Showing posts with label Jon Atack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jon Atack. Show all posts

Jun 19, 2022

Profile: Jon Atack

Jon Atack
Jon Atack is best known as a leading expert on Scientology, but in the 30 years since the publication of Let’s Sell These People a Piece of Blue Sky, he has studied many other destructive cult groups and other forms of authoritarianism, including terrorist radicalization, racial supremacy, multi-level marketing, conspiracy theories, human trafficking, pedophile grooming, and domestic abuse.

Jon is a court-appointed expert witness who has consulted on more than 150 cases around the world. He has been a source for more than 200 media pieces, including many books and documentaries. Jon has written more than 500 papers and articles. He recently published a chapter co-authored with Steven Hassan, Ph.D. in the Oxford University Press book, Lone Actor Terrorism.

Jon has lectured extensively, including hosting the Getting Clear of Scientology seminar in Toronto with Professor James Beverley, and giving a talk at the highly prestigious Eton College this year. Jon’s latest book is Opening Our Minds: avoiding abusive relationships and authoritarian groups, which is available in print, as an e-book, and as an audiobook. As emeritus professor of law, ICSA Board member Alan Scheflin says in the introduction, “If you want to make your body stronger, go to a gym. If you want to make your mind stronger, pay close attention to what this book tells you. Not only will you learn how to spot and avoid threats to your mental integrity, you will also have the pleasure of reading a very fine book.”

Jon has posted more than 300 videos on his YouTube channel jon atack, family and friends,including interviews with some of the leading experts on cults, authoritarianism, and coercive control. Jon is currently working on a preventative curriculum for schools covering all the topics raised in the book. By teaching the next generation how to recognize human predators and their techniques, and how to spot fake news and propaganda far fewer of them will be lured into authoritarian groups or other abusive relationships.

Jon is currently working on a preventative curriculum for schools covering all the topics raised in the book. By teaching the next generation how to recognize human predators and their techniques, and how to spot fake news and propaganda far fewer of them will be lured into authoritarian groups or other abusive relationships.

Jon has made a special video for the ICSA conference, which you may view here: https://youtu.be/U8TvHvHZUfc


And feel free to dip into the complete Jon Atack video library on YouTube. Here are some sample videos:

Our ‘Essentials’ playlist -

https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLOprfY0DnRsZthjWcYatg3g_6NJiNHqw9

Yuval Laor’s “Belief and Fervor” presentation, which describes the evolutionary adaptations that make us more susceptible to groupthink:

Jon’s favorite interviews:

When mindfulness harms w/ Joe Kelly and Pat Ryan - https://youtu.be/up30Qh0M32o

False friendships in cults w/ Hoyt Richards- https://youtu.be/Ku3vLyI_zYk

Surviving NXIVM w/ Sarah Edmondson - https://youtu.be/U7pdXoVUMqI

The enemy within w/ Sam Atack - https://youtu.be/66NzDyx4pVc

Advice for would-be interventionists w/ Pat Ryan and Joe Kelly - https://youtu.be/_aMUdR7v3NU

Helping people escape authoritarian cults w/ Joe Kelly - https://youtu.be/-RJt_-VsXmo

Cults, New Religious Movements, and diplomacy w/ Pat Ryan - https://youtu.be/ALrmv_MGeKo

How Scientology harassment works w/ Mike Rinder - https://youtu.be/M6KxZ6lnvIU

Hypnosis and altered states w/ Pat Ryan - https://youtu.be/0m8wAhg85fQ

Membership, c-word cults n culture w/ Pat Ryan and Joe Kelly -

Part 1 :https://youtu.be/eUu9mTNFjeg

Part 2: https://youtu.be/NbsdY2ivHpk

And, finally, an offering by Spike, discussing dangerous misconceptions people have about authoritarian groups and relationships: https://youtu.be/1eRSvAUSxm8


Some praise for Jon from Professor Steven Kent:

“I appreciate the staggering amount of research material that Mr. Atack had to assimilate and present.

He demonstrated impeccable judgment concerning his sources, and similarly he showed artistic skill in his ability to present complex … material in graceful and clear prose. Had his book been offered by a doctoral candidate … it would far exceed necessary standards … an unrivalled piece of superb scholarship. Quickly his book has become one of the classic studies of sectarianism and deviant belief systems. All future scholarship on Scientology will build upon his contribution.”

—Professor Stephen Kent, Sociology and History of Religion, University of Alberta


And one may download our free, printable ‘how to spot a predator’ poster here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1-Xlw2b5YJqq1j766GhFGLhTyUn_z46CG/

how to spot a predator’ poster

More from Jon Atack

opening our minds chapter one and introduction with Alan Scheflin

 

before we begin

Human predators roam among us. Although there aren’t many of them, they have a tremendous influence. To them, the rest of us are prey. Predators manipulate their prey using well-tried tricks. Once you know these tricks, it is much easier to avoid them or to stop them in their tracks.

Every bad relationship, every destructive group, every dangerous government has a human predator at its heart. 

Predators rely upon persuasion. In honest persuasion, we have access to all of the facts – and different opinions about those facts – and enough time and privacy to consider these facts and opinions.

But then there is the type of persuasion used by predators, which is simply manipulation. To manipulate means to manage or influence skillfully, especially in an unfair manner. Facts are hidden or distorted, and we are rushed into decisions that take away our own authority and harm our interests.

Predators cause upset, conflict, corruption and devastation. By seeing through their methods, we can take power away from human predators and have a much greater chance to overcome the problems they cause in our personal and group relationships.

Here is a quick description of the human predator:




Human predators:

  • are mean.

  • are utterly selfish.

  • pretend friendship and love but feel absolutely nothing for others.

  • are charming and good at flattery, but don’t mean a single word of it.

  • brag and boast and make up outrageous lies. When challenged, they blame others.

  • don’t feel anxiety or fear - or are deeply anxious and cowardly.

  • are impulsive and easily bored. They demand thrills and take dangerous risks. They enjoy pushing others into taking dangerous risks, too.

  • are bullies with explosive tempers.

  • are cunning and manipulative.

  • enjoy humiliating people.

  • weaken people with insults and putdowns.

  • hate it if anyone else has power or is praised. For the predator, life is a competition and they want to WIN.

  • lie easily and think nothing of breaking a promise.

  • are without conscience: they do not feel remorse or guilt.

  • often boast about the harm they’ve done other people.

  • are parasites and lazy, living off others, giving as little as possible in return.

  • are control freaks, stopping others from taking control of anything if they can.

  • force petty rules on others – rules that are impossible to follow.

  • boast about tricking other people and breaking the law.


This book will show you how to deal with predators and how to make society safe from their tricks and traps.




introduction

The most precious and personal part of every person is his or her own mind. No one else ever sees it, or knows exactly what it is thinking or feeling. It is our most sacred possession because it houses our innermost identity. It defines for us precisely who we are, and who we are not. We can hide the truth from others, but not from ourselves. Or so we think.

But our mind, like our body, needs nourishment. Other people feed our mind with thoughts, suggestions, comments and ideas. We choose which ones to accept and which ones to reject. And we feel confident that we are good at doing so. But are we?

To be good at protecting our minds we must be familiar with the tactics and strategies that may be used by others to outmaneuver our natural protections and defenses. You can see a punch coming, but not a carefully crafted lie or manipulation strategy, unless you are trained to look.

The greatest threat to the autonomy of our mind is from people who seek to influence it for their own best interests, but present themselves as our friends and helpers. Every one of us has great confidence in our ability to protect ourselves from other people acting in ways that would harm our own best interests. We have faith that we have a strong mind, have good “crap detectors” and are not easily influenced.  I call this “The Myth of the Unmalleable Mind.” As kids are fond of saying, “Sticks and stones can break my bones, but words can never hurt me.” But they can. 

For the last 60 years I have studied how people can be fooled, seduced, altered and injured by con artists with exquisite expertise in mental manipulation. I have journeyed through Soviet, Chinese, Korean and American government programs to mentally enslave citizens and enemies, and private cultic groups around the world that have millions of devout followers. I have studied the tactics of advertisers and marketing specialists, the techniques of police interrogators, the dark literature of the antisocial uses of hypnosis, and the exquisite artistry of rhetoric and persuasion.

During this journey I encountered Jon Atack and found a fellow traveler, and a friend. My journey has been as a research scholar; Jon's journey began by being a victim. After he freed himself from the clutches of a cultic group, he chose to make saving others his life's work. There are very few "warriors of the mind." Jon is one of the best. 

In this book, Jon has written a handbook for mental integrity. A botanist studies what insects and pests can harm plants and flowers. Jon has provided us with a handbook for protecting the mind from often invisible forces seeking surreptitiously to undermine freedom of thought. 

One of the fastest growing areas of law is the expansion of protection for victims of mental assault. British and American law for over 500 years has recognized that it is a violation to act towards another person with undue influence. The cases, however, usually involved older people conned out of their life savings by dishonest caretakers. These cases involve financial harm. Within the last twenty years, however, courts and legislatures have recognized that undue influence can also include mental harm. New laws now widen the protections available for people injured by mind manipulators. The need for such laws demonstrates how serious the problem has become.

Lord Thomas Robert Dewar once observed that “minds are like parachutes; they only function when open.” This book is a manual for keeping your mind open. If you want to make your body stronger, go to a gym. If you want to make your mind stronger, pay close attention to what this book tells you. Not only will you learn how to spot and avoid threats to your mental integrity, you will also have the pleasure of reading a very fine book.


~Alan Scheflin, professor emeritus of law


Alan Scheflin holds a BA in philosophy (with high honors), a JD in law (with honors), an LLM in law, and an MA in counseling psychology. He is the co-author of The Mind Manipulators (1978) and Trance on Trial (1989) and many others. He has also published over 70 articles, and is the recipient of 18 awards from various professional organizations including the American Psychiatric Association, the American Psychological Association, and the American Society of Clinical Hypnosis. He has been a consultant in, or appeared as an expert witness in, dozens of legal cases.



1
the web of influence

“When you believe in things that you don’t understand, then you suffer.” ~ Stevie Wonder, Superstition.
 

It doesn’t matter how smart you are. Anyone can be taken in by a human predator. Even an expert on influence.

you are not a gentleman

I was barely awake when the phone rang. The urgent voice at the other end of the line claimed that Microsoft had found a serious problem with my computer. The caller insisted that I log in, immediately: otherwise, the malware would destroy my machine and everything on it. He sounded deeply concerned.

I tapped in the letters as he dictated them. A list of over a thousand errors and warnings scrolled down the screen. Yes, I had noticed that the computer had been slowing down. Yes, so many error messages were indeed worrying. “You see,” he said, “your computer is about to die.” I was having a little difficulty making out his accent; I was concentrating on understanding, rather than on the significance of the call itself.

But I was beginning to wake up. “Did you say you’re with Microsoft?” I asked.

“No, we’re partners. We’re Microsoft certified. Look on your screen.”

Sure enough, there was a window with “Microsoft Gold Certified” right there, on the screen. Again, he insisted that my computer would die, today, if I did not let him install software to quarantine the many infections. A new window flashed on the screen. For £149 (about $200), he would save my computer, and the protection would last for a year, but for another hundred pounds, if I bought the software immediately – today – he would extend the protection to five years.

“How do I know that you’re Microsoft certified?” I asked, stifling a yawn.

“Look at your screen,” he responded.

“Yes, but you can put whatever you want on the screen. Who can I contact at Microsoft, in the UK?”

The address for Microsoft in London flashed on the screen. “But the London office won’t know who we are,” he said.

“How did you get my number?” I asked.

“If you don’t do this right now, your computer will die. What difference does it make to me? I’m paid my salary whether you take my advice or not. I don’t work for a commission. You’ll lose everything on your computer. It’s no skin off my nose.”

“How did you get my number?” I asked again.

“You are not a gentleman!” he said. “I’m trying to help you.” He sounded genuinely frustrated.

“Hang on a minute,” I said. “I won’t let you call me names just because I want to be sure your offer is genuine.”

“It’s no skin off my nose,” he repeated.

“I want to talk to your supervisor,” I said. 

The supervisor came on the line and apologized for the slur. He then repeated the assertion that my computer would die, and I would lose everything on it, if I didn’t act immediately. “Listen. We’ll do the work for free. If you’re happy, you can pay us. If not, you can simply walk away without paying a penny.”

I put the phone down as my computer went through various changes before my eyes. I called my brother Jim. “Switch your machine off, immediately,” he urged. “It’s a scam. Several of my friends have been caught by it. They leave ransom-ware on the machine, so every few months, you have to buy new add-ons to repair it.”

I had already pulled the plug. The phone rang again. It was the supervisor. “You’ve dropped your Internet connection. You are not a gentleman!”

“I am a gentleman and you are a scam artist. A criminal.” He wanted to argue the point. I hung up. 

Luckily, my son Ben is a computer expert and later that day he cleaned the machine thoroughly. “Watch out for any pop-ups,” he recommended.

I have spent a lifetime studying tricks and scams. I can recite the litany of names used by experts to describe these manipulative methods. And yet, I almost fell for this rather obvious confidence trick. There are even web pages warning about this particular company.

I didn’t buy the fake fix, and no ransomware was left in my computer. I’ve never sent money to a Nigerian offering to share his inheritance with me if I just give him a few dollars so he can collect. I have never sent a “registration fee” to collect my winnings from the Dutch lottery. When a gorgeous Malaysian girl claimed to lust after my aging body, I did realize it was a scam (though only after exchanging emails for a couple of hours). 

It is not just the Internet that is rife with scams. Trickery is an aspect of human nature, and it reaches back long before the advent of the worldwide web. Indeed, some students of animal behavior say that lying is the first stage in the evolution of intelligence. Californian jays have been observed pretending to bury food, and then quickly concealing their actual stash, while their rivals scrabble about in the false hiding place.

Pride does indeed come before a fall. If there is one lesson that we should all learn, and relearn, as often as necessary, it is that no one is invulnerable to persuasion. Not even those of us who make it our life’s work. Indeed, it is confidence in our invulnerability that makes us so vulnerable. Despite decades of immersion in the world of tricksters, I, too, can still be charmed, cajoled, and led like a lamb to the slaughter.

Years ago, I finished my interview with a teenager who had escaped from a notorious authoritarian group only weeks before. He grinned and said, “The great thing is, Jon, that we’ll never be conned again.”

I shook my head, “No, the great thing is that I realize I’m gullible. And that’s my only defense. Whenever I’m brimming over with enthusiasm and ready to reach for my wallet, I try to stop myself and analyze the evidence. Sometimes that saves me money and embarrassment.”

A few years ago, when Amazon contacted me to say I’d won a thousand pounds in their Wishlist lottery, I didn’t believe it. And the disbelief did me no harm; it actually made it sweeter when the credit appeared in my account.


the fraudster’s sales kit 

The phone fraudster – and his colleagues in a boiler room somewhere in Kolkata or Delhi – went through a tried-and-tested script that exploited normal feelings and responses. First, he created fear: your machine will die. Emotional pressure always reduces the capacity to reason. Language can be crafted to direct us away from thinking: psychologists have found that certain words and phrases can by-pass our reasoning processes altogether – “buy now”, “new and improved”, “for a limited time only” and “every penny counts”, for instance.

Next, he created a sense of urgency: he wanted me to act immediately, so that I would have no time to think. This is the “buy now” mechanism, which slips past reasoning. When we are buying anything – from computer software or a second-hand car, to a business training program, to a new religion – it is important to take our time. This mechanism is recognized legally in some countries, where there is a “cooling off” period in which you can cancel a contract to fit double-glazing or anything else you have been pressured into buying. If you must “buy now,” don’t buy at all.

A good scam artist creates rapport. Here the phone scammer failed. He was too urgent, and he was rude. Often as not, when challenged, tricksters protest too much. How could I doubt his word? This is actually a way of generating rapport in reverse. He was suggesting that we had made a connection and that I had violated it by distrusting him. Whenever I hear the phrase: “You can trust me,” a voice in my mind whispers: “You can trust me; I’m a con artist.”


a fraudster’s sales kit

  • inertia – keep them going in the right direction

  • emotional pressure – turn on the heat!

  • urgency – don’t give them time to think

  • rapport – act like a friend and they’ll trust you

  • consistency – if you can get ‘em once…

  • flocking – “everybody’s doing it!”

  • scarcity – “supplies are limited!”

  • reciprocity – “let me give you something in return”


Rapport is an essential aspect of sales and recruitment. We are far more likely to buy from someone who has become a friend. Instant friendship is almost always a trap. Real friendship takes more than one meeting, just as love at first sight is often simply a matter of psychological projection. We find what we are searching for in the other person, whether it is there or not, because expectation conditions experience.

From rapport comes authority. We believe our friends, but we also believe people who agree with us, and share our view of the world. Flattery usually works very well at creating rapport, and when someone has shown us that they have the discernment to appreciate our superior qualities, we are open to their opinions about other matters, too.

Once we have sent the first few dollars to the Nigerian heir, the Dutch lottery official or the gorgeous young Malaysian woman, the next tranche of cash comes more easily. Against the protests of her family, one seventy-year-old squandered her every last cent – some $300,000 – on a telephone scammer. She lost her home and ended her days on welfare, after alienating her whole family. The power of persuasion is far greater than we like to admit.

Once we have committed to a course of action, we tend to continue. It is the inertia of “throwing good money after bad,” which is also known as the sunk cost fallacy. Once we’ve decided on a course of action, we tend to keep following it down the slippery slope. Psychologist Robert Cialdini calls this consistency or commitment. Scammers attack the most generous part of our nature. They are like vultures looking out for the kindest people. Somehow by continuing to fund the Nigerian’s lifestyle, we believe that everything will work out. History is littered with such scams.


fraudsters in history 

In the early eighteenth century, the Mississippi Company, owned by the French Royal Bank, offered investors the chance to make enormous rewards by buying shares in the new Louisiana Territories in America. The currency of France came to depend on the illusory trade of this company. Many French people lost everything they owned to the fraudulent Mississippi Company, and the French currency collapsed. At the same time, British investors were gulled into buying shares in the South Sea Bubble. The Panama Canal scam bankrupted investors in the Victorian era. Clever, wealthy and accomplished people lost everything. 

Dishonest dealings also featured in the Wall Street Crash that precipitated the Great Depression in the 1930s. Share prices were inflated in an ever-increasing spiral. With the Crash, the banks, which had poured investors’ money into this illusion, were forced to foreclose on mortgages; property prices collapsed. Later on, the same trickery happened on a grand scale with the banking crash of 2008. Bankers really believed that they could package up “sub-prime” debts and so give them value. So, property mortgages were offered to people who had no chance of making the payments. A picture containing text, book

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Two economists were awarded Nobel prizes for “proving” that the economy would never collapse again. Trillions of dollars leached out of the economy because of this fanciful belief. Once the mind is convinced, it continues in the same direction – inertia, the commitment of consistency, bedevils human belief.

This highlights another innate problem of such scams: if other people flock to invest, we will be tempted to follow suit. This pattern of jumping on the bandwagon is sometimes called social proof or flocking.

Any examination of history shows that people can be brought to believe almost anything. At the extreme, this flocking behavior led Germans and Austrians to vote away the right to vote and put all power in the hands of a skinny, average-height, dark-haired Austrian, who proclaimed the era of the muscled, tall, blond, Aryan superman. Fifty million people died in the aftermath of this group delusion. Hitler refused to end the war, costing another million lives, because he believed that his followers deserved to die, because they had failed him. There is no safety in numbers when it comes to belief, and joining the crowd quite often leads to catastrophe.


scarcity and reciprocity

Throughout history, scarcity is another often-used aspect of confidence trickery. This can be the insistence that we “buy now” (or the computer will die) or the precious rarity of a “limited edition” of 10,000 coins, postage stamps or porcelain mice.

We also tend to feel obliged to give something in return. Charities will send a free ballpoint pen, a couple of cardboard table coasters, or some nametags along with a request for donations. This is the reciprocity principle. The supervisor who almost managed to scam me said he would fix my computer for free, and I should only pay if I was satisfied. The truth is that many people will pay up, after this seemingly friendly gesture, which is simply another way of building rapport. Then your computer will crash, and you’ll be forced to buy the “add-ons”.

Now we turn to the methods used by scammers, recruiters, radicalizers and pick-up artists to slide past our defenses and sell us anything from a time-share to a belief system.

recommended reading:

Robert Cialdini, Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion

Pratkanis and Shadel, Weapons of Frau

Mar 1, 2022

Make Me A God: Jon Atack

A Little Bit Culty: Make Me A God: Jon Atack 
February 28, 2022

Jon Atack wants to help you protect yourself from the human predators who roam among us, and believes that every bad relationship, every destructive group, and every dangerous government has a human predator at its heart. This conversation was recorded several months ago, but it feels a bit prescient now that Putin is raining hellfire on Kyiv. The author, academic, and former Operating Thetan Section V chats with Sarah and Nippy about why it seems like psychopaths are running the world, and why he still has hope that humanity can turn things` around in spite of itself.


Feb 2, 2022

The Dynamics of Cult Involvement


The Dynamics of  Cult Involvement - Jon Atack
January 29, 2022

Pat Ryan and Joe Kelly have worked helping people exit and recover from cults for many years. In this week's video, they join Jon to talk about the nature of authoritarian control, the nostalgia some people hold for the early days of their involvement, and how no two experiences are ever the same.

Sep 8, 2021

Advice for would-be interventionists - with Pat Ryan and Joe Kelly

jon atack, family & friends
February 5, 2021

A talk on the tricks and traps of helping people exit authoritarian groups, with noted interventionists Patrick Ryan and Joseph Kelly.


May 25, 2021

Book Review: Dianetics and L. Ron Hubbard Exposed

Book Review: Dianetics and L. Ron Hubbard Exposed
Miles Ferguson
Cult Observer
Cultic Studies Journal, 1994, Volume 11, Number 1, pages 123-125.

“Dianetics and L. Ron Hubbard Exposed"

A Piece of Blue Sky: Scientology, Dianetics, and L. Ron Hubbard Exposed. A Lyle Stuart Book from Carroll Publishing Group. 1990. 428 pp. $21.95. 

The true history of L. Ron Hubbard and the Church of Scientology, its deceitful origins, underhanded dealings and harassment of critics, is thoroughly documented in this new book by Jon Atack, an Englishman and former Scientologist.

A Piece of Blue Sky was delayed several years by infamous Scientology legal tactics aimed at gutting the original manuscript. But Atack finally prevailed in New York federal court and the volume is now headed for bookstores.

It was worth the wait. While Atack's concise writing style and dry sense of humor make for enjoyable reading, his tale ultimately is a horrifying account of a destructive cult that escaped collapse on several occasions, only to grow and prosper as we enter the 1990s.

"The Church is a very rich and very dangerous organization," he writes. "There is no indication that it will change its ways. Hubbard's policy is now considered ,scripture,'. . .[and] there is no possibility of change. While promising freedom and claiming honesty, Scientology will continue to practice deception and generate tragedy."

In a sense, A Piece of Blue Sky completes a trilogy. First there was Bent Corydon's L. Ron Hubbard: Messiah or Madman?, a hard-hitting account of abuses by Hubbard and his messengers. Released in 1987, Corydon's book broke important new ground. But its format- a string of anecdotes and testimonials-proved hard to follow and left some readers confused about the overall picture.

Also in 1987, Russell Miller's Bare-Faced Messiah was released. An accomplished English journalist, Miller was able to track down and interview dozens of people who had spent time with Hubbard. The result was a revealing, critical

biography that was so well-written readers could breeze through its 500 pages in a short time. The problem was that the Scientologists were able to use a loophole in U.S. copyright laws to successfully prevent the book, which quoted from Hubbard's unpublished materials, from being distributed in the United States. Moreover, Miller's book focused entirely on Hubbard and paid little attention to the Church of Scientology.

Atack makes it very clear that the Church is Hubbard's "alter ego." He quoted a California judge who said of the Church, "The organization clearly is schizophrenic and paranoid, and the bizarre combination seems to be a reflection of its founder [L. Ron Hubbard]."

Atack observes: "Scientology makes more sense when seen in the light of Hubbard's psychopathic tendencies, and his paranoia. His bouts of exhilaration in the belief that he had conquered some deficiency, and his bouts of intense and usually private depression when his deficiencies once more took hold, created a pattern which runs throughout Scientology."

Like Miller's book, A Piece of Blue Sky traces Hubbard's life from boyhood to struggling science fiction writer to cult leader. It offers strong evidence that Hubbard falsified much of his past, including his claim to have been a war hero wounded in action, a member of Naval Intelligence and a nuclear engineer. Especially chilling are the accounts of Hubbard's relationships with Aleister Crowley's black magic cult.

In 1961, Hubbard in a letter to President Kennedy, compared himself to Albert Einstein and offered his "mental technology" to assist the President put a man on the moon. The book quotes Hubbard's letter to the President: "Such an office as yours receives a flood of letters from fakes, crackpots and would-be wonder-workers. This is not such a letter......

Atack writes "Hubbard did not receive a reply from the President. On January 4, 1963, however, the Food and Drug Administration raided the Washington Church, and... seized a huge quantity of E-meters and books."

A Piece of Blue Sky offers the first comprehensive account of Scientology's dreaded "Guardian's Office," responsible for dirty tricks, legal harassment, and intelligence gathering. One chapter details the GO's illegal infiltration of various federal offices, including the Internal Revenue Service and Justice Department. It was these escapades that eventually led to the arrest and conviction of 11 GO operatives including GO boss, Mary Sue Hubbard, Ron's wife.

Atack shows how the Church went to great lengths to distance Ron Hubbard's connections with the Church's illegal activities so he could plausibly deny that he was involved.

The book details the rise of "The Messengers," in Hubbard's waning years, and their victory in the internal power struggle to gain control of the organization in the wake of Hubbard's death. The Messengers consisted mainly of individuals who spent their adolescence and teen-age years growing up under the influence of Scientology. They were typified by David Miscavige, now the boss of several Scientology organizations.

Atack writes the "Miscavige was a cameraman with the CMO Film Unit in 1977, at the age of 17, and had gained a reputation for bulldozing through any resistance. Miscavige could get things done, and had even been known to stand his ground before Hubbard. His parents were Scientologists, and his older brother, Ronnie, was also in the CMO. David Miscavige had trained as an Auditor at Saint Hill [England] at the age of fourteen. He was not a long-term messenger, but his dogged determination led to a rapid promotion."

In 1982, Miscavige led the power struggle that put his clique on top, and squeezed out the more independent "Mission Holders." An intense campaign of harassment against the so called independence movement followed. It was during this period that Atack woke up and decided to leave Scientology. Many people who have never been in cults find it difficult to understand how intelligent people can fall for the con games that cults play. Atack's personal account of how he was drawn into Scientology is both powerful and frightening as it shows how others, given similar circumstances, could be drawn in as well.

Atack believes that government can play an important role in stopping cult abuse, but he criticized such efforts as President Nixon putting Scientology on the "enemies list" and the CIA passing inaccurate information on to foreign governments. "These underhanded tactics all eventually backfired, making sensible measure curbing the Church of Scientology's abuses more difficult," he wrote.

His chapter on "Scientology and the Law" confirms that filing lawsuits against the Church has been one of the most effective forms of fighting its abusive practices. Such lawsuits have also prompted some of the most poignant criticisms of Scientology by judges in the United States and England. Atack keeps in his attic one of the world's best collections of materials on Scientology, which Russell Miller said made possible his writing of Bare-Faced Messiah.

In the preface, Miller writes, "It is my firm conviction that Jon began to assemble his archive because he had become aware that he had been fed untruths for years and he simply wanted the truth to be known about the antecedents and antics of his former church and its founder.... Jon Atack believes that people have the right to know the truth about Scientology. That belief is the laudable genesis of this book."

Jan 16, 2021

Helping someone to leave an authoritarian group or abandon destructive beliefs



Jon Atack
January 2, 2021

Helping someone to leave an authoritarian group or abandon destructive beliefs. Cult intervention specialist Joe Kelly also talks with Jon about the difficulties of his profession.

Dec 17, 2020

CultNEWS101 Articles: 12/17/2020

Transcendental Meditation, Prakashanand Saraswati, Video, Jon Atack, Religious Freedom, Legal, Trauma, ParlerApp, Extremism, Hindu Nationalism, India

Jon Atack, Family & Friends: Moving Beyond the Guru, with Joe Kelly
"Joe Kelly spent nine years in Transcendental Meditation and then five more with a rival swami, who convinced his former TM followers to sue for refunds from that group. This led to Joe meeting Margaret Singer, who helped to begin to rethink his involvement. For many years, Joe has worked helping members of authoritarian groups to rethink their involvement."

Justices' drive to promote "religious liberty" may only become more intense.

"The Supreme Court's decision last week overturning New York State's limits on religious gatherings during the COVID-19 outbreak previewed what will likely become one of the coming decades defining collisions between law and demography.

The ruling continued the conservative majority's sustained drive to provide religious organizations more leeway to claim exemptions from civil laws on the grounds of protecting "religious liberty." These cases have become a top priority for conservative religious groups, usually led by white Christians and sometimes joined by other religiously traditional denominations. In this case, Orthodox Jewish synagogues allied with the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn to oppose New York's restrictions on religious services.

But this legal offensive to elevate "religious liberty" over other civic goals is coming even as the share of Americans who ascribe to no religious faith is steadily rising, and as white Christians have fallen to a minority share of the population.

That contrast increases the likelihood of a GOP-appointed Court majority sympathetic to the most conservative religious denominations colliding with the priorities of a society growing both more secular and more religiously diverse, especially among younger generations.

While most conservative analysts have cheered the Court's moves in this area, centrist and liberal critics see the ingredients for a political explosion as the Court backs religious-liberty exemptions to laws on employee rights, health care, education, and equal treatment for the LGBTQ community.

"What we are seeing today is this effort to turn religious freedom into religious privilege," Rachel Laser, the president and CEO of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, told me. Religious institutions and individuals are being given "the right to wield religious freedom as a sword to harm others, and frankly to dial back social progress in light of our changing demographics and progress toward greater equality."
Indeed, the succession of recent religious-liberty rulings by the conservative Court majority may represent another manifestation of the fear of cultural and religious displacement that helped Donald Trump amass huge margins among white Christian voters in both of his campaigns. "We are dealing with a majority-conservative Court that suffers from the same Christian-fragility disease as we are seeing in Trump's base—as though Christianity is what's under attack when others are asking for equal treatment," Laser said."

Medical News Today: What is trauma bonding?
" ... A trauma bond is a connection between an abusive person and the individual they abuse. It typically occurs when the abused person begins to develop sympathy or affection for the abuser.

This bond can develop over days, weeks, or months. Not everyone who experiences abuse develops a trauma bond.

Stockholm syndrome is a specific type of trauma bond. While this term typically refers to someone who is captive developing positive feelings for their captors, this dynamic can occur in other situations and relationships.

2018 research investigating abuse in athletics suggests that Stockholm syndrome may begin when a person experiencing abuse begins to rationalize the actions of the perpetrator."
"Parler looks a lot like Twitter. It's a microblogging platform where users post short updates, called "Parleys," which can be reshared by others. Just like its well known competitor, it uses hashtags to link content and account handles begin with the at symbol.

But the social media app, which caught fire with supporters of President Donald Trump during the election, isn't based in Silicon Valley. It's headquartered in Henderson, Nevada, a suburb of Las Vegas.

Parler owes its newfound popularity to promotion by right-wing media figures and its promise to never censor users, unless they post illegal content, spam or pornography — a major draw for conservatives who object to recent reforms on Twitter and Facebook designed to limit the spread of misinformation. 

But experts warn the site is becoming a right-wing echo chamber, where average Republican voters are exposed to conspiracy theories and extremist propaganda."

" ... Meanwhile, far-right content is thriving on Parler. 

A review of the platform by CapRadio revealed overt neo-nazi propaganda being shared by users who advocate for violence against the Jewish community. 

The site also includes members of the white supremacist Proud Boys, who have threatened Black Lives Matter supporters in Carson City and fought with counter-protesters in front of California's State Capitol in recent weeks. 

Affiliated accounts on Parler have posted videos of Proud Boys engaging in violence, which is encouraged by the organization.
"On November 28, a pro-ISIS propaganda channel on Telegram released two videos, titled "The Battle of Mosul" and "Mosul Another Perspective." Both videos were responding to Netflix's release of the movie "Mosul," which is based on the true story of an Iraqi police SWAT team fighting ISIS in 2017. The pro-ISIS propaganda films, approximately 12 minutes and 43 minutes each, contain extensive footage from previously released ISIS propaganda videos shot in Mosul, including propaganda clips including the British hostage John Cantlie. The videos include footage of vehicle suicide bombings and shootings.

In addition to Telegram, the videos were uploaded to Ok.Ru, the Internet Archive, File.Fm, pCloud, Mail.Ru, and Dropbox. The initial uploads on November 28 were no longer available approximately four days later, however on December 3, additional uploads of the second video were still available on MediaFire, File.Fm, DropApk.To, and UsersDrive.Com.

The Guardian: Twitter accused of censoring Indian critic of Hindu nationalism
"Writers including Salman Rushdie express anger after journalist Salil Tripathi has account suspended

"Twitter has been accused of censoring the prominent Indian journalist Salil Tripathi by suspending his account, after he tweeted on subjects including the anniversary of the demolition of the Babri mosque and his work on India's shrinking democratic space.

Writers including Salman Rushdie and Amitav Ghosh expressed anger after Tripathi, who is chair of PEN International's Writers in Prison Committee, had his Twitter account suspended on Sunday without warning.

A rightwing Hindu nationalist group called Deshi Army, which has 26,000 followers on Twitter, claimed victory after the suspension. Deshi Army was recently praised online by Kapil Mishra, a hardline leader from India's ruling Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata party (BJP), who said: "This team is doing amazing work" in targeting critics of the government online."

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