Cults, Culture & Coercion with Dr. Steve Hassan

Invisible Threads: Weaving Mental Health and Democracy in Trump Times with Kate Woodsome

9 snips
Feb 17, 2025
Kate Woodsome, writer-filmmaker and founder of The Invisible Threads Project, studies mental health’s ties to democracy and trauma-informed reporting. She recalls covering January 6, stepping back from newsroom burnout, and exploring how movements vary. Conversations include Christian nationalist themes, Project 2025 concerns, restoring civil discourse, and approaches to reconnecting with polarized family and communities.
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ANECDOTE

Reporter Threatened During January 6 Coverage

  • Kate Woodsome was physically threatened at the January 6 Capitol site after identifying as a Washington Post reporter and faced direct accusations about Ashley Babbitt's death.
  • She stayed calm using journalistic training, humor to defuse a younger attacker, and described how the event reopened childhood trauma leading to later healing choices.
ANECDOTE

A Single Speech Cracked Indoctrination

  • Steven Hassan recounted leaving the Unification Church after seeing a speech that revealed Sun Myung Moon's lies, which cracked his indoctrination.
  • He credits a single emotional moment (his father's tears) and reading internal propaganda for catalyzing exit and later activism.
INSIGHT

Why Newsrooms Hesitate To Call Out Lies

  • Newsrooms often avoid words like lie or mental-illness diagnoses because of concerns about intent, pathologizing individuals, and respect for audiences.
  • Kate explained internal editorial grappling at The Washington Post shaped how journalists framed Trump-era coverage, limiting direct language.
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