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CULTS AND FASCISM

Andrew Carpenter | 09.04.2004 11:45 | Analysis | Anti-racism

The Left has largely distanced itself from anti cult activism. The Right has no such reservations about the cult question, indeed it frequently sees 'closed' movements as natural allies. An Australian based cult provides an example of the links to the far right.

Arguably Nazism was the most pervasive and vicious cult to have infected any human society. With its 'charismatic' leader deferred to as a god, a credo of absolutism and a homicidal desperation for its members to have a special identity, the Hitlerian Sect exemplifies the synthesis of introverted politics and oppressive religion that comprises a 'cult'.

The Left has largely distanced itself from anti cult activism; a pathological concern for pluralism as a reaction to an historic failure to challenge the totalitarianism engendered by Stalin and Mao has seen the Left unwilling to enter territory that involves challenging religion or culture. The Right has no such reservations about the cult question, indeed it frequently sees 'closed' movements as natural allies and the power of cultic organisations within the US has grown exponentially as they ave been courted by the Republicans. Both Scientology and Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church enjoy support on Capitol Hill and in the White House.

The dangers of cults to individuals, to communities and societies has been frequently demonstrated, from Jim Jones' People's Temple, The Solar Temple, The Branch Davidians (Waco) and The Aum cult, the tendency to mass suicide, violent and irrational resistance to social norms and simple murderous intent, the capacity for these 'closed' groups to embrace harm is unequivocal. Yet there is a growing apologetics movement, one which uses an appeal to religious freedom, claims for cultural equality and Sociological justification to gain the support and protection of the State by identifying critics as 'oppressors' and cults as some special entity - the favoured term being 'New Religious Movement'.

Leading the way in cult apologism is an organisation called CESNUR and its director Massimo Introvigne, if anyone on the Left has doubts about the importance of the cult question to the Right, those doubts will be seriously challenged by a reading of CESNUR diatribes and the political beliefs of Massimo Introvigne.

 http://www.kelebekler.com/cesnur/eng.htm

 http://www.kelebekler.com/cesnur/storia/gb05.htm

 http://home.snafu.de/tilman/prolinks/cesnur.and.massimo.introvigne.html

 http://www.cesnur.org

 http://www.cesnur.org/testi/se_scientology.htm


A cult becomes an increasing danger when it is threatened by external criticism ( criticism hardly ever takes place within a cult), it is then that the dissonance between cult belief and the real world engenders either a violent reaction toward the outside world as in the Sarin attacks of the Aum cult or a Gottendamerung suicide as happened with the Peoples Temple, The Solar Temple and at Waco.
In Australia there is an increasingly worrying example of how cults behave when opened up to public scrutiny, and interestingly this cult has turned to Massimo Introvigne for its self protection strategy.

Elan Vital, which has invested in a major property development at Peak Crossing, Ipswich, Queensland, undertook a SLAPP (Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation)
style persecution of journalist John Macgregor. In the face of Macgregor refusing to be bowed by Elan Vital and the media attention that inevitably followed on the heels of Macgregor being legally gagged, Elan Vital has become increasing desperate in its communications with the outside world.

Using tactics reminiscent of the Scientologists when seeking to destroy their critics, Elan Vital has also moved directly to employ the CESNUR strategy of identifying critics as a 'hate group' and now even links to the CESNUR web site and the writings of Introvigne

 http://www.elanvital.com.au/faq/idx/0/086/article/

How far the Elan Vital cult is on the road to violent response is anyone's guess, although thirty years ago US journalist Pat Halley was beaten half to death and left permanently disabled in an attack by two individuals, one of whom was then very close to the cult's leader Prem Rawat. For all its claims to peace Elan Vital has a vicious undercurrent, another of its former leading lights is a serial child abuser. The coming months are likely to see greatly increased interest in Elan Vital; the behaviour of its leader and his followers should be of concern to all, and the role of the extreme right in justifying a harmful and exploitative group demands especial vigilance.

Elan Vital  http://www.elanvital.com.au/faq/

Supporters of Prem Rawat  http://www.one-reality.net/

Supporters Message Board  http://www.hotboards.com/plus/plus.mirage?who=neverleave

Related Article  http://www.melbourne.indymedia.org/news/2004/03/64387.php

AC 08/04/04

Andrew Carpenter

Comments

Hide the following 3 comments

The SWP are a cult

09.04.2004 14:28

Most the far left groups, if they are honest, would admit to being sects. The trot group I was in did, I vividly remember their guru justifying this in a meeting in Manchester called over the fact that 4 of us were leaving; "in the current period the sect form is necessary to keep the ideas (of revolutionary marxism) alive".

That was quite a few years ago, I don't think the sect form was necessary then and it is even less now. This still hasn't really sunk in with the far-left. Many of the groups are worse then sects, they are essentially cults at the core. The SWP are the best example of this in the UK.

The internet, projects like Indymedia, the Free software movement and the Wikipedia show that non-hierarchical, open, self organisation can change the world, we don't need to be told what to do and we sure as hell don't need any sects or cults, of left, right, religious, or any flavour.

No Gods, No Masters

ex-trot


as an example of the strange times we now live in...

09.04.2004 20:48

 http://www.skeptictank.org/gen3/gen02011.htm

Scientology Lawyer Buys Rights to Anti-Cult Organization

Sunday, December 1, 1996
Home Edition

Scientology Lawyer Buys Rights to Anti-Cult Organization

Religion: Scientologist member from L.A. owns name, other assets of bankrupt group that tried to 'deprogram' the church's members.

By: LAURIE GOODSTEIN
THE WASHINGTON POST

BARRINGTON, Ill. -- For 20 years, the Cult Awareness Network ran the nation's best-known hotline for parents who grew distraught when unconventional religious groups they neither trusted nor understood suddenly won the allegiance of their children.

>From its offices here in a Chicago suburb, the network (known as CAN) answered more than 350 telephone inquiries a week, counseled relatives at conferences attended by thousands and gave news interviews.

As CAN's influence rose, so did the ire of its foes, who were furious at being depicted as dangerous cults. In particular, Church of Scientology members fought CAN with a barrage of lawsuits.

One suit, handled by Kendrick L. Moxon, a lawyer who has frequently represented the church, succeeded, and a jury ordered CAN to pay as much as $1.8 million. The group filed for bankruptcy. Distaste for CAN

Last week its name, logo, post office box and telephone number were sold to the highest bidder: a Los Angeles lawyer named Steven L. Hayes, who is a Scientologist. Hayes says he is working with a group of people "united in their distaste for CAN" who plan to reopen the group so it "disseminates the truth about all religions."

"It kind of boggles the mind," said David Bardin, an attorney who has represented CAN in Washington. "People will still pick up the CAN name in a library book and call saying, 'My daughter has joined the Church of Scientology.' And your friendly CAN receptionist is someone who works for Scientology."

In an interview, Hayes said he represents a group of several people he cannot name without "permission." He said they put up money of their own and money "from this country and other places." Hayes said he is a Scientologist, not an employee of the Church of Scientology.

Hayes said his group intends to revamp CAN so that "religions that have been attacked in the past would have an opportunity to at least show what they believe the truth to be."

Literature of the Church of Scientology calls CAN "a hate group in the tradition of the KKK and the neo-Nazis." The Rev. Heber Jentzsch, president of the Church of Scientology International, said in an interview: "I just don't think a hate organization has a right to operate in America with impunity, and obviously the courts feel the same way."

Next up for auction could be 270 boxes of CAN files that former staffers say are stuffed with confidential information about current and former cult members, efforts to extricate them and private testimonies of anguish and abuse. Moxon is actively trying to purchase these files, says Chicago attorney Philip R. Martino, the trustee handling the bankruptcy.

Martino said he won't sell the files until names and personal information are removed, a process that he estimates will cost about $50,000, to be paid by the buyer. People who were heavily involved with CAN may ask to have their names removed, he said.

CAN took telephone inquiries from around the world about hundreds of controversial groups. Every request for help was logged and filed.

CAN also gave some parents references to self-styled "deprogrammers," whom CAN maintained were skilled at extricating devotees from cults by systematically challenging cult teachings and undermining beliefs. But there were repeated cases of deprogrammers being convicted for using force or other criminal means to wrest their targets away from the cults.

The CAN board articulated a policy advocating only "legal methods" of deprogramming, but the stigma of associating with criminals left CAN vulnerable to its detractors.

The Scientology magazine Freedom last year devoted a special issue to CAN, headlined: "The serpent of hatred, intolerance, violence and death." A story called CAN's executive director, Cynthia Kisser, "the mother of the serpent" and purported to expose her past as a topless dancer, which she has denied. Barrage of Lawsuits

Beginning in 1991, CAN and its local affiliates and staff were hit with a series of lawsuits filed by several dozen members of the Church of Scientology and others. In one week in 1992, Scientologists filed 12 suits against CAN, Kisser said.

Most of the suits were civil-rights claims, according to attorneys on both sides. People who identified themselves in the suits as Scientologists alleged that the group denied them membership or participation in CAN conferences.

Moxon, whose law firm filed many of the suits against CAN, said: "What would you do if you had a religious belief and somebody was intentionally trying to destroy your church and destroy your belief and destroy your family?"

Many of these lawsuits were dismissed, but CAN cannibalized its $300,000 annual budget to defend itself,Kisser said.

CAN struck back in 1994 with a countersuit against the Church of Scientology, 11 individual Scientologists and the Los Angeles law firm of Bowles & Moxon. The group's suit alleged that the Church of Scientology orchestrated the filing of 45 unfounded and frivolous suits in an attempt to drive CAN into bankruptcy.

CAN's suit was dismissed by the Cook County Circuit Court, but an appeal is pending in the Illinois Supreme Court.

The lawsuit that succeeded in driving CAN into bankruptcy involved an 18-year-old from Bellevue, Wash., named Jason Scott. In 1991, Scott's mother hired a "cult deprogrammer" and two assistants in an attempt to get him to renounce his membership in the Life Tabernacle Church, a Pentecostal group. 'Unfortunate' Actions

Scott alleged in the suit that he was kidnapped for five days at a beach house, handcuffed, gagged with tape and forced to watch videotapes about religious cults. Scott feigned conversion, and when his deprogrammers took him to a restaurant, he ran off and went to police. In late 1993, the county prosecutor brought charges against the deprogrammer, who was acquitted.

But the case lived on in civil court. The lawyer who took the case on Scott's behalf was Moxon. He has been sued by CAN for allegedly filing malicious lawsuits.

This time, Scott sued not only the deprogrammer and his two assistants, but also CAN. Scott maintained that the woman who referred his mother to the deprogrammer did so as a local CAN volunteer.

A jury found all the defendants liable and awarded Scott more than $4 million in damages. CAN was ordered to pay as much as $1.8 million; the group has appealed.

Paul Lawrence, an attorney for CAN, acknowledges that Scott suffered an "unfortunate" deprogramming attempt. But CAN "did not deserve to be swept up" in the case because the volunteer who referred Scott's mother to the deprogrammer did so without CAN's knowledge, he said.

In the meantime, CAN filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in October 1995, hoping to develop a reorganization plan that would allow it to keep operating while pursuing the appeal. CAN's main creditor is Jason Scott. Moxon, Scott's lawyer, contested CAN's plan in bankruptcy court, and the judge refused to approve it. In an attempt to protect its assets, CAN filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy last June, which meant that it transferred control of its assets to an independent trustee--Martino.

On June 22, Martino went to CAN offices and arranged to have all the locks changed. He told the staff to take only their personal belongings and leave.

Martino sold CAN's name and logo, telephone number and P.O. box, along with CAN's office furniture and computers (stripped of their hard drives) for $20,000. CAN tried to contest the sale, but dropped the attempt last week after the judge required the group to first post a $30,000 bond.

Martino said he put CAN's name-brand assets on the auction block only because Kisser herself asked to buy them. Her highest bid was $19,000.

________________________________________

so there you have it
nothing is true everything is permitted!


welcome to the terrordome
synarchistic psyops of the secret world war...

use disgression at all times....

Captain Wardrobe


Andrew Carpenter is an Alias for Known Racist

21.12.2004 02:21

The name "Andrew Carpenter" is bogus. It is a nom de guerre for
Nigel Wright, a contributor to a racist hate group who harass, annoy
and threaten people of Indian descent.

Masquerading as "ex-followers" of Prem Rawat, a controversial but widely-popular spiritual teacher, Wright and several of his cronies have been involved in schemes to steal computer data, committ cyber-terrorism, and cyber-stalking. There is no evidence that Wright was EVER a follower of Rawat's. He has refused to provide any such information, and claims -- as most hate groups do -- that a leftist conspiracy is out to destroy him, thus, no bona fidea are forthcoming.


Him Jeller
mail e-mail: himjeller@home.com


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