Cults & the Culting of America w/ Knitting Cult Lady | 64 | Power Coalition and Getting Involved
Cults and the Culting of America
Release Date: 01/27/2026
Cults and the Culting of America
Content warnings: discussion of child abuse, child sexual abuse, sexual assault, trauma, recovery culture, substance abuse, and high-control groups. In this episode of Cults and the Culting of America, Daniella and Scot are joined by Violet, a writer and creator who grew up immersed in 12-step programs from infancy. Violet shares her lived experience of being raised in Alcoholics Anonymous, examining how recovery culture, often treated as sacred and beyond critique, can function as a high-control system, particularly for children. The conversation explores themes of indoctrination,...
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In this special edition of Cults and the Culting of America, Daniella speaks with Ashley Shelton, founder of the Power Coalition for Equity and Justice in Louisiana, about organizing, democracy, and what it actually means to fight authoritarianism in real life. Ashley draws on her background in philanthropy, disaster recovery, and voter engagement to explain how Black and Brown communities—particularly in Louisiana—have long relied on mutual aid and organizing because government support has historically been absent or extractive. The conversation connects current political threats,...
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In this episode of Cults and the Culting of America, Daniella Mestyanek Young and Scot Loyd are joined by hip-hop artist, author, and activist Spryte the Emcee, who shares her deeply personal journey through addiction, recovery, and eventual deconstruction from Narcotics Anonymous. Spryte recounts a childhood shaped by trauma, loss, and instability, followed by immersion in NA after a near-fatal overdose. While the program initially provided safety and structure, it later became increasingly coercive and controlling, particularly when Spryte pursued higher education and personal growth. The...
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In this episode of Cults and the Culting of America, Daniella sits down with political scientist Thomas Kelly to revisit one of the most foundational ideas in cult studies: cognitive dissonance. Their conversation centers on Leon Festinger’s famous book When Prophecy Fails, which is often cited to explain why cult members double down on beliefs after predictions don’t come true. Thomas walks through his research uncovering serious methodological and ethical problems with that original study, arguing that the historical record actually shows the opposite of what Festinger claimed....
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In this episode, guest Ara Jade shares her seven-year experience inside a high-control religious group adjacent to the Hebrew Israelite movement, known as the Israel of God. She recounts how she was drawn in through family influence, biblical study practices, and a strong sense of community, only to later encounter manipulation, racism-based doctrine, misogyny, surveillance, fear tactics, and emotional control. Ara describes specific red flags, including purity rules for women, the weaponization of Black identity, pressure to obey male authority, and her arranged-like marriage. She explains...
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This episode of Cults and the Culting of America features guest Emily Hulen, a massage therapist and trauma coach who grew up in Christian Science and later navigated additional cult-like environments. Emily describes the core beliefs of Christian Science — including the denial of physical reality, rejection of medical care, and heavy reliance on prayer as a means of erasing mortal experience. She shares harrowing examples of untreated medical issues in her family and her own childhood injuries and illnesses that went unaddressed. Emily traces her early cognitive dissonance, beginning around...
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In this episode, Dr. Cynthia Brown discusses her journey in women's health and fertility, emphasizing the importance of understanding these topics beyond conventional medicine. The conversation explores the Maha movement and its impact on women's health, cultural perspectives on pregnancy and motherhood, and the dangers of extreme birthing practices. The discussion also touches on the romanticization of pain in motherhood, the need for community support in parenting, and the intersection of gender and medical care. Dr. Brown highlights the boy crisis and the influence of cult mentality on...
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Content Warnings: Sexual assault and child sexual abuse Sex trafficking and the Epstein list Cult dynamics, coercive control, and brainwashing White supremacy, racism, xenophobia, and fascism Historical violence, genocide, Nazism, U.S. colonial atrocities, police violence Political extremism, MAGA, Trump administration actions Death, including anticipated death of a political figure Domestic extremism, ICE raids, and militarized responses Cult-related childhood trauma and labor camp environments In this episode Daniella (“Knitting Cult Lady”) and historian Amanda...
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Content Warning: This episode contains discussions of religious and institutional abuse, child abuse, disordered eating, family estrangement, mental illness, trauma recovery, and medication withdrawal. Listener discretion is advised. In this episode of Cults and the Culting of America, hosts Dr. Scot Loyd and Daniella Mestyanek Young speak with Beth Granger, author of Born and RAZED: Surviving the Cult Was Only Half the Battle. Beth shares her experience growing up at Grenville Christian College, a Canadian boarding school later revealed to be a religious cult connected to the Community of...
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In this special episode, Daniella Mestyanek Young (“Knitting Cult Lady”) speaks with Dr. Bryan Pitts, Assistant Director of UCLA’s Latin American Institute, about the Brazilian military dictatorship (1964–1985) and how studying Brazil’s political history can help Americans understand current threats to democracy. They compare U.S. and Brazilian political systems, the cultural myths that obscure inequality (the “American Dream” vs. Brazil’s “racial democracy”), and the interplay between religion, class, and authoritarianism. The discussion explores how political elites,...
info_outlineIn this special edition of Cults and the Culting of America, Daniella speaks with Ashley Shelton, founder of the Power Coalition for Equity and Justice in Louisiana, about organizing, democracy, and what it actually means to fight authoritarianism in real life. Ashley draws on her background in philanthropy, disaster recovery, and voter engagement to explain how Black and Brown communities—particularly in Louisiana—have long relied on mutual aid and organizing because government support has historically been absent or extractive. The conversation connects current political threats, including voter suppression, Medicaid cuts, ICE activity, and the erosion of due process, to broader patterns seen in authoritarian regimes. Together, they argue that elections still matter, collective action works, and community-based organizing is one of the strongest tools available to resist democratic backsliding. The episode emphasizes empowerment over despair, calling listeners to engage locally, vote strategically, and stop treating elected officials like friends instead of employees.
https://powercoalition.org/
Daniella's Links:
Order Culting of America: The Culting of America – Knitting Cult Lady
Daniella Mestyanek Young's book:
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Uncultured Autographed:
Connect with Daniella on social media
Other Podcasts
Daniella's other podcast: Hey White Women
Scot's Socials
TikTok: @thescotloyd
Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@thescotloyd
Key Takeaways
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Organizing doesn’t require ideological purity—just shared problem-solving and community trust.
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Black and Brown communities are often more prepared for mutual aid because government abandonment isn’t new to them.
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Louisiana’s political and economic structure (resource extraction + poverty) forces community interdependence.
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Federal budget cuts—especially to Medicaid—will have life-or-death consequences in poorer states.
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Elections are flawed but still one of the most powerful tools available to protect democracy.
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Disengagement and political helplessness are intentional outcomes of authoritarian strategy.
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Collective pressure (calls, protests, organizing) does move even extreme politicians.
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The erosion of due process affects everyone eventually—citizenship protections are more fragile than assumed.
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Authoritarianism thrives when communities stop talking to one another.
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Social media and decentralized platforms now rival traditional media in shaping public accountability.
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Democracy defense looks different for everyone—craftivism, education, calling reps, organizing all count.
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Accountability matters more than forgiveness; reconciliation without change enables harm.
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Pocketbook politics (healthcare, food, housing, utilities) cut through manufactured culture wars.
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History shows progress is fragile—and can be reversed if not actively defended.
Chapters
00:00 Introduction to Ashley Shelton and the Power Coalition
01:47 Ashley’s Journey into Organizing
02:54 The Importance of Community Support
05:03 Challenges in Louisiana and Community Resilience
08:50 Empowerment Through Voting and Civic Engagement
15:43 The Role of Elections in Democracy
19:05 Hope and Collective Action for Change
22:06 Engaging Well-Meaning Allies in the Fight
27:21 Communication Breakdown in Politics
28:11 The Reality of Accountability
29:52 The Stakes of Political Decisions
31:13 Understanding Class Warfare
33:05 The Meaning of Citizenship
36:45 Confronting America's History
38:00 Defining Moments in American History
39:30 Activism Through Craftivism
41:32 The Power of Social Media
45:26 The Role of Curiosity in Understanding
Produced by Haley Phillips, Meghan Picmann, and Lizy Freudmann