Good News Club’s program of religiously-flavored “traumatic bonding” — shaming and terrorizing
children; emphasizing sin, obedience, and punishment; and mixing it with love and affirmation that is
conditioned on like-mindedness — grooms children to become “authoritarian followers.”
In his free book The Authoritarians, acclaimed psychology researcher Robert
Altemeyer distinguishes “authoritarian followers” from “authoritarian leaders,”
personality types that are dependent on each other. An authoritarian follower
is someone who “submits by leaps and bows to his authorities,” and exhibits
both “a high level of conventionalism” and “high levels of aggression in the
name of their authorities,” including aggressiveness against deviants and outgroups. Authoritarian
followers are “extra-punitive against law-breakers” and “tend to feel more endangered in a
potentially threatening situation than most people do, and often respond aggressively.” They exhibit
“fear of a dangerous world” and often “believe the world will end soon.”
By defining “sin” as anything you “think, say or do” that “displeases God,” Good News Club conditions children to fear critical
thinking that might lead them to question their beliefs. By mocking scientists and teachers who challenge young-earth
creationist beliefs as “fools” and servants of Satan who defy God (see Anti-Science page), Good News Club teaches children to
despise people who don’t share their beliefs.
By characterizing children as intrinsically sinful and worthy of unthinkable punishments, and then insisting — as part of a
“sinner’s prayer” and daily devotions — that children internalize these negative self judgments, Good News Club conditions
children to doubt and feel ashamed of themselves. To bond children to these notions, Good News Club offers children the
conditional, belief-contingent comfort of God’s “love.”
Over time, this authoritarian conditioning breeds a sense of personal inadequacy and endangerment. The traumatized self
becomes angry, hostile, and resentful. However, because the religion that produces, legitimizes, and represses the trauma is
beyond question, the traumatized individual remains blind to its causes. This leads to authoritarian aggression, that personality
trait Dr. Altemeyer describes as a “little volcano of hostility bubbling away inside of them looking for a (safe, approved) way to
erupt.”
Grooming children with a deep-seated sense of personal shame and inadequacy undermines their capacity for empathy.
Studies show that fundamentalist adults are more likely to be harsh and dis-empathetic to their own children (see boxes below)
and enthusiastic advocates for war, torture, and excessively punitive laws. In America’s history, fundamentalists have been
defenders of numerous entrenched cultural injustices, from 19th century slavery and Jim Crow laws to 1960s segregation.
More recently, fundamentalists — at war with themselves and at war with the world — have redirected their “volcano of hostility”
against gays, Muslims, “illegal immigrants,” Democrats and secular humanists.
Studies also demonstrate that “religious fundamentalists ... usually score very high on the Right Wing Authoritarian (RWA)
scale,” a scale widely used to identify authoritarian personalities. After thoroughly describing numerous studies and surveys of
conservative evangelicals, Dr. Altemeyer summarizes the results as follows:
They are highly submissive to established authority, aggressive in the name of that authority, and conventional to the point
of insisting everyone should behave as their authorities decide. They are fearful and self-righteous and have a lot of
hostility in them that they readily direct toward various out-groups. They are easily incited, easily led, rather un-inclined to
think for themselves, largely impervious to facts and reason, and rely instead on social support to maintain their beliefs.
They bring strong loyalty to their in-groups, have thick-walled, highly compartmentalized minds, use a lot of double
standards in their judgments, are surprisingly unprincipled at times, and are often hypocrites.
But they are also Teflon-coated when it comes to guilt. They are blind to themselves, ethnocentric and prejudiced, and as
closed-minded as they are narrowminded. They can be woefully uninformed about things they oppose, but they prefer
ignorance and want to make others become as ignorant as they. They are also surprisingly uninformed about the things
they say they believe in, and deep, deep, deep down inside many of them have secret doubts about their core belief. But
they are very happy, highly giving, and quite zealous.
Dr. Altemeyer’s observations are bolstered by the softer criticisms of many evangelical authors. See, e.g.,
Tom Hovestol, Extreme Righteousness: Seeing ourselves in the Pharisees (2008); David Kinnaman et al.,
unChristian: What A New Generation Really Thinks about Christianity... and Why It Matters (2007); David
Kinnaman, You Lost Me: Why Young Christians Are Leaving Church...and Rethinking Faith (2011).
Dr. Altemeyer also asks the following disturbing question: “Can we not see how easily religious
fundamentalists would lift a would-be dictator aloft as part of a ‘great movement,’ and give it their all?”
(p140). Far from being a cheap shot, Dr. Altemeyer’s question is poignant. After all, Good News Club
not only identifies “complete obedience” as the supreme value but also uses I Samuel 15’s genocidal
imperative in a shockingly deliberative way to illustrate it.
Authoritarian Conditioning
What it Means to Train Children to be Authoritarian Followers
© Intrinsic Dignity
Disclaimers:
Good News Club® is a registered trademark of Child Evangelism Fellowship, Inc. (CEF), headquartered in
Warrenton, Missouri. This site is not affiliated or associated with CEF, which can reached at www.cefonline.com.
This site is also not affiliated or associated with the book “The Good News Club: the Christian Right’s Stealth
Assault on America’s Children” (2012), its author, Katherine Stewart, or its publisher (PublicAffairs).
The materials available at this web site are for informational purposes. While it includes some legal
commentary, these materials should not be regarded as legal advice.