Back in college a friend and I read many of demonologists Ed and Larraine Warren's books and they were interesting but also very frightening. In fact, I suggested to my spirit-infested friends that they contact the Warrens, which they did.
As an uncertified skeptic, I recommend that people also look at these:
http://www.legendofdudleytown.com/warren.htmlhttp://www.bostonphoenix.com/archive/features/97/08/14/SKEPTICS.htmlhttp://www.theness.com/articles/warrens-cs0203.htmlhttp://www.theness.com/articles/ghostbusting-csc0103.htmlhttp://www.amityvillemurders.com/As you might have gathered, I am not all that wild for the Warrens, as I used to be in my more credulous youth. Not that I don't doubt their sincerity--- however, as one (certified) skeptic put it, "One shouldn't mistake sincerity for authenticity." I do not believe reality is completely subjective, though individuals can interpret it differently than the majority. And science isn't infallible. But it's far less likely to play on the emotions of the vulnerable.
And while I don't believe in the supernatural, I think human beings have a spiritual component, though I am not sure any individual has the right to claim that he or she has a direct line to whatever Prime Mover, or intercessor. Why, after all, should an angel bother to help someone with a relatively trivial problem, and allow 30,000 innocent people to die in an earthquake in their sleep, or face a massacre, or a slow painful death from cancer, or what have you?
As to the Warrens themselves, again, while, by all accounts, even from their detractors, that they DO believe what they say, and while I admire their moxie and prescience at taking up their occupation at just the right time (after a series of humdrum and unsuccessful careers) and making good, old-fashioned American success, trouble seems to follow in their wake.
Their "investigations" of Union cemetery in Easton have attracted the curious, who have trespassed and inadvertantly vandalized the place, causing innocent others of fearing arrest even during the day. Their interference with the notorious Ridgefield "demon murder trial" was seen through by the jurors, who understood that the only demon was ther mutual lust and jealousy of two men over one woman.
They played into the hands of Ronald Defeo's attorney, who sought some excuse to get his appalling client sprung from prison with the excuse that the Devil made him kill his family. The Defeos were a messed-up bunch long before they ever moved to Amityville. The Warrens' implications also insulted Native Americans by claiming that they impounded their mentally impaired people at the Ocean Avenue site, and that Satanism was practiced there, etc. Also, abetted the Lutzes, who had gone in over their heads with the mortgage and saw this as a way to recoup their losses (did you know that they returned the very next day after "fleeing" the house, to have a garage sale?)
Also, encouraged the Lindley Street incident in Bridgeport, where a teenaged foster daughter was later caught on videotape knocking over furniture--- an act they had attributed to poltergeists? (There's a distinct misogynistic bent in supernatural investigations in general, heaping blame upon the disturbing influences of growing girls and older women, which thinking, as I recall, led to the "witch burning times" that targetted mostly females. Boy, is Lorraine Warren lucky she wasn't born back then.)
Even a cursory reading of their own case histories shows that Ed (who is mostly retired now due to recent ill health) was not above "leading the witnesses" during his interrogations of those who had contacted him and Lorraine for assistance. Rather than arriving at supernatural explanations AFTER exhausting all possible NATURAL ones (something referred to in the Hampton Court thread, which I admit I lightheartedly introduced), the Warrens jump right in with supernatural theories FIRST.
Again, this is quite legal, and a matter of free will, but might block someone from thinking objectively about the situation, and seeking a less-disturbing way of solving problems.
(Plus, how many times do I have to repeat about the "photographic evidence"? Orbs are reflected DUST or DEW. Arcs are light refractions, or the camera strap falling in front of the lens. Using old or defective film causes emulsions. Reflections cause distorted optical illusions.)
Hey, I love a good story, I love DS, I love Art Bell and George Noory, I loved X-Files and Millennium and Sightings, I still find the Warrens' adventures entertaining (BTW, they only live about 6 miles from me.) However, I would take EVERYTHING the foregoing say, with a BIG grain of salt.
L