Does conflict, or elements of it, remain?
On the level of fundamental beliefs, cults are not radically different from those of their mainstream heritage.
Numerous tensions between ideals and practical contingencies have been observed. Members of the unification church, for example, find themselves having to part from their parents, their spouses, and even their children in pursuit of the ideal of establishing the kingdom of heaven on earth--a kingdom in which the basic unit is a closely united nuclear family. (Barker)
Given their "newness":
The idea behind "brainwashing" is also found here:
The horror of Jonestown was compounded by its apparent incomprehensibility. How, it was repeatedly asked, was it possible for adult men and women, at least some of whom were reasonably well educated, to agree to take their own lives at the behest of a man who, in the eyes of most people, was surely nothing but a raving lunatic? (Barker)
What critics often overlook is the dedication to the community that each individual has.
This dedication is coupled with a dramatic belief that the community is the next to last step toward restoration.
Sociological explanations of cults in relation to the contemporary world: