Articles on Cults and Mind Control
Cult Concerns: An Overview of Cults and their
Harmful Methods in the UK
Originally published in 'Assignation', the ASLIB
Social Sciences Information Group Newsletter, Vol. 11, No. 4, July 1994.
When the word cult is mentioned, some people may think
not only of the tragedy in Waco, Texas but also of 'Jonestown' and the
murder/suicides there on l8 November l978, when 913 died following the order of
Rev. Jim Jones to drink cyanide laced 'Kool-Aid'.
Both of these cases instantly became the focus of the
world's attention. Since the two groups were U.S. based, there is a danger that
many people in the U.K. may consider the cult issue to be a North American
problem and one that does not affect people here in Britain. They do so at
their peril.
Figures quoted for the UK usually indicate 500+ cults
in operation here. On a per capita basis the U.K. has a similar problem with
the number of cults to that of the U.S.
Most cults register with the government as religious organisations
or simply charities of one form or another. So what is the problem? It is that
people are being deceived and then psychologically coerced into association
with the cults through the use of methods sometimes called mind control
techniques. On the latter point alone, the cult problem becomes a human rights
issue.
People coerced into cult involvement usually find it is
to the exclusion of all else that they have stood for before, whether it be
their studies, beliefs, careers, families or friends. As the above may suggest,
the impact not only on the cult victim, but on his or her family too, can be
devastating. Some families have described it as being harder to deal with than
death. "It's a living bereavement" said a woman recently.
When looking at the kind of person most likely to fall
victim to the cults, many people are surprised by the findings. The following
are characteristics of the most likely cult recruit and suggest that the
person:
1. Is from an economically sound family background.
2. Has average to above average intelligence.
3. Has a good education.
4. Is idealistic.
Most cults can recruit and control a person in a
matter of three or four days. However, leaving the group is not as easy. Some
never do leave. For those that do it is often thanks to a lot of hard work on
the part of their family and/or friends over a prolonged period of time. Some
families elect to adopt a DIY approach to helping the loved one to try to
critically evaluate once more, whilst others prefer to hire the services of an
'exit-counsellor' to do the job for them. Whatever route is adopted there is
never a guarantee of success.
For those who are fortunate enough to leave a cult
there then begins a difficult rehabilition period. This typically takes a year
or more. During this time the ex-member experiences a variety of symptoms of
withdrawal. These symptoms as shown in "Information Disease," Science
Digest, January 1982, include:
|
Hallucinations |
Fear of the group |
|
Delusions |
Emotional outbursts |
|
Insomnia |
Menstrual dysfunction |
|
Amnesia |
Sexual dysfunction |
|
Guilt |
|
Without adequate assistance and information the
ex-member's rehabilitation is likely to be prolonged for an indefinite period.
In order to continue to discuss the issue, it is
important to offer a definition for the term 'cult'. The Cult Information
Centre (CIC) defines a cult as a group having all of the
following five characteristics:
-
It uses psychological coercion to recruit and indoctrinate
potential members.
-
It forms an elitist totalitarian society.
-
Its founder leader is self-appointed, dogmatic, messianic, not
accountable and has charisma.
-
It believes 'the end justifies the means' in order to solicit
funds or recruit people.
-
Its wealth does not benefit its members or society.
It is also important to consider the categories of
cults. There are two main headings under which CIC chooses to categorise all
cults:
| Religious
Cults |
Therapy
Cults |
- Communal living common.
- Members usually leave or do not join society's
workforce.
- Average age at the point of recruitment is in the low
20's.
- Registered as religious groups.
- Appear to offer association with a group interested in
making the world a better place via political, spiritual or other means.
|
- Communal living rare.
- Members stay in society's workforce.
- Average age at the point of recruitment is in the mid
30's.
- Registered as 'not for profit' groups.
- Appear to offer association with a group giving courses in
some kind of self improvement or self help technique or therapy.
|
If someone becomes an unwitting member of a cult then
clearly the suggestion is that the person becomes a victim of psychological
coercion. The techniques of mind control are many and varied and comprise a
list of 26 as follows:
Hypnosis Peer Pressure Love
Bombing Rejection of Old Values Confusing
Doctrine Metacommunication Removal of Privacy Time Sense
Deprivation Disinhibition Uncompromising Rules Verbal Abuse Sleep
Deprivation Replacement of Relationships |
Chanting Confession Financial
Commitment Finger Pointing Flaunting Hierarchy Isolation Controlled
Approval Change of Diet Games No Questions Guilt Fear Dress
Codes |
The average cult uses a combination of the majority of
the above described techniques, which result in a potential recruit being
broken down physically and mentally and made highly vulnerable to suggestion.
This pressure usually continues to a breaking point referred to as 'snapping'
by Conway and Siegelman (Conway & Siegelman, Snapping. New York:
Delta Books, l979). After snapping, the subject is left in a state of hyper
suggestibility where the critical ability is severely impaired. Simultaneously
there is usually a sudden personality change, a change for the worse.
It is this change of personality and the relative
inability of the subject to critically evaluate, that provokes family and
friends of the average victim to react. Unless they are given some guidance in
how to cope, the cult member will rapidly become more and more alienated from
them.
With cults representing such a threat to the
individual, the family and society, how can we cope? There are many things that
can be done as follows:
-
Society needs to become aware of how everyone is vulnerable to
manipulation.
-
People need to be educated about mind control techniques, so
they can recognise and leave an environment where psychological coercion
exists, before becoming a victim.
-
Society needs to become aware that there is a lot of good
material on cults to be found in the media. It is useful for updating one's
information.
-
People need to learn to question, be discerning and feel it is
OK to say NO!
-
More mental health professionals need to be trained to help
cult victims.
Hopefully some of the popular misconceptions have been
overcome in this article. They are as follows:
Exploding The Myths
-
People don't join cults. They are recruited.
-
People are recruited by a method not a message.
-
People do not stay in cults because they have nothing better
to do with their lives, but because psychological coercion holds them
there.
-
Cults intend to retain a hold on people for life, or for as
long as they are valuable to the cult. It is not a fad or a phase.
-
Normal people from normal families are recruited into
cults.
-
Cult leaders should be blamed for the problems caused, not the
individual members, ex-members or their families. (Blame the victim syndrome).
It can happen to anyone.
-
Cult members are sincere. (Sincere victims, but
sincere.)
-
Cult members are victims and need to be treated with love.
They are people who need help, not hostility.
-
Cults recruit people of all ages, not just young
people.
-
Cult recruiters are rarely visually identifiable. They usually
look like quite normal people who appear to be very friendly.
-
Anyone can become a victim of cult techniques of psychological
coercion. The safest people seem to be the seriously mentally ill, or those
that know how to recognise a cult.
-
Accurate information on cults is not best obtained by trying
to infiltrate a cult. This is far too dangerous.
Ian Haworth, General Secretary, Cult Information
Centre
Caring for Cult Victims

Caring for the Family of Cult
Victims 
Coping With Stress

John
Soderlund, "In Three Minds," New Therapist 24
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