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Adapted from: Cults Questions and Answers,
by
Michael D. Langone, Ph.D. Copyright
AFF, 1988
Cults & Mind Control
What is a Cult?
A cult is a group or movement exhibiting a great or
excessive devotion or dedication to some person, idea, or thing, and employing
unethically manipulative techniques of persuasion and control designed to
advance the goals of the group’s leader, to the actual or possible detriment of
members, their families, or the community.
These groups tend to dictate, sometimes in great detail,
how members should think, act, and feel, claim a special exalted status for
themselves and/or their leader(s), and intensify their opposition to and
alienation from society at large.
Because the capacity to exploit human beings is
universal, any group could become a cult. However, most mainstream, established
groups have accountability mechanisms that restrain the development of cultic
subgroups.
How Many Cults Exist and How Many Members Do They
Have?
Cult-education organizations have received inquiries
about more than 3,000 groups. Although the majority of groups are small, some
have tens of thousands of members. Experts estimate that five to ten million
people have been involved with cultic groups at one time or another.
What is Mind Control?
Mind control (also known as "brainwashing,"
"coercive persuasion," and "thought
reform") refers to a process in which a group or individual
systematically uses unethically manipulative methods to persuade others to
conform to the wishes of the manipulator(s). Such methods include the following:
- extensive control of information in order to limit
alternatives from which members may make "choices"
- deception
- group pressure
- intense indoctrination into a belief system that
denigrates independent critical thinking and considers the world outside the
group to be threatening, evil, or gravely in error an insistence that
members’ distress-much of which may consist of anxiety and guilt subtly
induced by the group-can be relieved only by conforming to the group
- physical and/or psychological debilitation through
inadequate diet or fatigue the induction of dissociative (trance-like)
states via the misuse of meditation, chanting, speaking in tongues, and
other exercises in which attention is narrowed, suggestibility heightened,
and independent critical thinking weakened
- alternation of harshness/threats and leniency/love
in order to effect compliance with the leadership’s wishes isolation from
social supports pressured public confessions
Who Joins Cults and Why?
Contrary to a popular misconception that cult members
are "crazy," research and clinical evidence strongly suggests that most cult
members are relatively normal. They include the young, the middle-aged, elderly,
the wealthy, the poor, the educated, and the uneducated from every ethnic and
religious background. There is no easily identifiable type of person who joins
cults.
How Do People Who Join Cults Change?
After converts commit themselves to a group, the cult’s
way of thinking, feeling, and acting becomes second nature, while important
aspects of their pre-cult personalities are suppressed or, in a sense, decay
through disuse. New converts at first frequently appear to be shell-shocked;
they may appear "spaced out," rigid and stereotyped in their responses, limited
in their use of language, impaired in their ability to think critically, and
oddly distant in their relationships with others. Intense cultic manipulations
can trigger altered states of consciousness in some people.
Why Do People Leave Cults?
People leave for a variety of reasons. After becoming
aware of hypocrisy and/or corruption within the cult, converts who have
maintained an element of independence and some connection with their old values
may simply walk out. Others may leave because they are weary of a routine of
proselytizing and fund-raising. Sometimes even the most dedicated members may
feel so inadequate in the face of the cult’s demands that they walk away because
they feel like abject failures. Others may renounce the cult after reconnecting
to old values, goals, interests, or relationships, resulting from visits with
parents, talks with ex-members, or exit counseling.
Is Leaving a Cult Easy?
People who consider leaving a cult are usually pressured
to stay. Some ex-members say they spent months, even years, trying to garner the
strength to walk out. Some felt so intimidated they departed secretly.
Although many cult members eventually walk out on their
own, many, if not most, who leave cults on their own are psychologically harmed,
often in ways they do not understand. Some cult members never leave, and some of
these are severely harmed. There is no way to predict who will leave, who won’t
leave, or who will be harmed. ?
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