[Dixielandjazz] APA asked to investigate mind control in destructive cults

JimDBB@aol.com JimDBB@aol.com
Mon, 4 Nov 2002 15:05:27 EST


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Cults of hatred 
 
APA Monitor, Volume 33, No. 10 November 2002
BY MELISSA DITTMANN 
Monitor staff 
Print version: page 30 
 
Panelists at a convention session on hatred asked APA to form a task force to 
investigate mind control among destructive cults. 
 
Holding a briefcase filled with the explosive C4, Kerry Noble entered a 
church for gay men in Kansas City, Mo., in 1984 with intentions of blowing it 
up. He waited for his opportunity as he sat among a crowd of about 60 people. 
"All I had to do was hit the timer and walk out," Noble said. "About 10 or 15 
minutes later, there'd be an explosion, and everyone would die." Noble 
thought he was going to start a revolution. As a cult leader of the Covenant, 
Sword and the Arm of the Lord (CSA), he was on a mission for his 
organization, which had come to hate homosexuals, blacks and Jews. But as 
Noble sat among the crowd, he put a face to his enemy. And his "enemy" 
appeared no different than anyone else. He thought of the consequences--of 
what would have amounted to the largest terrorist attack in America at the 
time. Then, he picked up the briefcase and left. Noble joined other former 
cult members and experts at APA's 2002 Annual Convention in Chicago during 
the session "Cults of hatred" to speak out on the effects of mind control and 
destructive cults. Panelists made a plea to the association to form a task 
force to investigate mind control among destructive cults. "Extreme influence 
[such as mind control and cults] has remained dormant in the field of 
psychology," Alan W. Scheflin, professor of law at Santa Clara University, 
told the audience. Mind control, or "brainwashing" as it's commonly referred 
to by the media, is often viewed by many psychologists as science fiction. 
However, panelists stressed that mind control is being used by cults to 
recruit and maintain followers and can have dangerous and lasting 
psychological consequences. Cults that use mind-control techniques "have been 
able to do so with impunity, and the people who are victims of these 
techniques get no treatment," Scheflin said. In fact, psychologists who do 
treat someone claiming to be a mind-control victim from a destructive cult 
might face a malpractice action. "There are no legitimate treatments that are 
scientifically validated that appear in peer review journals, although they 
are effective clinically," Scheflin said. "Therefore, they are vulnerable to 
challenge in the courts. That has to stop. There is no reason why people who 
are true victims of mind control or people who think they are victims and are 
wrong should not receive treatment when they need it or want it." The time is 
now for psychologists to investigate cults and their impact, Scheflin said, 
especially in light of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. To fully understand 
the psychological factors that lead to terrorism, he added, the answers might 
lie in understanding cults. The cult mentality Panelist Deborah Layton also 
encouraged more help for mind-control victims. "It can happen to the best of 
us," Layton said. At age 18, in the early 1970s, Layton's need for belonging 
attracted her to the Peoples Temple, a group that offered her a sense of 
comfort and answers to life. The leader, the Rev. Jim Jones, made her feel 
like she was joining the Peace Corps. A few years later, Layton went to 
Jonestown, the Guyana village where Peoples Temple followers went to escape 
racism and persecution. However, the peaceful settlement appeared more like a 
"concentration camp," surrounded by armed guards, where food was scarce and 
followers were required to work long hours. She escaped from Jonestown in 
1978 and reported to police about activities there, such as mass suicide 
drills and people being held against their wills. Her prediction of a mass 
suicide came to fruition a few months later when 913 followers drank lethal 
cyanide punch or were shot to death. Layton felt ashamed at being warped into 
a cult. "If I could tell this story and explain it to the world, then maybe I 
could take myself out of the muck of shame," Layton said. Steve Hassan, a 
former cult member and licensed mental health counselor who specializes in 
helping those in destructive cults, says recovery from a cult's mind control 
can be facilitated if victims attain the proper information, support and 
interventions from former cult members. As for Kerry Noble, the CSA cult grew 
out of a small, pacifistic church he joined in 1977, which over four years 
gradually changed its religious philosophy. In 1978, the organization spent 
$52,000 on weapons. By 1981, the church had become an armed, extremist hate 
group. Noble had a four-day armed standoff with the federal government in 
1985 and spent two years in prison. But, he said understanding the psychology 
behind mind control helped him in his eight-year battle to recover. "I've 
learned that hate is a learned behavior," Noble said. Cults often use 
behavior modification on followers, such as thought- stopping techniques and 
instilling an "us-versus-them" mindset, Hassan said. With thought-stopping 
techniques, members are taught to stop doubts from entering their 
consciousness about the cult, often with a key phrase they repeat. Phobia 
indoctrination is also used, where cults play on a person's irrational fears, 
with threats such as the person will develop cancer or go insane if he ever 
leaves or questions the group. "Just as we can do short-term deep effective 
therapy to teach people about phobias and help them to get over their phobia, 
we can do the same with cult mind-control victims," Hassan said. A 
destructive cult is an authoritarian regime, which uses deception when 
recruiting as well as mind-control techniques to make a person dependent and 
obedient, he said. Al Qaeda fulfills the criteria for a destructive cult, 
Hassan said. "We need to apply what we know about destructive mind-control 
cults, and this should be a priority with the war on terrorism. We need to 
understand the psychological aspects of how people are recruited and 
indoctrinated so we can slow down recruitment. We need to help counsel former 
cult members and possibly use some of them in the war against terrorism." A 
legitimate field of study? In 1986, a group of psychologists formed a task 
force--Deceptive and Indirect Methods of Persuasion and Control (DIMPAC)--and 
submitted a report to APA that condemned cults for using brainwashing. But 
APA's Board of Social and Ethical Responsibility for Psychology found the 
report "unacceptable," lacking in scientific evidence, relying too much on 
sensational anecdotes and providing insufficient information for APA to take 
a position on the issue. But Scheflin maintains that for the last 100 years 
society has been given clear signals that this is a legitimate field of 
study, and psychology needs an organized response. For example, in the 1880s 
and 1890s, hypnosis was found to be used to implant false memories. In the 
1920s, police were believed to use "third-degree" interrogation techniques, 
where pain and suffering was inflicted on criminal suspects. During the 
Moscow Trials in the 1930s, innocent political ideologists were forced to 
confess to being traitors. In the 1950s and 1960s, Chinese Communists 
allegedly used brain washing techniques during the Korean War. "These 
subjects are incredibly unappetizing and very difficult to grapple with, but 
they are an essential part of the psychology of the human mind," Scheflin 
said. "We need to stop this germ from spreading." In a 1980 survey, 54 
percent of high school students in the San Francisco Bay area reported at 
least one recruiting attempt by a cult member, and 40 percent reported three 
to five contacts, according to a study of more than 1,000 students by APA 
President Philip G. Zimbardo, PhD, and Cynthia F. Hartley. Those numbers are 
expected to have increased with electronic media growing as a recruitment 
tool for cults. Cults exist at every layer of society, said Stephen J. 
Morgan, a faculty member with the American Management Association/Management 
Centre Europe in Brussels, Belgium. Morgan was an international leader for an 
extremist political cult in the 1980s, which operated in 31 countries with 
25,000 operatives. While holding office in the British Labour Party, Morgan 
worked as a spy in carrying out activities against the state. About 10 years 
ago, Morgan left the organization and regained his self-identity. Today, he 
lectures all over the world on mind control by terror cults. At APA's 
convention, he stressed the importance of a deeper understanding of cults in 
understanding terrorism. Cult leaders are usually psychopaths with a desire 
for power and often take ideas from politics, religion and psychology to 
fulfill their purpose, he said. Through mind control, they are able to filter 
their thoughts and behaviors into "fanatical faith and belief" among 
followers. "We need to bring the panelists' experiences together with your 
expertise," Morgan told psychologists in the audience. "It is a question of 
our health and safety as a nation." 

<A HREF="http://www.apa.org/monitor/nov02/cults.html">http://www.apa.org/monitor/nov02/cults.html</A>



 




 


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<HTML><FONT FACE=arial,helvetica><FONT  COLOR="#008080" SIZE=4 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" FACE="Verdana" LANG="0"><B>Cults of hatred</FONT><FONT  COLOR="#000000" style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" SIZE=2 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" FACE="Verdana" LANG="0"></B> <BR>
</FONT><FONT  COLOR="#000000" style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" SIZE=3 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" FACE="Verdana" LANG="0"> <BR>
</FONT><FONT  COLOR="#000000" style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" SIZE=2 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" FACE="Verdana" LANG="0">APA Monitor, Volume 33, No. 10 November 2002</FONT><FONT  COLOR="#000000" style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" SIZE=3 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" FACE="Verdana" LANG="0"><BR>
</FONT><FONT  COLOR="#000000" style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" SIZE=2 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" FACE="Verdana" LANG="0">BY MELISSA DITTMANN <BR>
Monitor staff <BR>
Print version: page 30 </FONT><FONT  COLOR="#000000" style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" SIZE=3 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" FACE="Verdana" LANG="0"><BR>
 <BR>
</FONT><FONT  COLOR="#008080" style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" SIZE=2 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" FACE="Verdana" LANG="0"><B>Panelists at a convention session on hatred asked APA to form a task force to investigate mind control among destructive cults.</FONT><FONT  COLOR="#000000" style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" SIZE=2 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" FACE="Verdana" LANG="0"></B> <BR>
 <BR>
Holding a briefcase filled with the explosive C4, Kerry Noble entered a church for gay men in Kansas City, Mo., in 1984 with intentions of blowing it up. He waited for his opportunity as he sat among a crowd of about 60 people. "All I had to do was hit the timer and walk out," Noble said. "About 10 or 15 minutes later, there'd be an explosion, and everyone would die." Noble thought he was going to start a revolution. As a cult leader of the <B>Covenant, Sword and the Arm of the Lord</B> (CSA), he was on a mission for his organization, which had come to hate homosexuals, blacks and Jews. But as Noble sat among the crowd, he put a face to his enemy. And his "enemy" appeared no different than anyone else. He thought of the consequences--of what would have amounted to the largest terrorist attack in America at the time. Then, he picked up the briefcase and left. Noble joined other former cult members and experts at APA's 2002 Annual Convention in Chicago during the session "Cults of hatred" to speak out on the effects of mind control and destructive cults. Panelists made a plea to the association to form a task force to investigate mind control among destructive cults. "Extreme influence [such as mind control and cults] has remained dormant in the field of psychology," Alan W. Scheflin, professor of law at Santa Clara University, told the audience. Mind control, or "brainwashing" as it's commonly referred to by the media, is often viewed by many psychologists as science fiction. However, panelists stressed that mind control is being used by cults to recruit and maintain followers and can have dangerous and lasting psychological consequences. Cults that use mind-control techniques "have been able to do so with impunity, and the people who are victims of these techniques get no treatment," Scheflin said. In fact, psychologists who do treat someone claiming to be a mind-control victim from a destructive cult might face a malpractice action. "There are no legitimate treatments that are scientifically validated that appear in peer review journals, although they are effective clinically," Scheflin said. "Therefore, they are vulnerable to challenge in the courts. That has to stop. There is no reason why people who are true victims of mind control or people who think they are victims and are wrong should not receive treatment when they need it or want it." The time is now for psychologists to investigate cults and their impact, Scheflin said, especially in light of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. To fully understand the psychological factors that lead to terrorism, he added, the answers might lie in understanding cults. </FONT><FONT  COLOR="#008080" style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" SIZE=2 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" FACE="Verdana" LANG="0"><B>The cult mentality</FONT><FONT  COLOR="#000000" style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" SIZE=2 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" FACE="Verdana" LANG="0"></B> Panelist Deborah Layton also encouraged more help for mind-control victims. "It can happen to the best of us," Layton said. At age 18, in the early 1970s, Layton's need for belonging attracted her to the Peoples Temple, a group that offered her a sense of comfort and answers to life. The leader, the Rev. Jim Jones, made her feel like she was joining the Peace Corps. A few years later, Layton went to Jonestown, the Guyana village where Peoples Temple followers went to escape racism and persecution. However, the peaceful settlement appeared more like a "concentration camp," surrounded by armed guards, where food was scarce and followers were required to work long hours. She escaped from Jonestown in 1978 and reported to police about activities there, such as mass suicide drills and people being held against their wills. Her prediction of a mass suicide came to fruition a few months later when 913 followers drank lethal cyanide punch or were shot to death. Layton felt ashamed at being warped into a cult. "If I could tell this story and explain it to the world, then maybe I could take myself out of the muck of shame," Layton said. Steve Hassan, a former cult member and licensed mental health counselor who specializes in helping those in destructive cults, says recovery from a cult's mind control can be facilitated if victims attain the proper information, support and interventions from former cult members. As for Kerry Noble, the CSA cult grew out of a small, pacifistic church he joined in 1977, which over four years gradually changed its religious philosophy. In 1978, the organization spent $52,000 on weapons. By 1981, the church had become an armed, extremist hate group. Noble had a four-day armed standoff with the federal government in 1985 and spent two years in prison. But, he said understanding the psychology behind mind control helped him in his eight-year battle to recover. "I've learned that hate is a learned behavior," Noble said. Cults often use behavior modification on followers, such as thought- stopping techniques and instilling an "us-versus-them" mindset, Hassan said. With thought-stopping techniques, members are taught to stop doubts from entering their consciousness about the cult, often with a key phrase they repeat. Phobia indoctrination is also used, where cults play on a person's irrational fears, with threats such as the person will develop cancer or go insane if he ever leaves or questions the group. "Just as we can do short-term deep effective therapy to teach people about phobias and help them to get over their phobia, we can do the same with cult mind-control victims," Hassan said. A destructive cult is an authoritarian regime, which uses deception when recruiting as well as mind-control techniques to make a person dependent and obedient, he said. Al Qaeda fulfills the criteria for a destructive cult, Hassan said. "We need to apply what we know about destructive mind-control cults, and this should be a priority with the war on terrorism. We need to understand the psychological aspects of how people are recruited and indoctrinated so we can slow down recruitment. We need to help counsel former cult members and possibly use some of them in the war against terrorism." A legitimate field of study? In 1986, a group of psychologists formed a task force--Deceptive and Indirect Methods of Persuasion and Control (DIMPAC)--and submitted a report to APA that condemned cults for using brainwashing. But APA's Board of Social and Ethical Responsibility for Psychology found the report "unacceptable," lacking in scientific evidence, relying too much on sensational anecdotes and providing insufficient information for APA to take a position on the issue. But Scheflin maintains that for the last 100 years society has been given clear signals that this is a legitimate field of study, and psychology needs an organized response. For example, in the 1880s and 1890s, hypnosis was found to be used to implant false memories. In the 1920s, police were believed to use "third-degree" interrogation techniques, where pain and suffering was inflicted on criminal suspects. During the Moscow Trials in the 1930s, innocent political ideologists were forced to confess to being traitors. In the 1950s and 1960s, Chinese Communists allegedly used brain washing techniques during the Korean War. "These subjects are incredibly unappetizing and very difficult to grapple with, but they are an essential part of the psychology of the human mind," Scheflin said. "We need to stop this germ from spreading." In a 1980 survey, 54 percent of high school students in the San Francisco Bay area reported at least one recruiting attempt by a cult member, and 40 percent reported three to five contacts, according to a study of more than 1,000 students by APA President Philip G. Zimbardo, PhD, and Cynthia F. Hartley. Those numbers are expected to have increased with electronic media growing as a recruitment tool for cults. Cults exist at every layer of society, said Stephen J. Morgan, a faculty member with the American Management Association/Management Centre Europe in Brussels, Belgium. Morgan was an international leader for an extremist political cult in the 1980s, which operated in 31 countries with 25,000 operatives. While holding office in the British Labour Party, Morgan worked as a spy in carrying out activities against the state. About 10 years ago, Morgan left the organization and regained his self-identity. Today, he lectures all over the world on mind control by terror cults. At APA's convention, he stressed the importance of a deeper understanding of cults in understanding terrorism. Cult leaders are usually psychopaths with a desire for power and often take ideas from politics, religion and psychology to fulfill their purpose, he said. Through mind control, they are able to filter their thoughts and behaviors into "fanatical faith and belief" among followers. "We need to bring the panelists' experiences together with your expertise," Morgan told psychologists in the audience. "It is a question of our health and safety as a nation." <BR>
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