223 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
223 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
Expansion of CompuServe Religion Forum message
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#: 88602
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22-Mar-88 16:22:27
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Sb: #Cult Awareness Network
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Fm: Don Tyler 75775,473
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To: All
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The Sunday 20 March Chicago Tribune carried an article headlined "Cult fighters
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in center of raging storm" regarding the Cult Awareness Network. It was the
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column-one story in the city section, under a local political headline but with
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a large (4x8) color photo of a concerned-looking Cynthia Kisser, exec. dir. of
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the CAN. Behind her are (squinting at fuzzy newsphoto) a bulletin board with a
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poster for a "Human Aura" conference, leaflets for Eckankar and NSA (?),
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Insight magazine (?), all flagged with post-it comments. "There are so many
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cults now, they are less visible, but more prolific, like the threads in a
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tapestry," she is quoted in the caption.
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CULT FIGHTERS IN CENTER OF RAGING STORM
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By Wes Smith
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Behind an unmarked door, three women work in a two-room office in a Chicago
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suburb. Mail is retrieved from an anonymous post office box. The telephone
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is listed to another address.
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In spite of the secretive nature of this place, the phone rings
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frequently, more than 2,000 times a year. The callers often speak with
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urgency.
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* A mother from a Southern state says her daughter has suddenly decided to
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quit medical school and leave the country to join a group "that knows the
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truth."
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* A Chicago secretary seeks information on a business management firm that
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she believes is linked to the Scientology movement.
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* A social worker in Ohio asks for literature on Satanism. A child under
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his care has exhibited signs of involvement.
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* A detective with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police asks for any
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information available on a suspicious-sounding "humanitarian group" that is
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trying to buy a large parcel of land in his area.
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The callers have dialed 312-267-7777 -- the number to the national
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headquarters of the Cult Awareness Network, a low-profile and nonprofit
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organization that gathers information on "destructive" cults, those that
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allegedly employ mind control techniques, coercion and unethical or illegal
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practices.
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The nearly 10-year-old network serves as a warehouse of information for
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people who often fear what they might learn when they call, according to
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Cynthia Kisser, executive director. It has 50 affiliates in 25 states and
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its files contain profiles, membership lists and even tax returns of more
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than 1,000 cults and suspected cults.
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Kisser said she regrets the melodrama of the network's undisclosed
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address, untraceable phone and unmarked door, but her small volunteer
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organization is not without its ardent detractors.
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The Unification Church of Rev. Sun Myung Moon has accused the Cult
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Awareness Network of "spreading fear."
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John T. Biermans, national spokesman for the Unification Church, said the
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Cult Awareness Network has unfairly labeled the church as a cult based on
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rumors and testimony from former church members.
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"You wouldn't want your ex-wife telling people about you, would you? If
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you rely on these people for information, then you are missing something. To
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assume they have all the information is simply unfair," Biermans said.
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The Unification Church has been joined by the American Civil Liberties
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Union and the National Council of Churches in campaigning against the
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network's ongoing efforts to create a National Cult Awareness Week by
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congressional resolution.
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The ACLU, the Unification Church and others believe the Cult Awareness
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Network treads on the constitutional rights of freedom of religion and
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speech, their spokesman said.
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But those who support the network say it provides a valuable service in
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tracking the activities of religious, political, self-help and commercial
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cults.
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The Cult Awareness Network was formed from disparate groups around the
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nation following the Jonestown tragedy of Rev. Jim Jones' People's Temple in
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Guyana. Those groups, composed mostly of the families of cult members or
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former cult members themselves, now make up a national network with
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affiliates in Denmark, England, France, Germany, Israel, Australia and New
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Zealand.
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"When Jonestown happened, the independent groups said it was the ultimate
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realization of the potential threat of dangerous cults," Kisser said.
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Funded by donations -- it operated on a $100,000 budget last year -- the
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Cult Awareness Network serves as an information center for the families of
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cult members, law enforcement agencies, the news media and anyone else
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seeking information on cult activities, Kisser said.
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The network does not, as members of the Unification Church and other
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critics charge, get involved in the abduction and deprogramming of cult
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members, nor is it anti-Christian, she said.
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Kisser did acknowledge, however, that the network's list of experts on
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various cults does include individuals who have been involved in
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deprogramming and that families have sometimes learned of those services
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after being referred by the network.
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Chicago Gang Crimes Detective Jerry Simandl, who specializes in crimes
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involving ritualistic groups, has spoken in seminars sponsored by the
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network and has investigated cases referred by the group.
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"We have worked very closely with them in education people on ritualistic
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criminal activity, and I have found them to be very dedicated people," he
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said of the Cult Awareness Network.
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Criticism of the network has reached a fever pitch in Washington, D.C., in
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recent weeks as Cult Awareness supporters have lobbied congressmen to
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support its resolution recognizing the Nov. 18 anniversary of the 1978
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Jonestown murder-suicide of 913 followers of Jim Jones and declaring a
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National Cult Awareness Week on Nov. 13-19, 1988.
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The ACLU sent letters protesting the resolution to every congressman last
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week and several experts scheduled to speak at a Cult Awareness Network
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informational session for legislative aides this weekend received threats,
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Kisser said.
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Barry W. Lynn, legislative counsel with the ACLU in Washington, as led
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that group's opposition. Lynn said the ACLU has found itself in interesting
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company in fighting the resolution.
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"I've been getting calls from Scientologists, witches and the Unification
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Church -- all seeking to derail this issue," he said.
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The ACLU opposes the resolution on the grounds that Congress is forbidden
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by the Constitution from restricting religious freedoms, Lynn said.
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U.,S. Rep. Tom Lantos (D., Calif.) sponsored the resolution in October to
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create the Cult Awareness Week in order to publicize the danger of cults
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and their increasing numbers, a spokesman said.
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The date was selected to commemorate the Jonestown massacre in which
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Lantos' predecessor, Rep. Leo J. Ryan, was shot to death and 930 other --
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most of them members of Jones' People's Temple cult -- also died from
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shooting or poisoning.
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The resolution needs 268 signatures -- half the membership of Congress --
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to win approval. So far only 40 signatures have been obtained. The effort
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has been thwarted by a deluge of protests to congressmen from organizations
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opposed to it, according to Kisser.
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Network members have claimed that some of those opposing groups are
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"fronts" for cults. The Unification Church, in particular, has made many
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inroads into politics by hosting programs under names not linked to it, and
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it allots a large amount of money to candidates, Kisser said.
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Last August, a lobbying group that persuaded some Chicago-area politicians
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and civic leaders to become active members was discovered, to the
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embarrassment of those politicans and civic leaders, to be an arm of the
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Unification Church.
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That group, the American Constitution Committee, is an offshoot of CAUSA
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International, which was founded by Rev. Moon to fight communism and revive
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moral standards through church unity, according to Michael Jenkins, regional
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director of the American Constitution Committee.
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Some of the letters sent to congressmen criticizing the Cult Awareness
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Network were written on the letterhead of a group called the "Voice of
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Freedom." Telephone callers condemning the resolution have identified
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themselves as members of the "Coalition for Religious Freedom." Both groups
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are suspected to be fronts for larger cults. Kisser said.
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"They have sent letters with all kinds of outlandish statements claiming
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that the network is an 'anti-religious hate group- and that it has engaged
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in physical attacks against Roman Catholics, Baptists, Episcopalians,
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Mormons, and others," said Patrica Ryan, a Washington lobbyist and member of
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the Cult Awareness Network.
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Ryan, 34, speaks from the heart when she talks about the dangers of cults.
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She is the daughter of the late Rep. Ryan who was shot as he attempted to
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help a cult member escape.
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Another family member, Shannon Ryan, 36, joined Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh's
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cult in Oregon in 1980 before he was ordered out of the U.S. in 1985.
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Shannon Ryan lives in San Diego but still follows the group's teachings,
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her sister said.
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"I've been hit as much as anybody by dangerous cults, sort of a
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double-whammy," said Patrician Ryan, who has been described by members of
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the Unification Church as "a fanatic."
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"When my father went to Guyana to help the families of his constituents,
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there was no source of information like the network," she said. "We are
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trying to make Congress aware that there is still a cult problem in this
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country."
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Cults prey successfully on all kinds of people, not just the spiritually
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or emotionally weak, Kisser said.
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"People don't realize how often they come into contact with cults in their
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daily lives," Kisser said. "There are so many cults now, they are less
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visible, but more prolific, like the threads in a tapestry."
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Cult members are lured to the web under the pretense of learning more
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about the Bible, losing weight or helping humanity, and then fall prey to
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mind-control techniques, Kisser said.
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"We are not a nation of lost sheep, but people are vulnerable. These
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techniques prey on our needs for approval, our need for food, or our sex
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drives."
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Cults use those needs to establish control of their member,s to wipe out
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their previous lives and make them dependent on the cult, she said. They
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employ methods learned in prisoner-of-war camps in World War II, in research
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done for Josef Stalin by Ivan Pavlov and techniques developed by the Chinese
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Communists in their thought-control schools, Kisser said.
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"We don't see torture used to gain control anymore, it is now all soft
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music and velvet gloves -- techniques that can be learned at the local
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library," she said. "Jim Jones had an excellent library on mind control at
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his Jonestown home."
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