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We suggest that you print this browser page
for future reference.
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The Marine recruit clearly knows what the
organization is that he or she is joining.... There are no secret stages such
as people come upon in cults. Cult recruits often attend a cult activity, are
lured into "staying for a while," and soon find that they have joined the cult
for life, or as one group requires, members sign up for a "billion
year contract...."
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The Marine recruit retains freedom of
religion, politics, friends, family association, selection of spouse, and
information access to television, radio, reading material, telephone, and
mail.
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The Marine serves a term of enlistment
and departs freely. The Marine can reenlist if he or she desires but is not
forced to remain.
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Medical and dental care are available,
encouraged, and permitted in the Marines. This is not true in the many cults
that discourage and sometimes forbid medical care.
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Training and education received in the
Marines are usable later in life.
Cults do not necessarily train a person in anything that
has any value in the greater society.
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In the USMC, public records are kept and
are available. Cult records, if they exist, are confidential, hidden from
members, and not shared.
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USMC Inspector General procedures protect
each Marine. Nothing protects cult members.
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A military legal system is provided
within the USMC; a Marine can also utilize off-base legal and law enforcement
agencies and other representatives if needed. In cults, there is only the
closed, internal system of justice, and no appeal, no recourse to outside
support.
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Families of military personnel talk and
deal directly with schools. Children may attend public or private schools. In
cults, children, child rearing, and education are often controlled by the
whims and idiosyncrasies of the cult leader.
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The USMC is not a sovereign entity above
the laws of the land. Cults consider themselves above the law, with their own
brand of morality and justice, accountable to no one, not even their members.
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A Marine gets to keep her or his pay,
property owned and acquired, presents from relatives, inheritances, and so on.
In many cults, members are expected to turn over to the cult all monies and
worldly possessions.
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Rational behavior is valued in the USMC.
Cults stultify members'
critical thinking abilities and capacity for rational,
independent thinking; normal thought processes are stifled and broken.
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In the USMC, suggestions and criticism
can be made to leadership and upper echelons through advocated, proper
channels. There are no suggestion boxes in cults. The cult is always right,
and the members (and outsiders) are always wrong.
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Marines cannot be used for medical and
psychological experiments without their informed consent. Cults essentially
perform psychological experiments on their members through implementing
thought-reform processes without members' knowledge or consent.
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Reading, education, and knowledge are
encouraged and provided through such agencies as Armed Services Radio and
Stars and Stripes, and through books, post libraries, and so on.
If cults do any education, it is only in their own teachings. Members come to
know less and less about the outside world; contact with or information about
life outside the cult is sometimes openly frowned upon, if not forbidden.
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In the USMC, physical fitness is
encouraged for all. Cults rarely encourage fitness or good health, except
perhaps for members who serve as security guards or thugs.
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Adequate and properly balanced
nourishment is provided and advocated in the USMC. Many cults encourage or
require unhealthy and bizarre diets. Typically, because of intense work
schedules, lack of funds, and other cult demands, members are not able to
maintain healthy eating habits.
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Authorized review by outsiders, such as
the U.S. Congress, is made of the practices of the USMC. Cults are accountable
to no one and are rarely investigated, unless some gross criminal activity
arouses the attention of the authorities or the public.
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In the USMC, the methods of instruction
are military training and education, even indoctrination into the traditions
of the USMC, but brainwashing, or thought reform, is not used. Cults influence
members by means of a coordinated program of psychological and
social
influence techniques, or
brainwashing.
--adapted from
Cults in Our Midst: The
Hidden Menace in Our Everyday Lives, Margaret Singer and
Janja Lalich,
Jossey-Bass, 1995. Reprinted with authors' permission.
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Awesome Families: The Promise of Healing Relationships in the International Churches of Christ - book review by Janja Lalich, Ph.D. Bounded Choice - Book Review by J. A. Looney, Ph.D. Bounded Choice - J. Lalich Captive Hearts Captive Minds - Book Review by Carol Giambalvo Churches That Abuse - Book Review by M. T. Singer, Ph.D. Conference 1997: PA Presenter Conference 2000 WA: Speakers Conference 2001 NJ: Speakers Conference 2002 FL: Events Conference 2004 AB: Draft Agenda Conference 2004 GA: Events Overview Conference 2006 CO: Conference Handbook with agenda, bios, & abstracts Conference 2008: Philadelphia home Conference/Congrès 2007: _Brussels Home - Bruxelles Page d'acceuil Cults in Our Midst: The Hidden Menace in Our Everyday Lives - Book Review by Rev. Walter Debold Lalich, Janja & Langone, Michael: "Characteristics Associated with Cultic Groups - Revised" Lalich, Janja Ph.D.: "Individual Differences Affecting Recovery" Lalich, Janja Ph.D.: "Repairing The Soul After A Cult Experience" Lalich, Janja Ph.D.: "The Role of Cognitive Distortion" Lalich, Janja, Ph.D.: "Individual Differences Affecting Recovery" Lalich, Janja, Ph.D.: "Using the Bounded Choice Model as an Analytical Tool: A Case Study of Heaven's Gate" - abstract Lalich, Janja: "Dominance and Submission: The Psychosexual Exploitation of Women in Cults" - abstract Lalich, Janja: "Evaluating Cult Involvement" Lalich, Janja: "Introduction to Special CSJ Issue on Women and Cults" Lalich, Janja: "The Cadre Ideal: origins and Development of a Political Cult" - abstract Lalich, Janja: "Women Under The Influence" Langone, Michael: "Recovery From Cults" On the Edge and Tabernacle of Hate - Book Review by Janja Lalich, Ph.D. Singer, Margaret & Addis, Marsha: "Cults, Coercion, and Contumely" - abstract Singer, Margaret T., Ph.D., & Lalich, Janja Ph.D.: "Crazy" Therapies: What are They? Do They Work? - The Therapeutic Relationship Singer, Margaret T., Ph.D.: "Undue Influence and Written Documents: Psychological Aspects" Singer, Margaret Thaler, Ph.D.: "Post-Cult After Effects" Singer, Margaret, Ph.D. et al.: "Psychotherapy Cults" - abstract Singer, Margaret, Ph.D.: "Crazy" Therapies: What Are They? Do They Work?" Singer, Margaret, Ph.D.: "How United States Marine Corps Differ from Cults" Singer, Margaret, Ph.D.: "Six Conditions for Thought Reform" Singer, Margaret: "'Crazy'" Therapies" Singer, Margaret: "Coming Out of the Cults" Singer, Margaret: "Cults In Our Midst: Hidden Menace in Our Lives Singet Margaret, Ph.D.: "Thought Reform Exists: Organized, Programmatic Influence" Take Back Your Life - Lalich, Janja & Tobias, Madeline Take Back Your Life: Recovering from Cults and Abusive Relationships - book review by Doni Whitsett, Ph.D. Them and Us: Cult Thinking and the Terrorist Threat - Book Review by Janja Lalich, Ph.D.
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