Transcript for: Charismatic Leaders and Cults: Linguistic Tools for Manipulation
What do Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr. and Hitler have in common? They were all obsessively
studied by Jim Jones, the cult leader who convinced and coerced some 900 members of his Peoples Temple to drink poison Flavorade in 1978, in what came to be called
"The Jonestown Massacre." All these figures are known
as charismatic leaders, people who inspire intense devotion or emotional attachment in their followers through their communication skills. While Jones had little in common with these men spiritually
or philosophically, he was fascinated with their
ability to sway people. Even from a young age, he
exhibited a desire to control, and he knew that the best
tool for the job was language. I'm Dr. Erica Brozovsky,
and this is "Otherwords." (bright upbeat music) - Otherwords. (bright upbeat music) - Men have so dastardly
distorted what my spirit is. - Come into the dark in
the middle of the great- - You can't go against that culture because going against that culture- - My father gave me long
before this civilization- - [Erica] If there's one
thing that cult leaders do, it's talk a lot. Like Jim Jones, Heaven's
Gates' Marshall Applewhite, or NXIVM's Keith Raniere, the traditional image of
a cult leader is a person (usually but not always male)
orating for hours on end while a congregation
hangs on his every word. While there are common linguistic features of cult leader speech,
which we'll get to in a bit, the quantity of words
seems to matter as well. For decades, researchers have been testing the Babble Hypothesis,
which proposes that leaders are chosen for how much they speak rather than the quality of their ideas. Since the 1950s, scientists
and psychologists have been questioning
the theory's credibility. But in 2020, the most
thorough test ever conducted had surprising results. Diverse groups of people with varying personalities
and skill sets were tasked to solve challenging
strategy games as a team. Each member's total speaking
time was carefully measured, as well as the substance
of their utterances. Afterwards, the subjects were all asked to nominate other group members
for leadership positions. The results weren't even close. Speaking time had by far
the highest correlation with leadership emergence,
beating out intelligence, agreeableness, game proficiency,
and even extraversion. The only other factor that
came close was gender. While the study doesn't purport to explain the psychological factors behind it, it seems likely that humans
use quantity of speech as a mental shortcut to determine who would make a good leader. "If everyone else is
listening to this guy, maybe I should too." But not all leaders are cult leaders. In her book, "Cultish",
linguist Amanda Montell seeks to tease out some
common linguistic features of the men and women who run
so-called destructive cults, authoritarian groups that exploit or otherwise cause harm to their members. And one of the most
common is loaded language. Loaded language is a general
term for words or phrases that have deep emotional
associations for the listener, like genocide, patriot, toxic, or vermin. Cult leaders will craft
their loaded language to have specific connotations. David Koresh used the phrase "New Light" to cast his teachings
as divine inspiration. Charles Manson repurposed the Beatles song lyric "Helter Skelter" to refer to an imminent race war. And Jim Jones borrowed the
term "Revolutionary Suicide" from Black Panther
activists to equate his plan for mass suicide with resistance to authoritarian state power. Through repetition,
these leaders ingrained an intense emotional association
in their follower's psyche, so that eventually just
invoking a short phrase can instantly summon powerful feelings of beauty, love, fear, or hatred. It's like creating linguistic buttons that can be pushed to generate
an immediate response. Another trick in the cult
leader's language toolkit is the thought-terminating cliche. These are sayings that end
uncomfortable conversations or trains of thoughts. "It is what it is." "Everything happens for a reason." "Let's agree to disagree." They shut down argument
and critical thinking, which is why they're so
handy to authoritarians who don't like to be questioned. Charles Manson countered
any rational objections to his ravings by saying,
"No sense makes sense." Try arguing with that. Ti and Do, the leaders
of the Heaven's Gate cult would tell skeptical listeners they didn't have "the gift of recognition." And Warren Jeffs, leader
of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-Day Saints, admonished dissatisfied female
congregants to "keep sweet." Though-terminating cliches
are a two-way street. They allow the leader to
avoid threatening questions while giving followers permission to ignore their
cognitive dissonance. Not sure whether you're
doing the right thing? Well, "It's out of our hands,"
as Jim Jones would say. You might be thinking that these traits aren't exclusive to cults. After all, mainstream religions are full of loaded language
like heaven and hell and thought-terminating cliches like "God works in mysterious ways." A linguistic study from 2021 analyzed the speeches of destructive cult leaders like Jim Jones and Marshall Applewhite and compared them to those of
mainstream religious leaders like Billy Graham and Rick Warren. And while there were some similarities, there were also some stark differences. For one, cult leaders' speech
tends to be highly elaborative using words like that,
which, would, and because to create novel worlds full of complex rules and casualties. Mainstream preachers by contrast don't have to explain new systems of morality and spiritualism, but instead work from
those their audiences are already familiar with. They also found that cult leaders favored the pronouns, "us" and "them," while mainstream religious
leaders preferred "you." This is consistent with cults' tendency to reinforce ingroup/outgroup
dynamics through language. Members of Heaven's
Gate believed themselves to be "evolved" and "next level," while outsiders were
stuck on the human level. NXIVM labeled unbelievers "suppressives." And Scientology uses the derogatory "wogs" to refer to non-Scientologists. Perhaps the most efficient
linguistic tactic for reinforcing an "us
versus them" mentality is the use of jargon. While specialized vocabularies are necessary in many professions, cults use them for a
secondary, social purpose. To determine who is a
trusted part of the family and who is an outsider to be avoided. Members of Heaven's Gate
call their bodies, vehicles, and their group, the classroom. They didn't say kitchen or laundry room, but Nutri-Lab and Fiber-Lab. NXIVM, the multi-level marketing company turned sex trafficking cult, performed integrations to rid members of their mental dysfunctions
known as disintegrations. And the jargon of Scientology can quite literally fill
a 300-page dictionary, which members were forced
to study for hours on end. A 2020 study by researchers from Columbia University and
USC examined the relationship between jargon and self-perception. They analyzed the writings of a broad spectrum of graduate students and found that the lower the ranking of the university the student attended, the higher the frequency
of unnecessary jargon. Students from high status schools tended to communicate
more simply and clearly. They also invited business school students to pitch ideas to a panel of
experts, Shark Tank style, but manipulated their
feelings of status beforehand. Some were told that their competitors were successful entrepreneurs,
while others were told they were competing
against high school kids. Those that had been made to feel inferior were more likely to use
jargon in their pitches. The researchers concluded
that jargon can function as a kind of linguistic
conspicuous consumption, advertising a higher status using words. Many ex-members of cults
support this hypothesis, recollecting the early thrill of learning a mysterious terminology. Like kids sharing a secret
code in a clubhouse, it made them feel part
of an exclusive group which gave them a sense of superiority. In her book, Montell offers evidence that these linguistic tactics have seeped out from cults
and into wider society. Propelled by capitalist demands and the reach of social media, the language of cults, she
says, is now everywhere. If you question the business model of a multi-level marketing scheme, well, that's just "stinkin' thinkin'," a thought-terminating cliche
popular with MLMs like Amway. Similarly, when the predictions of QAnon and other conspiracy
theorists don't come to pass, followers on social media
are told to "trust the plan." Corporations employ mantras
full of loaded language to enforce obedience like Jeff Bezos' leadership principles, which include "Think Big" and "Dive Deep." Politics is rife with us
versus them terminology so that everyone is either
a "patriot" or a "traitor". And fitness centers like
SoulCycle or CrossFit use jargon like box,
WOD, tapbacks, or DOMS to make membership feel exclusive. Montell argues that as
traditional institutions like churches, clubs, and unions have declined in popularity, people are desperate for new ways to feel a sense of belonging, and the majority turn to social media. Online wellness gurus like
Teal Swan and Bentinho Massaro have been accused of cult-like
behavior though they deny it. Technology has vastly lowered the bar, allowing them to influence an infinite number of followers from the comfort of their own homes. Say what you want about Jim Jones, the guy could talk for
hours IRL without editing. Meanwhile, TikTokers are competing to coin the next trendy phrase like polywork, micro-cheating, or 75 cozy. This online jargon has
little functional purpose other than to create a sense of community amongst the people who know it and confer status in
the form of viral views to the ones who can successfully
get others to adopt it. In a widely read essay in The Cut, financial columnist Charlotte Cowles explained in detail how she was talked into handing a box of $50,000
in cash to a stranger. The linguistic tactics the
scammers used were compared to how police may coerce a
false confession from a suspect, but could just as well apply
to cult indoctrination. "They do it incrementally, in a series of small steps that
take you farther and farther from what you know to be true. It's not about breaking the will, they were altering the sense of reality." Montell cites the French
philosopher, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, who stated that language was, "Our element as water
is the element of fish." Your perception of reality depends less on the
physical things you see than the words you hear. Language empowers cult leaders to create a "mini universe" as Montell puts it, around their followers. The defense of that is
not to block out language, but to hear more of it from
as many sources as possible. That way no one person has the
power to shape your reality. NXIVM, the multi-level marketing company turned sex trafficking
cult performed integrations to rid members of their mental (beep). - [Crew Member] Wow. - (laughing) Oops, I don't
think we can say that. (laughing)