This might sound like a question inspired by current events, but I’ve actually been thinking of this for a while and can give pointers to a few times I had asked this or talked about it.

The people who the masses look up to seem to have a strange way of dishing out their opinions/approval/disapproval of the groups of the world. Some groups can get away with being considered good no matter how negative their actions are while other groups are stuck with a high disapproval rating no matter how much good they might do, and a discussion on whether “culture” or a “cult” is involved almost always comes up.

An example of this is the relationship between Islam and Scientology, in fact this is the most infamous one I can link to having spoken about. People on a certain side of the thinktank spectrum (the same side Lemmy seems to lean towards at times) are quick to criticize Scientology even though they consider “classic Islamic philosophy”, for a lack of a better way to put it without generalizing, as not inspiring a call for critique to see how one may change it. And I’ve always wondered, why? One at times leads people to trying to exterminate innocent groups, the other one is just “Space Gnosticism” that has a few toxic aspects but hasn’t actually eliminated anyone. Of course, I’m not defending either one, but certainly I’d rather live in a stressful environment than one that actively targets me.

This question has been asked a few times, sometimes without me but sometimes when I’m around to be involved, and they always say (and it’s in my dumb voice that I quote them) “well Scientology is a cult, of course we can criticize them” and then a bit about how whatever other thing is being talked about is a part of culture. This doesn’t sit well with my way of thinking. I was taught to judge people by the content of their character, in other words their virtues, so in my mind, a good X is better than a bad Y, in this case a good cult should be better than a good culture, right? Right?

In fact, as what many might call a mild misanthrope, I’d flip it around and point out how, over the course of human history, alongside seemingly objectively questionable quirks people just brush off (like Japan for a while has been genociding dolphins for their meat value just above extinction “because it’s culture” or how there are people in China who still think dinosaur bones are a form of medicine waiting to be ground up), no group/culture has kept their innocence intact, every country having had genocides or unnecessary wars or something of the like, things they ALLOW to happen by design. Then they turn around and tell so-called “cults”, even the ones that have their priorities on straight compared to cultures, that they are pariahs and shouldn’t count on thriving, even though their status is one that doesn’t necessitate gaining any kind of guilt. I was a pariah growing up, almost everyone else revolved around a select few people that seemed in-tune to the culture, and they would say anyone who revolved around people outside the group (me for example) was “following a cult”, and this hurt at the time, but now seeing all the wars going on right now, I might consider this a compliment.

My question, even though it by definition might make affirming answerers question whether they are pariahs or a part of the cultural arena, is why does nobody agree? Why are cultures “always precious” while cults are “always suspicious”?

  • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.eeOP
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    I mean murder and manslaughter are a part of a large spectrum, so they could be said to have done some damage, but this is in far better taste than, say, the crusades or the cultural revolution. What you’re saying is kind of what I’m asking about, as most people would then turn around and speak about the groups currently in the middle east in a kind of “well at least they’re not Scientologists” kind of way. I personally would apply that statement in the exact reverse.

    • Devi@kbin.social
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      4
      ·
      1 year ago

      Look at percentages, if there’s 100,000 scientologists worldwide with 70,000 suffering some kind of abuse directly by the religion that’s a massive percentage, whereas christianity there’s 2 billion, and the numbers suffering abuse directly by the religion if they’re exactly the same number, it’s much less of an issue.

      Beyond that, a christian can leave whenever they like with no real consequences. It doesn’t have the elements of control. Nobody is helping people escape from christianity. You don’t have volunteers picking up nuns by the side of the road at 2am wearing only the clothes on their back.

      • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.eeOP
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        1 year ago

        You’re comparing the worst possible statistics/interpretation of one group with the best possible statistics/interpretation of another group that has had a history that was far, far worse. Or to put it another way, if the first group lived a few hundred years ago, who do you think would’ve killed who? It was for this reason “Christians” weren’t in my original comparison, it was a group with an arguably higher rate of suffering. That inspired the main question, why “cults” are considered outcasts for the sake of it.

        • Devi@kbin.social
          link
          fedilink
          arrow-up
          3
          ·
          1 year ago

          What does history have to do with it? You’re asking about the view today.

          I’d say at no point in history was christianity as bad as Scientology but today it’s fairly innocuous.

          • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.eeOP
            link
            fedilink
            English
            arrow-up
            1
            ·
            1 year ago

            I brought up history because of their ages, but it doesn’t even have to be history, you still have human rights abuses across the world carried out in the name of several cultures, ones intertwined with Christian activity as well as ones by other groups which one might call cultural. If I told you there lived a group that went on conquests, killing everyone who disagreed with their flawed interpretations of their book, burning ancient books en masse, causing mass starvations among whole nations, inciting warfare, and creating a network of chattel slavery that spanned dozens of countries, what would you think of? Scientology? No, that’s the one group in all these conversations on this thread that didn’t do those things.

            • Devi@kbin.social
              link
              fedilink
              arrow-up
              1
              ·
              1 year ago

              A network of slavery spanning dozens of countries is the main thing scientology does.

              Look, you seem to have started a debate which you don’t have any background knowledge on. Maybe look into it first?