Core tenents of Scientology?
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This might interest you, but apperently the high ranking wierdos in Scienctology avoid prosecuction by living on a boat Hubbard purchased and stay in international waters. If Hubbard is still alive, and I believe he is, thats where he is hiding.
Here is an interesting site detailing some of their hijinks.
Here is an interesting site detailing some of their hijinks.
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They have also been the only "religious" organization ever successfully convicted for criminal libel (a criminal prosecution) in Canada courtesy of its attacks on a Crown Prosecutor. And one of the few with its own spy service (read about operation Clambake) intent on taking over the government. To quote Londo - "stupidity and arrogance all wrapped up in the same package. how convenient."Lord Zentei wrote:
A commercial organization? Here I was thinking it was defined as a cult. Oddly enough, the "commercial organization that strives against the free and democratic order" label is even more appropriate...
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Alas, there are people who actually beleive the bolded bit. But yeah, this is hilarious. Way to go onion.Above: The paperback that has already sold two million copies.
"Unlike Scientology, which is based on empirically verifiable scientific tenets, Fictionology's central principles are essentially fairy tales with no connection to reality," the AIR report read. "In short, Fictionology offers its followers a mythical belief system free from the cumbersome scientific method to which Scientology is hidebound."
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TAX THE CHURCHES! - Lord Zentei TTC Supreme Grand Prophet
And the LORD said, Let there be Bosons! Yea and let there be Bosoms too!
I'd rather be the great great grandson of a demon ninja than some jackass who grew potatos. -- Covenant
Dead cows don't fart. -- CJvR
...and I like strudel! -- Asuka
Here's the article about taking to the seas. It also states that Hubbard died in '86 in the USA while in hiding. Pretty kooky.
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That's hilarious. Thank you, Onion.
Well, yeah. This thing's called 'the Sea Org', and was Hubbard's little private navy with their wannabe marine corps dress uniforms. They're pretty kooky. A few accounts from aboard show like... high-ranking Scientologists hiding out there while being waited on hand and foot by totally brainwashed followers. People have died, and they have intense hazing for people who don't unquestioningly follow orders. Pretty nasty stuff.
Oh. By the way,
Praise Kosh and the holy V-Meter!
Well, yeah. This thing's called 'the Sea Org', and was Hubbard's little private navy with their wannabe marine corps dress uniforms. They're pretty kooky. A few accounts from aboard show like... high-ranking Scientologists hiding out there while being waited on hand and foot by totally brainwashed followers. People have died, and they have intense hazing for people who don't unquestioningly follow orders. Pretty nasty stuff.
Oh. By the way,
Praise Kosh and the holy V-Meter!
[quote="Nephtys"] People have died, and they have intense hazing for people who don't unquestioningly follow orders. Pretty nasty stuff.
[quote]
I question the use of the word Hazing in this case. According to Clambake, it seems more like systematic torture to get Sea Org recruits in line.
Operation: Clambake on Sea Org
The letters from Susan Meister before joining and immediately prior to her death by shooting herself with a revolver (in an impossible position to shoot one'sself, nonetheless) and the later change to Moroccan Cholera are very disturbing.
[quote]
I question the use of the word Hazing in this case. According to Clambake, it seems more like systematic torture to get Sea Org recruits in line.
Operation: Clambake on Sea Org
The letters from Susan Meister before joining and immediately prior to her death by shooting herself with a revolver (in an impossible position to shoot one'sself, nonetheless) and the later change to Moroccan Cholera are very disturbing.
What's the evidence that convinces you that he's still alive? They were pretty quick to plant the corpse and all, but that'd be in line with greedy bastards securing their power base after the big man dies.Cpl Kendall wrote:This might interest you, but apperently the high ranking wierdos in Scienctology avoid prosecuction by living on a boat Hubbard purchased and stay in international waters. If Hubbard is still alive, and I believe he is, thats where he is hiding.
Here is an interesting site detailing some of their hijinks.
Huh? No I thought he was still alive because I hadn't seen anything saying he was dead. But I saw in that article I posted on Sea Org that he died in '86. I wasn't trying to imply a conspricy, just a lack of info on my part.Petrosjko wrote:
What's the evidence that convinces you that he's still alive? They were pretty quick to plant the corpse and all, but that'd be in line with greedy bastards securing their power base after the big man dies.
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Pwned, if you're smart enough to see it.The Onion wrote:"Scientology uses strictly scientific methodologies to undo the damage done 75 million years ago by the Galactic Confederation's evil warlord Xenu—we offer our preclear followers procedures to erase overts in the reactive mind. Conversely, Fictionology is essentially just a bunch of make-believe nonsense."
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People keep referring to Scientological indoctrination methods peripherally, but now I hear they're serious: as in, mental abuse serious. Anyone mind explaining?
"If one needed proof that a guitar was more than wood and string, that a song was more than notes and words, and that a man could be more than a name and a few faded pictures, then Robert Johnson’s recordings were all one could ask for."
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+http://www.clambake.org/archive/so/19821005-in.gif
A memo from within Scientology. Their notorious program within their 'Sea Org' was called the Ethics Program. It's where any small violation of a leader's word or percieved confusion/wavering resulted in being thrown into the chain-locker, a damp dark little pit where the ship's anchors were stored for upwards of two weeks without contact. Kids have been thrown in there, including a five year old blind-deaf until he learned to write his name, and a perhaps three year old.
They also had a program called the Rehabilitation Project Force, which punished lax performance. About a third of their little ship (150 hard core people) were rehabilitated at any one time, and one two-year member of the RPF said this...
A memo from within Scientology. Their notorious program within their 'Sea Org' was called the Ethics Program. It's where any small violation of a leader's word or percieved confusion/wavering resulted in being thrown into the chain-locker, a damp dark little pit where the ship's anchors were stored for upwards of two weeks without contact. Kids have been thrown in there, including a five year old blind-deaf until he learned to write his name, and a perhaps three year old.
They also had a program called the Rehabilitation Project Force, which punished lax performance. About a third of their little ship (150 hard core people) were rehabilitated at any one time, and one two-year member of the RPF said this...
So yeah. Sick bastards. Even the 'non hardcore' stuff is pretty awful. Early treatment sessions include 11 hour isolation sessions, staring at an instructor while repeating phraises, and being shouted at while trying not to flinch.It was essentially a prison to which crew who were considered nonproducers, security risks, or just wanted to leave the Sea Org, were assigned. Hubbard's RPF policies established the conditions.
RPF members were segregated and not allowed to communicate to anyone else. They had their own spaces and were not allowed in normal crew areas of the ship. They ate after normal crew had eaten, and only whatever was left over from the crew meal. Their berthing was the worst on board, in a roach-infested, filthy and unventilated cargo hold. They wore black boilersuits, even in the hottest weather. They were required to run everywhere. Discipline was harsh and bizarre, with running laps of the ship assigned for the slightest infraction like failing to address a senior with "Sir." Work was hard and the schedule rigid with seven hours sleep time from lights out to lights on, short meal breaks, no liberties and no free time...
When one young woman ordered into the RPF took the assignment too lightly, Hubbard created the RPF's RPF and assigned her to it, an even more degrading experience, cut off even from the RPF, kept under guard, forced to clean the ship's bilges, and allowed even less sleep.
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Oops. Here's more info on the sea org group of Scientology. The 'personal guard' deal.
http://www.xenu.net/archive/so/
http://www.xenu.net/archive/so/
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How the fucking hell is this legal anywhere? Besides, someplace like Saudi Arabia? They can't hide under the word "religion" to justify actual physical abuse.
"If one needed proof that a guitar was more than wood and string, that a song was more than notes and words, and that a man could be more than a name and a few faded pictures, then Robert Johnson’s recordings were all one could ask for."
- Herb Bowie, Reason to Rock
- Herb Bowie, Reason to Rock
International Waters, my friend, International Waters. It's why they're Sea Org and not Dirt Org. And Celebrity endorsement to avoid popular disapproval.wolveraptor wrote:How the fucking hell is this legal anywhere? Besides, someplace like Saudi Arabia? They can't hide under the word "religion" to justify actual physical abuse.
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http://www.xenu.net/archive/techniques/wolveraptor wrote:How the fucking hell is this legal anywhere? Besides, someplace like Saudi Arabia? They can't hide under the word "religion" to justify actual physical abuse.
Here's more on their lower-level brainwashing techniques.
But how is it legal? It most sensable countries, it's not. Germany, and if I recall.. Italy have it on the dangerous sect lists. But in the US, ignorance and their power prevents them from being hit hard. They've been sued, and brought up on criminal charges for Fraud, extortion, and manslaughter before in the US, but get away. They have a lot of support here, and practically own the town of Clearwater, Florida, where they've built a GIANT FORT. They hide behind 'religion' to take money from people.
The American government has a pathological inability to even try and restrain any type of religion. Even stuff made up by a hack of a sci-fi author and called a "religion".
Radical Islam has nothing on the type of damage Scientology does to America's culture and people.
Radical Islam has nothing on the type of damage Scientology does to America's culture and people.
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Scientology does truly sound like a very evil organization created by a delusional paranoid man. It isn't a religion as far as I can see... it is some kind of insane cult. How the hell does something like this happen? You'd think people would have more good sense then to believe in some crackpot's crazy claims. If not... I'm very worried about the future of our world... ugh...
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They trap people with misleading questionaires and makes them feel uncomfortable without the cult, and part of a group with it... just like any other 'religion', actually. But here's their questionare they give to new people to make them feel bad.
http://www.xenu.net/archive/oca/
http://www.xenu.net/archive/oca/
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Wait. In International waters, aren't these people under the jurisdiction of the UN, or something? Could you really rape, murder and abuse people just by being miles out to sea? That's seriously fucked up.MRDOD wrote:International Waters, my friend, International Waters. It's why they're Sea Org and not Dirt Org. And Celebrity endorsement to avoid popular disapproval.wolveraptor wrote:How the fucking hell is this legal anywhere? Besides, someplace like Saudi Arabia? They can't hide under the word "religion" to justify actual physical abuse.
Besides, aren't Hollywood actors a bunch of dirty, rich liberals? How do some whack-jobs influence the vast majority of people, especially with the current conservative gov, to not persecute Scientology?
"If one needed proof that a guitar was more than wood and string, that a song was more than notes and words, and that a man could be more than a name and a few faded pictures, then Robert Johnson’s recordings were all one could ask for."
- Herb Bowie, Reason to Rock
- Herb Bowie, Reason to Rock
By mostly flying under the radar, and going on the offensive whenever something is published about them. Lawyers backed by a boatload of cash can scare a lot of smaller media outlets.wolveraptor wrote:Besides, aren't Hollywood actors a bunch of dirty, rich liberals? How do some whack-jobs influence the vast majority of people, especially with the current conservative gov, to not persecute Scientology?
So they can dodge lawyers, lets try torpedoes then! :twisted:Cpl Kendall wrote:This might interest you, but apperently the high ranking wierdos in Scienctology avoid prosecuction by living on a boat Hubbard purchased and stay in international waters.
Surely some Sub could have a weapon "malfunction"...
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Huh? I thought all cults were by definition religious (unless one is using the other meaning of cult as in "cult tv").Zero132132 wrote:Scientology does truly sound like a very evil organization created by a delusional paranoid man. It isn't a religion as far as I can see... it is some kind of insane cult. How the hell does something like this happen? You'd think people would have more good sense then to believe in some crackpot's crazy claims. If not... I'm very worried about the future of our world... ugh...
Scientology's philosopy is indeed nutty. However I can't see how this is more weirder than a religion claiming a flat earth, night and day being separated for 3 days before the sun was created, and hailstones being stored in giant warehouses in the sky.
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No, YEC Christianity is just stupid, not nutty and abusive.
Well not nutty, anyways.
Well not nutty, anyways.
"If one needed proof that a guitar was more than wood and string, that a song was more than notes and words, and that a man could be more than a name and a few faded pictures, then Robert Johnson’s recordings were all one could ask for."
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I can explain it perhaps. In America, you see people shake their heads all the time in disgust and mutter "I've never seen our country in such bad shape."ggs wrote:The American government has a pathological inability to even try and restrain any type of religion. Even stuff made up by a hack of a sci-fi author and called a "religion".
That does NOT happen in Germany...