I have read Lifton, Singer, and ofshe among others. I know full well what brainwashing is by their definitions. I know what the criteria for cults are, and I know that you have not read certain books because if you had, you would be bringing up some better counterarguments.
I would like to hear one element of a cult you think that AA does not have, other than the lack of a charismatic leader, which i'll concede. You claim you have studied cults... let me test that if you challenge me. I can name another element AA does not have off the top of my head. Let's see if you can name it.
I’m not interested in playing “Who knows Cults” against defending champion, Psy..
Your implication is I am uneducated so my opinion isn't as valid as yours. So, recognize your opinion isn't as valid as cultic experts. All of whom, that take a position on this issue, hold that A.A. is NOT a cult or cult-like. Upon study, Margaret Singer and Rick Ross hold that A.A. doesnt use thought reform, nor is not cult-like or a cult.
Agent Orange, the internet guy who created the page you quote for evidence of your beleif, actually visited the Rick.Ross forum, of the Rick Ross Institute for Cultic education, to argue A.A. is cult-like. Rick Ross states definitively A.A. is not cult-like or a cult.
Here is R.R. on the topic of A.A.
http://forum.rickross.com/read.php?8,1016,page=4“As a staff member of Jewish Family Service in the 1980s and coordinator of its Jewish Prisoner Program for Arizona, I dealt extensively with AA. I attended meetings to find out what they were like anonymously and saw nothing wrong or supect.… my postion is that I see AA and NA as benign support groups, which I have and would again recommend to people with a substance abuse problem.”
And
“[RickRoss forum]is a "Cult Education Forum" for those interested in discussing groups called "cults," "cult-like" groups and the manipulative techniques they may employ. AA doesn't fit within that spectrum.”
Meanwhile, he considers “teen boot camps” and related orgs like Straight, Desisto, Synanon, WWASP cultic organizations
Here is what he says to the internet guy, Agent Orange, and about L rangels, who, you quote or refer to as evidence of your position:
http://forum.rickross.com/read.php?8,1016,page=34‘’Please understand vince that Margaret Singer would not agree with your application of her work concerning AA. Dr. Singer did not consider AA a "cult" and never opined otherwise, nor did she apply thought reform techniques to AA.
Robert Jay Lifton, the author of "Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism" likewise has not stated that AA uses thought reform, that I am aware of.
So you may offer your opinions, but they have no basis agreed upon by the authors you quote.
You offered a link to L. Allen Ragels paper "Is Alcoholics Anonymous a Cult?"
Ragels like others quoted by anti-AA critics on the Internet, is not a recognized cult expert and has no meaningful standing in that area of study.””
In the opinion of notable EVERY cultic expert I could find, A.A. does NOT practice thought reform, nor is it “cult-like” or a cult. Margeret Singer, author of the most concurrent, contemparary thought-reform study,who DESIGNED the parameters you say show A.A. is cult-like, holds that A.A. is NOT cult-like.
I do not “follow” A.A. My opinion synchs with the experts in this field: A.A has no tightly delineated, closely observed and measured hierarchy. It does not practice “brainwashing” in a reasonable sense of the word. There are no hidden rules, no hidden secret texts. All its material and designs are easily downloadable and viewable on its website. It does not seek to financially exploit its members. It’s free. They don’t accept money from non-members and there is a cap on what the organization will accept as a bequest ($2500?).You mentioned people related to A.A. supposedly made $ by selling books about it, or something; that is irrelevant. The ORGANIZATION A.A. does not expect money from its members etc, etc, SO, NO, A.A. is not cult-like or a cult, in any meaningful way.
A.A's a group. You could fairly consider it religious-like, or philosophy-like (as opposed to scientific) but not cult-like. I know some,not experts, say A.A. fails the “cult test” or has enough of S’s aspects to be a cult. If I wanted, I could make the v.a. guides apply to basically any group: republicans, Catholics... You need to use the paradigm in a reasonable way for it to be useful. A.O, L rangels, etc, and you don't do so.