May 31, 2025

Click, whirr.

"Click, whirr" refers to a mental shortcut or automatic response, often used in psychology and persuasion to describe a tendency to react quickly and without conscious thought to certain cues or triggers. This concept, popularized by Robert Cialdini in his book "Influence," suggests that when we recognize a specific situation or cue, we trigger a pre-programmed response. 

The "click, whirr" response is often a quick and efficient way to make decisions, but it can also lead to poor choices if we are not aware of the triggers and our own tendency to react without thinking.

May 25, 2025

Travel ban imposed on Unification Church leader amid probe into ex-first lady scandal

SEOUL, May 22 (Yonhap) -- Prosecutors have imposed a travel ban on the leader of the Unification Church as part of an investigation into allegations that the wife of ousted former President Yoon Suk Yeol received luxury gifts from the church, sources said Thursday.

The Seoul Southern District Prosecutors Office recently imposed an overseas travel ban on the church leader, Han Hak-ja, in connection with its investigation into allegations that a high-ranking church official gifted a diamond necklace worth 60 million won (US$43,405) and two Chanel bags to Kim via a shaman.

The shaman, Jeon Seong-bae, also known as Geon Jin, allegedly delivered the items to Kim and asked for various business favors on behalf of the church after Yoon was elected president in 2022, according to the sources.

Prosecutors suspect the church official may have acted either under Han's direction or with her tacit approval, given the high value of the gifts and other circumstances. The church has maintained that the gifts were offered based on the official's personal motives.

Prosecutors have yet to locate the necklace and bags, while Jeon has claimed that the items were lost.

Investigators, however, have confirmed that the bags were delivered to a member of Kim's personal staff, surnamed Yoo, who reportedly exchanged both for different models after paying surcharges.

Kim's side has asserted that the gifts were never handed to her, suggesting that the shaman and Yoo may have had a separate personal connection.

Shaman Jeon Seong-bae, also known as Geon Jin, attends a trial session at the Seoul Southern District Court in Seoul in this May 12, 2025, file photo. (Yonhap)

graceoh@yna.co.kr
(END)

https://m-en.yna.co.kr/view/AEN20250522010300320

May 24, 2025

Today is Cult Recovery Day


Today is Cult Recovery Day.

 A day to honour the strength of survivors, raise awareness, and support healing from coercive control and manipulation.

Let’s continue to fight, continue to break down coercive control tactics and educate as many as we can.

#cultrecoveryday

Leader of neo-Nazi death cult extradited to US for plot to poison Jewish children

Gavin Blackburn
May 23, 2025
EuroNews

Michail Chkhikvishvili, a 21-year-old originally from Georgia, was arraigned on Friday before a federal judge in Brooklyn on multiple felonies, including soliciting hate crimes and acts of mass violence.

The leader of an eastern European neo-Nazi group has been extradited to the United States from Moldova following his arrest last summer for allegedly instructing an undercover federal agent to dress as Santa Claus and hand out poisoned candy to Jewish children and racial minorities, prosecutors have said.

Michail Chkhikvishvili, a 21-year-old originally from Georgia, was arraigned on Friday before a federal judge in Brooklyn on multiple felonies, including soliciting hate crimes and acts of mass violence.

He pleaded not guilty through an attorney, Samuel Gregory, who requested his client receive a psychiatric evaluation and be placed on suicide watch while in custody.

Prosecutors described Chkhikvishvili, who also goes by "Commander Butcher," as the leader of the Maniac Murder Cult, an international extremist group that adheres to a "neo-Nazi accelerationist ideology and promotes violence and violent acts against racial minorities, the Jewish community and other groups it deems 'undesirables.'"

They said the group’s violent solicitations, promoted through Telegram channels and outlined a manifesto called the "Hater's Handbook," appear to have inspired multiple real life killings, including a school shooting in Nashville earlier this year that left a 16-year-old student dead.

Since 2022, Chkhikvishvili has travelled on multiple occasions to Brooklyn, where he bragged about beating up an elderly Jewish man and instructed others, primarily through text messages, to commit violent acts on behalf of the Maniac Murder Cult, according to court papers.

When he was approached by an undercover FBI agent in 2023, Chkhikvishvili recruited the official to a scheme that "involved an individual dressing up as Santa Claus and handing out candy laced with poison to racial minorities and children at Jewish schools in Brooklyn," according to the Justice Department.

He later suggested narrowing the focus to "dead Jewish kids," prosecutors said, after noting that "Jews are literally everywhere" in Brooklyn.

Describing his desire to carry out a mass casualty attack, Chkhikvishvili said he saw the United States as "big potential because accessibility to firearms," adding that the undercover should consider targeting homeless people because the government wouldn't care "even if they die," according to court papers.

He was arrested last July in Moldova, where he was held prior to this week's extradition.

In a statement, Attorney General Pam Bondi said the case was "a stark reminder of the kind of terrorism we face today: online networks plotting unspeakable acts of violence against children, families, and the Jewish community in pursuit of a depraved, extremist ideology."

https://www.euronews.com/my-europe/2025/05/23/leader-of-neo-nazi-death-cult-extradited-to-us-for-plot-to-poison-jewish-children

May 17, 2025

Mississippi law enforcement warn parents to beware of terrorist cult grooming children online

Caleb Salers
SuperTalk
May 16, 2025

Sextortion
Photo from the Child Rescue Coalition
Officials in the Mississippi Pine Belt are warning parents to beware of an international child exploitation cult seeking to groom local youth.

“764,” a group labeled by the Department of Justice as a “terror network,” is reported to be targeting children, especially those with mental health challenges. The group was founded by then-15-year-old Bradley Chance Cadenhead of Texas, who went by the online alias “Felix” on the instant messaging platform Discord.

Cadenhead, who was bullied as a young child, reportedly used his position in the “decentralized Satanist, neo-Nazi” cult to engage in sextortion and doxxing, or collecting and disseminating someone’s personal information to defame that person online.

Though Cadenhead is currently serving an 80-year prison sentence for possessing child pornography, the terror cult he founded remains active online. 764 operatives reportedly pressure young people into committing acts of self-harm, harming animals, and sending nude images of themselves, among other heinous acts. Sometimes, group members’ primary goal is to coerce their prey into dying by suicide.

In Mississippi, law enforcement authorities are asking parents to be on the alert for potential predators lurking around online, targeting their young ones. Officials say 764 operators are all over the place, including harmless interactive games like Minecraft and Roblox.

“When your kids come in day to day, you need to know what your children are doing, be involved. It takes less than 10 to 15 minutes of your time to just talk to your children every day and see how they’re doing,” Perry County investigator James Burch told WHLT.

“Check, go in their rooms. You’ve got to be vigilant. Parents are going to have to start stepping up and being a part of this, because like I said before, we can’t police everybody’s child.”

In late April, two major 764 members were arrested by the FBI. Federal officials remain dedicated to shutting the dangerous group down. However, parents can play an even more vital role in shielding vulnerable children from evil actors.

https://www.supertalk.fm/mississippi-law-enforcement-warn-parents-to-beware-of-terrorist-cult-grooming-children-online/

May 6, 2025

FBI has opened 250 investigations tied to violent online network '764' that preys on teens, top official says

"This is one of the most disturbing things we're seeing," an FBI official said.

Mike Levine, Pierre Thomas, and Lucien Bruggeman
ABC News
May 6, 2025

FBI officials say they are growing increasingly concerned about a loose network of violent predators who befriend teenagers through popular online platforms and then coerce them into escalating sexual and violent behavior -- pushing victims to create graphic pornography, harm family pets, cut themselves with sharp objects, or even die by suicide.

The online predators, part of the network known as "764," demand victims send them photos and videos of it all, so the shocking content can be shared with fellow 764 followers or used to extort victims for more. Some of the predators even host "watch parties" for others to watch them torment victims live online, according to authorities.

"We see a lot of bad things, but this is one of the most disturbing things we're seeing," said FBI Assistant Director David Scott, the head of the FBI's Counterterrorism Division, which is now leading many of the U.S. government's investigations tied to 764.

The FBI has more than 250 such investigations currently underway, with every single one of its 55 field offices across the country handling a 764-related case, Scott told ABC News in an exclusive interview.

He said the FBI has seen some victims as young as nine, and federal authorities have indicated there could be thousands of victims around the world.

'Nihilistic violent extremists'

"[It's] very scary and frightening," the Connecticut mother of a teen girl caught up in 764 told ABC News.

"It was very difficult to process, because we didn't raise her to engage in that kind of activity," said the mother, speaking on the condition that ABC News not name her or her daughter.

Last year, in classic New England town of Vernon, Connecticut, local police arrested the girl -- a former honor roll student -- for conspiring with a 764 devotee overseas to direct bomb threats at her own community. When police searched her devices, they found pornographic photos of her, photos depicting self-mutilation, and photos of her paying homage to 764.

As Scott described it, one of the main goals of 764 and similar networks is to "sow chaos" and "bring down society."

That's why the FBI's Counterterrorism Division and the Justice Department's National Security Division are now looking at 764 and its offshoots as a potential form of domestic terrorism, even coining a new term to characterize the most heinous actors: "nihilistic violent extremists."

"The more gore, the more violence ... that raises their stature within the groups," Scott said. "So it's sort of a badge of honor within some of these groups to actually do the most harm to victims."

According to an ABC News review of cases across the country, over the past few years, state and federal authorities have arrested at least 15 people on child pornography or weapons-related charges, and accused them in court of being associated with 764.

In one of those federal cases, a 24-year-old Arkansas man, Jairo Tinajero, plotted to murder a 14-year-old girl who started resisting his demands. When he pleaded guilty to conspiracy and child pornography charges three months ago, Tinajero said he believed the murder would raise his stature within the 764 network. His sentencing is set for August.

In another federal case, 19-year-old Jack Rocker of Tampa amassed a collection of more than 8,300 videos and images that the Justice Department called "some of the most horrific, evil content available on the Internet." He pleaded guilty in January to possessing child sexual abuse material and was sentenced to seven years in prison.

While amassing his collection, Rocker organized his digital content into folders with titles such as "764" and "kkk-racist." Another folder, called "trophies," contained photos of victims who carved his online monikers into their bodies -- a form of self-mutilation known as "fan signing." He also had a folder titled "ISIS," referring to the international terrorist organization that produced barbaric beheading videos.

Followers of the 764 network share all sorts of violent content with their victims, while some also glorify past mass-casualty attacks such as the 1999 Columbine High School shooting, or introduce victims to other extreme ideologies like neo-Nazism or Satanism, according to authorities.

"They want to desensitize these young people so that nothing really disturbs them anymore," Scott said.

Just two weeks ago, the Justice Department announced the arrest of a 20-year-old North Carolina man, Prasan Nepal, for allegedly operating an elite online club dedicated to promoting 764, extorting young victims, and producing horrific content. He has yet to be arraigned.

An undated photo shows Bradley Cadenhead, the founder of the initial "764" group, who is serving an 80-year prison sentence in Texas after pleading guilty

Texas Department of Criminal Justice
In charging documents, the Justice Department said Nepal helped launch 764 with its Texas-based founder more than four years ago.

Though charging documents don't identify the founder by name, federal law enforcement sources identified him to ABC News as Bradley Cadenhead, who is serving an 80-year-prison sentence in Texas after pleading guilty to several child pornography-related charges in 2023.

According to court documents, Cadenhead launched his new online community on the social platform Discord and called it "764" because at the time -- when he was 15 -- he lived in Stephenville, Texas, where the ZIP code begins with the numbers 764.

'It's everywhere'

Since the launch of the initial 764 group, which garnered a couple of hundred Discord followers, 764 has become a global movement, with an array of offshoots and subgroups that often rebrand and change their names to help keep social media companies and law enforcement from tracking them.

The original 764 was itself an offshoot of previous extremist and gore-focused groups online.

"Think of this less as a group, and think of it more as an ideology," Vernon police detective Tommy Van Tasel said of 764 and similar networks. "It doesn't matter what they're called. There are a lot of actors out there ... encouraging this type of behavior. So it's everywhere. It's in every community."

Indeed, the young Connecticut girl that Van Tasel would eventually investigate was sucked into 764 by a man overseas.

Reflecting what her family described as a typical 764-related encounter, the girl met him on the popular online gaming platform Roblox, and then they began communicating more regularly online, including on Discord, which caters to gamers.

The man convinced her he was her boyfriend, and she sent him sexual photos of herself -- the types of images that 764 adherents threaten to share widely if victims don't comply with their escalating demands.

An undated photo found by Vernon, Connecticut, police on the devices of a 17-year-old girl associated with the online network 764 shows a Barbie Doll


Vernon Police Department

According to police, she had produced an assortment of 764-related content, including a photo of a nude Barbie doll marked with "764" on its forehead; photos depicting her cutting herself; and a note, written in her blood, calling her supposed boyfriend "a god."

"They felt like they owned her," the girl's mother said.

And, fearing even further extortion, the girl began participating in some of the same threatening behavior that she had endured herself, according to Van Tasel.

Scott said it's common to "have victims who then become subjects" by perpetrating acts "on behalf of the individual who victimized them."

According to her family, the Connecticut girl was trained to hack into Roblox accounts and lock them -- which allowed her to make demands of account owners if they wanted their accounts back. And she allegedly helped direct a series of threats that rattled Vernon-area schools for three months in late 2023 and early last year.

"I have placed two explosives in front of Rockville High School, and if they fail to detonate, I'm going to walk into there and I'm just going to shoot every kid I see," a male with a British accent claimed during a call to Vernon police in late January 2024.

Those threats led Van Tasel to the girl whose mother spoke with ABC News. The girl was arrested on conspiracy-related charges and referred to juvenile court.

But even before her arrest, she had started to resist some of the demands that were being directed at her. As a result, her family's home was bombarded by incidents of so-called "swatting," when false reports of crimes or violence try to induce SWAT teams to respond to a location in an effort to intimidate targets there.

"One time ... they had surrounded our whole house," the girl's mother said. "And then that kept going on and on."

Scott said swatting is a common tactic used by adherents of 764 and similar networks when they don't get compliance.

The man at the heart of the Connecticut girl's ordeal is still under investigation by authorities, according to Van Tasel.

'Be on the lookout'
Van Tasel and Scott offered several tips to parents worried about whether their children could fall victim to 764. In particular, they said parents should watch what their children are doing on applications and online games.

A spokesperson for Roblox agreed, saying in a statement to ABC News that parents should "engage in open conversations about online safety," especially because 764 is "known for using a variety of online platforms" to evade online safeguards.

A Discord spokesperson, meanwhile, said that 764 is "an industry-wide issue," and that the "horrific actions of 764 have no place on Discord or in society."

Both spokespeople said each of their companies is "committed" to providing a safe and secure online environment for users, with both noting that each company uses technology to remove harmful content and, by policy, prohibits behavior endangering children.

Discord added that "behind the scenes" it made "proactive disclosures of information to law enforcement" and, "where possible," assisted authorities in building the case against Nepal, who allegedly helped launch 764.

Van Tasel and Scott said parents should also look out for changes in their children's activities or personality, and watch for questionable injuries to family pets or evidence of self-harm.

Scott said that if a child is wearing long-sleeved clothing or trying to cover up their body on hot days, that could be a sign of self-harm.

"Just be on the lookout for any of those things that are alarming, and just have in the back of your mind that this may all be a result of what is happening online," Van Tasel said, urging parents to call law enforcement if they have concerns.

As for the Connecticut girl caught up in 764, her mother told ABC News that she cooperated with authorities, the case against her is "almost resolved," and she's now "back on track" after getting help.

"Back to having friends, back to attending activities," her mother said. "Not quite back to where she was when it all began, but she's getting there."

https://abcnews.go.com/US/fbi-opened-250-investigations-tied-violent-online-network/story?id=121480884

May 5, 2025

Manufacturing Mania: The Dopamine Hypothesis of Religious Experience


A Dose of Reason


This video dives into the science behind faith, exploring how psychological suffering, dopamine, and social reward can create the powerful illusion of encountering God.

About John Hunter:
Dr. John Hunter is a South African researcher and lecturer, based in Johannesburg. His interest in large group awareness trainings (LGATs) – and their impact on mood and psychosis – is grounded in his personal experience of bipolar disorder and his participation in an LGAT in 2010. In 2017, he completed a Ph.D. in psychology at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, proposing a neurobiological explanation for the relationship between LGAT conditions and results. Specifically, Dr. Hunter put forward the dopaminergic defense hypothesis, offering insights into both the “transformational” experiences associated with LGAT participation, and the common claims of psychological harm and problematic behavior associated with participation. In 2022, Dr. Hunter published an article explaining the dopaminergic defense in the Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion, in July 2023 he presented this work at the annual International Cultic Studies Association (ICSA) conference in Louisville, Kentucky, and in June 2024 acted as an expert witness in a United States federal court regarding the use of LGATs in the Troubled Teen Industry. Dr. Hunter’s first book, Manufacturing Mania: The Dopamine Hypothesis of Religious Experience, is complete and is now available.


https://youtu.be/nXAl0jjCh1g?si=nl1cE7zyC6sIkvX8&sfnsn=mo 

May 2, 2025

Sovereign micronation causes cult concerns in Hawkins County

Liam Bridgeman
WYCS
May 1, 2025

"Residents in Hawkins County have been in an uproar over a 60-acre property on Stanley Valley Road.

According to the deed, the property was purchased by NewEarth Nation Coalition, a group hoping to establish what they call a sovereign micronation in Hawkins County.

Marsha Willardson is the trustee of the NewEarth project in Tennessee.

“We're setting up communities where people who are working and discovering their souls journey their soul path their sole purpose and looking to find divinity and bring it as an expression of a community,” Willardson said.

She says, the coalition hopes this project will be the first of many across the nation and they look to begin with 7 to 10 people and their families.

Hawkins County Commissioner Syble Vaughan Trent, who grew up near the property has concerns.

“The literature that I have says that they're going to bring in 200-300 people. Well, this property will not accommodate 200-300 people” Vaughan Trent said.

According to the group's website, they are led by the founder of NewEarth Sacha Stone and they're selling ‘golden tickets’ at 10,000 dollars apiece to be part of the nation.

Neighbors Wayne and Mary Ellen Field have reservations.

“You don't know who these people are or where they are coming from,” Mary Ellen said.

“We came down here from Maryland hoping to have a nice peaceful retirement until this company came and bought this property back here,” Wayne said.

Representatives with the group told News 5 the project is still very early in the planning stages but they do plan to meet on the property for a ceremony in June and it's open to the public.

“I say to the whole community, I'd love to see you there. When you really experience what we are bringing you will know for sure. Your first-hand knowledge is so valuable,” Willardson said."


https://wcyb.com/news/local/sovereign-micronation-causes-cult-concerns-in-hawkins-county

May 1, 2025

US national charged with operating global child exploitation enterprise

Thao Nguyen
USA TODAY
May 1, 2025

Two men have been arrested and charged for allegedly playing key roles in operating "one of the most heinous online child exploitation enterprises" federal authorities have ever encountered, the U.S. Attorney's Office said.

Leonidas Varagiannis, 21, and Prasan Nepal, 20, are accused of leading "764 Inferno," a core subgroup of a U.S.-based criminal online network known as "764," according to the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia. The group targeted vulnerable people, specifically children, online and used violent tactics that were designed to induce self-harm, a criminal complaint states.

"764 is a network of nihilistic violent extremists who engage in criminal conduct in the United States and abroad, seeking to destroy civilized society through the corruption and exploitation of vulnerable populations, which often include minors," the U.S. Attorney's Office said in a news release April 30. "The 764 network’s accelerationist goals include social unrest and the downfall of the current world order, including the United States Government."

Varagiannis, who is known online as "War," is a U.S. citizen residing in Greece and was arrested in the northern Greek city of Thessaloniki on April 28, prosecutors said. Nepal, known as “Trippy,” was arrested on April 22 in North Carolina.

The two men allegedly conspired with and directed at least half a dozen other members or prospective members of "764 Inferno" to commit malicious crimes, according to the criminal complaint. They face a maximum penalty of life in prison if convicted, prosecutors said.

These young men were being blackmailed. Then, they lost more money.

Federal authorities have referred to "764" as a "nihilistic violent extremist" network that operates within the United States and across the world. The group is one of several online-based cybercrime networks within a broader network known as “the Com,” which includes violent and cybercriminal activity, according to Reuters and CyberScoop.

In March, the Federal Bureau of Investigation warned in a public service announcement that there has been a "sharp increase" of "764" activity and other related violent online networks.

"These networks methodically target and exploit minors and other vulnerable individuals, and it is imperative the public be made aware of the risk and the warning signs exhibited by victims," the FBI said. "These networks exist on publicly available online platforms, such as social media sites, gaming platforms, and mobile applications commonly used by young people."

According to the agency, these networks threaten and manipulate victims into producing and sharing acts of self-harm, animal cruelty, sexually explicit acts, or suicide. Footage of these acts is then shared among members of these networks to extort victims and control them.

'Facilitated the grooming, manipulation, and extortion of minors'
The criminal complaint alleged that members of "764 Inferno" operated through encrypted messaging applications, in which they made and distributed child sexual abuse material. Prosecutors said the group's activities occurred from late 2020 to early 2025, during which "core leadership roles" were assigned to both Veragiannis and Nepal.

The material was used with "other gore and violent material to create digital 'Lorebooks,'" according to prosecutors. The group's "Lorebooks" were used as digital currency within "764," which members traded, archived in encrypted "vaults," and used to recruit new members or maintain status within the network, prosecutors said.

The complaint detailed how Veragiannis and Nepal provided step-by-step instructions for other members on how to groom and extort a potential victim. The two also set production expectations, which were based on the quality and notoriety of content for new recruits, the complaint alleged.

What is sextortion? This fast-growing crime targets teen boys. Here's what to do about it.

According to the complaint, Veragiannis and Nepal exploited at least eight victims under the age of 18 across multiple jurisdictions, and some content was traced to children as young as 13. The complaint also alleged that both Veragiannis and Nepal threatened and coerced their victims to engage in self-mutilation, online and in-person sexual acts, harm to animals, sexual exploitation of siblings and others, acts and threats of violence, and suicide.

"The defendants facilitated the grooming, manipulation, and extortion of minors," the U.S. Attorney's Office said. "Veragiannis and Nepal allegedly ordered their victims to commit acts of self-harm and engaged in psychological torment and extreme violence against minors .. This content includes 'cut signs' and 'blood signs' through which young girls would cut symbols into their bodies."

Allison Nixon, chief research officer for cybersecurity company Unit 221B, told Reuters that Varagiannis and Nepal are "major actors," and that their arrests are a positive development.

"Com-related crime waves are driven by a small number of highly prolific actors,” Nixon added. “Arrests really are a winning strategy."

If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis, help is available. Call or text 988 or chat at 988lifeline.org.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2025/05/01/764-global-child-exploitation-enterprise/83378660007/