CULT LEADERS & 'APOSTATES'

by DannyHaszard 3 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • DannyHaszard
    DannyHaszard

    Cult leaders, in religion and politics, demand fealty
    San Francisco Chronicle - San Francisco,CA,USA
    It seems that nearly all cults follow a predictable program: There is the charismatic leader, who is dynamic and promises love and paradise for his adepts. ... Cult leaders, in religion and politics, demand fealty

    If no enemy exists, one will be createdto engender loyalty

    Arthur Janov Sunday, May 27, 2007

    I watched a documentary the other night on Jonestown, the cult enclave in Guyana led by Jim Jones, who fled San Francisco 30 years ago along with more than 1,000 of his followers in order to build a "new life" in the jungle. The documentary struck me because my new book, "Beyond Belief," is about cults, healers, mystics and gurus -- and why we believe in them. It seems that nearly all cults follow a predictable program: There is the charismatic leader, who is dynamic and promises love and paradise for his adepts. He has a mission that he inveigles the followers to embrace; it doesn't matter if there are casualties because the mission is all and because he, too, is caught in the rhetoric of paradise, of a place where all is love and, for him, all is power. Soon, however, the mission falters -- because there are the enemies (you're either for us or against us) who stand in the way and won't let the mission be accomplished.Paranoia sets in; the infidels must be destroyed because they are out to destroy us. What exacerbates the paranoia are the depths of suspicion that the leader becomes mired in. He must build up defenses -- against his fears. He sees enemies everywhere, and he imagines it is a coherent plot among them. Even a benign move by them becomes interpreted as a threat. There is no talking to them anymore because they are the enemy. This ultimately leads to a confrontation and finally combat. It is not hard to imagine the big leap to some government leaders who run cults writ large (Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot , Kim Jong Il ). In these "cults," the casualties matter little and there is hardly any emotion wasted on the suffering of the followers, nor the enemy for that matter, nor the bystanders (collateral damage), for they must accomplish the mission that exists in the collective head of the "guru." Whether the leader of a cult or the leader of a government, what better position for that leader than to convince the followers that they need protection? The evidence is all around them. What better position than to order arms at will, no matter what the cost? Cost never enters the equation. Defeating the enemy is all. If no enemy exists, one will be created. What is amazing is how little it takes to bring people along for the ride. Cults appear in many guises and disguises. But the dynamics never change. The leader wants your money and possessions, your body (the army), and then your mind. The military is an organization that tells you how to dress, when to get up, when to eat and what, when you can go out on liberty. It attracts the obedient ones, in the same way that cults attract them. Military intelligence then becomes an oxymoron because those uncreative, unfree types are in the saddle running the show. The focus is always on the enemy, not on our suffering soldiers. The mission: uber allies. Those who would wish to end the war are accused of aiding the enemy -- except that the worst enemy is inside, not outside. That logic operated in Nazi Germany, where to utter the word "defeat" was a crime and was punished by death. First the leader must start a war, even with no evidence of a threat. Then he castigates those who don't agree as enemies. This is particularly true of those who find other truths; Valerie Plame comes to mind. It doesn't matter that she was a highly secretive employee dedicated to protecting our country. What mattered was to stifle dissent; democracy took a backseat. Hitler managed to get tens of millions to invade other countries and go to war on the flimsiest pretext -- the need for more breathing space. When we defer to external regulation of our own lives and minimize the value of personal efforts in affecting problems, the result is rule by the cognoscenti, rule by a knowing elite who knows what is best for us. It applies to politics. When people feel powerless, they prefer government by experts over government by the people. It is not the content of a belief system that matters, but what draws us toward ideas and beliefs, and what makes beliefs so important to us. The brain does not care if it is, say, the Republican Party, est or the Branch Davidians, just as the brain does not care what brand of whiskey the alcoholic uses. The leader has inculcated an ideational net inside the follower, which is the most effective possible means of control. Control is in place, and the follower does the dictates of the ideological net. The net is enveloped by the need. Fulfilling his own archaic needs, the leader becomes more dictatorial, and the followers become more and more needy for guidance. They lose all perspective as to right and wrong, moral and immoral. They simply follow their leader, who assures them that they are doing the right thing and that everything is for their own good. Obey me if you want a better life. I will bestow upon you justice, protection, caring, understanding, love. "You have the chance to learn my salvation." We get it. Arthur Janov, a psychologist, is the author of 11 books, including "The Primal Scream" and his newest, "Primal Healing." He is the founder of the Primal Center in Venice (Los Angeles County). Contact us at [email protected]. http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/05/27/INGRRPUU401.DTL [email protected] lets write this guy
  • golf2
    golf2

    Last week, Fox News interviewed some man who said he is the 'reincarnated' Jesus Christ. The commentator didn't make a big issue because he knew it was ALL bull. It was however interesting, especially when he questioned him about the amount of money and property he owns.

    Golf

  • smellsgood
    smellsgood

    "Last week, Fox News interviewed some man who said he is the 'reincarnated' Jesus Christ. The commentator didn't make a big issue because he knew it was ALL bull. It was however interesting, especially when he questioned him about the amount of money and property he owns."

    Was it Donald Trump? "I'm a ratings Messiah,,oh, and,,,Rosie's fat!!" er, j/k

    I'm gonna go out on a limb and guess for real that it was::::Sun Myung Moon (da True Father)
    Owns the Washington Post,,,,gets a little intimate with the Bushes, from S. Korea. I didn't see it, but he's one who thinks he's doing what Jesus couldn't (er, own a media conglomerate?) and is just cute as a button. Scratch that, he's like gangrene.

  • DannyHaszard
    DannyHaszard

    alt The Watchtower Cult IS Jonestown without the Kool-Aid! The parents in Jonestown forced 276 children to drink poison because they too believed it was in their best interests. There is good and valid reasons why there is such an outrage against the Watchtower for misleading millions of followers.
    Many have invested everything in the 'imminent' apocalyptic promises of the Jehovah's Witnesses and have died broken and beaten. alt Jehovah's Witnesses Watchtower is an orwellian world and a doomsday destructive cult with a supremacist doctrine to hate all dissidents. Jehovah's Witnesses are an oppressive fraud for God cult.

    The Watchtower is a total ripoff,their core doctrine is that Jesus ALREADY had his second coming in 1914 and made them da boss. Two or more wrongs don't make a right just because false Christians abound does not make Jehovah's Witnesses the truth.


    1 1914 false for Jesus second coming

    2 Many false prophecies that you dared to print up by the millions and cannot deny

    3 Only literal 144,000 only go to heaven

    4 Corruption in leadership as bad as the vatican

    5 Child abuse and abuse of your elderly many who put faith in the imminent 'new system' and did not put away for their old age retirement Long time Watchtower believers like my OWN parents and grandparents who gave everything to the man made Watchtower.

    6 Thousands who died for the WT flip-flopping ban on blood transfusions.

    I was born a 3rd generation JW in 1957 I know what's going on people.The Watchtower NEVER thought they would have to defend their positions in 2007 it was suppose to be all over a long time ago.
    What say you watchtower defenders? (Any Questions about the faith? Do a google keyword search of "Jehovah's Witnesses and see for yourselves. )

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