May 23, 2017

How to Identify a Dangerous Cult

Jonestown and Peoples Temple
Stephen Johnson
Lifehacker
May 23, 2017

It starts innocently: Maybe the new guy at work asks you to play bass in his indie rock band. A friend-of-a-friend invites you to a free vegan brunch. Your mother-in-law wants to share a life-changing home business opportunity with you. Accept the wrong offer, though, and you could find yourself dead-eyed, be-robed, and dancing around a burning pentagram to usher in the Seventh Age of Blood Atonement.

No one wants that kind of life for you.

When people think of cults, they tend to picture bizarre religious sects and apocalyptic scenarios—the Branch Davidians burning up in their compound in Texas, or the corpses on the ground at Jonestown—but cults needn’t be religious, and are anything but exotic. If you want to get literal about it, any group of like-minded people could be considered a cult.


“The Democratic and Republican parties are cults,” explained cult expert Paul Morantz. “I’m in a cult where everyone wears the same color and we meet for rituals every Saturday. It’s called the USC Alumni Association.”

Morantz is an expert in distinguishing between innocent book clubs and apocalyptic death cults. He’s been battling fringe groups like EST, Synanon, and The People’s Temple in court since the 1970s, and he says that while cults can be seductive, the dangerous ones can be identified and avoided if you know what to look for.

“If a guy went to a bible study group that’s a front for a dangerous cult, and he’s been educated about how you can be done in by the group,” Morantz said, “I think he could be OK.”

Look at Who’s in Charge

Cults are formed around strong leaders, so take a serious look at the motives and personality of the person in charge. According to Morantz and other cult experts, control-freak cult leaders are nearly interchangeable.


  • Narcissistic personality—Dangerous cult leaders usually hold grandiose notions of their place in the world.
  • Ability to read others— “A guy like Charles Manson had the ability to spot who, at a party, that he thought he could control. It just seems to be in his personality,” Morantz said. Cult leaders “have the ability to size you up, and realize your weaknesses and get to your buttons.”
  • Claims of special powers: If a leader claims he’s smarter, holier, and more pure than everyone else, think twice about signing up.
  • Charisma meets anger: Dangerous cult leaders can be extremely loving, charming and affectionate, but often turn angry and abusive with no warning. This mercurial presentation keeps members off balance.



Put on your tin-foil hat, cover your webcam with a piece of tape, and wait for the imminent arrival …

Look for Signs of “Brainwashing”

While the details of thought reform methods vary from cult to cult, the broad strokes have been around forever. So if you notice your righteous new friends using any of the techniques below, you might want to sneak out of the compound and call your dad:


  • Isolation: Separating group members from family and friends forces them to rely on fellow cultists for all emotional needs. This is why many cults are based around communal living. (And why cult members are so boring.)
  • Peer Pressure: It’s nearly impossible to overstate the power of social norms on behavior—the only reason you’re wearing pants right now is because that’s what they expect you to do—but when you manipulated peer pressure consciously, you can make people give away their life savings, marry a stranger, or listen to the horrible rock opera you wrote.
  • Confession: Dangerous cults are notorious for making members confess to past sins, often publicly, then using those confessions against them. Some groups keep elaborate files of their members’ pasts for blackmail.
  • Control: Cults often tell members when to eat, whom to sleep with, and what to do every second of every day. This induces dependency, and leaves little free time to question what the hell you’re doing handing out Bible tracts in Sausalito when you have a BFA in English.
  • Sleep Deprivation: Simply keeping people from sleep or rest is amazingly effective at controlling their thoughts. As Chuck Dederich, the leader of the Synanon rehab cult, described it: “If you keep people awake long enough, you can make them believe anything.”
  • Language Control: To enforce isolation, many groups replace common words with special jargon, or create new words to describe complicated abstractions. This makes conversations with outsiders tedious: It’s just exhausting to explain the 17th Expositional Commandment of The Gospel of Norbert to your sister.
  • Threats of Expulsion: Totalitarian groups often use the threat of expulsion to keep members in line. Once you’ve successfully defined the outside world as evil or deadly, it’s easy to maintain discipline by threatening to throw someone out.
  • Ask Questions (Cults Hate That)


Maybe the easiest hallmark of a dangerous authoritative group is visible through its absence: Skepticism. Dangerous cults rarely, if ever, allow members to raise questions about the group or the group’s beliefs. So the easiest way to suss out a dangerous cult may be to ask probing questions and note how they’re answered. Even if you’re just asking yourself.

“Back in the 60s, I was getting a lot peer pressure to take acid,” Morantz said. “So I went to see Timothy Leary speak, expecting a scientific explanation of what LSD does.... Instead it was a bunch of slogans and everyone screaming and clapping.”

“I wanted to stick my hand up and say, ‘Can you stop the propaganda and just tell us what LSD is or does?’ but I knew that if I did that, the mob would have attacked me. So I quietly exited, thinking I’d just seen the most dangerous man alive.”

I’ll leave Morantz with the last word, his personal failsafe method for determining whether a group is dangerous cult: “Count how many Hollywood stars are there,” Morantz said. “If you get past five, get the fuck out.”

http://lifehacker.com/how-to-identify-a-dangerous-cult-and-resist-the-urge-t-1795342855

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