Sunday, December 26, 2021

Are you too smart to join a cult?



Reprinted with permission from 



Highlights in yellow by Banned that have a correlation with Armstrongism


Cults, wonderful on the outside, but are on the inside very manipulating. Cult leaders are desperate to trick you into joining. They are after your obedience, your time and your money. Cults use sophisticated mind control and recruitment techniques that have been refined over time. 

Beware of thinking that you are immune from cult involvement, the cults have millions of members around the world who once thought they were immune, and to this day still have not realized they are in a cult.

To spot a cult you need to know how they work and you need to understand the techniques they use. Teaching you these things is what this article is all about. This article exposes the secret techniques cults will use to try and trick and control you. Cult leaders will not want you to read this, but read it anyway. Once you understand How Cults Work you will be better able to spot and avoid cult recruiters, and protect your family and friends. First let’s eliminate some misconceptions about cults.  

Cults are easy to spot, they wear strange clothes and live in communes.
Well some do. But most are everyday people like you and me. They live in houses. They wear the same clothes. They eat the same food. Cult leaders don’t want you to know that you are being recruited into a cult and so they order their recruiters to dress, talk and act in a way that will put you at ease. One cult has even invented a phrase to describe this, they call it “being relatable”.

Cults are full of the weak, weird and emotionally unstable.
Not true. Many cult members are very intelligent, attractive and skilled. The reality is that all sorts of people are involved in cults. One of the few common denominators is that they were often recruited at a low point in their life — more about that later.

Cults are just a bunch of religious nut cases.
This is a common mistake people make thinking that cults are purely religious groups. The modern definition of a mind control cult refers to all groups that use mind control and the devious recruiting techniques that this article exposes. The belief system of a religion is often warped to become a container for these techniques, but it is the techniques themselves that make it a cult. In a free society people can believe what they want, but most people would agree that it is wrong for any one to try to trick and control people. In the section “Types of Cults” we will examine the various types of cults you may come across.

Christians call all other groups cults.
Basically Christians have said that if a group claims to be Christian and yet teaches something fundamentally different from what the Bible teaches then they are a cult. ie. a Buddhist group that claims to be Buddhist is not a cult, but a Buddhist group that pretends to be Christian is. This definition is not used in this article.So what is a cult anyway?


The modern definition of a mind control cult is any group which employs mind control and deceptive recruiting techniques. In other words cults trick people into joining and coerce them into staying. This is the definition that most people would agree with. Except the cults themselves of course!


Religious
Cults that use a belief system as their base are very common. Their belief system could be standard Christianity, Hinduism, Islam or any other of the world religions, or they may have invented their own belief system. What makes them a cult is the fact that they use mind control, not what they believe.

Commercial
Cults that use commercial gain as their base are called “cults of greed”. They will promise you that if you join them and follow their special programme for success then you will become very rich. Often they will hold up their leader as an example and explain that if you do what he or she says then you will be successful too. Commercial cults use mind control to get you working for them for free, and to make you pay for an endless stream of motivational tapes, videos, books and seminars all of which are supposedly designed to help you succeed, but in reality are designed to enhance the cult’s mind control environment and keep you believing in their almost impossible dream of success. Of course they never mention that the primary way the leaders make money are by selling these motivation materials to their group! For more information see below under the section, “Pressure Selling”.

Self Help & Counselling
Cults that use “self help” or counselling or self improvement as their base often target business people and corporations. By doing their courses and seminars they claim you and your staff will become more successful. Business people locked away in hotel rooms are subjected to quasi-religious indoctrination as they play strange games, join in group activities, and share their innermost thoughts with the group. Once you have completed one course you are told you need to do the more advanced course, which naturally costs more than the last. These cults will sometimes request that you do volunteer work and that you help recruit your friends, family and work mates. These groups specialize in creating powerful emotional experiences which are then used to validate your involvement in the cult. The religious overtones are couched in terms which don’t sound religious. They usually come to the surface as you near the end of a seminar. Many people have been bankrupted by involvement with these cults.

Political
Cults that use political ideals as their base are well known throughout history. Hitler’s Nazi Germany and Stalin’s Communist USSR were classic examples of mind control on a very large scale. On smaller scales white and black supremacists, terrorists, and rebel groups commonly use forms of mind control to recruit and dominate their members.

Mind Control is a suite of psychological techniques that cult leaders attempt to control their members with.

Cultwatch does not consider Mind Control to be some magical device which can take away peoples’ free will. In other words it does not turn people into some sort of remote control robot. Rather we see Mind Control as a dishonest influence placed covertly on cult members by the cult. So instead of Mind Control being some sort of irresistible force like the aliens in the movies that take over peoples minds, rather it is more like a gun. The cult leader points the Mind Control “gun” at a member and says, “if you leave us then you will lose all of your friends and family”, “if you don’t conform then you will go to Hell”, “if you don’t give us money then you will fail in business”.

We have broken Mind Control up into a series of techniques that the cults use. Together these techniques make up Mind Control.



A cult needs to recruit and operate using deception. Why?
Because if people knew their true practices and beliefs beforehand then they would not join. A cult needs to hide the truth from you until they think you are ready to accept it.

For example, imagine if the leader of Heavens Gate cult was open and honest about the group and had said to new recruits, “Join us, wear strange clothes, get castrated and then drink poison!” he would not have had many takers.


A cult will have a slick well-rehearsed Public Relations front which hides what the group is really like.
You will hear how they help the poor, or support research, or peace, or the environment. They will tell you how happy you will be in their group (and everyone in the cult will always seem very happy and enthusiastic, mainly because they have been told to act happy and will get in trouble if they don’t). But you will not be told what life is really like in the group, nor what they really believe. These things will be introduced to you slowly, one at a time, so you will not notice the gradual change, until eventually you are practicing and believing things which at the start would have caused you to run a mile.



A normal religious organization would not have any trouble with you moving to another similar organization as long as you stayed in that same religion. Because it is the belief system that matters, not membership in an organization. For example if you were a Christian then you could move from one church to another and still be a Christian.

However cult leaders will tell you can only be “saved” (or can only be successful) in their organization alone. No other organization has the truth, all others miss the mark. So it is not the belief system that decides your future, but it the belief system AND your membership with that particular group.


The cult leaders need to make you believe that there is no where else you can go and still be saved, and if you ever leave the “one true church” then you are going to hell. This is a fear based control mechanism designed to keep you in the cult. It also gives the cult leaders tremendous power over you. If you really believe that leaving the group equals leaving God (or means you are leaving your only chance to succeed in life), then you will obey the cult leaders even when you disagree with them instead of risking being kicked out of the group. Exclusivism is used as a threat, it controls your behavior through fear.


Be very suspicious of any group that claims to be better than all the others. A religious group may say that other groups following the same religion are OK, but they are the ones who have a better grasp of the truth and they are superior to the rest. This is often just a subtle version of exclusivism.


This is one of the practices that cults are often very deceptive about. For example, first off they may give you the impression that they think you are a true Christian, Buddhist or Muslim and it’s not until later that their true position is revealed.

Fear_&_Intimidation
Cult leadership is feared. To disagree with leadership is the same as disagreeing with God. The cult leaders will claim to have direct authority from God to control almost all aspects of your life. If the cult is not a religious group then questioning the leaders or program will still be seen as a sign of rebellion and stupidity.

Guilt, Character Assassination and Breaking Sessions. Guilt will be used to control you. Maybe the reason you’re not making money is because you’re not “with the programme”. Maybe the reason you’re not able to convert new recruits is because “your heart is prideful and full of sin”. It could never be that the programme isn’t working, or those new recruits have valid reasons for not joining. It’s always your fault, you are always wrong, and so you must try harder! You will also be made to feel very guilty for disobeying any of the cult’s written or unwritten rules.

Character Assassination is used to help create the guilt in you. Character Assassination is a type of false reasoning used by people and groups who have no real arguments. The technical name for Character Assassination is “The Ad hominem Fallacy”. This is how it works. Imagine if you will a conversation between two men, Ford and Arthur…

“One plus one equals three”, says Ford.
“No I don’t think so. You see when I have one thing, and I have another thing, then I have two things not three”, replies Arthur.
“I see your point, but what you must realize is that one plus one when calculated in relation to this complex number domain, which I just invented, and then squared by the sum of the ninth tangent in the sequence of the Fibonacci series results in three!”, stated Ford triumphantly.

Ok, Ford is wrong, but that is not the point. The point is that Ford tried to answer Arthur’s reasoning with more reasoning of his own. This is the healthy way people and groups debate subjects. Now lets see what would have happened if Ford had used Character Assassination…

“Arthur I have been a mathematician longer than you. How dare you disagree with me! You are obviously a very smug and prideful person. I think you are disagreeing with me because you are jealous of me, and to be honest with you Arthur your rebellion has really hurt me and a lot of other people too”, stated Ford his face intimidatingly close to Arthur’s.

You see Ford didn’t answer Arthur’s argument, instead he attacked his character. If you are not aware of how Character Assassination works then it is a powerful way to exert control over you.


Breaking sessions are when one, two or more cult members and leaders attack the character of another person, sometimes for hours on end. Some cults will not stop these sessions until their victim is crying uncontrollably.

 

Love_Bombing_&_Relationship_Control
Cults know that if they can control your relationships then they can control you. Whether we like it or not we are all profoundly affected by those around us. When you first go to a cult they will practice “love bombing”, where they arrange instant friends for you. It will seem wonderful, how could such a loving group be wrong! But you soon learn that if you ever disagree with them, or ever leave the cult then you will lose all your new “friends”. This unspoken threat influences your actions in the cult. Things that normally would have made you complain will pass by silently because you don’t want to be ostracized. Like in an unhealthy relationship love is turned on and off to control.

Cults also try to cut you off from your friends and family because they hate others being able to influence you. A mind control cult will seek to manoeuvre your life so as to maximize your contact with cult members and minimize your contact with people outside the group, especially those who oppose your involvement.

 

 



Those who control the information control the person. In a mind control cult any information from outside the cult is considered evil, especially if it is opposing the cult. Members are told not to read it or believe it. Only information supplied by the cult is true. One cult labels any information against it as “persecution” or “spiritual pornography”, another cult calls it “apostate literature” and will expel you from the group if you are caught with it. Cults train their members to instantly destroy any critical information given to them, and to not even entertain the thought that the information could be true.


Common sense tells us that a person who does not consider all information may make an unbalanced decision. Filtering the information available or trying to discredit it not on the basis of how true it is, but rather on the basis of how it supports the party line, is a common control method used throughout history.

 



In a mind control cult like in Nazi Germany or Communist Russia you must be careful of what you say and do; “The walls have ears”. Everyone is encouraged to watch out for “struggling” brothers and sisters and report what they see to leadership. Often information given in deepest confidence is automatically reported to leadership. Cult leaders will then use this information to convince their members that they have a supernatural link, the trusting member does not suspect the very natural mechanism behind the supernatural revelations they are given.

People in a mind control cult will also hide their true thoughts and feelings, and instead wear a mask which presents them as a perfect cult member. This mask is a defense against being reported to leadership and being punished for not measuring up (cult members never feel like they measure up to the cult’s ideals, and yet often believe the other members around them do, when in reality the others feel the same as them). Hence cult members are trained not only to deceive outsiders, but also to deceive their fellow cult members. Rarely can close friendships form in cults, and if they do the cult’s leaders may see them as a threat and move those people away from each other. Nothing is allowed that can be more powerful than the cult members’ allegiance to the group and it’s leaders.

 



Mind control cults keep their members so busy with meetings and activities that they become too busy and too tired to think about their involvement.

Time control also helps the cult keep their members immersed in the manufactured cult environment.

And time control helps keep cult members away from friends and family.

 


Together they make Mind Control.

Remember, people are not perfect, but if they employ them constantly you are most likely dealing with a cult.


One of the most common forms of commercial cults is the pressure selling organization. These groups ostensibly make money by selling goods via their sales organization, but in reality they make their money by selling goods and motivational materials to their sales organization. Using mind control they seek to enlarge and maintain their sales force, and hence their profits.

Some names along with the bad reputations of these groups are well known to the general public, so their recruiters need to be very deceptive. They will call and ask to come and meet you to discuss a “business opportunity” or new “eCommerce venture”, not once mentioning the organization behind it. In fact if asked they might mention a completely different name. Meeting with them will involve a long intense presentation carefully designed to convince you that you could make a lot of money by following their plan. Only near the end will they briefly mention the real organization behind it.

Here are some key warning signs to watch out for…

  • Deception. No valid business needs to use deception.
  • Super hyped meetings, books, tapes, videos, leaflets, products.
  • Use of Mind control, refer to the earlier “Mind Control” section.

Here are some key questions to ask the recruiter…

  • Is it XZY group? Ask them if they are, or are involved with any of the well known commercial cults. Often the recruiter will admit to some connection, and in fact the clever recruiter will plainly state their involvement rather than having their deception uncovered later on.
  • Could I see some properly certified audited accounts which demonstrate this business model working? Like any business they should be able to provide the hard numbers. Not stories of other people making it big, or generalizations about six figure incomes, or more enthusiastic claims that you can make it if you work hard enough. If this is a new business then you want a business plan, profit and loss projections for the next year, two years and five years. If they claim it is a successful established business then demand to see the books. These are not unreasonable demands, no successful business person would ever touch a venture without this basic information. Tell the recruiter that you want to run them past your own accountant, and perhaps your lawyer too. If it’s for real then they will be more than happy to comply, otherwise watch them squirm and dodge with all manner of well rehearsed excuses. Of course if they do produce the information then go to your accountant, you’re a fool if you don’t.

 


Here are some key warning signs that may indicate a cult is trying to recruit you.

Hyped Meetings
Rather than explain to you what the group believes or what their programme is up front, they will instead insist that you can only understand it if you come to a group meeting. There everyone around you will seem so enthusiastic that you will start to think there is something wrong with you. They create an environment where you will feel uncomfortable and the only way to become comfortable is to join them. This is an application of controlled peer pressure.

Intense Unrelenting Pressure
They call repeatedly. Meet you on campus or outside your work. Trick you into coming for only an hour and then lead you into a long study, meeting or talk. They have to keep the pressure on, otherwise you might snap out of the mind control environment they are trying to immerse you in.

They tell you that they are not a cult.
This is a preemptive strike against the warnings from friends and family members which they know will come. In fact some cults go as far to tell you that Satan will try and dissuade you by sending family members and friends to tell you it is a cult. When this tactic is used then often a warped form of logic occurs in the recruits’ mind, the “agents of Satan” do come and tell them that it is a cult. So since the group predicted that would happen, the group therefore must true! Basically if any group tells you that they are not a cult, or that some people call them a cult, then for goodness sake find out why!

  • Times you are vulnerable.
  • Experiential rather than logical.
  • Fake friendship.
  • End of world pressure.
  • Pressure to do crazy things.
  • Secret knowledge.

  • Single charismatic leader.
  • People always seeming constantly happy and enthusiastic. Especially if you discover that they have been told to act that way for the potential new recruits.
  • Instant friends.
  • If you are told who you can or cannot talk to or associate with.
  • They hide what they teach.
  • Say they are the only true group, or the best so why go anywhere else.
  • Hyped meetings, get you to meetings rather than share with you.
  • Experiential rather than logical.
  • Asking for money for the next level.
  • Some cults travel door to door during times when women are home alone. They, and this is rather sexist, think that women are easier to recruit and once they have the woman then it will be easier to snare the husband or partner.
  • Saying that they have to make people pay for it because otherwise they will not appreciate it. This is of course a very silly reason, plenty of people are able to appreciate things which they did not pay for.

 


The Internet should be your first stop if the group you are interested in or involved with has an international scope. Most of the larger cults will be mentioned by counter-cult organizations like Cultwatch, and commonly many ex-members will have posted their cult involvement stories on the net.


Many of the larger cults hate the net since it allows their members access to information they deem subversive or evil. A good place to start is www.CULTWATCH.com, there we have cult information and links to other counter-cult groups. Also go to the search engines and type in keywords associated with the group, like the name of the group, the leaders or founders name, the titles of books they use and any peculiar words that the group uses. If the group is new or too small to have been exposed on the net then read stories of other people who were in mind control cults. The patterns may seem familiar to you. If you are still unsure then email us your story at cultwatch@cultwatch.com, we will let you know of any thoughts we have.

Other ways…
Old publications by the group. Often the older cults have predicted the end of the world or changed their beliefs significantly, hence their older publications become a danger to them. For some of the older cults people have produced books of photo copies of these changes.



Check out more great articles on Cult Watch





28 comments:

RSK said...

I have been following a group of QAnon addicts recently for the entertainment value. I almost choked laughing recently when one made a prediction of "Nuclear Attack" for a particular week, then literally blamed his readers for "lack of faith" when it didn't happen!

Unknown said...

I like this article and it’s very helpful but a bit disingenuous. They state that what makes a cult is not what they believe but the control aspect. I think they make this clear in two different places. Yet on their website they have an article about Brian Tanaki’s Destiny Church (which yes is a cult) and state that they have labeled it as a cult due to the church’s belief:

“By denying an essential of the Christian faith Cultwatch is reluctantly forced to classify Destiny Church as a cult. “


Turns out CultWatch is made up of Christians. Christians have a bad habit of this- if your beliefs are wonky and weird you just aren’t a heretic, you’re a cult.

So this website is very valuable but take it with a grain of salt.

By the way I find it disturbing that CultWatch did not label Destiny a cult because Tanaki makes his followers wear creepy submission rings but because of doctrine.

Anonymous said...


Your point about people joining a cult at a low point in their life was addressed to me.

I wasn't too smart to join a cult... wcg.. as a depressed teenager.

The hook that caught me was "How to Have a Happy Family." And of course the Bible Study course which led you into the Law one step at a time. So off to AC I went. Escaped the whole thing in the early 80's.

Found the Grace of God. What a relief!!!

Hope your post helps many people to avoid lost years.

Anonymous said...

"Love bombing" in the WCG splinters? I don't think so!

Tonto said...

I will reduce this down to its most fundamental elements.

1) The ORG or Leader benefits from you financially.

2) The leader is somehow on a much higher level in life than you are, and you have to do what they tell you.

Anonymous said...

This is off topic. I was recently saw Ray Wright on some of UCG's site. Is this the same Ray Wright that embezzled and stole while in administrative posts at Worldwide back in the day?

Anonymous said...

In case you guys in the splinter groups missed it, this Bud's for you! You're in a cult. I know, you hate that designation just like all of us did before common sense and survival instincts kicked in and we left. Having a wonderful time, wish you were here!

Anonymous said...

As you put on your jacket so there is a cult to fit ‘your size’.
They come in all shapes and sizes and colour.
Their weave is sometimes light sometimes heavy, many in between.
Some are tight fitting some are lose. Some look good and fashionable when worn right.
Some look smart some not so. Some are in your face some are low key and discreet.
Whatever your size and shape there is always one to ‘suit’.
But beware the buyer for no refund on cash thus spent is ever available.
Choose your tailor wisely as they say.

Anonymous said...


The Catholics and Protestants with their ham-eating, Sunday-keeping, Christmas-observing, Easter-observing, Halloween-observing, Trinitariansim, and weird ideas about heaven and hell, are all in cults too. They all listen to, and financially support, a bunch of frauds.

Anonymous said...

One sure sign of a thoroughly indoctrinated Armstrongite cultie is the demonstration of the Armstrong belief that Christians-falsely-so-called observe Halloween like a church holiday. Sure, everyone likes the candy but, no Christians think Halloween has any place in the church.

Jim said...

Anon 8:49

Yes the Ray Wright you saw on the UCG website is the same Ray Wright that was accused of embezzling funds from WCG. Stan Raider was able to get the charge covered up. During the receivership, Stan got all charges against the church dropped. The state of California dropped the case. Some felt it was Satan attacking the church, others thought there was a massive coverup of mismanagement of funds.
Jim

Anonymous said...

Those of us in Pasadena heard he embezzled over $100,000.00.

Anonymous said...

Interesting. The words that draw us in to a cult are not the words we hear when we are in a cult, and certainly neither set of words are those we use when we leave.

Ironic that with regard to COVID, Bob Thiel accused Dr. Fauci of scaremongering. But I suppose those of you who are conservative would agree with Bob. Maybe that's how how would get you, if you agree with him.

Anonymous said...

Crazy how many of these traits some of the splinters exhibit (in particular LCG,RCG,PCG). UCG is arguably a little less so, at least less exclusivist, but certainly still has the same foundation. These types of articles are helpful in bringing people to understand wrong practices.

Anonymous said...

Maybe someone can do a series on it... Ambassador Report has some good information on it. Amazing to see group think and the degree of brainwashing that occurred to think that "satan" is attacking the church- all the government wanted was transparency for the membership. I know members in the XCG today who claim that time as when "satan attacked the church". A lot of bad things were happening, and it is too bad that it couldn't be brought to light to discredit HWA.

Anonymous said...

Ain't it amazing how ordinary lay members that would sin or get "narced" on by spies would be marked and disfellowshipped but old turds like Ray Wright who embezzled membership tithes and offerings stay in the ministry. Why don't they be like the rest of society and go work a real job.

Anonymous said...

I knew an attorney who was a corporate law expert & Worldwide member who went out to Pasadena in 1979 at the time of the State of California's investigation to offer his services to the church. A few weeks later he came back & resigned fron the Worldwide. He said the the claims that the church was attacked by Satan was an outright lie and that gross financial malfeasance and misappropriation of funds by HWA and the church was taking place.

Anonymous said...

Having Ray Wright in UCG really helps their credibility. Maybe they can recruit Bernie Madoff to join and become a minister.

Anonymous said...

$100,000 in 1978 is equal to about $400K today.

Anonymous said...

Is this blog trying to stir up trouble in UCG now ? What a surprise NOT !! Why don't you stick to the ministers online forum.

Anonymous said...

As I understand it, during the states investigation in to the churches finances, other churches also stepped into the fight. Does anyone know if Scientology was among those?

Anonymous said...

You guys are committed to making fun of people trying to obey God. Take the beam out of your own eyes first . This is nothing but a gossip page

Anonymous said...

What a sick site You guys need help

Anonymous said...

Oh, look. Somebody is upset that his church is actually a cult. Prove it wrong, buckwheat.

Anonymous said...

What a pathetic site. Making fun of people trying to live Gods way.

Anonymous said...

My God what a stupid comment! You have been brainwashed by Armstrongism so bad you cannot tell truth from reality.

You aren't living God's way if you are still bowing down to the law instead of Christ. The old has been undone and fulfilled. We rest in assurance now of salvation. No amount of law-keeping, kosher eating, sabbath keeping will ever produce a good result. It is impossible. Scripture says so.

Anonymous said...

This site is by ex members of Gods church . Their joy is making fun of people trying to live a Godly life
How sad these guys are

Anonymous said...

This site seems to be run by people that got their feelings hurt by Gods word
How sad