proplog2,
Hillary The argument over the derogatory label "cult" is another issue.
Linguistic definitions do not have emotion attached to them. I neither view the 'word' cult as derogatory or freindly, it is term that people have struggled to define. The reason that I noted that the United Nations have pronounced on what ingredients makes up a "cult", is that it is a term agreed by World Member Nations of the UN and not by Hassan.
There is nothing unique about this process as governments, legal bodies and international bodies regularly define such matters. You may pesonally disagree with such definitions, but you will have a very hard job persuading the legal bodies around the world that agreed on this definition. In this, you are a candle in the winds of social time and your viewpoints are quickly extinguished.
The word "cult" comes from the Latin 'cultus' which invokes the meaning of adoration, worship. As I have noted, this takes in all relgions at some stage or the other of their evolution. The definition needs to be more focused as the centuries have given birth to religions, religious leaders and doctrines from the benign to the malevolent.
Try to stand aside from your distaste with Steve Hassan and his work and see the bigger picture.
What would you define as a cult? What would you define as a high-control religion? What would you define as a mainstream religion? What would you define as benign religious beliefs. What would you define as malevolent religious beliefs?
Once you have reached consensus within yourself, how would you define your views linguistically so that they are useful to society? This is what the world nations did from all the information they had at hand which led to the UN pronouncements. This is what every society attempts do do in order to structure itself to be of some use to its citizens. Anarchy of language will lead to anarchy of behavior.
HS