Excerpts
from Cults
In Our Midst
By Dr. Margaret Thaler Singer
One of the
leading experts in the field of coercive persuasion is Margaret
Thaler Singer, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist and emeritus
adjunct professor at the University of California, Berkeley. In
her career, she has counseled and interviewed more than 3,000
current and former cult members and their relatives and friends.
Dr. Singer is
the author of the book "Cults In Our Midst," which
summarizes fifty years of work on the subject. In the 1950s, as
a senior psychologist in the laboratory of psychology at the
Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, she worked with Dr.
Robert Jay Lifton and others who were studying prisoners of war
from the Korean War. It was there that she first encountered the
forms of coercive persuasion, or thought reform programs, that
not only prisoners of war but also civilians in a variety of
milieus had been exposed to in the Far East. She also
interviewed a number of Jesuit priests who had been exposed to
thought reform processes while imprisoned in mainland China.
Because of her
early work at Walter Reed, Dr. Singer was familiar with the
history of coercive persuasion in many settings throughout
history. Later, laboratory studies done by social psychologists,
field studies of influence done by anthropologists, and
propaganda analyses done by political and linguistic analysts
all came to be of use as she studied how current cults and other
groups using thought reform processes induce attitude and
behavior changes in their members, how they use words to
persuade, control and even damage people.
By the 1960s,
as Dr. Singer writes in the introduction to Cults In Our Midst:
"I began
to hear from families who had missing members -- usually the
missing person was young, between eighteen and twenty-five years
old, and had become involved with one or another of the cultic
groups that were just taking hold in those years. The family,
and others who knew the person, told about a sudden change in
personality, a new way of talking, a restriction of emotions, a
splitting from family and the past. I recognized what sounded
like the effects of a thought reform program or the type of
intense persuasion and social controls that I had studied for so
long, things that until then we thought happened more often in
faraway places. But here it was right at home." . In her
introduction Dr. Singer defines cults in terms which make it
clear that this issue is relevant to all of us:
"There are
many definitions and views of what a cult is, and sometimes
writers, scholars and even former members avoid the term
altogether. The term cult tends to imply something weird,
something other than normal, something that is not us. But as
Cults In Our Midst will show, cults are far from marginal, and
those who join them are no different from you or me. The issues
they represent are basic to our society, to our understanding of
each other, and to our accepting our vulnerabilities and the
potential for abuse within our world.
"In this
book I will use cult and cultic group to refer to any one of a
large number of groups that have sprung up in our society and
that are similar in the way they originate, their power
structure, and their governance. Cults range from relatively
benign to those that exercise extraordinary control over
members' lives and use thought reform processes to influence and
control members. While the conduct of certain cults causes
nonmembers to criticize them, the term cult is not in itself
pejorative but simply descriptive. It denotes a group that forms
around a person who claims he or she has a special mission or
knowledge, which will be shared with those who turn over most of
their decision making to that self-appointed leader.
"Cults
come in all sizes, form around any theme, and recruit persons of
all ages and backgrounds. Not all cults are religious, as some
people think. Their reasons for existing may concern religion,
life-style, politics, or assorted philosophies. Not everyone who
is approached by a cult recruiter joins, and of those who join,
not all stay forever. Cults vary in how much financial and
political power they wield. Some are local phenomena with only a
dozen members. Others have thousands of members, operate
multinational businesses, and control complex multimillion- if
not multibillion-dollar organizations.
Further in her
introduction Dr. Singer compares George Orwell's vision of a
negative utopia in his classic work, Nineteen Eighty-Four, to
the frightening world inside modern-day cults:
"Modern-day
cults and thought-reform groups tend to offer apparent utopias,
places where all humankind's ills will be cured. The cults' lure
is, if you just come along, all will be fine, and everyone will
live happily ever after.
"Down
through time, people have written about such promised utopias,
but they have also described their downsides, which might be
called negative utopias. In 1949, George Orwell wrote about the
negative utopia he feared would evolve, perhaps by 1984. Others
before him, such as Daniel Defoe, Aldous Huxley, and Jack
London, had also written about negative utopias in which
political systems gradually curbed and eventually stifled
people's most central capacities for reasoning creatively,
scientifically, and compassionately. In these real or imagined
centralized governments, torture, drugs, and mysterious,
esoteric techniques were the feared methods by which people
might be controlled.
"Orwell's
genius was in sensing that combinations of social and
psychological techniques are easier, more effective, and cheaper
than the gun-to-the-head methods of coercion. Social and
psychological persuasion is also less likely to attract
attention and thus is less apt to mobilize opposition early and
easily from those being manipulated. Orwell reasoned that if a
government could control all media and interpersonal
communication while simultaneously forcing citizens to speak in
a politically controlled jargon, it could blunt independent
thinking. If thought could be controlled, then rebellious
actions against a regime could be prevented. Not only in his
book Nineteen Eighty-Four but also in his essays on politics and
the English language, Orwell emphasized the power of words.
Words represent thoughts, and without the capability to express
thoughts, people lose access to their own thinking.
"When the
year 1984 arrived, various totalitarian governments were
controlling and censoring the media and squelching dissenting
individuals. And over the years, many versions of Orwell's Big
Brother, Newspeak, and Thought Police, some more ominous and
subtle than others, have appeared here and elsewhere throughout
the world. Orwell's predictions may never come to pass
completely because of the wondrous properties of the human mind
when it remains free to reason. But his ideas still serve as a
warning of the extent to which people's thinking can be
influenced.
"Since the
1960s, there has been a burgeoning not of governments but of
independent entrepreneurial groups that go into the
mind-manipulation and personality-change business. Myriads of
false messiahs, quacks, and leaders of cults and thought-reform
groups have emerged who use Orwellian mind-manipulation
techniques. They recruit the curious, the unaffiliated, the
trusting, and the altruistic. They promise intellectual,
spiritual, political, social, and self-actualization utopias.
These modern-day pied pipers offer, among other things, pathways
to God, salvation, revolution, personal development,
enlightenment, perfect health, psychological growth,
egalitarianism, channels to speak with 35,000-year- old
"entities," life in ecospheres, and contact with
extraterrestrial beings.
"There is
truly a smorgasbord of spiritual, psychological, political, and
other types of cults and cultic groups seeking adherents and
devotees. Contrary to the myth that those who join cults are
seekers, it is the cults that go out and actively and
aggressively find followers. Eventually, those groups subject
their followers to mind-numbing treatments that block critical
and evaluative thinking and subjugate independent choice in a
context of a strictly enforced hierarchy
"The
wisdom of the ages is that most manipulation is subtle and
covert. When Orwell drew on this wisdom, he envisioned the
evolution of an insidious but successful mind and opinion
manipulator. He would appear as a smiling, seemingly beneficent
Big Brother. But instead of one Big Brother, we see hordes of
Big Brothers in the world today. Many of them are cult
leaders."
Read
More about Margaret Thaler Singer
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Cults in
Our Midst
by Margaret Thaler Singer
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"The strength of Cults in Our Midst is its clear
explanation of the nature of cults, how they operate, the
threat they pose to individuals, families, and society,
and how others can help cult survivors escape and recover.
Many types of cultic relationships are considered, from
tiny religious or occult groups to the "large group
awareness training" programs that have infiltrated
workplaces."
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quote on the FACTNet web site was provided by the publisher.)
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