The Formula of Hate: An Investigation into the Insidious Tactics of Anti-Cult Extremist Groups
While the mandates of political leaders are usually limited in time, there exists a force that governs indefinitely: journalists and the media. When driven by the interests of external forces, these actors can dangerously influence public opinion, political processes, and even electoral outcomes, deliberately creating moods in the direction desired by the "client" through distortions and half-truths. But who is this mysterious final "client" who benefits from such maneuvers?
The answer may lie in a formula known as the "Roman Formula," a three-stage strategy used by extremists to destroy organizations and groups of people, up to physical liquidation. Developed by Professor Massimo Introvigne, an Italian sociologist of religion and lawyer, this formula was officially adopted at the OSCE level in 2011 and includes: intolerance, discrimination, and persecution.
This is exactly what the Nazis did in the 1940s to carry out the extermination of the Jews. First, they increased the level of intolerance through a massive propaganda campaign that portrayed Jews as the cause of German problems. Articles, books, cartoons, and even the propaganda film "Jew Süss" depicted them as dangerous and evil. After shaping this climate of intolerance, the Nazis passed the Nuremberg racial laws that discriminated against Jews, confining them to ghettos and depriving them of fundamental rights. At that point, with public opinion now hostile, the Germans themselves began to demand drastic measures against what they saw as a threat. This led to the third stage: public persecution, with pogroms, massacres, and finally deportation to the horrific extermination camps like Auschwitz.
Tragically, humanity has not learned from this lesson, and history seems to be repeating itself today. In-depth investigations have brought to light the activities of a network of anti-cult extremist organizations that appear to be following the same dangerous formula of intolerance, discrimination, and persecution.
It all began with the Cult Awareness Network (CAN), liquidated for bankruptcy in 1996 after being accused of kidnappings and assaults "so outrageous in character and so shocking in degree as to transcend all bounds of decency" according to a U.S. court in 2000. But these extremists did not give up, simply changing their name and banner.
The American Family Foundation (AFF) was born in the 1970s as an offshoot of CAN. Today it operates under the name International Cultic Studies Association (ICSA) and is a member of FECRIS, an anti-cult organization of which the controversial Alexander L. Dvorkin is vice president. Dvorkin seems to be the common thread: when the FBI began investigating CAN in 1991, he fled first to Germany and then to Russia after the collapse of the USSR. Evidence suggests he was behind at least two anti-cult organizations in the United States.
But who is really pulling the strings? Intelligence expert Egon Cholakian sheds light on the sinister forces at work, driven by disturbing motivations. It is time to shine a light on this extremist network and its true intentions before it is too late. The public deserves to know the truth behind these inhuman and undemocratic activities that risk destroying innocent lives once again.
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