I was curious so I purchased this book and started reading it for myself. I was shocked at what I found. I have copied and pasted below just one of the many shocking passages that I discovered. The entire book is full of hard to understand garbage. Don’t just take my word for it. Anyone can purchase this book online and read it for yourself.
“MISHNA VIII.: If one gives one of his children to Molech, he is not guilty unless he had transferred him to the servants of Molech and let him pass through the fire. If, however, he had transferred and not passed through the fire, or vice versa, he is not guilty.”
Excerpt From The Babylonian Talmud Michael L. Rodkinson (Translator) https://books.apple.com/us/book/the-babylonian-talmud/id370190862 This material may be protected by copyright.
A standard translation is cited as Sanhedrin 64a, reading literally: "One who gives of his offspring to Molekh is not liable unless he hands over to the Molekh and passes through the fire. He handed over to the Molekh but did not pass through the fire, he passed through the fire but did not hand over to the Molekh, he is not liable, unless he hands over to the Molekh and passes through the fire."
Pretty simple despite the legalese. Since this idolatry is a capital offense by stoning, care is exercised and it is not punished unless the idolater has both action and intent. If he didn't intend to release his child to Molekh, or if he made a statement but didn't act on it, it is not capital.
The Bible speaks in detail about this form of idolatry; historically, in some cases it's actual child sacrifice, in others it's bringing a child across a fire symbolically without killing it. Human sacrifice was rampant throughout the ancient world (and we haven't really eradicated it yet), and so it's natural that the covenant people were repeatedly tempted by forms of it, and this continued after Jesus's death and resurrection.
There are many hair-raising passages, but they can be understood in the cultural context. There are also many flatly false quotations, or telephone-game paraphrases that totally change the original meaning.
It's hard to be sure you've got the whole Talmud. If you've got the Mishnah and the Bavli (Babylonian) and the Yerushalmi (Jerusalem), then you've got everything.