I came across this article and am republishing it here because it contains a wealth of useful information, quoting 3 people in particular who I know personally understand the world of cults better than almost anyone: Prof. Stephen Kent, Dr. Steve Hassan and Dr. Janja Lalich. Their observations on cults, but also the insight into how the internet is now being employed, is important. Social media is a dangerous cesspool of lies and those of dubious motivations.
Minnah Arshad and Jeanine Santucci
In an era when almost anyone can reach millions on the internet, where is the line drawn between a social media influencer and an influential leader who draws followers to something more sinister?
Six people are missing out of Missouri after investigators believe they were sucked into what appears to be a “spiritual cult” on social media called the University of Cosmic Intelligence. The group is run by convicted child molester Rashad Jamal.
They include Ma’Kayla Wickerson, 25, and her 3-year-old daughter, Malaiyah; 24-year-old Mikayla Thompson; 27-year-old Gerrielle German and 3-year-old Ashton Mitchell; and 29-year-old Naaman Williams. They were last seen at a Quality Inn near St. Louis in August.
The missing people became increasingly isolated from family members, quit their jobs and were seen engaged in nude meditations outdoors, according to the Berkeley Police Department in Missouri.
What is a cult?
What sets cults apart from other organized groups is they operate to benefit only a leader, and their authoritarian structures leave no room for critical thinking, according to Dr. Steven Hassan, a renowned cult expert with firsthand experience escaping the Unification Church. Hassan founded the Freedom of Mind Resource Center to help other survivors heal.
Other groups with a common set of beliefs, such as religious institutions, encourage values – such as compassion and generosity – that benefit society as a whole, according to Hassan, who practices Judaism and has found comfort in his faith.
“If you can create uncertainty, doubt and fear, it makes people’s minds more susceptible to an authoritarian voice,” Hassan said.
Dr. Janja Lalich, a professor emerita of sociology at California State University, Chico and founder of the Lalich Center on Cults and Coercion, was also in what she describes as a political cult. She said in a Wired video that cults have four common characteristics: a leader who is charismatic and a narcissist, a transcendent belief system “that gives you the answer to everything,” a system of control that dictates things like how followers live or what they wear, and a system of influence that draws on emotions such as fear or grief to get followers to comply.
“Probably 99% (of cult leaders) are con artists and they know exactly what they’re doing. Some of them may eventually become delusional because they get away with so much for so long,” Lalich said in the video. “I think most of them are sitting back and laughing at their followers.”
“I want to categorically state that I am not a cult leader. … I am not involved in any form of cult activities, and my teachings are focused on enlightenment, not control,” the statement said.
In the statement, he also denied molesting a child, for which he was convicted in Georgia, and said he believes he has been falsely persecuted because of his teachings: “A black activist like myself speaking out against Oppression and racism never stood a chance.”
How social media changed the way cults reach followers
Before the internet, people interested in cults largely communicated and found groups through individual contacts, alternative bookstores, a radio broadcast or lecture, Kent said. Now, the same groups can connect with each other from their couches by lifting little more than a finger on their phones.
In one case, a joke about birds operating as a tool of government surveillance started as satire and festered into a conspiracy theory – one Jamal also proposed on social media.
However, those who are mildly curious will also be able to find objective information cautioning against dangerous ideologies through the same online platforms, he noted.
Hassan suspects other agents are also at work.
“If you look at (Jamal’s) YouTube, how did he get so many followers? Was it really organic, or were there bad actors amplifying it, or was it just algorithms of YouTube trying to make money?” Hassan said.
From Russia to Christian nationalists, “bad actors” encompass a wide breadth of entities with a variety of agendas that benefit from inducing chaos and promoting anti-government views in the U.S., Hassan said. One of them may have amplified Jamal’s online presence and boosted his platform by manipulating the algorithm.
“There’s geopolitical forces at work here,” he said.
How algorithms can draw people in deeper
The algorithms social media sites use to determine which videos and content to put in users’ feeds are designed to target what will pull them further into the sites, entice them to click on ads and make purchases so companies running the sites make money.
“The internet makes cults more dangerous, because people who may be initially curious get dragged down rabbit holes through algorithms,” Kent said.
The average American spends nearly seven hours online per day, including about two and a half hours on social media, which Hassan suspects is partly driven by the addictive dopamine hit that companies bolster by pushing engaging content tailored to viewers.
“I want people to become good consumers and ask questions,” Hassan said, also calling for regulation of companies that run the web.
How did the missing people get caught up in a cult?
Jamal, whose full name is Rashad Jamal White, denied knowing the missing people and said in his statement he is “devastated by these distressing events.”
Police in Berkeley, Missouri, have said the missing people were followers of Jamal on social media, shared his content and referenced his teachings. Their behaviors included engaging in polygamy, changing their names to “a spiritual God or Goddess” and “referring to their mother as a ‘shell’ that brought their spirit into the universe,” police said.
It’s possible the missing people never had any in-person contact with Jamal, Kent said, because the social media influencer has been imprisoned and was previously living in a different state. But that doesn’t mean they were not among his followers, Kent said.
“That’s one of the consequences of the internet: People can feel like they know a leader even if a leader doesn’t know them,” he said.
While cults are often thought to only attract a fringe group of people, Hassan warned virtually anyone is susceptible, though cult leaders may take advantage of weak moments. They use behavioral tactics to gradually rope people in, such as sleep deprivation, manipulative language and instilling irrational fears to prevent recruits from leaving or fighting back. And in the age of the internet, recruiting a wide breadth of people is made even easier for cult leaders, Hassan said.
Kent said if the missing people have “gone underground,” they will likely eventually be found, whether through a tip to law enforcement, posting to an online platform, getting pulled over while driving or having a run-in with a bank. But they could also be unreachable if something tragic happened to them, he said.
“Sooner or later, this mystery’s going to be solved,” Kent said. “Let’s just hope more people aren’t harmed when the story’s all over.”
Surviving a cult
Some of the missing people’s family members told USA TODAY that they were shocked by the disappearances, but said there were warning signs.
“We still believe that everything’s going to be OK and they’re going to come back home safely,” Cartisha Morgan, Ma’Kayla Wickerson’s mother, said. “I just wish I knew where they were.”
“It’s not easy to leave a cult,” Lalich said in the Wired video. “It’s one of the hardest things someone’s ever going to do.”
Peace Dog says
Mike, I have many concerns about social media myself. YouTube in particular. I see how easily it is for people to follow streamers because they find a sense of belonging and make “friends” in the live chats. It’s been a concern of mine since YouTube began the live-streaming option. I’ve seen subscribers afraid to leave a YouTube channel because they don’t like the creator anymore. They’re afraid to leave because the YouTuber may call them out during a livestream and other such nonsense. It becomes almost cult-like. If you make negative comments about a YouTuber, their band of followers comes after you. I’ve known some people who have been harassed, doxxed, and cyber-bullied. I had somebody follow me from one YouTuber’s channel over to Blown For Good’s channel to tell me they’ve taken screenshots of comments I’ve made! Who does this? It’s extremely concerning.
After observing the Twin Flames cult that formed on Facebook, I think we are going to see more and more cults that start on social media. Hopefully, more will bring awareness to this and also to the dangers of parasocial relationships.
Karl Woodrow says
Oh! I have an idea! DM could be put in an electronic straight jacket and left in a mountain fortress for a billion years!! 😁😁
Actually a prison cell would do nicely.
Aquamarine says
Good Lord in Heaven.
6 thousand boxes.
All have to be “prepared” (whatever that means) and reboxed and shipped…in 7 days.
Without knowing ANYTHING about Scientology. with NO intel whatsoever except – along with the above data – the length of time that this org has been established, I would immediately, right off the bat, be suspicious. My own “inner voice” would be saying, “There is something wrong. This is a highly disorganized group. Stay away!”
Again, not knowing anything else, just this alone would set off warning bells in me.
Yawn says
Chilling.
Subjective warfare under or within the guise of ‘social media’ is a new and amplified wolf in sheep’s clothing. The novel little flat screen that has been adopted with such passionate ‘must have’ sincerity has become the opioid of the masses. Just try denying one to or taking one off a teenager. The withdrawals rival any drug of dependance. Interactive TV, who would have thought of that when TV first came out? Dick Tracey maybe?
Sort of ironic but fortunate that Scientology attacked the internet. A small silver lining in amongst a sea of hypnotic influence that opportunistic cults are taking advantage of, and new ones are propagating. Governments are biding their time as they lick their chops involving themselves in this evolution.
Social media is here to stay and is growing at an exponential rate. George Orwell explained the inner strength and inherent weakness of the human spirit rather well in writing “1984” way back in 1949, he was remarkably astute & uncannily accurate. The perpetual but now AI enhanced wars are already here.
This sure is very negative of me. I now find myself even apologizing to myself, but social media is the most expansive, invasive and growing propaganda machinery that humanity has ever created. This article and occurrences of this nature should be of no real surprise. That’s the really scary bit. ‘Apathy Kills,’ was the hippe based banner of the Vietnam era. They weren’t wrong.
Christine says
Thank you Mike for sharing this information. The internet/social media is a cesspool. I always wonder where it will all end. I hope you and your family are well. Take care and stay strong.
Peggy L says
Thank you Mike for sharing this information. The extent of human depravity is chilling.
Peggy L says
I just wanted to add that I tend to forget that one, despicable, depraved human can do so much damage, either by acting alone, or, in the case of those like LRH, can do so much damage when left unchecked. it can be someone on unsocial media too. It’s heartbreaking when those most harmed are children.
Yes, something can be done about it.
Fred G. Haseney says
I came across “The Social Dilemma” at the Internet Archive about 3 years ago. It blew me away. Yes, Mike, chilling and important it is.
Thanks to you and your blog, Mike, a safe place for me to destimulate as you educate.
Glenn says
GL
Infinite ability to keep paying and paying and……
If the IRS took away the cult’s tax exempt status and thus the ability for members to deduct their contributions from their taxes that well would dry up swiftly and the the diminutive midget would cash out and head to the Fleecewinds and hide.
Fred G. Haseney says
Thanks, Mike, for sharing this article with us. It further solidifies my decision to avoid social media. The 2020 documentary, “The Social Dilemma,” and a book written against social media by one of the film’s participants helped me walk away from social media.
It’s sad that two child are amongst the missing people. That cult’s leader might have nothing to do with their disappearance, but child molesters may be part of his followers.
My experience with authoritarian cults run by charismatic narcissistic leaders began with my upbringing (that is, the family that raised me, run by a narcissist, psychopathic parent), followed by 37 years in scientology.
In 2014, I walked away from scientology. This year, I celebrate a decade of freedom.
The funny thing is, scientology’s policy on disconnection helped me permanently cut all ties with that narcissistic parent. That took place in 1999, and my life has changed in ways that I never thought possible.
Scientology’s policy which forbids its followers from seeking help through psychology and psychiatry prevented me from learning about narcissism. It’s a dangerous policy that actually denies one the tools needed for understanding life.
Mike Rinder says
Thanks Fred. The Social Dilemma is a chilling and important documentary that everyone should watch. I have recommended it before.
Mick says
Boy does that sounds like someone we all know?
Title begins with a C.
Name begins with a D.
Nickname is Tiny Tyrant.
Last name begins with M.
Does it ring any bells?
Clue 1: He’s the shortest cult leader in the world standing at 4’13” with lifts.
Clue 2: His wife has been missing for over 17 years. Where’s Shelly?
Who am I?
GL says
$camatology tenet: “…human beings are immortal, that a person’s life experience transcends a single lifetime, and that human beings possess infinite capabilities.”
If this isn’t almost pure cultish language I must be missing something. The bit they left out (paraphrasing the above):
“…human beings are immortal, that a person’s bank accounts and credit cards transcends a single lifetime, and that cult adherents possess infinite capabilities to keep paying and paying and…”