New Era might be a cult

Travels WithTravels With Posts: 610
edited December 2009 in All Encompassing Trip
I'm pretty sure a friend of mine invited me to join a cult last week. It's called New Era (based in Concord, CA) - it's some "change your life" training/workshop. It costs thousands of dollars to complete and has an emphasis on recruitment. After a cup of coffee out and about 40 minutes on the phone I finally convinced him that it's just not my thing. Any one here have any experience with it?
“I suppose our capacity for self-delusion is boundless.” ― John Steinbeck, Travels with Charley: In Search of America
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  • normnorm Posts: 31,146
    I'm pretty sure a friend of mine invited me to join a cult last week. It's called New Era (based in Concord, CA) - it's some "change your life" training/workshop. It costs thousands of dollars to complete and has an emphasis on recruitment. After a cup of coffee out and about 40 minutes on the phone I finally convinced him that it's just not my thing. Any one here have any experience with it?


    that would be a pyramid scheme...or a "multi level marketing" business which is an euphemism for pyramid scheme
  • FYI: not all Multi Level Marketing Companies are "Pyramid Schemes".
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  • 8181 Needing a ride to Forest Hills and a ounce of weed. Please inquire within. Thanks. Or not. Posts: 58,276
    i thought this was going to be about baseball hats and the people that were them.
    81 is now off the air

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  • intodeepintodeep Posts: 7,249
    81 wrote:
    i thought this was going to be about baseball hats and the people that were them.

    I was headed in the same direction with my own thought process as well.
    Charlotte 00 | Charlotte 03 | Asheville 04 | Atlanta 12 | Greenville 16 | Columbia 16 |Seattle 18  | Nashville 22 | Ohana Festival 24 x2 | Atlanta 25 x2
  • FYI: not all Multi Level Marketing Companies are "Pyramid Schemes".

    True... but I think most lie somewhere in between a scam and a legitimate business.

    Are commissions paid on recruiting others? If so... it is not sustainable.

    Will the company buy back the inventory of participants if they opt out? If not... it is probably not legitimate.
    Everything not forbidden is compulsory and eveything not compulsory is forbidden. You are free... free to do what the government says you can do.
  • LizardLizard So Cal Posts: 12,091
    81 wrote:
    i thought this was going to be about baseball hats and the people that were them.
    People were baseball hats??
    8-)
    So I'll just lie down and wait for the dream
    Where I'm not ugly and you're lookin' at me
  • based on looking at the website, it just comes across as a non-accredited workshop on goal setting theory.

    I'd say your friend is over-zealous about his new find, nothing to be scared of.

    It didn't seem like their was an emphasis on recruitment from the site, but if there is I'd say it's a scheme. Legit tier based marketing or not; anything that questions the integrity of all personal relationships is a scheme in my book.
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