Anti-Cult Terrorism via the Internet Revisited
A Short Review of "Religion on the Internet: Research Prospects
and Promises", edited by Jeffrey K. Hadden and Douglas E. Cowan
(Amsterdam, London and New York: JAI, 2000)
From: http://www.cesnur.org/2001/plz_march01.htm
by PierLuigi Zoccatelli
The series "Religion and the Social Order", whose general
editor is David Bromley, has acquired a solid reputation for collecting
some of the best conference papers and journal articles in the field
of the sociology of religion. New developments in theory and research
have been regularly covered, with a special attention devoted to
new religious movements and the cult wars. Volume 8 of the series,
"Religion on the Internet: Research Prospects and Promises"
is edited by Jeffrey K. Hadden and Douglas E. Cowan, and collects
several papers about religion on the Web. Not all of them deal with
new religious movements (an interesting contribution is offered,
for instance, by Gary R. Bunt on cyber-Islam). NRMs, however, are
a recurring feature in general-theme articles, including Hadden
and Cowans "Introduction", Haddens success
story of his own "New Religious Movements Homepage", and
Bruce A. Robinsons tale of how he created www.religioustolerance.org
and managed to convert it into both one of the most popular religious
pages on the Web and an international voice for tolerance. Readers
will be both interested and saddened by the story of the rise and
fall of NUREL-L, as told from an insider perspective by Douglas
Cowan ("Religion, Rhetoric, and Scholarship: Managing Vested
Interest in E-Space"). What was started as a discussion list
for scholars degenerated into a name-calling arena when non-academic
anti-cultists became frequent contributors. Scientologists also
reacted, although, as list owner Irving Hexham explained, the latter
were much more "respectful and polite" than their opponents
(Cowan, op.cit, p. 112). Banning Scientology from the subject discussed
in the list and restricting it to scholars did not solve the problem,
and NUREL-L, although still existing to this date, "never recovered",
as Cowan puts it (ibid., p. 114).
The fourth section of the book, aptly called by the editors "Webs
of Deceit", is particularly consecrated to cult wars on the
Web. Jean-François Mayers paper (originally presented
at CESNUR 1999 conference in Bryn Athyn) concludes that anti-cultists
have profited from the Internet more than their opponents, some
of which (Scientology) have over-reacted while others have simply
ignored the Web to their own detriment. Massimo Introvigne publishes
another part of his 1999 paper (originally presented at the Chicago
ASR meeting) "So Many Evil Things: Anti-Cult Terrorism
Via the Internet" (other portions have appeared elsewhere).
The paper has benefited from peer review, suggestions and revisions;
it is also published at a time when "anti-cult terrorism via
the Internet" is less in need of being explained as a category,
Introvignes model being now frequently quoted by both scholars
of NRMs and law enforcement agencies in the wake of his celebrated
1999 paper. Introvigne can thus focus on methodological issues and
test some of his hypotheses against Mayers and Haddens
general discussions of NRMs and the Internet in the volume. It is
true, as Hadden himself summarizes, that "riding a wave of
media conjecture and exaggeration, opponents of NRMs appear to have
been more active and more aggressive in cyberspace than many of
the movements themselves". The significance of Introvignes
model of "anti-cult terrorism via the Internet", Hadden
suggests, lies however in the fact that it "uses emerging theoretical
models of cyberspace to examine issues of violence and terrorism
via the Internet. These models Introvigne then applies to the extreme
fringe of anti-cultism, which he is clear is not to be confused
with the more moderate cult awareness community." "Anti-cult
terrorists via the Internet", Hadden goes on commenting, are
rather "individuals and groups who use Internet to disseminate
religious hate propaganda. The activities of this lunatic
fringe focus on demonising and dehumanising the cults
and their alleged supporters; they promote increasingly wild conspiracy
theories; and they target legitimate scholars of NRMs whom they
have singled out as cult apologists" (p. 19). Paradoxically,
the importance of Introvignes study is confirmed by the "terrorists"s
own reaction to it: rather than understanding, let alone discussing,
the methodological issues involved, they immediately claimed that
Introvigne (and presumably Hadden, and other "cult apologists")
were simply labelling their own critics as "terrorists",
in continuing furtherance of the same "cult apologists
conspiracy". (One of the most strange claims is that certain
Web sites are not really anti-cult but simply anti-CESNUR, anti-Introvigne,
anti-Hadden, etc., and should not be called "anti-cult";
an exceedingly bizarre argument, since these individual scholars
and organizations are assaulted precisely because they are regarded
as "cult apologists", i.e. the "cults" allegedly
benefit from their work). The "terrorists" went on with
more of the same, reiterating the ad hominem arguments and name-calling,
thus behaving exactly as the model had predicted and confirming
the same models validity.
"Religion on the Internet" is, of course, about much
more than cult wars and anti-cult terrorists. It is also, however,
an interesting opportunity to revisit the latter categories in a
much broader context. The book is highly recommended to scholars
of religion and the Internet in general; and in particular to scholars
of new religious movements, the cult wars, hate literature, and
to law enforcement agencies and lawyers dealing with the more unpleasant
consequences of anti-cult terrorism via the Web.
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