Here’s a recent LinkedIn post by Mitch Jackson, a California trial lawyer & mediator with 40 years of experience who writes and speaks on law, tech, AI, and accountability. US Americans like Mitch give me hope. On a personal note, I remember reading Robert Lifton’s work as an undergraduate.
March 15, 2026
It’s a specific movement built around a specific person that demands absolute loyalty, punishes dissent, controls information, dehumanizes outsiders, rejects observable reality, and treats the leader’s word as sacred and unchallengeable truth.
If you’re still on the fence about this issue, take 5 minutes and read this post.
_________
A lot of people are calling MAGA a cult. They throw the word around on social media, in comment sections, on cable news. But most of them are using it as an insult. They are not using it as a diagnosis.
I am.
Not as a metaphor. Not as hyperbole. Not as a lazy political jab. I mean MAGA meets the clinical, psychological, peer-reviewed definition of a cult. And a psychiatrist named Robert Jay Lifton laid out the exact blueprint for identifying one more than six decades ago.
Lifton is one of the most influential psychiatrists of the twentieth century, a former professor at Yale and Harvard, a National Book Award winner, and a recipient of the National Humanities Medal. His 1961 landmark work “Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism” has been the gold standard framework for understanding coercive influence, cult dynamics, and authoritarian control for more than six decades, cited by scholars, law enforcement, and cult recovery professionals worldwide.
In his work, Lifton identified eight criteria that define a totalist environment. A system that uses coercive psychological techniques to control how people think, what information they receive, and how they interpret reality. It becomes a cult when that entire system is built around and in service to a single charismatic leader who demands personal loyalty above all else.
Let me walk you through all eight of Lifton’s criteria that distinguish a passionate political movement from something far more dangerous. And let me show you, with specific evidence, how MAGA satisfies every single one.
One: Controlling Your Environment (Milieu Control)
Lifton described this as the total control of a person’s information environment. The group dictates what members see, hear, read, and ultimately believe. It extends beyond external communication to the point where members learn to police their own thoughts.
Trump told his supporters in 2018: “What you’re seeing and what you’re reading is not what’s happening.” Read that again. The leader of a political movement told his followers to reject the evidence of their own eyes and ears. That is not politics. That is thought control.
He has spent years labeling the free press “the enemy of the people” and branding virtually all critical reporting as “fake news.” During his second term, his administration banned Associated Press reporters from pooled press events in the Oval Office because they used the term Gulf of Mexico instead of his preferred Gulf of America. The Pentagon stripped office space from CNN, The Washington Post, The New York Times, NPR, and other established outlets and replaced them with Newsmax, One America News Network, Breitbart, and The Daily Caller.
In September 2025, the Department of Defense issued new rules prohibiting reporters from obtaining or using unauthorized material even if the information is unclassified.
Reporters Without Borders has placed Trump on a trajectory to join its Press Freedom Predators list alongside Vladimir Putin and Daniel Ortega. The committee documented a systematic campaign of censoring government data, dismantling public broadcasters, weaponizing government agencies to punish critical outlets, and suing disfavored media organizations.
This is milieu control. When your leader tells you to ignore what you see and instead listen only to him, and then systematically dismantles every independent source of information that might contradict him, you are not in a political movement. You are in a controlled information environment. You are in the first stage of a cult.
Two: Mystical Manipulation
Lifton called this planned spontaneity. The leadership orchestrates events but presents them as organic or divinely guided. Members come to believe that the group’s experiences and revelations are signs of a higher purpose.
Trump has repeatedly framed his political survival as evidence of divine protection. After his 2024 assassination attempt, his supporters immediately declared it a miracle and a sign that God had chosen him to lead America. His campaign leaned into that framing with full force, and it worked because the groundwork had been laid for years.
He routinely portrays himself as the singular figure standing between order and chaos. Every rally reinforces the narrative that Trump alone can save the country. Every legal setback becomes evidence of a larger conspiracy against him, which paradoxically strengthens the belief that he must be doing something right because the forces of evil are trying to stop him.
The pardoning of more than 1,500 January 6 defendants on his first day back in office was framed as an act of justice against a corrupt system rather than what it actually was, the rewarding of loyalty. He called violent insurrectionists “patriots” and “hostages.” He opened a campaign rally in Waco, Texas, with a recording of imprisoned rioters singing the national anthem over a jail phone. Every element was choreographed to create a sense of sacred mission.
This is mystical manipulation. When the leader’s survival becomes a miracle, his legal troubles become persecution, and violent criminals become martyrs, the movement has crossed the line from politics into something that operates on faith, not evidence.
Three: The Demand for Purity
Lifton described this as the division of the world into absolute good and absolute evil. Members are held to an impossibly high ideological standard, and the inevitable failure to meet that standard creates guilt and shame that the group then exploits.
Trump has called Democrats “the party of hate, evil, and Satan.” He has called them “demonic.” He has referred to political opponents as “the enemy within.” He has called protesters “animals” and “enemies.” He called immigrants “vermin” and described them as “poisoning the blood of our country.”
Within MAGA itself, the purity test is even more severe. Anyone who questions Trump is immediately cast out. Liz Cheney. Mitt Romney. Mike Pence. Nikki Haley. Even Marjorie Taylor Greene, one of his most vocal supporters, was pushed aside after she challenged him on the Epstein files. Republican Thomas Massie was publicly attacked by Trump and targeted for a primary challenge simply because he voted his conscience on the debt ceiling.
The pardon attorney Trump appointed, Ed Martin, said it plainly when he justified pardoning a convicted Virginia sheriff: “No MAGA left behind.” That is not a legal standard. That is a loyalty oath.
When your political identity demands that you either agree with everything the leader says or face immediate excommunication, you are not dealing with ideological diversity. You are dealing with enforced purity. And that is the third criterion of a cult.
Four: The Cult of Confession
In Lifton’s framework, this involves pressured confession of doubts or ideological impurity. These confessions are not therapeutic. They are tools of surveillance and control. What is confessed can later be used against the individual.
In the MAGA ecosystem, public loyalty demonstrations function as mandatory confession. Republican officials who privately express doubts about Trump have been forced into humiliating public reversals. J.D. Vance once called Trump “America’s Hitler” and later became his running mate. Lindsey Graham went from saying Trump was a “kook” and “unfit for office” to becoming one of his most vocal defenders.
Every Republican who makes the pilgrimage to Mar-a-Lago after criticizing Trump is performing a public confession of disloyalty followed by a pledge of renewed devotion. Nikki Haley challenged him in the primary and then endorsed him. Ted Cruz watched Trump insult his wife and his father on national television and then phone-banked for him.
The January 6 pardons function the same way in reverse. Accept the pardon, accept the narrative. Pamela Hemphill, one of the Capitol defendants, rejected her pardon precisely because she understood this. She said accepting it would “contribute to their gaslighting and false narrative” and amount to helping them “rewrite history.” She was one of the few who saw the transaction for what it was.
When loyalty must be publicly performed and disloyalty must be publicly confessed and atoned for, you are looking at the fourth criterion of a cult.
Five: The Sacred Science
Lifton described this as the elevation of the group’s ideology to an absolute truth that is simultaneously presented as morally and scientifically beyond question. Challenging the doctrine is framed as both intellectually deficient and morally corrupt.
In MAGA, Trump’s version of events is the sacred science. The 2020 election was stolen. Full stop. Dozens of courts, Republican-appointed judges, Trump’s own Attorney General William Barr, his own election security officials, multiple audits, and every credible investigation concluded otherwise. It does not matter. Within MAGA, questioning the stolen election narrative makes you a traitor.
Trump told a Detroit audience in January 2026: “I’ve kept all my promises, and much more.” PolitiFact’s tracking of 75 second-term campaign promises found that nearly one-third had stalled due to congressional inaction, court rulings, or lack of White House initiative. The promise to end the Ukraine war in 24 hours was broken. Multiple other pledges remain undelivered. But inside the MAGA information ecosystem, these facts do not penetrate because the doctrine says Trump always delivers, and the doctrine cannot be questioned.
When the leader’s word overrides documented reality and questioning that word is treated as moral failure, you have satisfied the fifth criterion.
Six: Loading the Language
Lifton identified this as the compression of complex human experiences into brief, definitive phrases that shut down critical thinking. He called them thought-terminating cliches.
MAGA runs on them. “Fake news.” “Witch hunt.” “Deep state.” “Enemy of the people.” “Drain the swamp.” “RINO.” “Trump Derangement Syndrome.” “Woke.”
Each of these phrases serves the same purpose. They replace analysis with reflex. When a supporter encounters a credible criticism of Trump, they do not have to evaluate it on its merits. They simply label it “fake news” or attribute it to “Trump Derangement Syndrome” and the thinking stops. The label becomes the rebuttal.
This is not normal political messaging. Every campaign has slogans. But MAGA’s language functions differently because it is designed to foreclose independent evaluation rather than invite it. When someone says “that’s just TDS,” the conversation ends. When someone says “that’s fake news,” the evidence becomes irrelevant. When someone says “deep state,” they have explained away any institutional check on power without having to engage with the substance of what that institution actually found.
Lifton specifically warned about this. He said loaded language constricts the range of thought itself. When a handful of phrases can neutralize any argument, any fact, any piece of evidence, the language is no longer serving communication. It is serving control.
Seven: Doctrine Over Person
This is one of Lifton’s most important criteria. When individual experience is systematically subordinated to the group’s ideology, and when members are trained to distrust their own perceptions in favor of the doctrine, you are deep in totalist territory.
Farmers across America are bleeding money because of Trump’s tariffs. By 2026, major crops are suffering staggering losses per acre. Net farm income is projected to drop by tens of billions of dollars. These are people who voted for Trump. They are living the economic consequences of his policies every single day. Many of them continue to support him anyway because the doctrine says the tariffs are working and anyone who says otherwise is part of the problem.
The same dynamic plays out with the January 6 pardons. Police officers were beaten, sprayed with chemicals, and shocked with stun guns during the Capitol attack. Over 140 officers were injured. The mother of Officer Brian Sicknick told the court that “lawlessness, misplaced loyalty to a deranged autocratic ideal, and hate killed my son.” Trump pardoned the man who pepper sprayed Sicknick in the face.
And when one of his most loyal supporters, Senator Tommy Tuberville, was asked about the violence against police on January 6, he said: “I don’t believe it because I didn’t see it.” Despite the video evidence. Despite the court records. Despite the officers who testified. The doctrine says January 6 was not what you saw. So Tuberville chose the doctrine over his own capacity for observation.
When people choose the leader’s version of reality over what they have seen with their own eyes and felt in their own lives, that is not politics. That is the seventh criterion of a cult.
Eight: The Dispensing of Existence
This is Lifton’s most chilling criterion. The group claims the right to determine who has the right to exist. Those outside the group, or those who leave, are deemed unworthy, evil, or effectively nonexistent.
In November 2025, Trump posted on social media that six members of Congress, all military veterans, had engaged in “SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR, punishable by DEATH.” Their crime was making a video reminding military personnel that they have the right and duty to refuse illegal orders. Every one of those lawmakers served in uniform. Trump dodged the draft five times. And he publicly called for their execution.
He has called immigrants “vermin” who are “poisoning the blood” of the country. He has described political opponents as subhuman. After the January 6 pardons, pro-Trump forums erupted with calls for the execution of Democrats and judges. Users on one of the pro Trump websites I’m not going to mention, called for judges to be “beaten to death,” “ground up in wood chippers,” and “thrown from helicopters.”
When the leader dehumanizes outsiders and dissenters, when followers openly call for the physical elimination of perceived enemies, and when leaving the group means being labeled a traitor who deserves punishment, the eighth and final criterion has been met.
So here we are.
Eight criteria. Eight for eight. Not close calls. Not stretches. Direct, documented, evidence-based matches between what Robert Lifton identified in 1961 as the markers of a totalist movement and what MAGA has become in 2026.
I want to be clear about something. This is not an attack on every person who has ever voted for a Republican. This is not about policy disagreements over taxes or regulations or foreign policy philosophy. Reasonable people can disagree about those things all day long, and that disagreement is the lifeblood of democracy.
This is about a specific movement built around a specific person that demands absolute loyalty, punishes dissent, controls information, dehumanizes outsiders, rejects observable reality, and treats the leader’s word as sacred and unchallengeable truth.
That is a cult. Not by my definition. By the definition of one of the most respected psychiatrists in American history, whose work has been the foundational framework for understanding coercive groups for over 60 years.
The good news, if there is any, is that Lifton also found that thought reform is rarely total and almost never permanent. People who were removed from totalist environments recovered their independence and their ability to think critically. The environment was the problem, not some permanent deficiency in the individual.
Which means the people you love who are caught up in this can come back. But not if we refuse to name what we are looking at. Not if we keep pretending this is just politics as usual.
It is not politics as usual.
It is a cult.
And the first step to breaking its hold is being willing to say so.
Mitch Jackson, Esq.
Bonus: Cognitive Dissonance in Red Hats: The Psychology of Unshakable Trump Support – We’re not just battling disinformation. We’re fighting a mass psychological trap—and the future of truth, justice, and democracy hangs in the balance. (April 2025)
