Jul 10, 2026

Qi emission

The dramatic physical reactions observed in Qi emission demonstrations—where students convulse, weep, or are thrown across the room without physical contact—are textbook examples of non-verbal compliance and the ideomotor effect. These responses are rarely conscious faking; rather, they are complex physiological responses amplified by the psychological pressures of a high-demand environment.

Here is a breakdown of the psychological and physiological mechanisms at play.

## The Psychological Drivers
In esoteric martial arts and Qigong lineages, the master-student dynamic often mirrors the structure of high-demand groups. The intense pressure to validate the master's authority heavily influences the student's psychological state.

 * **The Ideomotor Effect:** This is a psychological phenomenon where intense expectation translates into unconscious physical movement. Because the student is deeply conditioned to believe the master is projecting a physical force, their nervous system reflexively yields or convulses to manifest that belief. The student experiences the movement as happening *to* them, completely outside their conscious control.

 * **Demand Characteristics and Somatic Compliance:** In a strict hierarchy, a master’s authority relies on the efficacy of their Qi. A student who fails to react might be implicitly labeled as having "stagnant energy," being "spiritually blocked," or simply lacking the requisite skill to perceive the master's power. Convulsing becomes a form of somatic compliance—a physical demonstration of loyalty, belief, and submission to the group's narrative.

 * **Emotional Contagion and Social Proof:** When senior, highly respected students dramatically writhe or collapse in response to the master's Qi, it establishes a powerful behavioral template. This social proof normalizes the reaction for junior members. In closed group settings, this can trigger a form of mass psychogenic response, where the expectation of a physical reaction becomes socially infectious.

## The Physiological Triggers
The mind's expectations are often supported by the actual physical conditions the students are placed in prior to and during the demonstration.

 * **Hyperventilation and Altered Blood Chemistry:** Many of these demonstrations occur during or immediately after the student has engaged in prolonged, intense breathing exercises. Over-breathing alters the carbon dioxide levels in the blood (respiratory alkalosis). This naturally causes physical symptoms like tingling in the extremities, lightheadedness, and involuntary muscle cramps or spasms, which are easily misinterpreted as "energy."

 * **Hypnotic Suggestibility and Trance:** The repetitive movements, rhythmic breathing, and intense, singular focus required in Qigong often induce a mild dissociative or trance state. In this highly suggestible condition, the critical, analytical part of the brain is bypassed, making the student much more susceptible to the master's verbal or non-verbal cues.

 * **The Startle Reflex:** Masters frequently utilize sudden, aggressive movements, sharp breaths, or loud shouts (such as a *kiai* in martial arts). When a student is already hyper-focused and physically tense, this sudden stimuli triggers the autonomic nervous system's startle response. The resulting sudden flinch, jump, or collapse is a basic human reflex that is immediately post-rationalized by both the student and the audience as the impact of external Qi.

Here is a selection of foundational texts and research spanning psychology, physiology, and group dynamics that explain the mechanisms behind these dramatic demonstrations.

## The Ideomotor Effect and Suggestibility
 * **"How People Are Fooled by Ideomotor Action" by Ray Hyman (1999):** Published in *Skeptical Inquirer*, this is a definitive modern breakdown by psychologist Ray Hyman on how strong expectations translate into unconscious, involuntary physical movements (such as those seen in dowsing, Ouija boards, and Qi demonstrations).
 * ***The Principles of Psychology* by William James (1890):** James originally formalized the concept of "ideomotor action," positing that every mental representation of a movement naturally awakens to some degree the actual movement, which is the foundational principle behind somatic compliance in these demonstrations.
 * ***Tricks of the Mind* by Derren Brown (2006):** While written by a psychological illusionist, this book provides an excellent, accessible breakdown of how hypnosis, suggestion, and the ideomotor effect are used practically to create the illusion of invisible forces, including specific dissections of martial arts "no-touch" knockouts.

## Group Dynamics and Social Compliance
 * ***Cults in Our Midst* by Margaret Thaler Singer (1995):** Clinical psychologist Margaret Singer details how high-demand environments utilize physiological manipulation—including hyperventilation and prolonged guided visualization—to induce trance states, bypass critical thinking, and enforce compliance within the group hierarchy.
 * ***Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism* by Robert Jay Lifton (1961):** Lifton's concept of "Milieu Control" explains how closed groups manipulate an individual's communication and environment. In esoteric martial arts, this control creates an environment where failing to physically react to the leader's "energy" carries heavy social penalties, driving unconscious somatic compliance.
 * ***Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion* by Robert B. Cialdini (1984):** Cialdini’s principles of *Social Proof* and *Authority* outline exactly why junior students begin convulsing only after watching senior members do the same. The nervous system mirrors the established behavioral template of the authority figure's inner circle.

## Physiology and Respiratory Alkalosis
 * ***Guyton and Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology* (John E. Hall):** The standard medical text outlining the mechanics of hyperventilation. It details how rapid, deep breathing (common in Qigong preparation) blows off excess CO2, leading to respiratory alkalosis. This alters blood pH, causing decreased calcium levels in the blood, which directly triggers muscle spasms, tingling (paresthesia), and tetany (involuntary contractions)—symptoms often misinterpreted as "Qi."
 * **"Mass Psychogenic Illness: A Social Psychological Analysis" by Robert E. Bartholomew and Simon Wessely (2002):** Published in *Psychological Medicine*, this paper explores how intense physical symptoms (like hyperventilation and collapsing) can rapidly spread through a tightly knit group facing high psychological pressure or expectations.

Jul 8, 2026

CultNEWS101 Articles: 7/8/2026

Culture & Media

New Docuseries

Ministry Of Evil: The Twisted Cult Of Tony Alamo


Chilling docuseries based on the life of televangelist Tony Alamo.


This four-part docuseries is a deep dive into Susan and Tony Alamo’s Christian Foundation. Founded in 1969 to bring those ‘dirty hippies’ into the fold, their message back then was: ‘repent or perish’.


Susan, who had faked cancer for years, died of breast cancer in 1982, aged 56, and although Tony and her followers fully expected her to rise from the dead, Tony had to work hard without Susan’s charisma to keep the ministry and its multiple businesses afloat.

Susan’s estranged daughter Christhiaon is one of the more prominent contributors, describing Tony as ‘extra baggage’ and reminding us that it was Susan who ‘started this mess’. Without her, the ministry was to descend into criminal chaos, when it was already pretty corrupt.


New Publications

Key points

  • Cult leaders and human traffickers use similar techniques to entrap new recruits.

  • Adults can help young people learn to protect themselves from recruitment into cults and trafficking.

  • "Taken No More" by Robin Boyle-Laisure provides suggestions for adults to help youth stay safe.


In Taken No More, law professor and cult expert Robin Boyle-Laisure, J.D., discusses commonalities between cults and human trafficking. In the mix, she also considers intimate partner violence and child sexual abuse. Coercive control unites these diverse situations.


The book is subtitled, “Protect Your Children Against Traffickers and Cults.” A good chunk of it is directed toward parents and educators. However, it also seems relevant to professionals in mental health, child protection, and the law, as well as to casual readers with an interest in these topics.


Updates

UnHerd: The Sikh sect linked to Henry Nowak's killer Nihangs revel in swords and sovereignty

Writing in Unherd, reporter Amardeep Bassey explains the story of the Nihangs order within the Sikh tradition, to which the murderer Vickrum Digwa belonged. Digwa was sentenced to life for stabbing to death teenager Henry Nowak, in Southampton, with a knife known as a pesh-kabz, a straight-bladed dagger especially associated with the Nihangs. In the UK, the movement has a few hundred adherents.


The article says that the Nihangs were mentioned in the judge’s sentencing remarks, and the report is an account of the order, its beliefs, history, and the extent of its influence.


U.S. Attorney's Office, Western District of Washington: Texas couple indicted for psychic fraud scheme, allegedly stealing millions from vulnerable people

A Texas couple, Bridgette Doreen Evans (alias Jolene Travis) and her partner, Washington, were involved in a sophisticated "psychic fraud" scheme. Prosecutors allege the pair targeted emotionally vulnerable individuals, such as those grieving a loss or experiencing romantic struggles, by claiming they could "cleanse" victims of curses or romantic misfortune.


Between April 2021 and July 2024, the couple reportedly defrauded at least three victims of approximately $2.5 million. Evans, using multiple aliases, convinced victims to liquidate their financial holdings—often sending money in the form of cash or gold coins—under the guise that she would "cleanse" the funds and return them. Uwanawich allegedly facilitated the fraud by managing bank accounts, selling gold, and vouching for Evans to gain trust.


The indictment reveals that Evans previously used similar tactics in Florida and Texas, at one point even operating from prison. The couple now faces charges of conspiracy to commit wire and mail fraud, with each count carrying a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison. The FBI is continuing its investigation into the scheme.


AI Research Disclosure: To bring you the most relevant stories, parts of this newsletter utilize artificial intelligence (AI) tools to search the web, source articles, and assist with content curation. This content is for informational purposes only; we recommend verifying critical facts independently.


News, Education, Intervention, Recovery

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Leading Scholars Slam Jailing of Orgasm Guru Using Junk Science

Twenty religious freedom scholars warn that the OneTaste forced labor case sets a dangerous precedent.
Daily Beast
July 7, 2026

Twenty of the world’s leading religious freedom experts have condemned the U.S. government for using a debunked “brainwashing” theory to imprison an “orgasm meditation” guru, PunchUp reports. Nicole Daedone, 58, founded OneTaste, the San Francisco company that ran a sexuality-focused wellness program for its paying students. Its alleged victims testified that they consented to the practices, and no physical force was alleged. Yet a Brooklyn jury convicted Daedone and former sales chief Rachel Cherwitz, 45, of forced labor conspiracy in June 2025. In March, Judge Diane Gujarati, a Donald Trump appointee, sentenced Daedone to nine years and Cherwitz to six-and-a-half years. The bipartisan scholars—among them Harvard Law’s Alan Dershowitz and the London School of Economics’ Eileen Barker—signed a memorandum through the Turin-based Center for Studies on New Religions calling the case “a significant threat to religious liberty and democratic norms.” The memo supports an analysis by Massimo Introvigne, the Italian sociologist who founded the Turin-based Center for Studies on New Religions (CESNUR), and is widely regarded as the world’s foremost authority on new religious movements. “Some may not understand why new religious movement scholars regard the OneTaste case as an extremely dangerous precedent,” Introvigne told PunchUp, our sister investigations Substack. “It is not about the content of the OneTaste courses and practices. It is about an American court that reintroduced the pseudo-scientific theory of brainwashing from the back door of trafficking laws, thus putting all religions that rely on volunteer labor in potential danger.” Daedone’s appeal is now before the Second Circuit. The Daily Beast has contacted the Department of Justice and the FBI for comment.

Self-Help Recovery from Coercive Control

Self-Help Recovery from Coercive Control

Many survivors of coercive control struggle to access support in the aftermath of their experiences. An absence of professionals with appropriate training, financial limitations, isolation, and lack of trust are just a few reasons many survivors find themselves alone in their recovery journey. 

This study aims to better understand self-help recovery processes.

Interview Participants needed:
Survivors of any type of coercive control whose recovery process has included some element of self-help; they may have also had professional support, but not necessarily. Candidates will have been out of the controlled environment for 12 months or more.

Researcher: Anami Shucart, A.T.Shucart@edu.salford.ac.uk
Supervisor: Rod Dubrow-Marshall, R.Dubrow-Marshall@salford.ac.uk

Jul 7, 2026

HBO Max premieres its documentary series THE GOOD SPIRIT: BEHIND THE DOOR OF OPUS DEI this fall

HBO Max premieres its documentary series THE GOOD SPIRIT: BEHIND THE DOOR OF OPUS DEI this fall

HBO Max today announced the fall premiere of its new original documentary series THE GOOD SPIRIT: BEHIND THE DOOR OF OPUS DEI, produced by THE MEDIAPRO STUDIO for HBO Max in Spain, created and directed by Mònica Terribas.

Following the media and social impact of the documentary series THE HEROIC MINUTE, I TOO LEFT OPUS DEI, which was awarded the 2025 Ondas prize - which addressed the labor, spiritual and psychological abuse to which, according to the testimonies of thirteen women, they are subjected within the institution - many men who had left Opus Dei also needed to explain the role they had played within the Work.

According to their own accounts, they were recruited from childhood and destined to become numeraries or priests of Opus Dei. The series analyzes their descriptions of psychological control, recruitment practices, and oppression, as well as their accounts of the alleged underlying dynamics of power, money, influence, and control.

THE GOOD SPIRIT: BEHIND THE DOOR OF OPUS DEI features the testimonies of 14 men of all ages from eleven different countries, who recount their personal experiences within the reality of Opus Dei: Spain, Italy, France, Poland, Germany, England, and across the Atlantic in Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, the United States, and Argentina. Many of them held positions of responsibility as directors, secretaries, and members of Local Councils within their centers, as well as officers of Regional Commissions. Others were called to support the institution from the highest levels of their professional careers to expand Opus Dei. Some, as numeraries, associates, or priests, were sent as teenagers to countries from which they never returned.

Their shared experiences shed light on the functioning of the Work, its economic dynamics and influence , through the Regional Commissions, the Local Councils, the educational, university and research centers, as well as the dynamics of spiritual direction and precepting on adolescents and young university students.

“The men within Opus Dei command, maneuver, administer, mortify themselves, sacrifice themselves, and, like the women, they also break down. It is heartening to hear them speak on behalf of the many who do not yet dare to stand before the camera and who have been part of the research for this series,” declared Mònica Terribas Sala, screenwriter and director of THE GOOD SPIRIT: BEHIND THE DOOR OF OPUS DEI.

To contextualize the protagonists' testimonies, the documentary features the voices of experts, such as Santiago Bueno Salinas, professor of canon law, also judicial vicar and president of the Ecclesiastical Tribunal of Barcelona; María Esther Fernández Mostaza, professor of sociology at the Autonomous University of Barcelona and author of the book Els fills de l'Opus; Dr. Vega González, clinical psychologist and managing director of Care and Research in Social Addictions (AIS); Gareth Gore, investigative journalist and author of Opus; and Rebecca Griffin, director of The Deep Dive Project.

The series features reenactments that reconstruct the protagonists' stories, played by actors Joel Bosqued and Guillem Balart and directed by Pere Sala.

THE GOOD SPIRIT: BEHIND THE DOOR OF OPUS DEI is an HBO Max original documentary series in Spain produced by THE MEDIAPRO STUDIO. Mònica Terribas, Bernat Elías, and Amparo Castellano are the executive producers for THE MEDIAPRO STUDIO. Bibiana González is the Director of Non-Fiction Content for HBO Max. María Rubio and Zaida Serrano-Piedecasas serve as executive producers for Warner Bros. Discovery.


Research participation opportunity: on spiritual life after religious/spiritual abuse

Rayann Gordon is researching spiritual abuse and is conducting a study on how people reconstruct their spirituality after leaving an abusive situation. She is talking to people who were hurt in a variety of spiritual settings: Buddhist, Christian, New Age, etc.

Here is the info: 

Looking for participants for

“Reconstructing the Sacred: A Mixed Methods Study of Recovery After Spiritual Abuse,” a research project exploring what recovery looks like after spiritual abuse, including the role of grief, ritual, finding new meaning, how your spirituality has changed, and what helped along the way.

You may be eligible if you:

Are aged 18 or over and fluent in English
Have experienced religious or spiritual abuse in the past
Have been out of the abusive situation for at least three years
Currently have a meaningful spiritual life
Feel that participation would not be distressing for you

What's involved:

Two brief online questionnaires and a 60–90 minute Zoom interview about your recovery journey and spiritual life now.
Participation is entirely voluntary and confidential.


Or contact Rayann Gordon (Researcher): r.gordon5@edu.salford.ac.uk

This study has been approved by the University of Salford Ethics Committee. Academic supervisor: Dr Linda Dubrow-Marshall.

The Make-Believe

The Make-Believe
A Memoir of Magic and Madness
By Hannah Murray

Book Description

From Skins and Game of Thrones star Hannah Murray, a “genuinely jaw-dropping” (Vogue) memoir about fame, mental illness, and the struggle to leave a shadowy wellness organization whose belief in magic shattered her reality.

“A frank and often darkly funny exploration of the convergence of hedonism with the self-help industry.”—The Guardian

I lost my mind. I lost myself. I got them back. But they are different . . .

From her breakout role as a teen actor on the cult TV show Skins to critically acclaimed movies to the smash hit Game of Thrones, Hannah Murray built a career in Hollywood, cracking open her own psychological foundations and pushing her body to its limits. But one day, the line between make-believe and reality disappeared, and she found herself confined to a psych ward, dangerously in love with the leader of a shadowy wellness organization, and believing in magic. How she got there—and how she managed to rebuild her life—is the heart of this gripping, powerful memoir that asks: How far would you go to find enlightenment?

For Hannah, it was deceptively easy to fall down the rabbit hole. As she struggled with her mental health, she sought help in the form of wellness and self-care. After an eye-opening session with an energy healer, Hannah was introduced to an organization that she was told would bring her further spiritual rewards. Enthralled by its charismatic leader and his teachings of a world filled with magic and meaning, Hannah found herself sucked into a rigorous practice involving high control and financial outlay. And as her sense of reality began to slip, eventually resulting in her hospitalization and diagnosis with bipolar disorder, she realized she had fully ceded control of her life to this mysterious organization. And, she thought, as she reckoned with the Hollywood career that conditioned her to give her body and soul over to others, maybe she’d been doing that her whole life.

Both a cautionary tale and a cry for radical empathy, Hannah’s story of learning to trust herself will resonate with anyone who has struggled to find agency. The Make-Believe is a probing exploration of womanhood and mental health, and a search for the healing that comes from reclaiming our own narratives.

American perceptions and personal experiences regarding coercive or cult-like groups

YouGov poll conducted in October 2025:
2,232 U.S. adult citizens. 
The poll was conducted between October 2nd and October 6th, 2025, with a margin of error of ±2.7%.




  • 32% of Americans report knowing someone who has joined a coercive or cult-like group. 
  • 18% knowing an acquaintance, 
  • 12% a friend, 
  • 12% a family member, and 
  • 3% who report having personally joined one.

  • 45% of the public believes that coercive or cult-like groups are more common today than they were in the past.
  • 32%: The average person is susceptible to recruitment.
  • 53% of Americans view individuals who join coercive groups as victims of manipulation, whereas 
  • 28% hold the individuals responsible for their own choices.

Yogaville Lawsuit Analysis with Legal Expert Marci Hamilton: What the Joint Statement Really Means


Yogaville Lawsuit Analysis with Legal Expert Marci Hamilton: What the Joint Statement Really Means

In this episode of Surviving Satchidananda, host Briana Patton examines the recently settled lawsuit filed by Shanti Norris and Susan Cohen against Yogaville and Integral Yoga. The plaintiffs alleged they were subjected to coercive control and sexual abuse by the late Swami Satchidananda while they were teenage devotees.

​Patton interviews legal expert Professor Marci Hamilton, who contextualizes the lawsuit within the broader history of clergy abuse. Hamilton explains how charismatic religious leaders use coercive control to manipulate victims, noting that powerful institutions frequently protect predators and attempt to hide behind the First Amendment to avoid legal accountability. She draws parallels between this case and other high-profile abuse scandals, emphasizing the urgent need to eliminate statutes of limitations for child sex abuse.

​The episode concludes by analyzing the lawsuit's recent confidential settlement and joint public statement. While Patton respects the survivors' choice to settle after four grueling years of litigation and counter-lawsuits, she harshly criticizes Yogaville's leadership. She condemns the statement’s minimizing language—which reframes grooming and abuse as "inappropriate sexual activities"—and calls out the organization's claim of ignorance as false, given decades of open secrets. Patton concludes that, despite the flawed settlement, the public record has been permanently changed.
​(Source: Yogaville Lawsuit Analysis with Legal Expert Marci Hamilton)

https://youtu.be/re58x9boFMI?si=mTCzN9MbCpOybdNL 

You lose the person; they're still there but you don't recognize them”: A qualitative study examining the consequences of conspiracy beliefs for romantic partners

British Journal of Social Psychology
Volume 65, Issue 1
Lea C. Kamitz, Ricky Green, Cassidy Rowden, Daniel Toribio-Flórez, Mikey Biddlestone, Karen M. Douglas
12 December 2025

This study examined how conspiracy beliefs influence romantic relationships. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 17 partners (or ex-partners) of conspiracy believers, asking questions about their experiences in their relationships. A thematic analysis generated several key themes. Specifically, participants described how their partner's beliefs led to relational strain in the form of conflict and communication breakdown, which was tied to the psychosocial death of the partner and the relationship. There were several negative effects on participants, as their partner's beliefs not only affected their relationship dynamic but also took a psychological and physical toll on the participants themselves. Sense-making became important as participants tried to understand their partner's beliefs. Ultimately, most relationships deteriorated, and many ended, though some remained intact due to financial or emotional barriers. During this process, participants reported seeking support and started to navigate endings in the case of relationship dissolution. These findings extend current knowledge on the consequences of conspiracy theories for interpersonal relationships, suggesting that they pose significant barriers to successful romantic attachments.

Maternal Exorcism

Maternal Exorcism Wednesday 8th July 2026. 7.30pm at The Fanatic Salon, 3815 Sawtelle Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90066

Tickets are free/donate at the door. Reservations: call 615-400-5620.

At 41, Zoe Lambert is not an alcoholic. Just emotionally dependent on cheap whisky. Reeling from her mother’s death, she unpicks a life’s work as a carer and her strict religious upbringing as a Jehovah’s Witness, which she swore she had left behind.

Both hilarious and heartbreaking, A Maternal Exorcism sheds light on the lingering impact of coercive control and religious trauma in a high-control group.

“A passionate and gripping piece of theatre” Lancashire Post (UK).

Zoe says, “How do you write a love letter to your dead mother when all you want is to shout at her? This show is for anyone who has experienced the confusion of conditional love or coercive control. Or wondered what life is like for the JW who knocks on your door”.

Adapted from her memoir-in-progress, A Maternal Exorcism premiered in Montreal in 2025 before winning the UK's 2025 Bay Fringe Festival’s award for ‘Best Local Theatre’.

Zoe Lambert is a writer and lecturer at Lancaster University (UK). Her short stories have been widely published in the UK, including her collection, The War Tour (Comma Press). Brought up as a Jehovah’s Witness, she is now a board member of the International Cultic Studies Association.

The show is brought to the US by Ken Bernstein of CK Productions, who just earned his master's in the Psychology of Coercive Control at The University of Salford, and premiered Steve Earle’s Karla, Jeremy Child’s Vampire Monologues, and Bruce Arnston’s The Doyle and Debbie Show and Petrie.

Please note that this performance is educational. Tickets are free/donation to cover costs only. Reservations 615-400-5620

What No One Told Me About the Medicine I Was Taking

Brooklyn Balance: What No One Told Me About the Medicine I Was Taking

In this blog post, Josh Jupiter recounts a distressing experience with an underground "plant medicine" group, highlighting the critical importance of informed consent.

The author describes being invited to a group led by a facilitator who projected professionalism and safety while maintaining an air of exclusivity and mystery. Participants were encouraged to "Trust, Let Go, Be Open" (TLO)—a mantra the author later realized discouraged critical thinking and masked a lack of transparency. Despite an initial screening process that appeared thorough, participants were never informed about the actual substances they were being given, which were vaguely labeled as "heart openers" or "plant medicine."

Through his own research and piecing together information over time, Jupiter discovered that the substances included MDA, MDMA, Syrian Rue, and barbiturates. He emphasizes the danger of this lack of disclosure, noting that Syrian Rue—an MAO inhibitor—can create life-threatening pharmacological interactions when combined with other substances like MDMA, particularly for individuals with specific health conditions or those taking other medications.

The piece serves as a cautionary tale about the risks of high-demand or unregulated groups that prioritize secrecy over safety. Jupiter concludes that without clear, honest communication about what is being consumed, true informed consent is impossible, leaving participants vulnerable to significant physical and psychological harm. This experience was a foundational moment in his shift toward his current professional work in advocacy and education.

https://www.brooklynbalance.org/blog/knowwhatyourtaking

CultNEWS101 News: 7/7/2026

Culture & Media

Videos

Biography: David Koresh and the Raid That Shook America

"Followers from around the world travel to Mount Carmel to hear the preaching of David Koresh, a local Texas working-class kid turned prophet of God and leader of the religious group The Branch Davidians. But as Koresh's teachings become more and more apocalyptic, members of the group question his motives, in this full documentary, 'Waco: Madman or Messiah.'"


Updates

Amnesty International: China: Detention of church leaders signals intensifying attacks on religious freedom

"...The Early Rain Covenant Church said on Monday it was raided by armed police midway through its Sunday service in the south-western city of Jiangyou, Sichuan province.


Spokespersons for the church said more than 30 members were taken away for interrogation, and two leaders remain detained. A church messaging account shared photographs and videos that show congregants surrounded by SWAT (Special Weapons and Tactical Unit) officers.


Founded in 2005, the Early Rain Covenant Church is one of the largest and most prominent “house churches” in China. In December 2018, authorities carried out a large-scale crackdown on the church, detaining more than 100 members. The church’s founding pastor Wang Yi was later convicted of “inciting subversion of state power” and “illegal business operations” and sentenced to nine years’ imprisonment in December 2019.


Tricked into Trance: How Cults Misuse Meditation and Hypnosis for Mind Control and Exploitation of Followers

"Tricked into Trance: How Cults Misuse Meditation and Hypnosis for Mind Control and Exploitation of Followers" argues that high-control groups weaponize altered states of consciousness to bypass followers' critical thinking. While these states can promote healing in healthy contexts, the article posits that cults use them to implement sophisticated psychological manipulation.


The author explains that intense meditation quiets the brain’s Default Mode Network (DMN)—which governs ego, skepticism, and boundaries—leaving the subconscious highly vulnerable. By inducing this state, leaders can plant ideologies, demand obedience, and foster dependency without resistance.


The process is often accelerated through forced, intensive breathing exercises. This practice—hyperventilation followed by breath retention—alters blood chemistry, constricts cerebral blood vessels, and forces the brain into theta- and delta-wave states. Physiologically, this starves the "security guard" of the critical mind, rendering the participant unable to analyze or question incoming information.


Consequently, followers transition from an intense, euphoric experience into a state of profound suggestibility. Manipulators exploit this by framing the resulting feelings of peace as a product of the leader's "grace." This shifts a natural physiological response into a perceived supernatural blessing, transforming feelings of gratitude into absolute, unquestioning obligation toward the organization and its leadership. Ultimately, the article warns that individuals may appear fully functional on the outside while their internal values, reality, and life choices are being systematically dictated by the cult's indoctrination process.


Five takeaways: Star investigation into alleged Southern Arizona 'cult'

An Arizona Daily Star investigation has brought significant scrutiny to the Global Community Communications Alliance (GCCA), a religious group based near Tumacacori, Arizona. Often described by former members as a "cult," the organization faces allegations of high-control tactics and exploitation.


The investigation highlights five key takeaways regarding the group's operations:

  1. Forced Labor Allegations: Former members have filed lawsuits claiming they were subjected to long, unpaid workdays as a condition of membership. Allegations suggest that children within the community were also expected to perform manual labor, with schooling being minimal and focused primarily on indoctrination.

  2. Highly Profitable Hospice: The GCCA operates Soulistic Hospice, which has become a significant financial engine for the group. Between 2021 and 2024, the hospice generated roughly $12 million in annual revenue, primarily through Medicare.

  3. Large Financial Transfers: From 2010 to 2024, the hospice transferred nearly `$35 million in grants to the GCCA. This resulted in an approximate 34% profit margin, a figure significantly higher than the national average for hospices, which often operate with much narrower or negative margins.

  4. Defensive Response: The GCCA has formally denied all allegations of wrongdoing. In a written statement, the group maintained that membership is a voluntary commitment made after a six-month trial period, asserting that members willingly contribute their labor to sustain the community.

  5. Closed Campus Environment: Legal filings characterize the GCCA as a high-control, closed-campus religious group. These reports reinforce the testimonies of former members who describe a life defined by strict adherence to the group's mission at the expense of personal autonomy.


AI Research Disclosure: To bring you the most relevant stories, parts of this newsletter utilize artificial intelligence (AI) tools to search the web, source articles, and assist with content curation. This content is for informational purposes only; we recommend verifying critical facts independently.



The selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not imply that Patrick Ryan, Joseph Kelly, or Ashlen Hilliard endorse the content. We provide information from multiple perspectives to foster dialogue.

Please forward articles you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.


Jul 6, 2026

CultNEWS101 News: 7/6/2026

Culture & Media

Videos

Deceived - The Jonestown Tragedy

Directed by Mel White, this documentary investigates the 1978 Peoples Temple massacre in Jonestown, Guyana, where 913 people died. Hosted by a pastor and seminary teacher, the film features exclusive interviews with survivors and family members to explore how ordinary, devoutly religious people from diverse backgrounds were subtly deceived by Jim Jones.


Initially, the Peoples Temple attracted followers by offering a deeply warm, racially integrated, and socially active community that cared for outcasts, drug addicts, and senior citizens. However, survivors detail the slow, calculated process of psychological manipulation used by Jones. He systematically replaced existing authorities in members' lives, positioning himself as the ultimate voice of God.

To enforce absolute dependence, Jones systematically isolated members from outside contact, banned regular media, and deliberately tore down nuclear families and marriages by forcing public confrontations. He maintained a punishing environment of severe sleep deprivation, requiring 16 to 18 hours of labor a day to leave followers too exhausted to question his choices. Discipline gradually escalated from whippings to the public torture of children and staged "poisoning" loyalty tests. Furthermore, members were coerced into turning over all personal incomes and properties, accumulating a hidden $26 million fortune while followers starved. The film concludes with the horrific audio recordings of Jones commanding his followers to execute an act of "revolutionary suicide," framing death as mere sleep.


Updates

Research & Academic.

Two-thirds of Americans think the average person is susceptible to cult recruitment


An October 2025 YouGov survey asked Americans which groups they think use cult-like tactics, which groups could be defined as cults, and who is susceptible to being recruited into cults. Many Americans think the average person is susceptible to being recruited into a cult, but very few see themselves as susceptible.


  • Majorities of Americans say that political groups (68%), religious groups (64%), and spiritual groups (62%) very or somewhat often engage in coercive or cult-like behavior. 

  • Majorities say the same about each of the social media platforms (56%) and online groups (56%); 48% say this about multi-level marketing businesses.

  • Democrats are more likely than Republicans to say cult-like behavior often occurs with religious groups (72% vs. 53%) and spiritual groups (67% vs. 56%). Democrats are less likely than Republicans to say educational groups often engage in cult-like behavior (21% vs. 37%).

  • Half of Americans say anyone is vulnerable to being recruited by a cult.

  • About half (53%) of Americans believe that people who join coercive or cult-like groups are mostly victims of manipulation.

  • About half of Americans believe people who join cult-like groups are victims of manipulation

  • Nearly two-thirds (62%) of Americans think the average person is very or somewhat susceptible to being recruited by coercive or cult-like groups, including 12% who think the average person is very susceptible.

  • Far fewer Americans (17%) say they themselves are susceptible to being recruited by cult-like groups. Adults under 30 are about twice as likely as older Americans to say they believe they are susceptible to being recruited by cult-like groups (29% vs. 14%).

  • About one-third (35%) of Americans have been approached in person by a group or person that was part of a coercive or cult-like group. Americans who live in the West are more likely than those who live in other regions to have been approached by a group or person in a cult-like group (43% vs. 28%).

  • Only 14% of Americans have been approached online by a group or person that was part of a coercive or cult-like group.

  • One-third (32%) of Americans say they know someone who has joined a coercive or cult-like group, including 18% with an acquaintance, 12% with a friend, 12% with a family member (12%), and 3% who have personally joined a cult-like group. 40% of Americans who live in the West know someone who has joined a cult-like group, compared to 29% of those who live in other parts of the country.

  • Nearly half (45%) of Americans say coercive or cult-like groups are more common today than they were in the past. Americans 65 and older are more likely than younger adults to say cults are more common now (56% vs. 42%).


Ongoing Focus

NDTV: Pune 'Godman' Abused Woman For Years, Made Her Drink His Urine

Radheshyam Mishra, aka Radhamohan Mishra, ran what he called a 'modern gurukul' in the Ubale Nagar area of Wagholi in Pune.


In a case from Pune, a self-styled "godman" named Radheshyam Mishra (aka Radhamohan Mishra) and seven of his associates have been arrested for the long-term exploitation of a woman. Operating under the guise of a "modern gurukul" in Wagholi, Mishra convinced the victim that he was an incarnation of God.


Between 2010 and 2016, Mishra systematically isolated the woman, forcing her to divorce her husband and submit to years of sexual abuse, physical assault, and torture, including the use of electric shocks. Furthermore, he blackmailed her using recorded obscene videos and coerced her into committing thefts to enrich himself and his ashram. Following a police raid, authorities seized large amounts of electronic evidence, cash, jewelry, and drugs. Police, currently analyzing the recovered materials, suspect there may be more victims and have called for a thorough investigation. All eight accused remain in custody.


Fox 13: Scientology wins battle over Clearwater street, lawsuit looms

The Clearwater City Council voted 3-2 on Thursday to allow the Church of Scientology to take control of a section of South Garden Avenue. The church plans to use this land, located between Franklin and Court streets, to construct a new venue, "L. Ron Hubbard Hall," as part of an expansion of its downtown campus.


The decision followed hours of heated debate at a meeting that drew over 2,000 people to the Clearwater Main Library, prompting officials to implement a strict public comment system. Proponents argued the closure would enhance church security and provide a space for community events. Conversely, opponents, including Mayor Bruce Rector, criticized the transfer of public land without a plan for an alternative route.


Despite the council's approval, the controversy is ongoing. A grassroots organization called "Save The Garden," which opposes the proposal, has already filed a lawsuit challenging the decision. The legal conflict centers on the contested ownership of the land underneath the street, setting the stage for a judicial review of the city’s action.


SportsNet: How Blue Jays’ Dylan Cease uses yoga to unlock success on the mound

Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Dylan Cease has distinguished himself in the major leagues not only for his mound performance but also for his unique approach to mental and physical preparation. A practitioner of yoga and meditation, Cease credits these "internal arts" as fundamental to his success.


Rather than viewing yoga merely as a workout, Cease utilizes it to cultivate internal awareness, body alignment, and the ability to maintain focus under the intense pressure of professional baseball. He has spent significant time studying under the guidance of yogi Sadhguru, learning practices that focus on transcending the mind and building mental resilience. For Cease, these routines help him stay grounded through the natural ups and downs of a long season, allowing him to enter a "flow state" more effectively. This commitment to mindfulness has become a hallmark of his persona, setting him apart from typical clubhouse culture and contributing to his consistency.


AI Research Disclosure: To bring you the most relevant stories, parts of this newsletter utilize artificial intelligence (AI) tools to search the web, source articles, and assist with content curation. This content is for informational purposes only; we recommend verifying critical facts independently.


The selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not imply that Patrick Ryan, Joseph Kelly, or Ashlen Hilliard endorse the content. We provide information from multiple perspectives to foster dialogue.

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