@Alex (based on your comments around 1:35 of the Youtube Video (when you reference "a christian narrative')
You don't have to "buy into" (ie. "believe in") a specific religious paradigm to be able to,
as an outside observer (a Skeptiko observer), identify activities of
some (maybe all) of the participants of those activities to be performing acts "in the name of" a specific "mythological entity" (example, Satan) or "side" (example, "darkness") featured within that paradigm or within the "narrative" (framework) of that paradigm
to identify it as such (example, Satanic Ritual Abuse).
Brisson (and the atheist investigator he mentioned) based on evidence they have found are identifying that evidence which suggests "they" (the participants, perpetrators) believe in the paradigm
or, if they don't, certainly want their targets, victims to believe it... And I can imagine some of the participants may "believe in it" and some may not, but use it for its usefulness.
It is that simple... and I understand getting worked up about it because... well, I must only speak for myself. I don't "do" those paradigms anymore. I grew out of of these beliefs, I grew out of a need for these beliefs... yet regardless, if I walk into a crime scene with a dead body and knife wounds and the heart cut out and its laying on some alter and everything on the room is black save for a pentagram I see drawn in blood on the floor... I am probably not out of bounds to suggest it looks like an example of Satanic Ritual Sacrifice. Of course, that scenario likely would never happen because it seems these folks are damn good at cleaning up their messes and having a powerful network backing them up when a mess is discovered...
a very powerful network.
The key here (IMO) is... don't feed the monster by giving the narrative power... instead, I feel I can only act individually as to what I do with my life, making my decisions within my own journey through good and evil.
Remember when I mentioned to you I hoped we could talk about paradigms? This is what I had hoped to convey.