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Towards
A New Model Of ''Cult Control"
February
22, 2000
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Robert
Vaughn Young, was a member of the Sea Organization for twenty
years, during which time he worked almost exclusively for
the Office of Special Affairs. Both he and his wife were highly
placed personalities, Stacy
Young was the chief editor of the Scientology Freedom
magazine and Vaughn Young had made a name for himself in the
inner circles of Scientology. Both broke out of the cult in
1989 and started speaking out against it in 1993.
(Originally
posted to the newsgroup alt.religion.scientology)
|
To those
who don't know me, I was in Scientology for about 21 years.
Until Jesse Prince stepped forward, I was the highest-ranking
Scientology executive to speak about the organization without
its approval. I served in and saw virtually every echelon
of the organization, from a franchise where I started in 1969
to working directly with David Miscavige. About 18 of those
years was spent in or senior to Dept. 20 (now called the Office
the Special Affairs or OSA), the section that deals with the
''enemies'' of the organization, which comes to mean anyone
who disagrees with or criticizes any aspect of Scientology,
Hubbard or ''management.'' Thus it is Dept. 20 (and now also
RTC) that deals with the media, the courts, government agencies,
critics and ARS itself.
Hello
& Goodbye from Robert Vaughn Young
(Preface:
I am making this long post to ARS because I am stepping
away from this work and I want to get it into the hands
of people who study or are concerned with this issue.
I do not know who has taken this view. It is merely my
perspective and opinion and can certainly prompt debate,
not to mention screams of horror from any cult. I just
want it to be seriously considered by the professionals
who deal with this. Others should be interviewed on it
and the model developed and tested. Nor do I think it
is the only model. I merely think it might help some who
could not be helped before. I only ask that someone provide
a copy of this to whoever might be interested in the issue
of ''cult control.'') |
After
I left Scientology in 1989 with 21 years in the cult, the
hardest question people posed to me was why I stayed in it
so long if I knew it was such an abusive system. I didn't
have an answer that satisfied me, let alone anyone else. I
think I've come up with a reply and a model. It at least satisfies
me today.
My own
background and basic interests also demanded an answer to
that question. I had a pursued and obtained a BA in philosophy
(from what was then known as San Francisco State College)
because of a strong interest in what we called philosophy
of behavior/mind/psychology. (The choice often depended on
the school, as well as the emphasis within the field.)
I was
then accepted into the PhD program at the University of California
at Davis. I picked them because they had a strong program
in this new, growing field of study. (Twenty years later I
discovered that the field of ''cognitive science'' had emerged
with entire departments devoted to it and PhDs being granted
at some universities. Cognitive Science is a blend of philosophy,
psychology and some computer science, namely in the area of
AI or artificial intelligence, which was exactly what I was
looking for. AI was posing new philosophical problems but
back in the late 1960s, departments had yet to integrate them
as full subjects.)
It was
this interest of mine that prompted me to read Hubbard. I
was intrigued with elements of his philosophy, namely some
of the epistemological and cosmological presentations. Scientology's
Dept 20/RTC and their attorneys (especially in my last deposition
in Tampa a couple of weeks ago) can't grasp this. When they
ask why I got into Scientology, they make all sorts of assumptions,
from ''personal improvement'' to my wanting to join a religion.
No, I say, trying to explain, but it never sticks. For an
''applied religious philosophy'' they haven't a clue what
''philosophy'' even means, let alone ''religious philosophy.''
(They think that a ''religious philosophy'' is a religion.
Get a clue!) But then, Hubbard didn't understand it either,
as I finally came to learn.
Which
brings it back to the issue of why I stayed. There was one
incident that happened in 1988 that I kept as my litmus test.
I knew if I could understand it, I could understand it all.
I was
on the Rehabilitation Project Force (RPF) at ''Golden Era
Studios'' at Gilman Hot Springs CA. (For the sake of brevity,
let's skip why I was there and the way it works and the like
and just cut to the chase. Besides, it's irrelevant to the
point I'm making and I think I've written about it before.)
My situation had deteriorated to the point that I was afraid
I was either going to go crazy on the RPF or die so I escaped
one night. They found me at a motel in nearby Hemet and wanted
to talk. I said okay and the next thing I knew, I agreed to
return to the ''program'' and to finish the RPF. I did and
was on it another 5-6 months (total 16 months) before ''graduating.''
Here
is my litmus test. More than why did I stay in here, why did
I return if I felt it was so abusive that I escaped? And here's
the kicker: they TALKED me back in. They didn't lay a hand
on me. By just talking with me, they convinced me to give
up what I had planned for weeks and executed. They convinced
me to go back to the very condition that I feared would kill
me. Why did I do it?
And this
must be remembered: I can look back (11 years after fleeing)
and see that I was right to escape the RPF and wrong to return.
So why did I return and then stay?
Here's
where the ''mind control'' advocates might argue their point.
After all, isn't this what ''mind control'' is all about where
I was ''controlled'' to do something that was inherently against
my will?
Or the
''brainwashing'' school might give their explanation from
that perspective. After 21 years in the cult, they might say,
I was ''conditioned'' and like some ''Manchurian Candidate''
or Pavlovian dog, someone merely rang some bell or pushed
a button and I complied.
I never
bought either model. As I tried to understand, I read some
articles by ''experts'' on the subject of ''cult control''
but they just didn't fit. It was like putting on an expensive
but oversized coat that hung off the fingertips and draped
across me like a double-breasted. Yeah, it was a ''coat''
and the ''label'' was impressive but
I wondered
if it was me. Maybe I resented the idea that I had been ''brainwashed''
or there was ''mind control'' and so that was why I didn't
like the theories. I found myself in an amusing situation
where I was agreeing with the cult that the models didn't
work but there was still SOMEthing, some point of control.
Why was I talked back into a situation that I detested and
that I could look back on years later and agree, yes, something
else was at work. There WAS some sort of ''control'' but ''mind
control''? It didn't work.
It wasn't
until my first trip to Wellspring that I found the model that
worked for me. It had nothing to do with them. It was some
books that were on their shelves that I was reading in my
spare time that let me realize the model that worked for me:
the battered or abused woman. The idea didn't take hold fully
then. It took further reading (including some on the Web)
some months later to bring it together.
Various
''experts'' can (and do) argue if ''mind control'' or ''brainwashing''
really exists or if we are just talking about various forms
of ''influence'' that is found in everything from advertising
to conversations. But they can't argue with the fact that
there are battered/abused women who stay in abusive situations
and there are women who flee and when found by the husband
are talked BACK into the very relationship they tried to escape
and then it repeats.
Until
a very few years ago, our society didn't even ADMIT to these
women, let alone try to help them or try to understand the
phenomenon. Being the male-dominated society we are, it was
even legal in many states for a husband to hit his wife, and
may still be. If a woman went to the police, they simply called
the husband. But now women are stepping forward and it isn't
easy. It is like being a rape victim and speaking out. It
takes courage and it took some women to force this issue on
our (American) male-dominated society and MAKE it an issue.
That is why it is a new issue. It is not that it hasn't existed.
It has undoubtedly existed for as long as there have been
men and women but - like civil rights and other issues - it
took some ''victims'' FORCING the issue before anyone even
admitted that it existed.
The first
time I saw the parallel between my own experiences in the
cult of Scientology and battered women was when I was reading
''Captive Hearts, Captive Minds,'' which is an excellent book.
It was in the Intro or maybe the first chapter that they cited
and quoted the singer Tina Turner who had been in an abusive
relationship for something like 10 or 15 years. She remarked
how being with Ike Turner was like being in a small cult.
The remark jumped off the page at me. Given the success of
Tina Turner as an entertainer, one is not prone to say she
is a stupid woman but there she was in a marriage where she
was beaten constantly and yet she stayed. When she finally
escaped, as she tells her story, it was after a beating that
left her head so swollen that she couldn't put on a wig. She
wrapped her head in a scarf and fled, taking no money or anything
and finally got away from Ike Turner.
One wonders
how often she has been asked since, ''Tina, you're such a
talented woman, so intelligent, how could you stay with a
man for 10/15 years who was beating you?'' Maybe she has an
answer in her autobiography. I don't know. It is on my to-read
list. But I know she was asked that question. Every woman
who escapes a man who has been beating them must get that
question and it is probably the hardest one in the world to
answer. After all, it's not that you don't KNOW you're getting
beaten. And it didn't happen just once. Nor twice. It happens
week after week, month after month, year after year.
Nor are
these women locked up. The husband goes off to work, for example,
and she has a car. She gets in the car and she goes to the
store, buys food, and brings it home, to the very place where
she is being beaten and she makes dinner. She doesn't keep
driving. SHE COMES BACK. To what? More abuse.
There
are also plenty of cases where the women DID escape, where
they finally got up their courage and maybe grabbing the kids,
they fled and the man managed to find them. Then, with no
physical abuse, he TALKED HER BACK. And then when the abuse
started again, she stayed. Some leave, but some stay.
When
I began to see the parallel between my own experience and
these women, I went back and re-read Lifton's 10 or however
many points that he makes for his model and I realized that
it was based on studying prisoners of war! That was hardly
a secret but when he and others were making their models of
''mind control'' or ''brainwashing'' or however you call it,
battered women weren't even a subject which, for me, was a
telling difference. After all, what repatriated prisoner of
war says he wants to go back? What prisoner of war was let
out of their cell and allowed to go into the city to relax
and then went back to the prison where they were abused and
tortured? THAT, for me, is where the model breaks down and
where the model of the abused or battered woman takes over.
Even
before I realized how the plight of the abused woman paralleled
my situation, I used to wonder how people from East Germany
were able to cross into Berlin to shop and then would return.
If conditions in East Berlin were as bad as we were being
told in the West, how could they step into the West, see the
difference, buy the things they didn't have back home and
then return? I don't cite this as an exact parallel, but there
is a similarity. Why would a person go BACK to a condition
that is worse? I don't think ''mind control'' or ''brainwashing''
fits that situation any more than it fits the abused woman
or that it fit mine.
One day
talking with someone about this new idea that I had, I mentioned
the East German parallel and the person made an excellent
point. ''East Germany was their home,'' she said. ''People
don't easily leave their homes unless they have someplace
better to go.''
And that
nearly tied the two together for me, as well as back into
my situation. Where can the abused woman go? Can she just
take off for nowhere? I don't know. I do know that when I
escaped the RPF, I didn't have anywhere to GO, which was why
I went to a motel. (There was another reason but it is somewhat
immaterial for this point.) When Stacy and I successfully
fled in 1989, we were in the same bind. We didn't have anyplace
to GO. We knew that the cult had the names and addresses and
phone numbers of every single family member and friend. If
nothing else, our mail had been monitored and read for years
and there is no doubt in my mind that the already-existing
list was expanded from that monitoring. (Their excuse for
opening and reading all mail that comes to staff at the org
is to watch for billings to the org. It is a Hubbard policy.
Staff are then pulled in and interrogated about mail considered
suspicious.)
Knowing
that they had such a list, we knew we could not go to any
of those people so we just hit the road and drove. I had already
been talked back in once. And there was one other time when
I tried to escape and got as far as the gate and was talked
back. So that was one thing I knew I had to avoid. I had to
get enough space and time to get my own wits about me to fend
off another attempt, if they could find us.
That
is also why I believe cult members have to escape in secret:
they are afraid they will be talked back in or convinced to
stay. I know what that feels like.
After
I began to apply the abused or battered woman model (for want
of better words) to my own situation, I had an inadvertent
and unintentional opportunity to test it and I will never
forget the experience. I was back on Vashon Island, sometime
in 1999, where I had been living. (For those who don't know,
Vashon is an island in Puget Sound.) Vashon is an incredibly
unique community. When you live there, you are an ''islander''
and it grants you a number of unstated privileges. It took
me a long time to realize what it reminded me of. It is what
the Old West (in the US) used to be like. A person was accepted
for who they said they were until they proved otherwise. You
answered to the locals, not outsiders. That was how Vashon
islanders lived.
There
were two bars on the island, across the street from each other.
One of them was where the ''kids'' and off-islanders hung
out. It had a pool table and a big screen TV for watching
games. The other was quiet, sedate and for the ''old timers''
who knew each other and everything that was happening on the
island. Even if you were new on the island, by the time you
visited, they knew you and more than you imagined. It was
the sort of place where you could sit down, have a beer and
catch up on the local gossip. Any visitors to the island looking
for a place to hang out would stick their heads in and then
leave and choose the one across the street, leaving us to
our own rhythm. It was also a place where you could just sit
and if you wanted to be alone, you were left alone. It was
that sort of place.
One night
I went in, getting the usual hi's and nods and maybe a slap
on the back or giving one in return. 'Hey, where ya been!''
someone asked. ''Oh, hanging around,'' I answered. Such a
reply would be enough. If I wanted to say more, I would. No
one would pry. I pulled up a bar stool, ordered a beer and
sat watching ESPN. It was the only acceptable station because
one could watch it with no sound, and it was kept at no sound
so people could play the juke box if they wanted.
I was
there relaxing for about 15 minutes when a woman sat down
next to me. More out of reflex than anything else, I turned
and looked and nodded and she nodded back. Then I went back
to the TV to watch how the Mariners were doing. The barkeep
said hi to her in a way that meant she was a local.
After
a couple of minutes she spoke up. ''You're the one they've
been picketing, aren't you?''
I turned
to her. She was sipping on her beer. She was maybe 45 and
dressed as islanders dress. (Nine times out of ten, you can
spot an off-islander by their attire.) She was clearly a local,
although I didn't recognize her. That was easy enough on this
island. ''Yeah,'' I said.
''How's
it going? They still doing it?''
No, I
said, it's been quiet lately. She told me how she thought
it was terrible, how they come onto the island like that.
It's not how islanders behave, she said. Yeah, I replied with
a shrug. They just don't get it.
''I saw
you on the 'Dateline' show,'' she said. I nodded as she remarked
some more about it. Finally she asked the question. ''So how
long were you in Scientology?''
''About
21 years,'' I said.
''Wow,''
she said actually surprised. ''If it really is as bad as I
hear, how could you stay in it that long?''
There
it was, that same question. Well, this time I had a new answer.
''I guess
that's like asking an abused women why she stayed in that
relationship for so long when
''
She suddenly
turned to me and raised her hands in front of her, one of
those ''halt'' motions and said, ''Say no more! I just ended
an abusive marriage of 12 years. I know exactly what you are
talking about.''
And right
there, we became friends. We had something in common.
We exchanged
a few more words on the subject of coming to one's senses
and then the entire subject was dropped. Neither of us were
interested in it. We each understood the other fully and spent
the next hour talking about the island, the Mariners and other
pleasantries of life until she finally paid her bill and got
off the stool, shook my hand, wished me well and said she'd
tell her friends about us.
After
she left and in the year since, I've thought about that conversation
many times, how there was an instant connection by her, an
immediate recognition. She never said how long it had been
since she ended the marriage but it had probably been long
enough to be asked the same question that she found herself
asking me. But it was by an incredibly stroke of luck that
the first person I said that to happened to be a women who
escaped from an abusive relationship. It could have been someone
who would have let me finish my statement and said, ''You
know, I've never understood that either,'' but it wasn't.
It was a woman who said, say no more, I know exactly what
you're talking about. And she did. Our situations were entirely
different but they were the same.
After
that I realized that for the first time I had a model that
I could use in the most difficult situations and the understanding
would be based on that person's grasp of the situation of
the abused woman. With this model/analogy, I could go on the
''Oprah'' show and with that response she would get it, as
would millions of women watching the show. Nothing else would
be needed. There wouldn't have to be arguments about ''mind
control'' or ''brainwashing'' and if it really exists. Abused
women exist and whatever keeps them there or brings them back,
it happens. That fact cannot be denied.
Now that
I've made my point, let me expand it. In my opinion, this
model/analogy extends much further than the control of a cult.
I think it can be found in jobs where the person feels trapped
and wants to leave but can't. There might be a difference
that the ''boss'' may not try to talk them back, but I think
this model/analogy goes farther than merely cults and abused
women. That would be up to others to pursue. My point is that
I'm not targeting Scientology. The model worked for me in
my situation and I think it would help others who have had
difficulty understanding the ''control'' they felt. It helped
me because it lifted out of the subjects of ''mind control''
and ''brainwashing'' and told me that it was not exclusive
to the cult. In turn, I understood - or at least sympathized
- with the plight of the abused woman. I no longer wondered
why they stayed or returned. I didn't have an answer, but
I was no longer puzzled.
At my
last deposition in Tampa, there was a point where this came
up. I don't recall what it was but I was asked something that
prompted me to say that I thought the abused woman syndrome
was a good model for what I had experienced. Of course, there
were the guffaws and laughs of severe denial from their part.
It is to be expected from the abusers, isn't it? No abusive
husband admits to it and no abusive cult will either and for
the same reasons.
Before
closing, let me make a couple more points of parallel.
No abusive
relationship starts that way. In fact, the chances are that
if the guy had slapped her on the first date, there wouldn't
be a second one. No, the abusive relationship starts with
sweetness. When I was reading about abusive relationships,
that came up constantly, how the guy was so nice and sweet.
No, the abuse is gradual. It starts with some criticism and
when the woman accepts it, then there is a little bit more.
When she accepts that, the man does more as he introduces
CONTROL. If she protests, he backs off until he can reestablish
the control. It is called a GRADIENT. (Ironically, Scientologists
will be familiar with that word.) The woman comes to accept
more and more and becomes convinced that it is something SHE
is doing wrong. As it is increased, the sweetness tapers off
until it is finally dangled in front of her like a carrot.
Somewhere along the line, the physical abuse starts. If she
breaks too hard, he is sweet and comforting and maybe even
apologetic, bringing her back under control. That is the key.
CONTROL. (Another word Scientologists know well. Hubbard even
had his own definition for it and processing addressing control.)
Then one day the beatings are regular and she loses her self-respect
and dignity.
Let me
draw another parallel to my own situation. I mentioned in
one of my other posts to ARS that I am making with this one
about the woman who asked me if there was anything anyone
could have said to me to change my mind while I was in Scientology.
No one had asked me that and I realized - and told her - that
no, there was nothing anyone could have said.
That
happens with the abused woman too. I read how they would later
recount the advice of friends who kept telling them that their
husband/lover was abusing them and that they should leave.
I don't recall any who said, you know, you're right! I'm going
to leave him! No, they explained the abuse! They would say
- actually believing it, until they finally escaped - that
he was really a nice guy, that he was misunderstood, that
he was trying, that they would work things out, etc., etc.,
etc.
You know
who usually changes the woman's mind? The abuser. Those who
flee - like Tina Turner - simply say one day, I've had enough,
and escape. Some do it sooner. Some later. Until that moment,
they rationalize their situation. Friends or family might
be able to intervene but not in the hard core cases. In those
instances, the abuser is the only one who can change the person's
mind.
Until
then money and resources are also a factor. People stay in
abusive situations because they have no money or anywhere
else to go. Maybe if the abused woman had $100,000 in the
bank she would have given him the finger and taken off long
before. But what abuser would allow the woman to keep that
money for herself? (I have yet to learn of a Sea Organization
member who escaped with ample personal resources. The amount
of money one has on joining - if any - is quickly discovered
and one is convinced to spend it on the cult, thus effectively
wiping out any resources.) These are the points that have
to be researched to understand this phenomenon and to offer
help.
Meanwhile
you might ask, how can a person rationalize a beating? Good
question indeed. If the plight of the abused women had been
known longer than it has, maybe we would have a better understanding.
Each woman will have her own answer but until we get a grasp
of it the fact remains that it exists and there are some disturbing
parallels between them and cult members. I wasn't ''abused''
when I joined. It was like the ''love bombing'' found in another
cult. Everything is wonderful and the future is bright and
this is the place to be. Then one day, there is a little ''correction.''
If one balks, one is talked through it gently until it is
grasped and one is willing to accept it. The next one is attached
to that one. (''Remember how well we did last time when you
were able to understand it and you had a win?'') And the next
until one day you find yourself working 12 hours a day at
hard labor, under guard, seven days a week, unable to talk
to friends and family, your body racked in pain and undergoing
constant interrogation to give up your ''crimes'' and you
accept it as necessary for your own ''rehabilitation.'' And
if you try to escape and they catch you, you can be talked
back to the very same situation and you convince yourself
that this is right as you haul the next load of rocks out
in 110 degree heat and a blazing sun for $5 a week. It is
all part of your ''rehabilitation.''
No, when
people asked me how I could stay for so long when I knew it
was abusive, that's a loaded question. I didn't know it any
more than the abused woman knew it. I kept telling myself
that they really are okay, that it must be my fault, that
it is being done to help me and things really will get better.
I carried that attitude right into the RPF until one day I
broke and decided to escape. Then they talked me back and
I was convinced that it would get better. All they did was
back up the gradient to where I would accept the control.
That
is another place where I find that the ''mind control/brainwashing''
models break down. It is crucial in cult control that the
person feel in control and in fact IS ''in control.'' One
is always making the decision to stay. To that degree, it
is ''consensual.'' But how ''consensual'' is the abused woman?
Just because she has the freedom to drive to the store and
back and no one is keeping her in chains, does that mean she
is ''consenting'' to her situation? Can the husband argue
that he isn't ''controlling'' her because she has that freedom?
Then what IS ''consent''? That may be a legal quandary as
much as a psychological one but I don't think we are ready
to walk away from the woman being beaten, saying she is ''consenting
to it,'' are we?
Thanks
to video cameras, we can watch shows like ''Cops'' where the
police are called out to a real life ''domestic disturbance.''
If you have watched that show enough, you finally saw the
all-to-familiar scene of the woman with a bloody nose who
has clearly been beaten (the cops were called by neighbors
hearing the fight) and is standing there explaining it all
away, insisting that the police take no action. No, she's
fine, she says. No, it's nothing. To the questions from the
police about the bloody nose or the swelling around the eyes,
she'll say anything but the facts, that he was beating her.
Do we need more evidence? There are the very people - the
police - who can take him off to jail and end the abuse if
she will simply speak up and she refuses while wiping the
blood from her nose or pulling the torn clothing up around
her shoulder and telling them that everything is okay. Of
course, the police cannot legally intervene unless she complains
and she will not.
Now let
me make a harrowing admission. If the police had shown up
that day when I was at the motel trying to escape, when the
security guards were parked outside to make sure I didn't
disappear on them, and if the police had asked me if everything
was okay or if I needed any help, do you know what I would
have said and done? The same thing as that woman. No, it's
fine, I would have said. I'll handle it. It stuns me to think
it, let alone say it right now, but that is the truth. That
is exactly what I would have done. And do you know why? Because
I didn't want to be in trouble with the cult. If you can figure
that one out, give it to the experts.
That
is why people who flee the cult - even into the arms of the
authorities - can be talked back. They can no more say ''help
me'' than the woman standing there with a bloody nose can
tell the police. Give them a few days rest and time to get
their wits about them and maybe they can. That is why those
first few hours or days are crucial. The more time the person
gets away from the person suppressing them, the more they
recover their own sense of self. That, of course, infuriates
the abuser, until he/they finally give up and look for their
next victim. Meanwhile, some degree of control remains until
the person finally sheds it.
And don't
think that all abused women are abused physically. The abuse
might be merely verbal, with other controls like control of
money, sleep, clothing, friends, beliefs, free time etc. (Gee,
sound familiar?)
Now if
one were interested in studying the ''abused woman'' syndrome,
who would one study? This may sound like a ridiculous question
but it goes to a point the cult is making.
First
of all, one has to decide if such women exist. (This may sound
like I'm contradicting myself but hang on.) How does one decide?
The obvious answer would seem to be the stories of women themselves.
But can we believe them? Maybe they are making it up. So let's
ignore them for the moment and go to marriages/relationships
and ask the women, are you abused? Let's ask the men, are
you abusing this woman? What sort of answer will we get? Done
in this way, we can conclusively ''prove'' that there are
no abused women because all of the women - including the ones
with the bloody noses - will deny it as will the men. Case
closed. No woman is abused.
That
is exactly what the cult is doing. They are saying that those
who have left and claim abuse are ''apostates'' (one who has
abandoned one's belief or cause) and can't be believed. (They
even paid some ''experts'' to ''conclude'' this.) Meanwhile,
they will suggest, all you have to do is ask Scientologists
if they feel abused. In fact, you can even go into the RPF
and ask and chances are (unless there is one rocky one who
will be quickly stashed somewhere else) they will respond
to the man and woman that they are not being abused. Case
closed. No one is abused.
In other
words, as long as we listen to someone who has abandoned a
belief or a cause (from a marriage to a ''religion'') cannot
be believed.
And that
is one of the reasons why abused women were not believed until
just a few years ago. Think on that. Women have been abused
for thousands of years and it wasn't until a few years ago
that it was even admitted that it happened and that something
should be done about it. How many women went to the police
and were turned away or were killed or destroyed before someone
believed them? How many have simply fled and disappeared and
are still too ashamed to talk, preferring to just live quiet
lives where they can choose their own friends, have their
own bank accounts, pick their own meals, select their own
clothes, keep private diaries and not have to answer or explain
themselves again? Can anyone imagine what a joy that is to
a person whose life was controlled down to the point of what
it was they could say or believe, where their very thoughts
and opinions were monitored, that they can now forget it?
How many women are out there? Compare that to how many go
to the authorities or champion the cause of abused women and
take it to the media and the courts. How many of THOSE are
there? Three? Five? Ten? Should these ''apostates'' be believed?
How many
ex-cult members are there? How many have of them have spoken
out? Three? Five? Ten? Should these ''apostates'' be believed?
I think
there are many, many reasons to draw a parallel between the
two groups not only in their situation but in those who speak
out and I hope that this might spark some interest within
some professional circle. I'm no more an ''expert'' on sociological
parallels than that woman with the bloody nose is an expert
but we do have a level of understanding.
Robert
Vaughn Young
copyright
(c) Robert
Vaughn Young all rights reserved
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