Alligatorob
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Only peripherally. I know most anyone can use the name Baptist, no central authority there...Are you familiar with the Independent Fundamental Baptists, or the Westboro Baptist Church?
Only peripherally. I know most anyone can use the name Baptist, no central authority there...Are you familiar with the Independent Fundamental Baptists, or the Westboro Baptist Church?
By who?The Southern Baptist Convention is classified as a cult
Now you have my interest, I will have to do more observing!some weird sexual practice... my observation
It seems to me currently, it's not some, but most. Your guy/gal needs to be put in jail, but not my guy/gal who did the same or worst.Some political parties are cults. When your entire platform is bases on lies and crazy conspiracy theories, that makes it cult-like.
Long ago we went to a fundy Baptist church, they believed once saved always saved. So I have it made if I am wrong and a god does exist.Are you familiar with the Independent Fundamental Baptists, or the Westboro Baptist Church?
Some research netted the info that all cultists need to do is take on one or two practices of a legitimate religion and then they can call their cult the religion.
There was a famous non-religious cult in Sweden in the 1800s called Oneida that went around killing people....to eat their hearts, I think.This is an old discussion. Interesting that it's been revived!
It's become very obvious that in this country, at least, there are also non-religious cults. They're not always based on the supernatural. Some of them are based on a twisted conception of reality.
A young lady who worked at one of my pizza parlors was a member. This belief gave her a sense of entitlement.Long ago we went to a fundy Baptist church, they believed once saved always saved. So I have it made if I am wrong and a god does exist.
Well, as I have said some of the nastiest people I ever met were "saved".A young lady who worked at one of my pizza parlors was a member. This belief gave her a sense of entitlement.
Yep, waiting for dead people to come to life is not political but dumb as a box of rocks!QAnon is a present day cult and its followers have done some crazy things. I don't want to say anymore about it because it might be deemed political, but it's definitely a dangerous cult. Nobody can deny that, considering what they believe.
Here is a article about her. https://www.theguardian.com/film/20...-australia-melbourne-cult-anne-hamilton-byrnewas one in the 70's, I believe called the family cult .....in Australia........was led by a woman Anne Hamilton Byrne
Absolutely, Irwin. That's what I was thinking of when I said not all cults are religious. I didn't want to go any further, because it ventures into the political. But the word was used in an excellent documentary I watched yesterday on MSNBC called Love and the Constitution. The word was used to describe violent, criminal behavior by a group in the grip of a cult leader.Some political parties are cults. When your entire platform is bases on lies and crazy conspiracy theories, that makes it cult-like.
I tend to think they all are. Believe we would do better without....Some political parties are cults
It called the Constitution and in particular the 1st Amendment.What is it with America and cults? You seem to have pretty much cornered the market.
Australia is not immune but most cults in OZ are not home grown.
There was one that I remember called the Little Pebble cult. It attracted a lot of attention because of a charismatic leader.
William Kamm
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
William Kamm, also known as "The Little Pebble" (born 1950 in Cologne, West Germany), is the founder and leader of a religious group in Australia called the "Order of St Charbel" (or sometimes referred to as "The Community") named after the Maronite saint Charbel Makhlouf.[1] The Order of St Charbel is considered as a Christian sect and a fringe religious grouping.[2] His religious order claims to be part of the Roman Catholic Church, but the Maronite Church and the Holy See do not regard the group as being part of Roman Catholicism.[3] He was released from prison after serving 9 years of a 10-year prison term for the rape and assault of a teenager.[4][5]
Hubbard was a first rate con man for sure. Even though he was nuts, he made a fortune on it and it still flourishes with even more wackos, including some very famous ones.5. Scientology Cult
Decades ago, I bought the L. Ron Hubbard's Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health. I cracked it open a couple of times but found I couldn't get into it. Turns out that he founded the Church of Scientology after he lost the rights to Dianetics in a bankruptcy proceeding. His ideas, some quite strange, were discredited and ridiculed.
https://www.thevintagenews.com/2019/04/26/ron-hubbard/
I don't know about that. Just because a doctor says I should do something doesn't mean he/she is right, and it certainly doesn't mean I'll blindly follow his dictates.The concept of helplessness and responding to authority starts before birth as mom prepares for your arrival. To get along we have to trust someone who may or may not be give the best advice but we follow instructions, take medicine, watch our diets and exercise because we give people authority to tell us what we are doing wrong.