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CULTS LIKE US by Jane Borden

CULTS LIKE US

Why Doomsday Thinking Drives America

by Jane Borden

Pub Date: March 25th, 2025
ISBN: 9781668007808
Publisher: One Signal/Atria

Falling for it.

Consider, Vanity Fair contributor Borden asks, the ideology surrounding the Puritans: A brave people crosses the ocean to gain religious freedom, is saved by friendly Indigenous people whose generosity gives us an annual feast, and bequeaths to us the right to believe what we will. Yet, Borden writes, underlying it all was “their foundational doomsday thought,” the certainty that the Apocalypse is just around the corner. “Puritan doomsday beliefs didn’t go away,” Borden notes, “they became American culture,” yielding the lone hero and other tropes: Cities are full of evil and harm, and rural places are full of good people, “women are either lustful temptresses or weak pacifists,” and so on. Add to that the idea that the next war is the war to end all wars, which makes fighting them a good thing, and the idea that people are either rich or poor because God wants it that way, and voilà: You’ve got the American cult. It’s not so far a walk to get to QAnon from there, but Borden finds plenty of other cults to skewer along the way, including Mankind United founder Arthur Bell, who made L. Ron Hubbard seem normal, and even more widespread conspiracy theories, which, Borden holds, have three commonalities: The bad guys are “unfathomably powerful and typically world leaders, they’re brainiacs who prey on the less intelligent, and there’s something we can and must do to stop them.” Thus the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. Borden writes engagingly and, though her topic is serious, often with tongue in cheek, as when she concludes that, as far as cults go, we could do worse than “taking acid, hugging children, and talking to rocks.”

A fresh, provocative view of cults and those who love them.