Let's go through the traits:
Okay
That should be pretty obvious. "On fire for Christ" etc.
I'll agree with this one.
And within the church, people who ask "bad questions" get "prayed for" eventually for having a 'rebellious spirit' or whatever (at least for kids in youth groups that's pretty common).
I don't see this as "employing unethically manipulative (i.e., deceptive and indirect) techniques of persuasion" . It seems pretty direct to me and open to me rather than deceptive and indirect.
That's a little too vague to comment on.
That's a shame. I see it as the crucial charactoristic, particularly for the discussion here. If it's not harmful, it's certainly not abusive.
Christian kids aren't supposed to hang with unsaved kids, they're supposed to see unsaved parents and family as blinded by Satan...
I don't think most mainstream churches are so restrictive that they forbid their youth from associating with jews, muslims, or methodists. The more restrictive and controlling churches may recommend it, I don't know, but they don't actually isolate their kids from those who are unsaved. Cults do.
The emotional, hypnotic effect of worship services...
???? I've been to worship services at a variety of churches over my life. Emotional, occasionally. Hypnotic, never. I don't think this is charactoristic of mainstream churches. Going back, I see the definition says: "debilitation, use of special methods to heighten suggestibility and subservience" I don't think typical worship services can be called 'debilitating' though some do harp a lot on the 'subservience to god' bit.
You accept the theology or are ostracised...more "we'll pray for you" stuff...
Dogmatic churches are this way, but not all churches are dogmatic. I know of a number of churchs that are self described as 'radically inclusive'. They welcome gay couples, etc. They don't ostracise those who disagree, but welcome them and the opportunity to win them over.
No secular books, music, TV, "liberal news sources", etc.
This is pretty much limited to some fundamentalist churches, which I have already agreed could be considered cults. This isn't a charactoristic of mainstream churches.
That one should be obvious, too...
No. Same as above. This one only applies to certain fundamentalist churches. A great many churches want their members, including their children, to question what they believe in and why. They aren't afraid of it and they encourage it. That even includes some conservative denominations in addition to the liberal ones.
If you leave the church, it's because you're being led by Satan, etc. Hellbound.
This depends on the church. Not a universal by any means, though I think it's a relative common trait.
This is not the experience only in obscure little fundamentalist Westboro places...this is what goes on in the mega-churches! I admit I live in the bible belt, so I saw the worst of the worst for a national average, I guess...but this is what went on at all three of the mega-churches here in my little corner of the South. Most of the Evangelical/Baptist churches use the same kinds of youth programs. They tend to be little clones of each other. They're all brainwashy in the same ways.
I just can't agree that this qualifies as brainwashing. Yes, there are some charactoristics in common with the definition, but that's also true of such things as goth culture, fan clubs for rock stars, etc. Churches, with some exceptions, don't fit the definition of cult well enough to convince me that such an experience is harmful to children.