Trump’s cultic power
>> Saturday, December 7, 2019
PERRYSCOPE
Perry Diaz
From the time Donald
Trump was elected president of the United States, he targeted a group of Americans
– about 30% -- to be his base of support. Predominantly poor,
under educated, and white, Trump indoctrinated them in his way of
thinking. He called upon them to support his “America First’ policy and
to “Make America Great Again” or MAGA.
These are
patriotic slogans that he used from the very beginning of his political
adventure. He captured the loyalty of a large number of Americans.
And from this base, he built a formidable army of followers.
He once
boasted at a campaign rally, “I could stand in the middle of 5th Avenue
and shoot somebody and I wouldn't lose voters.” His supporters loved
him... fanatically. He realized then that he had cultic power and he’ll use it
in his presidency.
Every night,
he’d send tweets to millions of supporters. Those are his marching
orders. But his tweets are full of lies. But he could care
less. As long as they believe what he says; that’s all that
matters. They’ve been brainwashed by a cultist who preaches his brand of
fanaticism. He lies constantly and never admits when he is wrong.
He decides what’s “fake new” and what’s the truth. He’s authoritarian and
yet his followers blindly follow him. He’s megalomaniac and loves to be
adored. He’s like Jim Jones, David Koresh, Sun Myung Moon, and other infamous cultic
leaders.
Recently, a
book was published by Steven Hassan entitled, “Cult of Trump: A Leading
Cult Expert Explains How the President Uses Mind Control.”
Hassan wrote
about his first-hand experience escaping from the Unification Church back in
the 70s. He’s decided to write the book because he believes there is
something seriously wrong with American politics today. Hassan emphasized
concepts like indoctrination, blind devotion, authoritarianism, and of course
-- in the subtitle -- mind control.
In February,
the Rev. John Pavlovitz, a progressive Christian leader, wrote a short blog
entitled, “The Cult of Trump.” He said, “America is in a cultic
crisis, and Trumpism is the cult. There is no other way to approach these
days.” He peppered his essay with a heart-wrenching anecdote of a friend’s
attempt to rescue his brainwashed mother, who was reduced to posting bigoted
memes on her social media account. Indeed, the number of news outlets and
public figures who have compared Trump to a cult leader and his political
movement to a cult is ever-growing, And last weekend, in the
Washington Post, Trump critic and Republican Strategist John Weaver said the
GOP is not a party anymore in the traditional sense, it's a cult.
Author’s
notes
Hassan wrote,
“Uniting all these positions. is the claim that the category of ‘cult’ can
be distinguished from other social or religious movements, that cults are
united by sharing charismatic leaders, and that followers have been
manipulated, psychologically coerced, or simply brainwashed into their
adherence to the cult’s ideology. This brainwashing or mind-control claim seems
to underlie most if not all of the ‘Trump cult’ rhetoric, often explicitly.
“The problem
is that scholars like me who study new religious movements (NRMs)—the groups
generally called cults—have concluded that such groups often share very little
in common besides being new, small, or otherwise socially stigmatized.
Importantly, religious studies scholars, sociologists, and social psychologists
have over the past three decades nearly unanimously rejected the cultic
brainwashing model, which has been shown to be both circular and inherently
subjective. Repeated empirical studies have disproven brainwashing as an
explanation for recruitment and membership in NRMs, though it lingers among
those associated with anti-cult groups. Neither the American Psychiatric
Association nor American courts accept brainwashing as a credible
scientific concept, and major academic journals no longer publish papers on the
concept. (This isn’t to say that all such new religious groups are
harmless—many are not—but brainwashing does not explain why people join.) Given
that most researchers consider brainwashing and mind-control to be
pseudoscientific at best, what is the appeal of comparing Donald Trump to a
cult leader, and those who support him to brainwashed cultists?
“The answer
to this question requires delving into both the specific reasons why such
commentators have employed the ‘cult rhetoric,’ as well as the nearly 50 years of
collected academic research on cults produced by sociologists, anthropologists,
psychologists, historians, and scholars of comparative religion.
“Behind these
claims lurks the assumption that Donald Trump possesses charisma, or the unique
ability to lead and manipulate followers. The history of the modern concept of
charisma can be traced to German social theorist Max Weber, who in the early
twentieth century explained that charisma is the ability to lead based not on
rational persuasion or technocratic skill, but based on power of personality
and a claim to possess uncanny and remarkable personal characteristics.
“Yet several
generations of scholars researching NRMs have found that charisma is very much
a relative concept, and that rather than envision charisma as an inborn quality
of a leader, charisma is produced by the interplay of the leader and his or her
followers. Followers invest their leader with charisma, and the leader in turn
builds off his or her (usually his) followers. The interplay between President
Trump and his supporters at his political rallies shows the manner in which
this occurs. This process certainly involves psychological manipulation, but it
isn’t magic, and it isn’t mind-control. Trump tells his followers at the
rallies that they face crises (immigration, globalization, etc.) and only he
can resolve these crises, that they therefore need him, and that in turn, he
needs them.
“Donald Trump
has amassed a colossal political movement, capturing nearly 63 million votes.
Granted that many individuals voted for Trump while holding their noses, or out
of shrewd political calculation, yet still millions are committed followers.
How do you
explain that? The reason cannot be brainwashing or mind-control, disputed
pseudoscientific concepts that lack any empirical support. His success rates
are actually vastly higher than any cult or NRM. The actual reasons
for his political success require careful analysis by political scientists, not
pseudoscientific concepts such as mind-control. Personally, I think Trump’s
rise must be assessed by the way he appeals to the power of tribalism, and with
it the fears of others benefiting at America’s expense. It’s a simultaneous
appeal to the communal solidarity of patriotism and American exceptionalism,
and the resultant desire for isolationism and retrenchment of Us against the
menacing Them. Others view Trump’s appeal differently, but the fact is, it’s
not mind-control or brainwashing. However, it does parallel the sort of
dualistic worldview of us/them, good/evil, insider/outsider seen in many new
religions.”
The Chosen
One
MSNBC
host Joy Reid slammed Republicans as President Trump's "racial and
religious cult" after a poll showed that a majority of them view Trump as
a better president than Abraham Lincoln.
"There’s
a lot of ways if you look at like the public religion research institute
numbers that, you know, it isn’t just a pejorative to say that it’s a
cult," Reid said Saturday on her show. "There’s a lot of evidence
that is a racial and religious cult of personality in which his base is solidly
among the white evangelicals that almost worship him and say that he’s the
chosen one of God." However, the vast majority of independents and
Democrats considered Lincoln to be the superior president.
Trump had
jokingly referred to himself as “the chosen one” in August when talking
about the U.S. trade war with China. His outgoing Energy Secretary Rick Perry
also used the title to refer to the president. Since then, a lot of
Republicans supporting Trump have referred to him in a godly manner. And
this is where the biggest danger of Trump’s cultic power comes from. (PerryDiaz@gmail.com)
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