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We as spiritual beings or souls come to earth in order to experience the human condition. This includes the good and the bad scenarios of this world. Our world is a duality plane and no amount of love or grace will eliminate evil or nastiness. We will return again and again until we have pierced the illusions of this density. The purpose of human life is to awaken to universal truth. This also means that we must awaken to the lies and deceit mankind is subjected to. To pierce the third density illusion is a must in order to remove ourselves from the wheel of human existences. Love is the Answer by means of Knowledge and Awareness!



http://www.anti-fascism.org/cult3-2.html

The Scent of a Cult
Benjamin Wittes

"The only difference between a cult and a religion is a hundred years," said 
the editor of a prominent Washington weekly in turning down a proposal for 
an article on the Church of Scientology. The particular editor in question 
is devoutly secular, so it's not too surprising that he would paint the 
issue with such a broad brush. What's far more surprising is the number of 
religious individuals and organizations who are on record as agreeing with 
him, either equating religions and cults or insisting on the blurriness of 
any line that might separate them.

It might seem perverse for honestly religious people to group their faiths 
with those of the sadists and megalomaniacs who run most cults, but a 
growing number are doing just that. A substantial sector of religious 
America, for example, sees the firefight in Waco as an attack on radical 
religion and places the cutting edge of religious freedom in the defense of 
cults' free exercise rights.

According to the commonly accepted criteria for defining cults, the line 
between cults and religions is fuzzy indeed. The Cult Awareness Network 
(CAN), a Chicago-based clearinghouse of information on cults, identifies the 
following seven characteristics of "destructive cults": mind control, 
charismatic leadership, deception, exclusivity, alienation, exploitation, 
and totalitarian worldview. But as Thomas Taylor writes in Christianity 
Today, "Almost all Christian denominations have some aspects that would fit 
into the many vague definitions of cults." In fact, not only Christian 
denominations but all religions exhibit aspects that at least superficially 
resemble the defining features of cults. 

Do cults use controlled hunger to break down the resistance of members? So 
do Jews on Yom Kippur. Do cults isolate members for indoctrination sessions? 
Many religions sponsor retreats. Do cult members live together and eschew 
the outside world? So do monks. Do cults tap their adherents for money? So 
do televangelists and virtually all congregations. Do cults use mind 
control? Ah, but isn't it precisely the purpose of all religions to alter 
the way their adherents perceive the world? Brainwashing would be a more 
useful description of cults if someone could identify exactly what the word 
means.

The difference between a cult and a religion, of course, lies in extremity. 
Cults generally exhibit all seven of the CAN's criteria, while religions 
generally don't, and cults exhibit them with far greater vigor than 
religions do. Judaism, for example, demands of its practitioners an 
occasional day without food; most cults systematically malnourish their 
members. Still, without identifying an aspect of cults that is not also an 
aspect of established religious movements, these two classes of organization 
appear more similar than they really are. The confusion I have described 
induces a natural concern among religious organizations that a crackdown on 
cults could presage a crackdown on mainstream religions. As Taylor warns, 
"'We,' who sometimes wish that the government would restrict the behavior of 
[cults], may someday become 'them,' the prospective subjects of scrutiny and 
regulation."

CAN's definition of cults, then, lacks what we might call a red flag-one 
additional, readily visible criterion that stands beyond such argumentation. 
I shall propose one-though not, be it understood, in order to define cults 
as beyond First Amendment protection. The slippery slope that Taylor fears 
is very real; and the interests of a free society generally-and religious 
people specifically-are probably best served by toleration of the broadest 
range of religious beliefs, no matter how vulgar. I offer this refinement, 
rather, in the interests of intellectual clarity and so that religious 
organizations don't confuse their constitutional defense of cults with some 
broader sense of commonality with them. Where this issue concerns the 
Supreme Court, in other words, it may be useful that a cult should be deemed 
a religion; nevertheless, it is necessary for us to understand why most 
Americans, properly, intuit a difference between the Scientologists and the 
Moonies on the one hand and the Lubavichers on the other.

The quickest way to detect a cult is to sniff for doublethink. The cult 
seeks control over its membership not by providing a coherent theological 
system but by providing the opposite: an unstable theology infinitely 
malleable to the needs of the cult's top echelon and uninterpretable at all 
times to anyone below that level. Specifically, the cult destabilizes its 
theology by controlling its religious language-through ambiguity, 
definitional reversals, and deliberate imprecision. What ultimately 
separates religions from cults is not that cults seek to control the minds 
of adherents but that they employ Orwellian doublethink to do so and use the 
cover of language to effect the far more outrageous means of control set 
forth by CAN.

The Unification Church's use of the word "Messiah" provides a case in point. 
Reverend Moon on several occasions has called himself the Messiah, and the 
Moonie sacred text, Divine Principle, declares flatly that the Messiah was 
born in Korea between the two world wars (Moon was born in 1920). At other 
times, however, the church hierarchy demurs on the question of Moon's 
divinity. More important, it's not entirely clear what the word Messiah 
means in the church's vocabulary - the word means different things at 
different times. 

Jesus was the Messiah, according to the Moonies, but he failed in his 
mission to unite the world under a single theocracy, because he didn't marry 
and have children. Moon, then, represents the Second Coming, though not the 
Second Coming as described in Revelation. The National Council of Churches 
(NCC), in a critique of Unification theology, questioned the "meaning and 
intelligibility" of the Moonie view of the Messiah. While the NCC's first 
concern was that the teachings were un-Christian, for our purposes the more 
important critique is their incoherence.

The comparison with Lubavich Hasidism is instructive.
Many (though by no means all) Lubavicher Hasidim believed that Menachem 
Mendel Schneerson was the Messiah. In sharp contrast with the Moonies, 
however, "Messiah" has the same specific meaning to Lubavichers as it does 
to all religious Jews. Two thousand years of post-Second Temple Judaism has 
provided a framework of Jewish messianism, and Lubavichers could define 
precisely and briefly what they meant when they called Schneerson "King 
Moshiach." By contrast, when reporter Colin McEnroe last year asked 
Unification Church spokesman Peter Ross whether Rev. Moon was the Messiah, 
Ross suggested in effect that the question was unanswerable. "Do you have 
two days?" he said to McEnroe. When the reporter asked whether Ross could 
give a summary explanation, Ross told him, "That is the short version."

The Moonies have likewise rendered meaningless a series of words connected 
to family. The church refers to itself as "the family," and members call 
each other "brother" and "sister." Moon calls himself and his wife the "true 
parents." At the same time, the church urges new recruits to cut off contact 
with their biological families (parents in particular). The purpose, of 
course, is to appropriate to the church those words people intuitively 
associate with loyalty, love, and obedience, and to disconnect those words 
from biological relationships. Yet even as Moon interrupts normal family 
relations and appropriates the authority of parents, church literature 
refers to family values, clearly referring not to the church family but to 
the traditional nuclear family.

The principle vehicle for imposing doublethink is control over language, a 
dramatic example here being the Church of Scientology, a pseudo- religious 
cult oriented around the writings of L. Ron Hubbard. Hubbard created a 
dialect that rivals Orwell's Newspeak in its complexity and capacity for 
indoctrination. As journalist Stewart Lamont writes in Religion Inc: The 
Church of Scientology, "This org-speak is a feature of Scientology in which 
all terms are defined strictly and processes given technical names by Ron. 
Like the Red Queen, a word means what Ron says it means." Lamont further 
explains that this "org-speak is an alphabet soup of initials, jargon, and 
pseudo-technical expressions. This heightens the impression that a science 
is being taught and that it is esoteric and unavailable to the bungling 
ignoramuses in the outside world."

In Scientology courses, students are made to use a Hubbard-written 
dictionary to look up every unknown word in their texts. The dictionaries, 
according to Lamont, "define words the Hubbard way." In addition to the 
technical words, they include English words Hubbard wishes to redefine; he 
defines "having," for example, as "to be able to touch or permeate or to 
direct the disposition of." No other reference material is permitted to be 
used in reading Hubbard's texts. In other words, not only does the church 
control its source texts, it controls the tools with which the members 
process them. By its own definition, the Church has (directs the disposition 
of) the English language and thereby has its adherents' thoughts.

Political as well as religious cults can be distinguished from legitimate 
organizations by their use of doublethink. Though political cults espouse 
extremist ideologies, not extremist theologies, operationally they are 
virtually identical to religious cults, and they also go to great lengths to 
control the vocabularies of their members. Dennis King, in his book Lyndon 
LaRouche and the New American Fascism, describes how LaRouche turned his 
National Caucus of Labor Committees (NCLC) from a Trotskyite organization 
into an anti-Semitic neo-fascist group:


LaRouche helped his followers overcome their moral qualms by reframing 
reality for them through semantic tricks and false syllogisms. The resulting 
belief system involved four layers: a redefinition of "Jew," a redefinition 
of "Nazi," a denial of the concept of "left" and "right" in politics (to 
totally disorient the believer); and, for Jewish LaRouchians, a guilt trip 
and special fears.

According to King, LaRouche distinguished between real and fake Jews, 
defining the latter as Zionists and practitioners of religious Judaism and 
calling them "Jews who are not Jews." Real Jews, according to LaRouche, are 
followers of Philo of Alexandria, a first-century Jewish thinker with no 
modern following other than the Jews of the LaRouche movement.


LaRouche's redefinition of "Nazi" is even more sinister. Writes King,

He argued that Hitler was put into power by the Rothschilds and other 
wealthy Jews-who-are-not-really-Jews. These evil oligarchs invented Nazi 
racialism and brainwashed the Nazis to accept it. They then urged Hitler and 
his cronies to persecute the German Jews so the latter would flee to 
Palestine, where the Rothschilds had decided to set up a zombie state as a 
tool of their world domination. Thus did LaRouche place the ultimate blame 
for Hitler's crimes on the 
Jews-who-are-not-Jews-but-really-are-the-Jews-anyway.

In LaRouche literature, the words "Nazi" and "Jew" are both used sometimes 
pejoratively and sometimes in praise. Moreover, Nazi beliefs and practices 
are pejoratively called Jewish, and Jewish political practices, both in the 
U.S. and in Israel, are pejoratively called Nazi.

On the other end of the political spectrum, the New Alliance Party (NAP) 
plays similar games. The left-wing cult is led by former LaRouche associate 
Dr. Fred Newman (although the titular leader is Dr. Lenora Fulani, who 
fronts for the party as its presidential candidate), who considers himself a 
modern Lenin and writes hardline Marxist political tracts. At the same time, 
the NAP is not above McCarthyite red-baiting towards its rivals on the left. 
The party's paper, the National Alliance, attacked former NAP member William 
Pleasant with the banner headline: "William Pleasant's Latest Writings: 
Communism's Stinking Corpse." In NAP language, the words "left," 
"communist," and "Marxist-Leninist" are all positive when applied to the NAP 
itself, but they are also signals for a priori condemnation when referring 
to anyone else.

These semantic tricks are not simply oddities of a few isolated cults, but 
the very source of the cognitive power of cults, the means by which cults 
concentrate power at the top of the pyramid. Since mainstream religions 
don't control language, their religious authorities simply can't exercise 
the degree of power over membership that cult leaders can when they make an 
active effort to reduce the critical capacities of their adherents. Even 
religions that have historically concentrated extreme power in the hands of 
their leadership, the Mormons and the Lubavichers, for example, face a great 
deal more dissent within their ranks than the mildest of true cults. Without 
tampering with the definition of "Messiah," those Lubavich leaders who 
believe that Schneerson was the Messiah have not been able to make their 
view universally accepted within the movement. Now that the Rebbe is dead, 
it is an open question whether or not Schneerson's successors (whoever they 
turn out to be) will bring about such a redefinition. If they do-and the 
talk within the movement of Schneerson's imminent return might be the 
stirrings of that redefinition-Lubavich may yet evolve into a cult. In its 
current form, however, it has a long way to go.

The cult is no more a subset of religion than it is a subset of political 
party. While some cults orient themselves around ideology and some around 
theology (and some around self-discovery, and some around psychoanalysis), 
and they can thus appear to resemble religious or political organizations, 
cults actually constitute a phenomenon of their own. The free exercise 
clause protects any organization oriented around a theological worldview. It 
would be a grave error, however, to conclude that all who come under that 
protection have anything more in common than the protection itself.