Showing posts with label Ideal Human Environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ideal Human Environment. Show all posts

Aug 15, 2019

CultNEWS101 Articles: 8/15/2019

Zoroastrianism, Lev Tahor, Ideal Human Environment, Gaslighting, The School of Chung Moo Quan

BBC: Tomorrow's Gods: What is the future of religion?
"Before Mohammed, before Jesus, before Buddha, there was Zoroaster. Some 3,500 years ago, in Bronze Age Iran, he had a vision of the one supreme God. A thousand years later, Zoroastrianism, the world's first great monotheistic religion, was the official faith of the mighty Persian Empire, its fire temples attended by millions of adherents. A thousand years after that, the empire collapsed, and the followers of Zoroaster were persecuted and converted to the new faith of their conquerors, Islam.

Another 1,500 years later – today – Zoroastrianism is a dying faith, its sacred flames tended by ever fewer worshippers.

We take it for granted that religions are born, grow and die – but we are also oddly blind to that reality.

We take it for granted that religions are born, grow and die – but we are also oddly blind to that reality. When someone tries to start a new religion, it is often dismissed as a cult. When we recognise a faith, we treat its teachings and traditions as timeless and sacrosanct. And when a religion dies, it becomes a myth, and its claim to sacred truth expires. Tales of the Egyptian, Greek and Norse pantheons are now considered legends, not holy writ.

Even today's dominant religions have continually evolved throughout history. Early Christianity, for example, was a truly broad church: ancient documents include yarns about Jesus' family life and testaments to the nobility of Judas. It took three centuries for the Christian church to consolidate around a canon of scriptures – and then in 1054 it split into the Eastern Orthodox and Catholic churches. Since then, Christianity has continued both to grow and to splinter into ever more disparate groups, from silent Quakers to snake-handling Pentecostalists.

If you believe your faith has arrived at ultimate truth, you might reject the idea that it will change at all. But if history is any guide, no matter how deeply held our beliefs may be today, they are likely in time to be transformed or transferred as they pass to our descendants – or simply to fade away.

If religions have changed so dramatically in the past, how might they change in the future? Is there any substance to the claim that belief in gods and deities will die out altogether? And as our civilisation and its technologies become increasingly complex, could entirely new forms of worship emerge?

To answer these questions, a good starting point is to ask: why do we have religion in the first place?

Reason to believe

One notorious answer comes from Voltaire, the 18th Century French polymath, who wrote: "If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him."Because Voltaire was a trenchant critic of organised religion, this quip is often quoted cynically. But in fact, he was being perfectly sincere. He was arguing that belief in God is necessary for society to function, even if he didn't approve of the monopoly the church held over that belief.

Many modern students of religion agree. The broad idea that a shared faith serves the needs of a society is known as the functionalist view of religion. There are many functionalist hypotheses, from the idea that religion is the "opium of the masses", used by the powerful to control the poor, to the proposal that faith supports the abstract intellectualism required for science and law. One recurring theme is social cohesion: religion brings together a community, who might then form a hunting party, raise a temple or support a political party."

"A Lev Tahor cult member was arrested in New York, Wednesday [July 31st] night, and is being charged with kidnapping. Mordechai Yoel Malka was arrested upon his arrival at Newark Airport, as he arrived on a flight from Guatemala.

He was expected to be charged with identity theft, as he allegedly used a fake passport to fly to the United States, and kidnapping charges. Malka was allegedly the Michallel Shabbos who drove 14-year-old Yante Teller and her 12-year-old brother Chaim when they were kidnapped from Woodridge early on a Shabbos morning in December of 2018.

The two children of the Teller family had recently escaped from the cult in Guatemala and were spending Shabbos in the Catskills, when the kidnapping occurred.

The mother had been a member of Lev Tahor – her father, Rabbi Shlomo Helbrans, founded the sect in 1994 – but fled the group last year after its leadership, which include her brother Mayer Rosner, became increasingly extreme, according to the FBI."

"A well-established Australian cult that has been operating for about 30 years, and even hosted Prince Harry, is likely to continue in its quest to create the ideal human environment, despite its leader being jailed.

Key points:

    • The cult of James Salerno, known as Taipan to his followers, dates back to the 1980s
    • A former documentary maker filmed the inner workings of the group in 2015
    • He was shocked to hear Salerno had been charged with child sex offences
The group of about 30 members — now based in remote Western Australia — has strong business ties across rural Australia, including a law firm, clothing label and pastoral business.

On Monday [July 29th], its founder and leader James Gino Salerno, a former school teacher and Vietnam veteran, was sentenced to at least eight years in jail for repeatedly sexually abusing a teenage girl within the group."


Psychology Today: Why a Gaslighting/Narcissist Relationship Is So Devastating
"People tend to start life with the view that people are basically good. If you had trauma in childhood, such as abuse, that worldview changes quickly. The people who you were supposed to trust in your life didn't protect you. If you make it into adulthood with the perception that people are basically good and then get into a relationship with a gaslighter, the view of people being generally good can change. Here's a person that told you he loved you, and then he turned into a monster. This is a person that would drop the "mask" that they wore, and what you saw underneath terrified you. You saw a person who not only didn't have your best interests in mind, they were the furthest thing on his mind.

They Erode Your Trust in Yourself

Part of a gaslighter's strategy is to make you think you are not capable of functioning without her. She will tell you that you are crazy, or that what you saw and heard "isn't really what happened." By making you feel like you're unstable, you start relying on the gaslighter to give you the "correct" version of reality. This manipulation assures the gaslighter that you will stay with her and continue feeding her narcissistic supply. You may start to feel like you perceive things incorrectly. Gaslighters will even hide your items and tell you that you are irresponsible and can't be trusted. They tell you that you are crazy, that they told other people you're crazy, and that your friends and family think you're crazy. Read "Gaslighters Tell You Other People Think You're Crazy Too." "
They Erode Your Trust in Yourself

Part of a gaslighter's strategy is to make you think you are not capable of functioning without her. She will tell you that you are crazy, or that what you saw and heard "isn't really what happened." By making you feel like you're unstable, you start relying on the gaslighter to give you the "correct" version of reality. This manipulation assures the gaslighter that you will stay with her and continue feeding her narcissistic supply. You may start to feel like you perceive things incorrectly. Gaslighters will even hide your items and tell you that you are irresponsible and can't be trusted. They tell you that you are crazy, that they told other people you're crazy, and that your friends and family think you're crazy. Read "Gaslighters Tell You Other People Think You're Crazy Too." "

"I met Jesse Eisenberg when I was an extra on the film End of the Tour when it was filming in Minnesota along with Jason Segel and Joan Cusack. As an extra I was instructed not to approach him, or talk to him and especially don't ask for a picture. I stood next to him. He smiled at me, shook his head and acknowledging me, said hello. That was the extent of us meeting. There are well founded reasons for this set etiquette and overzealous celebrity worshipping fans is just one of them. That is not me. Of course, most of the footage of me was cut. What neither Jesse nor I knew then, standing next to each other, is that he would portray a character with striking resemblance to my life in the film The Art of Self Defense.

As a child and a teenager, I was severely bullied. When I was 16 years old I joined a martial arts school that was a front for one of the most notorious martial arts cults, The School of Chung Moo Quan. I have been outspoken about my experience there since the early 1990s and so this gives me a unique perspective to review this film. The use of answering machines and other electronics placed the film in the 1990s period. This was a time when the martial arts and a black belt still had a mystical aura around them, but that was coming to an end. In the beginning of the film, Jesse Eisenberg's character Casey Davis is targeted and physically assaulted by a group of motorcyclists and hospitalized. Casey is timid, lonely, and socially awkward. His only companion is his beloved pet dachshund. According to mind control experts, cults seek out those that are vulnerable, that are lonely and lacking direction.

As Casey enters the school for the first time, unknown to him there was a hidden agenda. Upon meeting the school's charismatic and mysterious instructor only known as Sensei, played by Alessandro Nivola. He offers Casey a chance to come back for the "Free Lesson". This is common in most martial schools and in my case when I did them, they were an orchestrated part of the indoctrination process. Casey would be led into a journey of darkness that he would never had agreed to if he knew Sensei's agenda to begin with.

Upon stepping onto the practice mat, Casey is still wearing his shoes. Anna, the female brown belt instructor played by Imogen Poots, is teaching the children's class. She chastises him that if Sensei sees him on the mat, he would be beaten. On the wall of the school is a list of 10 rules and the 11th rule: "Guns are for the weak." "No shoes on the mat" is rule number 1. In Chung Moo Quan, stepping into the practice area with shoes on normally would result in the student having to do pushups. At other times they would be beaten.

When I tell people that I had been in a martial arts cult, they are surprised that such a thing exists. But when you really think about it, it's really not all that surprising. Martial arts have a leader, a master that is overtly praised, and rank and file observe a hierarchy created by the belts system. The myths and legends and mystical thinking of the martial arts, combined with the American ignorance of Asia, creates the perfect recipe for martial arts cults, some referred to as McDojo's. It does not require any certification to open a martial arts school. Someone can get out of prison and open a school. I think that one of the only reasons you don't see more of these cults is due to the efforts of legitimate schools to expose them."



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Aug 2, 2019

Inside James Salerno's cult and its quest to create the 'ideal human environment'

PHOTO: James Salerno (left) leaving court in Adelaide. (ABC News)
Claire Campbell, Rebecca Opie and Daniel Keane
ABC Local
August 1, 2019


Watch Video


A well-established Australian cult that has been operating for about 30 years, and even hosted Prince Harry, is likely to continue in its quest to create the ideal human environment, despite its leader being jailed.


Key points:

  • The cult of James Salerno, known as Taipan to his followers, dates back to the 1980s
  • A former documentary maker filmed the inner workings of the group in 2015
  • He was shocked to hear Salerno had been charged with child sex offences

The group of about 30 members — now based in remote Western Australia — has strong business ties across rural Australia, including a law firm, clothing label and pastoral business.

On Monday [July 29th], its founder and leader James Gino Salerno, a former school teacher and Vietnam veteran, was sentenced to at least eight years in jail for repeatedly sexually abusing a teenage girl within the group.

The victim said Salerno — who insisted on being referred to as "Taipan" — "brainwashed, belittled … violated and damaged" her, and left her feeling like a "piece of meat".

The cult lived in the Adelaide Hills in a house once owned by the family of former foreign affairs minister Alexander Downer.

Salerno's children attended prestigious local schools — Cornerstone College and Mercedes College.

The cult eventually relocated to Queensland and later to Western Australia, where it is still based in Kununurra in the Kimberley region.

Documentary filmmaker David Bradbury spent several weeks in Kununurra in 2015, filming the inner workings of the group and interviewing Salerno.

"I was quite shocked when the news came through that James had been arrested and charged with having sex with an underage person," Mr Bradbury said.

He told the ABC the Salerno family was "highly motivated and well-educated" and strongly rejected being referred to as a "cult".

"It seemed to be a pretty normal functioning place there without any underbelly," Mr Bradbury said.

"There was certainly a reverence or a holding James Salerno in a bit of a guru-type position.

"He was wanting to establish a community that was different to how we do things in nuclear and non-nuclear families in Australia."

He said most members of the group worked normal jobs as accountants, lawyers and stockmen, while others would volunteer their labour in exchange for food and board.
Group members own a law firm and clothing company

Some of the group's members own a law firm — Salerno Law — which represents pastoralists, farmers and rural clients around Australia from its offices in Kununurra and the Gold Coast.

"One of the sons had flown … Prince Harry when he came and visited Australia some years ago," Mr Bradbury said.

In 2012, members also helped to form outback clothing company Ringers Western while also running the Salerno Pastoral Company.

"Actually, I think Prince Harry wore some of our clothes when he stayed with us," Salerno's daughter Emma told the Gold Coast Bulletin in March.

"Prince Harry was touring Kununurra in his last Australian visit before getting married and he stayed at our property.

"We kept it very low-key which I think he enjoyed … we took him shooting and riding — he loved it."

But the Royals were not the only ones to come calling on Salerno — the media and MPs also sought his company and counsel.

According to a 2013 South Australian parliamentary report, former Labor MP Lyn Breuer met with the cult leader during a tour of outback communities.

While Ms Breuer was clear that she did not endorse Salerno's teachings, she said he offered "interesting insights into education and psychology".

"Salerno made it his personal quest to discover a safer way for people to resolve their conflicts," she wrote.

Mr Bradbury said twice a week, Salerno's group would hold a meeting called "the wisdom bank" where members could air their grievances and resolve conflicts with the guidance of Salerno.

"They would thrash out issues — a teenager might have a problem with his or her mum or dad, trivial things through to more serious issues," Mr Bradbury said.

"James was brought up with a good work ethic … they were doing some good work with drug rehabilitation."

Mr Bradbury's film never aired, but he said he was able to glean various biographical details.

Documents collated by Ms Breuer showed Salerno was born in Benevento, Italy in 1947 and moved to Australia with his family seven years later.

At the age of 19, he joined the Australian Army and served in the Vietnam War.

Mr Bradbury said it was the trauma of Vietnam that sparked Salerno's interest in creating an "ideal human environment".
Women were submissive to men

After returning from Vietnam, Salerno became a teacher at a remote Aboriginal school and also spent time learning from Pitjantjatjara elders.

"Salerno travelled the world extensively, researching and studying different social systems, cultures and religions," documents stated.

"[He] also gained qualifications in teaching, nursing and naturopathy and acquired skills in psychology and counselling."

Mr Bradbury said that, in Salerno's society, women were submissive to men within the group and his partner, who had accompanied him on his visits, felt restricted in what she could do.

"Like that real old-school, 50s patriarchal-type society, for sure," he said.

"Notwithstanding the fact that James's daughter was a high-flying lawyer in the practice and it didn't seem to me that she was suppressed or not going to speak her mind at all.

"She was very much out there with branding, and cutting the balls off bulls, I filmed her doing that on the property … it wasn't just tokenism, she looked like someone plucked out of one of those country magazines."

Salerno lived in his own house on the property, as did his children, while other couples had their own bedrooms and private living facilities.

Salerno has launched an appeal against his convictions which will be heard in Adelaide's Court of Criminal Appeal in November.

Mr Bradbury said he expected the group would continue without him.

"[Salerno] put his imperator on the group and it came out of his own philosophical and practical observations of human nature and what he's pieced together," Mr Bradbury said.

"[He] had that very much quietly controlling influence on it, the women in particular, and his two sons, they are not nincompoops.

"They're not people who are … mentally deranged at all and they would be quite capable of exploring and continuing what James did."
Creating 'Project Research 2000'

Mr Bradbury is one of several documentary makers and journalists who have taken an interest in Salerno's group over the years.

During the 1990s, about 70 people from Australia and China set up camp on the banks of a waterhole on El Questro station to try and create "the ideal human environment" dubbed "Project Research 2000".

They included Salerno's own family and several other families.

"We've researched and tested some principles over the last 30 years of the ideal human environment," Salerno told ABC reporters who visited the site in 1999.

"I guess the definition … is that it's an environment people would rather live in than any other human environment."

Participants were ranked based on their skills and attributes including humility, business acumen, fitness and compassion.

Initiation also played a big role — with group members, including young children, required to undertake overnight bushwalks in the remote Kimberley alone without food or water.

However, the project did not go exactly to plan.

Two tents were burnt during a bushfire, several people contracted gastro, and others were hospitalised after developing tropical sores.

Several months after the research project began, only half of the group remained.

Around the same time, Salerno's group helped to establish the Ideal Human Environment (IHE) Foundation.
Group returned to Adelaide Hills

Between 2001 and 2008, members of the group — which was registered as a tax-exempt charity — moved to the historic Arbury Park mansion in the Adelaide Hills.

The case against Salerno largely focused on the group's activities when it was based at the 10-hectare property.

The 17-room stone mansion was the childhood home of Alexander Downer and was built by his father, Sir Alexander, in 1935.

The SA Government bought the property in 1964 and it was used by the Education Department as a training centre for teachers prior to being sold to the Salerno family.

Salerno had a large bedroom suite to himself on the second floor of the mansion and other group members lived in dormitory style accommodation called "The Barracks".

"The IHE necessarily required that people live communally and devote their resources, energy and, where appropriate, their earnings to the benefit of the group," Judge Paul Slattery said in his judgement against Salerno in May.

The so-called "wisdom bank" was responsible for making decisions including those concerning the future of the children in the group, often without any parental input.

The court heard women in the group were submissive to men, and girls as young as 13 were taught by older women how to be a "personal server" to their leader and tend to Salerno's needs, including massaging him and running him baths.

In handing down the sentence, Judge Slattery said Salerno groomed his victim and sexually abused her over two-and-a-half years.

Salerno was found guilty of eight counts of unlawful sexual intercourse with a child.

"You abused your position of primacy within the group to not only groom and sexually abuse the complainant but to ensure that she was fearful of speaking out about your actions," Judge Slattery said.

Salerno was sentenced to 10 years in prison with a non-parole period of eight years.

The ABC has attempted to contact the Salerno family for a response.

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-08-01/inside-james-salernos-outback-cult/11364154

Jul 31, 2019

Leader of Australian Cult the 'Ideal Human Environment' Has Been Jailed for Sexual Abuse

THE GROUP'S ARBURY PARK MANSION ON THE LEFT, AND JAMES "TAIPAN" SALERNO ON THE RIGHT. IMAGES VIA FLICKR USER SYDNEY OATS, CC LICENCE 2.0 (L) AND YOUTUBE/MATTEO SALERNO (R)
James "Taipan" Salerno founded the cult in the early 80s. Yesterday, he was found guilty of repeatedly sexually abusing a young member.

Gavin Butler
VICE
July 31, 2019,

This article originally appeared on VICE AU.

The leader of a cult dubbed the “Ideal Human Environment” (IHE) has been locked up for 10 years after being found guilty of eight counts of unlawful sexual intercourse with one of his teenage followers. James Gino Salerno, 72, appeared via video link in the South Australian District Court yesterday on allegations that he had sexually abused a young girl who fled the group several years ago—grooming her for sex from the age of 13. He allegedly told the victim it was his role to teach her “how to be a lady”, The Australian reports.

He has now been sentenced to 10 years in prison with a non-parole period of eight.

James Salerno, or “Taipan”, as he insisted his followers call him, formed IHE in South Australia’s Adelaide Hills during the early 80s, after returning from the Vietnam War. “I came back from Vietnam and I realised that war is the worst human environment,” he told The Weekend Australian in 2015. “So I dreamt up, I imagined, the opposite of that.”

Between 2001 and 2008, Salerno ran daily meetings at the group’s Arbury Park mansion, where much of the sexual abuse in question allegedly took place. As the cult grew in size, he and his devotees were forced to relocate to Beaudesert, in south-east Queensland, before finally moving to a compound in Western Australia's Kimberley region.

Between these three states, and over the course of some 40 years, Salerno conducted social experiments in an attempt to find a system of living he described as the “Ideal Human Environment”. These included giving a chronic gambler $100,000 so the group could witness and understand addiction, and buying three luxury cars so they could experiment with the idea of luxury car use on the Gold Coast. These “research projects” were funded by the cult members, who handed over most of their assets and income to the group as a joining fee.

Other details surrounding the peculiar goings on within IHE emerged over the past 12 months, as Salerno stood trial on the multiple charges of abuse for which he was charged this week. Among those details were claims that “Taipan” convinced his followers that he was an omnipotent god; that he made them dress in all white garb; and that he insisted they salute him like Russell Crowe’s character from Gladiator.

The complainant explained to the court in October that after a group viewing of Gladiator Salerno decided to introduce a new form of salutation, as inspired by Russell Crowe’s character in the film. Every time he entered a room the group’s members were expected to stand to attention, place their right arm over their shoulder and say “Strength and honour”.

"This was decided after the group had watched the movie Gladiator as a sign of respect and power," the complainant said.

"Taipan was a person that we were made to believe to be feared… he was God, he was someone that would bring down hell upon you. It was a lot of talking about how great Taipan was and how he was put on this Earth as God's gift and how we should all honour that. We would often wear white clothes because that was like a pure energy and we were often told we were there to serve Taipan.”

The complainant also claimed that Salerno selected a group of females to perform “healings” and massages on him, and that she was taught how to cut his nails, run his baths, and pick fruit for him.

When handing down the sentence yesterday, District Court Judge Paul Slattery said that Salerno’s offending—which took place in Salerno­’s bedroom in the Adelaide Hills house, as well as in the back of his car during a camping trip—was “very serious­”.

“You have been found guilty of unlawful sexual intercourse that occurred over a two-and-a-half-year ­period, against a young girl between­ the ages of 13 and 16 years,” Justice Slattery said. “You abused your primacy position within the group to not only groom and sexually abuse the complainant but to ensure that she was fearful of speaking out about your actions, and instille­d in her thoughts that no one would believe her even if she did speak out. Your offending has had a profoun­d effect on the complainant as she is still suffering ongoing physical, mental and emotional issues.

“To this day, you maintain your innocence and you’ve shown no contrition for your actions,” he added. Salerno is appealing against the guilty verdicts.

After the sentence was handed down, the victim told the ABC that she felt "justice has been served".

"The girls can sleep easy now, the ones that are still left in there," she said. "That's all I wanted from the start, to help the other girls."

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This article originally appeared on VICE AU.

https://www.vice.com/en_in/article/xwne4d/leader-of-australian-cult-the-ideal-human-environment-has-been-jailed-for-sexual-abuse