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initramfs · 3 years ago
I also recommend Don Delillo's Mao II, which covers the Moon cult and the deprogramming of one of the ex-followers.

And Ted Patrick! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzlNrWlakmA

Cults are fascinating- some appear to be by opportunists, and others true believers, but all are dangerous. I feel that the word cult is sometimes given a bad name, and it is overlooked in the word culture, yet I think it is a great way to examine modern-day dictatorships and nuclear powers, which still use some some of that power (maybe not so much in the west) to broadcast a cult of personality.

stOneskull · 3 years ago
i wonder about the boundary lines. is believing that moses got ten commandments on a mountain like a cult?
js2 · 3 years ago
Judaism doesn't proselytize. It goes out of its way to reject converts[1]. It actively encourages questioning and critical thinking[2]. These attributes are contrary to cults.

1. https://judaism.stackexchange.com/questions/17635/was-judais...

2. https://www.chabad.org/parshah/article_cdo/aid/3574984/jewis...

initramfs · 3 years ago
I guess it depends. I've always liked this phrase, and it's not exclusive to the Christian Bible- it's in other Abrahamic faiths:

"“Because knowledge of the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven has been granted to you, but to them it has not been granted. To anyone who has, more will be given and he will grow rich; from anyone who has not, even what he has will be taken away. This is why I speak to them in parables, because ‘they look but do not see and hear but do not listen or understand.’ Isaiah’s prophecy is fulfilled in them… But blessed are your eyes, because they see, and your ears, because they hear.” – Matthew 13:11-14, 16"

Though I have to say, what is in the ten commandments isn't the most terrible advice. :)

Gibbon1 · 3 years ago
One moment Moses is ordering the male children put to death. Next thing you know 3000 years later somewhere in northern Michigan an old lady is playing the pipe organ while signing off key.
distortionfield · 3 years ago
If you agree with the BITE model then yes. Yes it is.
GartzenDeHaes · 3 years ago
Mind Control Made Easy by Carey Burtt (HQ)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EJfm71I0OyU

what-no-tests · 3 years ago
But...don't you WANT to be a cult leader?
mvncleaninst · 3 years ago
Feel the need to post this fantastic read: https://www.thecut.com/article/larry-ray-sarah-lawrence-stud...

> His primary conversational tactic is to overwhelm. He can go on 20-minute unbroken monologues, especially if the subject turns to his victimhood. Everyone in his past, from his defense attorneys to his own mother, is “corrupt” or “biased.” He firmly believes that he, Felicia, Isabella, and Talia have been poisoned — and are still being poisoned. “We’ve suffered so much, and we’re still suffering so much,” he says.

Has anyone here met anyone like this irl?

spicymapotofu · 3 years ago
I no longer speak with my neighbour, but she introduces herself quickly to everyone that moves into the building. When she speaks like this, I suspect it's part of a manic episode.
spiderfarmer · 3 years ago
Yes, an angry, orange one.
what-no-tests · 3 years ago
Plot-twist: our entire society is essentially a cult, parenting and education is simply indoctrination, and the same psychological glitches which are exploited in order to produce compliant citizens are also exploited by would-be cult leaders to control their unfortunate members.

Can't fix the problem because doing so would unravel everything we call society.

dilawar · 3 years ago
I find zero-, positive-, and negative- sum games classification more informative. I guess the negative sum or zero sum cult are oppressive while the positive sum cults are tolerable? Rich are definitely getting richer and it is not so bad as long as poor are also doing a little better?
themodelplumber · 3 years ago
> and the same psychological glitches which are exploited in order to produce compliant citizens are also exploited by would-be cult leaders to control their unfortunate members.

That's only true in part.

Cults typically play on combinations of specific aspects of psychology, and generally a given cult will only "work" on certain people.

The same is true for parenting and education. Not all children can be effectively parented (or cultily-parented to take your view for a moment) by their specific parents, and certainly not all children can be indoctrinated, let alone educated as intended in a given environment.

Further, I think it's wise to add in these cases that a thing can be systematic and be explained in an organized manner to appear as if it's organized and systematic on purpose, and even designed by specific individuals, when none of that is actually the case. Otherwise we only-humans tend to start looking for someone to blame, effectively hallucinating.

And in many cases the problem you describe can be fixed without unraveling society and _already is being fixed automatically in many ways_. But that also requires going into lots of details to discuss; the generalities alone, while exciting or fear-inducing in isolation, tend to resolve down to too much hand-waving.

A lot of good people are out there working their @$$ses off helping people work together to improve society, bringing the best parts forward while leaving this unwanted stuff behind us.

jychang · 3 years ago
Meh, he discovered why the word “culture” and “cult” share the same root. Or “cultivate”.

That’s not some grand observation, any middle schooler can see the obvious reason why they’re similar.

colechristensen · 3 years ago
Uh, the word is culture.

Yes. Indeed. Thoughts and behavior are inherited in ways exactly the same as evolution but transmitted through various forms of learning and writing, etc. instead of through genetic material.

Saying it with a sneer does not really add anything.

kdmccormick · 3 years ago
Why would you say something so controversial, yet so brave?
voisin · 3 years ago
Cult and society being one and the same: a shared delusional thinking that one’s value system is the one true answer. Cult being just a minority with particularly (in the majority’s view) extreme positions.
mdanger007 · 3 years ago
I think we can all appreciate the flexibility of language when defining the word cult. But in practical terms was the Branch davidian the same as, say, the Mormon church or your nan's knitting circle?
mvncleaninst · 3 years ago
I don't think you can say that the dynamic is the same. With a cult, there's usually a single leader, there's usually a hierarchy

Does society have those things, inherently? A touchy question

Is there a cult that doesn't have those things? I've yet to find one. It seems to me that cults are similar not to general society, but to fascist societies

swayvil · 3 years ago
You gotta ask, "am I in a cult?"
dylan604 · 3 years ago
At this point, I think most tech companies are a cult. So, on this board, a large number of people should be replying "yes".
DiggyJohnson · 3 years ago
But labor is fundamentally transactional, and genuinely so. A cult is not.
it · 3 years ago
Final research project: start your own cult.
B0073D · 3 years ago
Calm down L Ron Hubbard
stickfigure · 3 years ago
These are the 2020s. It's "L-Ron".

Dead Comment

imperio59 · 3 years ago
Ah yes, the "it's not bigotry because it's taught at Harvard" garbage.

No thanks.

DiggyJohnson · 3 years ago
What? What do cults have to do with bigotry?
pfannkuchen · 3 years ago
Well, in a way, it doesn’t seem to encourage any evaluation of whether the cults had a point or were positive, it just assumes they are negative. That is technically bigotry (though so is a gazelle being afraid of all lions).