Morris dancing.
And a lot of the Morris dances resemble paganism.
Like sometimes there's antlers and stuff like that.
But it also more than anything reminds me of stuff
they would have done in that A24 movie, Midsommar.
And it's basically like folk dancing that dates back
to like the 15th century and probably before,
but they can definitely trace it back that far.
I was asking her about paganism. She's like, nope, not they can definitely trace it back that far.
I was asking her about paganism, she's like,
nope, not a pagan, I'm a Morris dancer.
That's super cool.
Yeah.
And not to get off topic, but since you brought up A24,
I just have to shout out their newest weird comedy
from Tim Robinson.
Oh yeah.
Actually not from Tim Robinson, he's in it,
but the movie Friendship, I can highly recommend.
And I went to the opening 11 a.m. screening in Atlanta
and my friend, because you love Tim Robinson,
you'll be glad to know, at Phipps Plaza at 11 a.m.
on a Friday, there were probably 25 to 30
like Tim Robinson fans in there.
Nice.
At that first show.
Was it rowdy?
Yeah, you know it's been a long time
since I've seen a crowded, and it was crowded
because it was probably a 50 person theater,
so it was 70% full.
Mm-hmm.
A crowded movie with other people, like a comedy,
where just a bunch of people are laughing at once,
and it was so much fun.
That's awesome, man.
It was great.
I wish I could have gone.
I wish you could have gone, too.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, are you talking about what, modern paganism?
Yeah, so we mentioned in several different ways
that modern paganism is its own thing.
One of the reasons why it's its own thing
is because they just didn't write down a lot of stuff
back then and stuff that was written down.
It wasn't like the literal detailed handbook
of how to do this ritual or this rite.
It was pretty rare.
Yeah, so that's one of the reasons,
and it was all stamped out.
Some of the stuff that we've gotten, modern-wise,
comes from these Icelandic, or maybe all of it,
these Icelandic texts called the Eddas, is that right?
Yeah, as far as Norse religions, Norse pagan religions
that fall under the umbrella term heathenism,
this is where they get all their stuff.
I don't know if it's Eddas or Eddas.
I think I agreed too soon.
Maybe Eddas.
That and then the Viking sagas.
So the Viking sagas aren't, like you said, it's not a handbook of how to worship Norse
gods, but just mentions of it, like incidental references to stuff like that.
The neo-pagans who worship Norse gods have kind of taken that glean from that, what some
of these rituals and thoughts and mythologies were.
Yeah.
And we're not going to talk about all modern pagan religions, but we're going to mention,
we're going to highlight a few.
We have to talk briefly at least about the hermetic order
of the Golden Dawn, but again, if you wanna hear a lot
about that, listen to our Alistair,
really good episode I think, Alistair Crowley episode.
This was the secret society that Alistair Crowley
was a member of.
He was never the leader, right?
Or was he just sort of a?
I think he did break off and try to become a leader
at some point, I think so. Did he? I remember. Yeah, maybe I should go back and listen to it
I don't remember either but their whole thing the reason we mentioned them is they were probably the first
What you could consider modern pagan religion they practiced magic and they were into the Egyptian occult stuff
So that's why we bring them up. There's I don't think there's too many
Golden Dawn people running around but I guarantee there are some.
Yeah, there's gotta be.
What about Wicca?
Yeah, we talked about Wicca in our witchcraft episode.
That was from a long time ago, though,
so it may not be our best work.
No, that's one that would probably be
pretty good to redo someday.
We're not gonna redo stuff, are we?
Okay, fine.
Modern Witchcraft, or Wicca, W-I-C-C-A, originally it was W-I-C-A, as named by a guy named Gerald
Gardner, who was a British customs official who worked in Malaysia, then came back to
England in 1936, wrote a bunch of Golden Dawn stuff, a bunch of Alastair Crowley stuff,
a bunch of Margaret Murray stuff,
our History Channel lady.
And he said, you know what, one night in 1939,
a coven of witches initiated me,
and they were members of this ancient fertility cult
that I read about from Margaret Murray.
Yeah.
So it depends on who you talk to.
Gardner might either be described as a huckster
who made all this up or a very gentle man.
I saw somebody describe him who knew him
as utterly without malice who may have made all this up.
But he was known for writing
what's called the Book of Shadows, which has become a big part
of the Wiccan religion, which is essentially
a personal recipe book of spells and rituals
that has worked for a particular witch or coven.
And sometimes it's shared, and people can borrow from it
and add to it, and they create their own Book of Shadows.
But having your own, basically, you know,
in those Bugs Bunny cartoons where that witch
is, like, looking through her book?
Mm-hmm.
That would technically be a book of shadows
that she's looking through to find, like,
the ingredients for her potions or whatever.
That's a pretty literally cartoonish depiction of it,
but that's, you know, essentially what she was doing.
My favorite part is when she would leave the frame very quickly and her hairpins would fall off depiction of it, but that's essentially what she was doing.
My favorite part is when she would leave the frame
very quickly and her hair pins would fall out of her hair
and float in the air.
She was one of the most disturbing cartoon characters
of all time, if you ask me.
Man.
Yeah.
Like she had that high-pitched voice,
and didn't she have kind of a red cousin-it type
who wore tennis shoes? He was a little off-putting as voice. And didn't she have like kind of a red, cousin-it type who wore like tennis shoes?
He was a little off putting as well.
I don't remember that, but if I saw it,
I'd probably know it.
Yeah.
So yeah, The Witch from Bugs Bunny.
That's right.
But back to Wickens, they became very popular
in the 60s and 70s with the feminist set
and the environmentalist set.
And there's still the Gerald Gardner focused.
They call it Gardnerian Wicca.
But if you're out at the 7-Eleven and you meet a modern Wiccan,
she's probably practicing what's called Dianic Wicca,
which is more woman-centered.
It came around in 1971 by Wiccan activist name, not
Susanna, but Zuzanna Budapest, great name.
Yeah, and it wasn't until 2015 that Zuzanna Budapest indoctrinated her first male clergy
member into Dianic Wicca, and other Dianic Wicca temples split off. And so it's rare to find a man in this religion.
Like, it's all women.
And I read that they're anti-patriarchy.
They actually try to use their magic against the patriarchy.
But they're not anti-male.
The reason that they exclude males
is because their religion is created
to celebrate and honor the life cycles, the biological
cycles in a lot of cases, of a woman as she's born and then ages and then dies.
And that essentially there's not a lot of role for men in that religion, but you know,
you guys go form your own stuff.
Go become druids, I think is their motto.
Yeah.
And here's a little dinner party factoid.
If someone brings up Wiccan around the table,
you can say, hey, did you know that it was
actually first recognized as a true religion
in 1986 in the United States
when the Supreme Court ruled in Detmer v. Landon.
You don't have to know that part,
but you could really knock their socks off if you do.
You could.
It was where a prisoner was denied the use of ritual wiccan objects, and they're like,
hey, this is my religious stuff, and the First Amendment protects this.
And the Supreme Court said, you know what, you're right.
Yeah, probably a liberal court.
One other thing I got to say, I ran across the UK finally suspended their witchcraft laws,
their bans against practicing witchcraft in 1951,
which is why Gerald Gardner's books start popping up in the 50s,
even though he'd been doing this since the late 30s.
Isn't that interesting? Like he could have been arrested
and thrown in prison for practicing witchcraft before 1951 Wow
All right
So those were sort of the big heavy hitters that were the first big ones that of modern paganism when it staged its comeback
But there are dozens of other smaller much smaller modern pagan movements
Wicca is definitely the largest but heathenry is one of them, which is basically
an umbrella term for people who, like you mentioned, the Norse and Germanic deities.
They're really into Marvel, I guess.
Marvel and Lord of the Rings. If you thought Led Zeppelin was into Lord of the Rings, man,
introduce yourself to a heathen. Like they are into that stuff.
A lot of Valhalla.
Yeah, and I think the two biggest Germanic
heathen religions actually, I guess,
I don't even think they're sex,
but one is Esatru.
They worship the Aesir gods,
who would be the highest of the pantheon of Norse mythology,
like Odin and Thor.
And so people who are into Asatru are very much into Honor and Valor and getting into
Valhalla.
And then there's the Vanitru, which they're concerned with the Vanir gods, who are the
rest of the gods, who are more earthy, more nature-based, they're into prosperity, that kind of stuff.
And I think there's way more Asatru than Vanatru right now.
And then one other thing about heathenism,
there's a really interesting like kind of side history that you can go look up about the black metal scene,
specifically the Norwegian black metal scene, that essentially turned
into, turned their focus from Satanism, like traditional metal, to Heathenry.
And so you've got like folk metal, Viking metal, like they essentially just became Heathens,
but metal, and it just got really out of hand in the early 90s.
It was really interesting stuff. Well, yeah, and I don't know if we could get a got really out of hand in the early 90s. It was really interesting stuff.
Well, yeah, and I don't know if we could get
a whole episode out of this.
We probably could, or maybe a short stuff,
but there was the very famous case of,
well, there were these series of arsons,
these church arsons, like 20 of them,
these very, very old wooden medieval churches
in Norway that were burned down.
I think 20 of them were attributed,
these arsons were attributed to black metal fans.
And a couple of the arsonists were very prominent
in the early Norwegian black metal scene.
These guys, they were bandmates at first
in this band Mayhem, but I think Varg Fikernes?
Sure.
He left Mayhem at a certain point, but
Euronymous is how this guy's known.
Osteen Arseth, aka Euronymous, I think, stayed in this black metal group Mayhem for the run
until he was murdered by Varg.
Yeah.
And they didn't exactly set paganism's general public image on fire. Well, actually, they kind of did. Yeah. And they didn't exactly, like, set paganism's general public image on fire.
Well, actually, they kind of did.
Yeah.
Yeah, Arseth was a Satanist.
Vikr Nies is, in addition to being a murderer,
he's a vowed neo-Nazi.
And the whole scene in particular kind of gets
caught up with nationalism a lot.
So it's not a very representative picture
of paganism as a whole or neo-paganism as a whole, but it's still, I mean,
it's just ridiculously interesting what happened there.
Yeah, totally.
It's worth mentioning, I guess.
Yeah, I remember when this happened
and I just, I didn't know much about,
I still don't know much about that whole music scene,
but it's super interesting.
My cousin is into it. Yeah, I was checking a lot of it music scene, but it's super interesting. My cousin is into it.
Yeah, I was checking a lot of it out.
Some of it's really good.
I'm not into folk metal though, at all.
What is that?
What's it sound like?
It's, you know that kind of like super proud Irish music
that's like rock from Boston?
Imagine that as like metal.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's got like bad vibes.
Or almost, almost.
Yeah.
Or no, the, so yes, that Irish rock does from Boston.
This is like the Norwegian metal version of that.
Okay.
Yeah.
I'll listen to something, see what it does to me.
Okay, just look up folk metal and you'll see.
But some of the other stuff is really good. Like Mayhem stuff was pretty interesting. I'll listen to something, see what it does to me. Okay, just look up folk metal and you'll see.
But some of the other stuff is really good.
Like Mayhem stuff was pretty interesting.
What if this changed my life and set me on a course
that one would never have expected?
You're 54 years old.
You start wearing corpse makeup.
Yeah, maybe, get some antlers.
Yeah, why not, man?
Why not?
Like really, ask yourself, why not do that?
I mean, no, no, no. It's no crazier than any of the rest of them if you ask me.
Yeah.
You mentioned Druids earlier, kind of in passing, but that is a modern belief system that is tied to pre-Christian British Isle sort of religion. That's where the Druids came from, right? Yeah, and I saw that Druids are, a big difference between them and others
is that nature itself is the divine.
It's not like a manifestation of God or the goddesses
or anything, like it's nature.
And I also saw that the practitioners
don't really consider it a religion,
they consider it more a philosophy or a way of life.
Yeah, it was modern Druidry was started
by a guy named Ross Nichols.
And I don't know why, I just find it funny
that the modern Druids and modern Wiccans
were started by guys named Ross and Gerald.
Yeah.
Isn't that a little weird?
Yeah, they sound like a couple of guys
who might live in a van together.
They might, who knows?
There's also ceremonial magic, which would trace itself
to, I guess, the Golden Dawn.
There's neo-paganism, which we should talk about,
because a lot of people use neo-paganism as a term
incorrectly to describe modern paganism, which
is what we've been talking about this whole time.
Neo-paganism itself is a specific kind
of pagan religion. So all
neo-pagans are pagan but all pagans aren't neo-pagans. And if you basically
want to just come at this by saying I like a little of this, I like a little of
that, I would like to do a little bit of ritual magic, yes I want to go out in the
woods and practice all this stuff. Then neo-paganism
is for you. It is wide open. They believe that everybody's beliefs are equal. They're
very much opposed to the idea of absolute good and evil. They're very into nature. It's
pretty much, I think, what people think about when they think about modern pagan religions.
And that's neo-paganism. Yes. All right.
And if you wanna know more about that,
there's a great site called neo-paganism.org.
They seem to be pretty authoritative on it.
They should be with that website.
That'd be a real shame if they weren't, yeah.
It's in comic sans.
And just one other thing about neo-paganism.
I think I said that a lot of people,
that's what they think of,
but they might be saying Wicca
when they're talking about neo-Paganism.
There's big differences between those two.
Wicca is very magical based.
The intent is to harness the power of nature
to get something done, like get a job successfully
or make someone fall in love with you, whatever.
And Wicca is very much esoteric,
so that means that there's a set amount of knowledge out there.
There's hidden mystery knowledge in the universe
that if you are an initiate into Wicca,
like you have to be initiated into a coven,
um, and you apply yourself and work and study,
you can have these mysteries of the universe
revealed to you, not at all what neo-pagans believe.
There's just a ton of differences,
but I mean, if any of this has floated your boat,
you're like, I really wanna check this out.
There's a lot of stuff on the internet
that you can go read up on.
I would just say use your, your just general common sense to decide what site
you're on is whether it's legitimate or authoritative
or if it's just some dude making stuff up.
Gotta have the right font where you know you're in trouble.
Exactly, it's a dead giveaway.
You also mentioned a great band name in there,
Hidden Mystery Knowledge.
That's a good one.
I feel like that's more an album though.
Okay. And you better believe they're gonna have
some Lord of the Rings character as the illustration.
True.
Well, if you wanna know more about that stuff,
like I said, go out on the internet.
And since I said that and Chuck had just said true,
that means that it's time for listener mail.
I'm gonna call this a popcorn cooking tip I'm surprised I haven't thought of.
Oh, okay.
Hey guys, writing it up because I want to tell you about my favorite way to cook popcorn
in bacon grease.
Oh yeah, I've heard of that.
I hadn't heard of it.
It's just right there in front of my face too.
You got bacon grease in front of your face?
Yeah, I do.
My aunt taught me her tried and true method
for cooking popcorn on the stove top.
She puts a spoonful of bacon grease in a skillet,
pours a popcorn salt over the grease.
Oh boy.
Plops a couple of kernels in there
and heats the whole thing up.
And when the grease is at the right temperature,
those kernels are gonna pop and alert you,
you can start cooking.
Pour in the rest of the kernels, cover your skillet,
and let it pop away.
The bacon grease gives the popcorn a little extra flavor.
It really makes it even more delicious
You should give it a try sometime. Just don't forget to cover your skillet. Okay
Thanks for all the years of podcasting listening pleasure you provided for me. I wish you both the best that is from Randy with an eye
Thanks a lot Randy with an eye that did Randy sign the eye with a little heart instead of a dot because
Yeah
Thanks a lot Randy. That was a great tip.
We appreciate it.
I'm quite sure everybody who loves popcorn and bacon that's listening appreciated that.
If you want to be like Randy and send us a tip that everybody can appreciate, you can
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