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<A HREF="http://www.rational.org/recovery/Cult.html">The Cult of Alcoholics
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Alcoholics Anonymous:

Of Course It's a Cult!

by Jack Trimpey


For a number of years, Lois and I have been aggressive critics of
Alcoholics Anonymous and its recovery group movement because we believe
strongly that AA is a primary cause of mass addiction in America. We
know that openly criticizing the 12-step program is enormously helpful
to people who have struggled in recovery group bondage, and we also
believe that the recovery group movement is harmful to American society.

It is understandable that we have gained quite a reputation for
AA-bashing. Many perceive Lois as a mild-mannered, cheerful person who
is much more reserved about attacking the addiction system, and that I
am a grumpy, old meanie with an ax to grind. Personalities aside, we are
equally devoted to the dismantling of the addiction treatment industry,
particularly its feeder system, the 12-step recovery group movement of
Alcoholics Anonymous and its pop-psychology based spinoffs. We do not
believe that these entities are capable of constructive change, and
would better be replaced by our model of self-recovery or with nothing
at all.

Oddly, we have not, until now (January, 1998), taken a public position
on the much-asked question, In spite of our outspokenness, we avoided
the "C" word, i.e., "cult." It has seemed needlessly inflammatory to say
that Alcoholics Anonymous is a cult - until now.

Alcoholics Anonymous: Cult or Cure? is the title of a book by Chaz Bufe
which examines the history, development and current practices of AA with
that question in mind. Bufe applies seventeen criteria commonly used to
define a cult from an academic viewpoint, but he equivocates, noting
that AA does engage in some, but not all, typical cult practices. He
concludes that AA is cultish in some ways but does not truly deserve the
label, cult. In his revised edition of that book this year, Bufe
continues to equivocate, admitting that institutional AA has cult
status, but communal AA does not.

Academic inquiry into the possible cult identity of Alcoholics Anonymous
is just that - academic - and therein lies a chief weakness of the Bufe
book. For decades, millions of people have suspected, believed, or known
that Alcoholics Anonymous is religious. Anyone can see that it is
religious, yet an entire nation has accepted its sophomoric disclaimer,
"Not religious, just spiritual." Recently, however, the federal courts
have asserted, "AA is unequivocally religious." They only looked at AA's
doctrinal literature, and unhesitatingly declared what is obvious to
anyone. No academicians determined that AA was religious; no
academicians are going to divert the river of public cash away from
addiction treatment into worthy projects. No academicians will steer the
nation away from its unholy union with AA, nor will acedemecians solve
the crisis of runaway, mass addiction.

For the record, here is our position: Of course AA is a cult! AA is not
only a religious cult, it is a radical cult, an evil cult, a widespread
cult, and a dangerous cult. AA has become an engine of social decay
posing as a noble, altruistic fellowship. Its perverse philosophy of
sin-disease and deliverance by faith in an amorphous, heterogenous deity
contradicts the fundamental values of a free society, but is uniquely
appealing to people addicted to substance-pleasure. AA is a cancer on
the soul of the nation, producing no pain to the populace as it eats
away at the foundation of society. Its victims are its members who
become grateful to their captors. AA is causing the problem is says it
helps. Its 12-step program suggests nothing on how to quit an addiction
except to stop trying, and its members come to love the cult more than
than any newcomer. Each cult member shares a vision of a better world
resulting from propagating the steps - but not from the effects of
abstinence upon society. The AA cult has infiltrated our federal and
state bureaucracies and now nests in every social institution, setting
policies that funnel new members into its craw. It expands for its own
sake, and cannot change from within. Therefore, it must be destroyed by
forthright public education and expose.

Lois and I rarely tell callers that AA is a cult; they tell us that it
is. We look through a window into the soul of America, a window that is
not available to others. At the national office, telephone calls are
continuous every day, many from callers who have been trying to get
through for days. It appears that our phone lines are two or three deep
with callers at any given time, although we cannot determine how many
are attempting to ring in at any moment. The calls are primarily from
readers of Rational Recovery: The New Cure for Substance Addiction,
 calling to say thanks for making the vital information on planned
abstinence available to them. For the most part, they are recovered as a
result of reading about AVRT, after which they pop out of the trance
induced by 12-step and psychological recovery groups.

Here are some telephone snippets from callers all over:

"I knew from the start there was something creepy about those people."
"They aren't of this world; they're way out there." "I kind of got a
shiver during one meeting when they were putting one guy down for
arguing against the powerless concept." "When they said my family also
was diseased, I knew something was wrong." "When they started this thing
about anything being my Higher Power, it felt wrong, like it was going
against something very important inside of me." "After I stopped going
to meetings, no one I knew from the groups would have anything to do
with me, even though I wasn't drinking." "My brother quit drinking by
going to AA, but he's become so weird. I hardly know him any more, and
almost miss the way he was when he was drinking. At least he was
sincere, and could talk about something besides himself." "Our son went
to a treatment specialist for drug addiction, and now he says we are
satanic child molesters." "I've been telling my husband that the
meetings aren't helping, that he now calls his binges relapses and feels
less guilty afterward. He admits he is drinking more and more often, but
says relapse is a normal part of recovery. When he goes to meetings
after a relapse, though, he feels ashamed and depressed." "A year after
I quit drinking, my wife went to Al-Anon with a friend. Now she won't
communicate with me unless I go to AA." "The counselors at the treatment
center were poorly-educated and acted like robots reciting every word."
"I heard one man say, 'I pray to God every day that I never get the idea
that I can run my own life.' When I heard this, I felt sick inside
because I felt unable to leave the group."

These comments, and the sometimes lengthy stories they tell us, are
convincing anecdotal evidence that Alcoholics Anonymous is a cult. AA
exudes cultism. It looks like a cult, acts like a cult, and sounds like
a cult. It is a cult that has risen meteorically from its origins as a
splinter from yet another radical cult, the Oxford Group. They found
dark niches in society - our jails, hospitals, and dead-end missions -
to pronounce the drunk diseased and therefore beyond the expectation to
quit drinking or using. They invented the malleable Higher Power, the
alcoholics' deity-of-convenience, to sanction them and guide them along
the cult's thin ledge of tentative sobriety, and they are directed to
constantly seek new members to justify their own cult affillation.

AA is not a cult because it meets certain objective criteria established
by academics; it is a cult because it appears to be one. Social and
behavioral scientists do not often make new discoveries, they typically
exploit discoveries by quantifying, describing, referencing, and
analyzing discoveries made by common people. They know little of the
real phenomena about which they expound, each building upon the
ignorance of their esteemed colleagues. AA has thrived on account of
everyone's hesitancy to say what it is that they see, i.e., the
Emperor's New Clothes. Therefore, it is time to call AA a cult, and wait
for the academicians to catch up.

To help them, I will apply the seventeen academic criteria of cultism
chosen by Bufe, and reach a clear, unequivocal conclusion based on the
daily experience of the national office of Rational Recovery:

1. Religious Orientation, supernatural beliefs

As predicted in The Small Book, the federal courts now refer to AA
docrinal literature, the steps themselves, as "Exhibit A" showing that
AA is "unequivocally religious." AA is intensely religious; what
religion would call for 90 meetings in 90 days? What's going on here?
"The Big Book" is regarded as divinely revealed, sacred scripture within
the step-cult; all disagreements are settled by citing passages from it.
Gaetano Salamone's extensive, on-going analysis in JRR shows the purely
religious identity and origins of AA. One of his unique contributions is
his comparison of the surface structure and the deep structure (what you
see and what you get) of the 12-step religious conversion program.

Families split apart based on AA membership, just as religious conflict
often disrupts family ties. At least one Methodist church has gone
belly-up to "those people who meet in the basement," who arose to
conduct Sunday services with a teddy bear affixed over the altar where
the image of Christ had been. The Church of Serenity, as they called
themselves, worship using a special Bible written for alcoholics.

M- called two days after reading The New Cure, excited that she would
never return to AA, of which she said, "Now I know why I always felt
uncomfortable at the meetings. They say that the step program is not
religious, but spiritual, but they place no value on religious worship
whatsoever. They claim to respect all religions, but believe that no
religion is adequate to solve problems of alcohol or drug addiction. To
me, this means that AA believes itself to be superior to Christianity
when addictive disease exists within the family. They diagnosed my ent
ire family as codependents or enablers who must enter their plan of
salvation, as if they were sick. This was extremely disruptive, but I
continued meetings and gradually replaced church connections with the
recovery fellowship. Although they claim there is no conflict between
churches and the program, in reality it is impossible to maintain both.
>From AA, I learned to look at God differently from the teachings of my
church. After attending step meetings, I was spiritually self-conscious
while worshipping at my church, because my perception of Jesus Christ in
church was radically different from the Higher Power I was, in effect,
worshipping at recovery meetings. I could not express this problem at
meetings or at church, but Rational Recovery has reunited me with my
religion by showing that drinking is not a disease, it is sin, and AVRT
is the nuts and bolts of Christian repentence."

2. Irrationality, rigidity, anti-intellectualism

To AA believers, AA doctrine must be correct, as it is written. No one
may speak of the incoherence of AA doctrine, and group interaction is
designed to prevent or contain skepticism. "Your best thinking got you
here." "There's no one too dumb to get this program, but many are to
intelligent." "Expect a miracle." There can be no discussion of the
merits and demerits of the 12-step program because scrutiny is
interpreted as dissent, and dissent is a symptom of addictive disease.

3. A Charismatic Leader

Few would disagree that Bill W., an irresolute drunk until his death,
has become a folk saint, revered and idolized by the 12-step community.
His home has become a shrine, and his personal memorabilia have become
sacred artifacts. He is regarded by some as the reincarnation of Christ,
guiding the world into the Age of Sobriety, a millennium comparable to
the Kingdom of God spoken of in the Bible. AA lifers trace their lineage
back to Bill W. through a genealogy of sponsors, and some speak with
great pride to say, "Bill W. was my sponsor's great-grandsponsor."

4. A Hierarchical, Authoritarian Structure

While AA appears to the casual observer as a nonprofit corporation that
sponsors autonomous, community-level cell groups, it has evolved far
beyond that level of organization. Its members, shielded by anonymity
and presenting themselves as concerned addictions experts, have
infiltrated federal and state bureaucracies, where they manipulate
social policies and funding patterns affecting America's social service
system. Hundreds of nonprofit organizations exist purely for the purpose
disseminating disease/treatment propaganda and networking within
communities to create political support for the 12-step agendas
described in AA doctrinal literature. Now in possession of the American
social service system, including the prisons and courts, the
professional disciplinary and licensing boards, the medicaid and social
welfare programs, and the military health care system, AA can be seen as
a powerful hierarchy of professional AAers employed in positions of
social responsibility. AA is a cult which has spread into a bureaucracy,
which I call a "cultocracy," for the lack of a standard word to describe
this anomaly. The funding for the AA cultocracy is not only from the
free-will donations of grateful alcoholics, but taken from each taxpayer
by the force of national tax laws. The AA cultocracy enlarges AA's
membership by using the authority of social institutions to force
vulnerable people into their recovery groups, where they are
indoctrinated under conditions that should interest Amnesty
International. The penalty for resisting AA participation may be
imprisonment, death by the lack of organ transplant, imprisonment as in
parole and early-release policies, alternative to substance abuse
diversion programs, loss of child custody as in domestic court cases,
loss of livelihood as in impaired professional programs, and loss of
employment as in employment assistance programs.

It has been known for a long time that persons high on authoritarianism
relate best to the rigors of the 12-step program and are more likely to
become devoted, long-term members. The sponsor system assures social
stratification, self-debasement, and gratification of the need for
control over others. Beyond this, members achieve status and credibility
based on Time since last drink, so that someone with five years of
sobriety might feel diminished in the presence of someone a decade
sober.

5. Submission of the Individual to the "Will of God"

Quitting drinking is not nearly enough to satisfy the demands of the
step program. One must accept the god of AA, the Higher Power, as one's
personal savior. Nearly all cults have God-control at the core. Jim
Jones, Koresh, and lately the Heaven's Gate cult are typical of other
cults that take what they like from legitimate religions but leave the
rest. Godly fellowships,

6. Dogmatism, the ultimate truth

Reading AA's central document, "The Big Book," will show beyond any
doubt that AA, despite some polite disclaimers, claims to have the
ultimate truth. Anyone who has attempted to argue against AA doctrine
during meetings will quickly find out that they are wrong, that the
Steps are absolutely true, and to hold opposing beliefs is tantamount to
a death sentence. J- called to say, "As soon as I told the group I was
reading the new RR book, they started rejecting me like I had the
plague. It was as if I had betrayed everyone present, or carried the
seeds of their destruction."

7. Separatism

No cult has succeeded in stigmatizing its members to the extent AA has.
Even the Heaven's Gate cult, requiring uniforms and castration, failed
to gain the support of the scientific community to support its bizarre
concept of a rescuing UFO hidden in the tail of comet Hale-Bopp. AA has
hypothesized the existence of a sacred disease, and found substantial
support. Neither Ti nor Do, the cult leaders, obtained the sanction of
organized religion to support their conceptions of salvation and heaven.
When the 39 cult members died of their own actions which were predicted
by cult doctrine, they were not seen to be victims of a hypothetical
disease, but to a large extent they were seen as victims of a dangerous
cult. (See box item, "The AA-HeavensGate Connection.")

It isn't much of a stretch to imagine a more highly developed and better
organized Heaven's Gate cult, in which a good number of M.D.'s and
psychologists had become devout members. (Heaven knows something more
bizarre than that has happened in the "addictionology" field.)

The HeavensGate - 12-Step Connection

This eerie passage below from HeavensGate historical literature
(1970's), shows that group's congruity and natural affinity with the
12-step program. Evidently, the HeavensGaters were too optimistic for
the 12-steppers. Note the last italicized comment. Emphasis added
throughout.


 For a while we tried to use what we had learned in an attempt to help
victims of problematic genetic programming. We briefly started what was
called Anonymous Sexaholics Celibate Church, aimed at people who had
already joined a Sexaholics type organization. We tried to show them the
positive side of their problem - that to be liberated from that
addiction, having already acknowledged that they were addicts, put them
ahead of the pack as far as having the potential for an improved
relationship with their Heavenly Father was concerned.

We didn't expose other knowledge that we had, only what we had learned
as related to the overcoming of a sex addiction - never anything about
UFOs or Next Level awareness. We simply tried to help them understand
that life after addiction acknowledgment could be a much happier, more
fulfilling, and significantly more liberating existence, particularly if
they could establish a dependency relationship with their Heavenly
Father in whatever vernacular that translated for them. This was done in
a way similar to the Sexaholics and Alcoholics Anonymous approach,
except it offered them a more Godly focused fellowship.

We spent a lot of time and money on planning, brochures, mailings, and
talking at meetings and conventions. However, the response to us was
almost one of resentment of our finding joy after celibacy, as if we
were trying to show off or be self-righteous. We considered and
presented ourselves as addicts, but our lack of ability at faking
doldrums seemed to cause some to question our humility. It was as if we
were supposed to remain in a "poor us" or "sick" syndrome or otherwise
be misunderstood. In this instance, they really couldn't tell where we
were coming from.


8. Exclusivity (the only path to salvation)

Throughout the AA scriptures, there appears to be no direct reference to
an afterlife, but there is one higher state of being, akin to heaven or
nirvana - serenity. Serenity is achieved by diligent step-study which
leads to a spiritual awakening, an ineffable and divinely inspired
religious conversion experience. Serenity is the state of personal
salvation by faith, and is the highest aspiration within the world of
the steps. From serenity comes all that is good, good works, good
feelings, goodness itself. Serenity is simply divine, and in the
step-world towers above the religious experience of traditional,
hierarchical religions. The general attitude of AA society to
traditional religion is snobbish humility, once again reflecting the
pervasive, inherent contradictions that permeate AA.

9. Self-Absorption (primary focus is the cult itself)

AA lore is replete with injunctions to devote one's life in every way to
the cult itself. One may not take credit for abstinence or relief from
despair; the only benefactor is AA or God, and the only proper attitude
is gratitude. Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions sets forth Tradition
One as, "Our common welfare should come first." AA presents itself as
necessary to life itself, "without AA we will perish." Any criticism of
the Program or of AA is regarded as heresy that endangers the lives of
AAers everywhere, and must be silenced by admonitions or mottos. Members
dwell upon themselves endlessly, working steps on themselves, and
attending as part of methodical spiritual growth. Step meetings focus on
philosophical minutia, and an endless stream of new books on
step-recovery, many from Hazelden, are found in bookstores for the
struggling recovering alcoholics.

10. Economic Exploitation

It appears likely that AA has destroyed the economic foundations of more
families than addiction itself has. The incestuous relationship of the
recovery groups and the treatment centers, where the referral traffic
sustains the interests of each, has run up bills that no person or
family can pay. Treatment centers have materials for credit applications
and mortgage arrangements to pay for readmissions of chronic relapsers.
If the services were in any way effective, the cost would not be
exploitive, but treatment centers are acutely aware that only about 5%
of those who come through the turnstiles will remain abstinent for long.
Repeat business is the best business in the addiction treatment
industry, but claims of "success rates" of 60% to 70% are common by the
treatment centers.

AA itself has set a suggested limit on how much members can give at
meetings (in 1990 it was $500 per year), but in the atmosphere of
meetings this is akin to a pledge goal. In just one of AA's many
districts, the amount actually sent to AA, not just dropped in the
basket, in 1989 was $11 million.

The economic exploitation denied with, "No one makes a dime on AA." Not
so.

11. Possessiveness (go to great lengths to retain members)

Acclaimed libertarian talkshow host, Gene Burns, noted during a program
on Rational Recovery in 1990, "AA has a proprietary interest in every
living person who drinks too much." In our work since then, we have
talked almost every day to people who say, "I finally quit because the
groupers seemed to think they owned me." "They kept calling between
meetings, and kept telling me I would go crazy or die if I didn't make
more meetings." "At the meetings, they made me feel naughty for missing
meetings." One man, depressed and frightened but apparently sober, said,
"I need help. They're coming for me." Believing police or paramedics had
been summoned, Lois asked, "Did you threaten yourself or someone else?"
He said, "No, they've been looking for me. I'm at my sister's house and
they just called and they're on their way over." Lois asked, "Who are
they?" He answered, "The AA people. They won't leave me alone. They're
on the porch." Lois told the caller he could send them away, but he
said, "It's no use. I can't go against them when they are here," and
hung up.

We receive many calls from people who have been securely abstinent for
years, but are now required to enter treatment programs. This occurs
with professional licensing programs, with drunk driver programs, drug
courts, and in child custody cases.

It is commonplace for AA-dropouts to receive calls from AA members
asking, "Haven't seen you for a while. Are you OK?" These calls are not
from concern or friendship, but only to manipulate people back into
meeting attendance. When the dropout makes it clear that he/she will not
be returning, it is most unlikely that the grouper will continue to
associate or call for other reasons.

12. Mind control techniques; intimidation

While some cults jinx or curse departing members with divine or karmic
punishments, AA promises refuseniks hell on earth, either from
inevitable drinking or using, or from a malady called dry drunk. The dry
drunk concept is one of the most sinister mind-traps ever devised to
retain errant cult members. Knowing intimately how addicted people
cannot imagine a satisfactory life without the substance, and
understanding well the insatiable appetite to continue drinking or
using, cult novices are told that quitting drinking or using is useless
since addicts cannot be happy, cannot cope with normal stresses of life,
or will simply self-destruct after prolonged suffering and
deterioration.

AA has a well-known reputation as "slogan therapy," but all cults use
repeated phrases as an indoctrination technique. Like all cults, each
and every slogan or motto of AA is an inversion of the truth or a
platitude to cover an atrocity. The meeting structure itself forbids
two-way communications, allowing for one to "share" whatever, with only
marginal commentary from the group. Approval and disapproval are
communicated slyly with ascerbic comments from groupers, or nonverbal
gestures and cues.

The fact that all newcomers suffer the same functional problem, i.e,
ambivalence with repeated reversal of intent, makes them easy prey for
seasoned old-timers who can anticipate addictive thought processes.
Instead of freeing people from addiction by telling the simple truth
they all must know, they exploit the weakness of newcomers to further
induct them into the cult. Each abstinent AAer knows very well that
drinking/using is a matter of free choice, and that self-recovery is not
only possible, but commonplace. Acting out of loyalty and guilt, they
repeat the official dogma, that AA is a lifeboat for all addicted
people, and to leave the fold is tantamount to choosing death. So
zealous has the recovery group movement become, that every single group
insists, "Anything can be your Higher Power - a teacup, a doorknob, a
stone." In their zeal, all respect for common sense and
self-determination is abandoned in favor of their coercive logic
approaching absolute mind-control. "At first you come because you have
to come," they say, "but later you come because you love to come."

No cult on record has achieved such sophisticated means of mind-control
that the casual onlooker either doesn't notice or doesn't mind the
coercion. This is accomplished primarily through the following means:

A. Defining the addicted person as sick, incompetent, in denial,
deserving of radical methods and forced humility, i.e., humiliation.
Observers will perceive what is actually abuse as necessary and
appropriate, as if watching a surgeon slice a person open.

B. The confidence game. The use of legitimate authority symbols, e.g.,
doctors, psychologists, professional associations, etc., to support the
use of the 12-step program. If the state licenses them, they must know
something, and if they say it's OK, then it's OK.

C. The big lie. Massive denials of reality, such as "AA lends its name
to no outside organization," while virtually all treatment programs are
run by professional AAers who forcefully indoctrinate participants in
the 12-step program. The use of mass media to repeat nonsensical phrases
over and over, i.e., addictive disease, treatment works,
one-day-at-a-time, recovery is a process, in recovery, recovering, in
denial, addiction treatment, etc., to inure the public and prevent moral
outrage over the actual content of American-style addiction recovery.

D. Steptalk, that polished explanation steppers provide when questioned
about their odd beliefs and proclivities. "It isn't religious, it's
spiritual." "It's a voluntary program; we don't control the courts." "No
one makes money on AA. We are a fellowship of concerned people supported
entirely by our own donations." "Take what you like and leave the rest."
"Whatever works, The 12 steps (upon which survival is said to depend)
are only suggestions."

E. Pathologizing inquiry, criticism, and dissent. The Program is
divinely inspired, and may not be criticized. Persons who object to cult
doctrine are ostracized, reprimanded, regarded as sick, diseased, in
denial, in relapse, constitutionally incapable of honesty, or simply
doomed. Critics of AA are always angry, in denial, paranoid, sick
people. Skeptics and others who test the coherency of AA doctrine are
advised, "Take the cotton out of your ears and stick it in your mouth."

13. A Closed, All-Encompassing Environment (physical)

We hear daily from people telling about being detained in treatment
centers, deprived of all reading materials except AA doctrinal
litarature, deprived of any contact with family or friends, and
prohibited from using the telephone. When the facility is not locked,
subjects are threatened with direct billing for services because
insurance will not pay the front-loaded hospital bill if the patient
leaves against medical advice. Moreover, resistance to treatment is
recorded into medical records which are released in advance at the time
of admission. The record becomes evidence for later repercussions in
court and before professional boards. Family members are required to
also submit to codepedency indoctrination as a condition of payment.

Ninety meetings in ninety days, an industry standard, makes the cult an
all-encompassing environment, allowing scant time for anything but cult
participation. Although the subject may sleep and eat at home, the
effect of daily cult participation results in social disorientation to
the extent that subjects feel as if they are at meetings while in their
homes. When this bizarre, coercive arrangement is not mandated by a
court, it is reinforced by the group (its established members working in
shifts, of course), which constantly remind subjects that if they relent
in meetings attendance they will self-destruct.

14. Deceptive Recruitment Techniques (deception, set up "fronts")

The fundamental deception of AA is that it is an organization devoted to
helping people defeat addictions. AA is not about recovery, AA is about
AA. The First Tradition, which values the welfare of the group over its
totally dependent members, is a red flag that is carefully shielded from
public scrutiny. The Steps themselves deceive the observer, seeming to
convey an antidote for the degeneracy of addicted people. Ominously, the
steps contain not even a hint on how an individual might cease and
desist from the use of alcohol or drugs, but only instruct the member to
stop trying to quit and shift that responsibiity onto the cult and its
deity-of-convenience, any Higher Power of one's conception. This
amorphous Higher Power, although called God, is entirely unique to AA,
as it is intended to metamorphose into an Alcoholic's God that
intervenes at the level of voluntary motor control. "At times, there is
no human defense against the desire to drink," they explain, "but your
Higher Power will protect you. Let go and let God." Submission to the
will of the Alcoholic's God is the benchmark of working a good program,
and is the antithesis of free-will, self-determination, self-will, i.e.,
denial. Since members are a self-selected group in the long-term grip of
pleasure, continued intermittent drinking or using is the actual group
norm, even though the stated norm is complete abstinence. Drinking bouts
are then integrated as "relapses," "slips," or innocent symptoms of the
group disease. This seductive, deceptive arrangement allows members to
continue drinking, which they are impassioned to do, while appearing to
be committed to abstinence. Essentially, AA is a drug-cult which holds
various substances to be "desecrating sacraments" which are necessary
for eventual cleansing of the soul. It is clearly not an organization
devoted to teaching people any means to end substance addictions.

The "treatment intervention" is a suprise party set up to trap an
unsuspecting substance abuser at a time of vulnerability. An emotional
ambush, orchestrated by a professional AAer, is planned ahead of time by
inviting the subject's significant others, including distant relatives,
old friends, neighbors, family members, present and former bosses, and
anyone else who would maximize the intended humiliation to the subject.
Each participant is told how the subject has the dread disease of
alcoholism and is in denial that only total embarrassment and tough love
can penetrate. They have rehearsals, each person dredging up examples of
the subject's poor behavior or moral transgressions. Often, a van from
the interventionist's place of employment, a nearby treatment center,
pulls up just as the meeting ends, and the subject is led sobbing to the
vehicle. We are not aware of any person who has been helped by this
intrusive, brutal practice, including those who later give rehearsed,
glassy-eyed testimonials of being gratefully intervened alcoholics.

We receive many calls from people who were deceived by addiction
treatment centers as to the nature of the services provided. Many people
who have had painful or disgusting experiences in AA ask specifically to
have no further exposure to AA, and state they will not enter the
facility if that is what is provided, some asking specifically for
Rational Recovery. The admissions personnel, always AA members, lie
straightforwardly, promising no AA, and then later explain that AA
doesn't lend its name to any organization, but that the only thing that
works with addictions is the 12-step program. Some hospitals even state
that they offer Rational Recovery, and the patient later finds that what
is offered is some form of cognitive, feel-good therapy, which they say
blends with their 12-step program. (These agencies, of course, receive
standard cease and desist letters from RRS, Inc.)

The endless inversions of truth, starting with the
"spiritual-not-religious" deception, are a path of progressive
self-betrayal culminating in collapse of critical judgment and surrender
to the cult, i.e., "snapping."

15. Manipulation through Guilt

The "intervention" is a graphic example of the AA cult's use of
emotional brutality to get new recruits, but every meeting of AA is a
guilt manipulation. Most AA escapees we hear from tell of the intense
guilt generated during meetings, particularly while working the steps
involving moral inventories and making amends. One disturbing but
frequent observation is that of callers who have spent many painful
years, even decades, in the revolving door of relapse and keep-coming
back, and who have been greatly inspired by learning about AVRT. In
spite of renewed hope for secure abstinence, and even a sense of
complete recovery, they are loathe to criticize AA in any way, even to
admit that they were misled by the step doctrine. "As long as AA helps
some people, it shouldn't be bashed. There are different roads to
recovery" Many years ago, we recognized this aberrant defensiveness and
included it under the list of signs of recovery group disorder, not
unlike the classical nonchalance of cult members toward self-sacrifice.

16. Milennarianism (the end is near)

AA now has a faction which believes that Bill W. was Christ reicarnated,
that the original Jesus was an alcoholic who authored the 12-steps, that
the Last Supper was the first AA meeting, that Old Testament prophecies
predict that AA will rise as the dominant world religion during our
times, and that the Age of Sobriety, actually the prophesied Kingdom of
God, will commence on the year 2000. Mark as Recovery Story, by William
Mellon, dovetails AA with Christianity through linguistic feats and
Biblical re-interpretation, drawing out shocking assertions about the
character of Christ and the nature of salvation. Galilee, Mellon
asserts, had a good number of 12-step groups started by Jesus when he
fled there following his mock-crucifixion. Yes, this is bizarre and
offensive, but there's no business like cult business.

17. Violence and Harrassment

If by violence we include intellectual violence, all cults are violent,
and AA surpasses most of them. Denial-hazing, in which any suggestion of
self-determination is made into a symptom of the group's disease, is
figuratively an intellectual "kneecap job," in which the legs are shot
out from under newcomers with the intention of crippling them for life.
Interventions are emotionally violent, and the entire pattern of
predicting death and destruction for program-resistent members is a form
of violence. Court-mandated AA participation is inherently violent,
since court orders are backed by guns.

Here I must address the issue of character defects, the subject of much
recovery group movement discussion. The 12 steps appear to be laced with
something that makes people mean and arrogant. The more seriously people
take them, the weirder they become, in comparison to their pre-cult
personality. They also appear more inclined to mistreat their fellow
beings - all in the name of treatment or recovery, of course. One caller
likened AA cult indoctrination to vampirism, in which, once-bitten, one
will go on to bite others.

The tens of thousands of people who have called us in despair have been
mistreated by members of AA - by fellow groupers, by sponsors, by
step-oriented counselors and therapists, and by stepping judges and
physicians. The abuses are surprisingly similar and few in type, the
most common being the insistence that AA is the only possible remedy for
addiction, leaving the subject depressed and hopeless. The use of death
threats is universal within the recovery group movement, drawing on the
tone and passages from "The Big Book" which predict death for
nonbelievers and dropouts.

The admonition, "If you don't (whatever) you will drink," is the
foundation of the entire recovery group movement, and it is commonly
understood that if you drink, you will end up "in jails, hospitals, and
asylums." While there may be some statistical support for this
prediction, it is not on account of anyone's failure to work the step
program that one might drink. Indeed, it is far more likely that the
prediction itself is more instrumental in a drinking outcome than not
enough program compliance. The cruel irony is that when the prediction
of drinking is accepted and acted upon, it appears to all that the
drinking was the direct result of program noncompliance. Relapse is
 program compliance!

Chemical dependency (CD) counseling is a professional guild created by
AA in order for its members to pratice stepcraft in public institutions
and agencies. Few CD counselors dreamed of becoming counselors until
they joined AA and saw the chance to work a Good Program and get paid
for it, so it is understandable that as a group they are poorly educated
and do not demonstrate the skill and poise of trained professionals.
Their philosophical orientation, at sharp odds with all of the health
and helping professions, defines their clients as fundamentally
defective, lacking in sound judgment, and riddled with character defects
that add up to sociopathy. They see their clients, whether on the
street, in their offices, in prisons, or in their homes, as not
deserving the same measure of dignity and trust that would be afforded
others, and always in need of more treatment or AA meetings. They manage
dependent caseloads of files that are never closed, but at some stage of
the disease of addiction, and they spend inordinate amounts of time on
psychosocial fishing expeditions, interviewing and compiling records and
evidence "assessing" and proving hypothesized pathology. Their
counseling skills do not exceed the limitations imposed by the 12-step
program itself, so they are unable to form genuinely therapeutic
relationships.

Yet they exercise more direct power over people's lives than is granted
to any legitimate professional, and to the extent they notice this
discrepancy, they are gratified by it. They can ruin a person's career
with a single telephone call, or place a person in prison with a letter
to the judge. The client can't object, because objections are symptoms
of alcoholism and anger is pathology proving the extent of disease. They
can order one into a treatment center, drinking or not, whether one
wants treatment or not, without regard to finances or feelings. And they
feel good about it! Eventully, many of the novices submit to the cult
mentality and return to their abusers with gratitude for their harsh
treatment. Then they get in line to become CD counselors themselves.

CD counselors are creations of the US government. They pulled together
when it began raining money for addiction treatment when there wasn't
anything by that name. They will disappear when the money runs out, and
that can't be too soon. But their cult will remain, seeking new avenues
into the fabric of society, where they will generate and feed on the
next generation of addicted masses.
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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