Welcome Guest [Log In] [Register]
Welcome!

You're currently viewing our forum as a guest. This means you are limited to certain areas of the board and there are some features you can't use. If you join our community, you'll be able to access member-only sections, and use many member-only features such as customizing your profile, sending personal messages, and voting in polls. Registration is simple, fast, and completely free.

Join our community!

Username:   Password:
Add Reply
Tom C's Scientology video while it lasts; Scientology
Topic Started: Jan 17 2008, 07:05 AM (582 Views)
mynameis
Member Avatar
Internet Jujitsu
http://gawker.com/5002269/the-cruise-indoctrination-video-scientology-tried-to-suppress
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Q
Member Avatar
A Higher Evolution
Tom who?
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Miragememories
Member Avatar

Big to do about nothing.

Tom basically rambles without saying anything.

It's just a big yawn.

MM
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
chrisfarb
Member Avatar

This is a video about Scientology for other practicing Scientologists. He's using terminology that only other Scientologists would understand, so to the uninitiated public, it looks and sounds foreign/bizarre.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Roxdog
Member Avatar

chrisfarb
Jan 17 2008, 10:57 AM
This is a video about Scientology for other practicing Scientologists. He's using terminology that only other Scientologists would understand, so to the uninitiated public, it looks and sounds foreign/bizarre.
It's bizarre period. I know more than the average person about Scientology and initiated or not, its a crock cult full of deranged weirdos.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
NWOgre
Member Avatar

Weird guy. Got any links on Scientology worth reading, Roxdog?
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Roxdog
Member Avatar

NWOgre
Jan 17 2008, 12:04 PM
Weird guy. Got any links on Scientology worth reading, Roxdog?
There are bunch of videos exposing scientology on youtube and google. Here is my favorite site...

http://www.xenu.net/
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Roxdog
Member Avatar

And check this out...

http://w2.eff.org/legal/cases/Scientology_cases/20010622_eff_henson_pr.html
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
chrisfarb
Member Avatar

Roxdog
Jan 17 2008, 11:48 AM
chrisfarb
Jan 17 2008, 10:57 AM
This is a video about Scientology for other practicing Scientologists. He's using terminology that only other Scientologists would understand, so to the uninitiated public, it looks and sounds foreign/bizarre.
It's bizarre period. I know more than the average person about Scientology and initiated or not, its a crock cult full of deranged weirdos.
crock - not true.
cult full of deranged weirdos - partially true.



Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Roxdog
Member Avatar

Quote:
 
crock - not true.

How so? The people at the top know what they are doing. Its multi billion dollar scam above all else...
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
chrisfarb
Member Avatar

Roxdog
Jan 17 2008, 02:35 PM
Quote:
 
crock - not true.

How so? The people at the top know what they are doing. Its multi billion dollar scam above all else...
Read some books before you call it a scam. If you already have, well then, oh well.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Q
Member Avatar
A Higher Evolution
Roxdog
Jan 17 2008, 12:54 PM
NWOgre
Jan 17 2008, 12:04 PM
Weird guy. Got any links on Scientology worth reading, Roxdog?
There are bunch of videos exposing scientology on youtube and google. Here is my favorite site...

http://www.xenu.net/
There's also the newsgroup

alt.religion.scientology

Just add an "e" and you have ARSE.

Via xenu.net you can also link to the OCMB forum: Operation Clambake Message Board. There is also the less vicious Ex-Scientologist Message Board.

Don't bother joining them until you've had a good read.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
NWOgre
Member Avatar

Thank you Roxdog and Zaphod.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
22205
Member Avatar
Arlingtonian
sometime over 15 years i ago i was skippin school with 2 friends and we were in georgetown (washington dc) on M street, which is a long strip of road with expensive shops and shnazzy bars. but its a very trafficked area, full of people. anyway, while walking down M street, suddenly a slightly nerdy dude around age 20 popped in front of us and invited us up some skinny stairwell to watch a video. he promised us free soda and snacks if we would give him 15 minutes of our time. we figured fukit, why not? the place we went into was a skinny apartment between two retail stores. we went up the stairs and into a room with a tv, a vcr, and about 20 empty seats. a table with refreshments sat by the wall, so we helped ourselves and sat down. i was casing the joint trying to get a feel for what this guy was selling us, and thats when i noticed a box of books, all of them paperback copies of DIANETICS. at the time there used to be commercials on tv for the book, so i was familiar with it, but my knoweldge was strictly limited to knowing it was a book and had sold millions of copies.

so anyway, we watched the tape, which actually didnt reveal anything about scientology. in fact i mistook it for some sort of christian preaching. the video was mostly testimonials about people whose lives had improved after reading the book. but they never said anything about their beliefs or how any of it worked. when the video was over the guy wanted us to stay, offerring to do a "personality test" on us. but we had finished our food and drink and were done with that crap. we used him for free shit, we didnt give a hoot about whatever brainwash he was trying to sell us. he offerred me a copy of the book, but i kindly declined. he handed us some sort of pamphlet and made us promise to read it and give it thought. we obliged and got out of there.

anyhow, i was trying to point out how back in the day, they were proactively seeking membership, at least here in DC. they were trying to recruit us but we werent havin it. but i can only wonder what percent of the total people who ended up in that room converted to scientology. they might still be recruiting around these parts, but its been a long while since i last had the free time to roam the city streets.

here is a long and detailed examination of them, their origins/history, and their techniques:
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Fishman/atack-freedom-trap.html


i agree the whole scientology thing is a racket for the wealthy and elite, but i still think its roots and origins are quite curious, and possibly even relevant to some substantially deeper/darker stuff. it seems that a NASA jet propulsion guy named Jack Parsons, was deep into the occult along with L Ron Hubbard. at some point HUB stole jack's wife (and his boat! ha!) and went off to create his scientology empire. but both men connect to Aleister Crowley and all that other ritual black magic stuff. here are a couple links with an overview:

http://www.bariumblues.com/jpl.htm
http://archive.salon.com/tech/books/2000/02/15/parsons/print.html

the above 2 are a quick easy read and actually tell an interesting tale, even tho they've probably been emebellished somewhat.


***

i remember a few years back the "church" of scientology was in trouble for having kept some woman against her will and she died:

http://www.lisamcpherson.org/



Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Roxdog
Member Avatar

chrisfarb
Jan 17 2008, 04:05 PM
Read some books before you call it a scam. If you already have, well then, oh well.
Any book in particular or just some books? :P

Anyone who has looked into Scientology the least little bit will realize what it is.

It is a scam.

They have scammed BILLIONS of dollars and that is just the beginning of the egregious sh^t they have done...

Quote:
 
The Church of Scientology, started by science-fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard to "clear" people of unhappiness, portrays itself as a religion. In reality the church is a hugely profitable global racket that survives by intimidating members and critics in a Mafia-like manner. At times during the past decade, prosecutions against Scientology seemed to be curbing its menace. Eleven top Scientologists, including Hubbard's wife, were sent to prison in the early 1980s for infiltrating, burglarizing and wiretapping more than 100 private and government agencies in attempts to block their investigations. In recent years hundreds of longtime Scientology adherents -- many charging that they were mentally of physically abused -- have quit the church and criticized it at their own risk. Some have sued the church and won; others have settled for amounts in excess of $500,000. In various cases judges have labeled the church "schizophrenic and paranoid" and "corrupt, sinister and dangerous."

Yet the outrage and litigation have failed to squelch Scientology. The group, which boasts 700 centers in 65 countries, threatens to become more insidious and pervasive than ever. Scientology is trying to go mainstream, a strategy that has sparked a renewed law- enforcement campaign against the church. Many of the group's followers have been accused of committing financial scams, while the church is busy attracting the unwary through a wide array of front groups in such businesses as publishing, consulting, health care and even remedial education.

Hubbard kept adding steps, each more costly, for his followers to climb. In the 1960s the guru decreed that humans are made of clusters of spirits (or "thetans") who were banished to earth some 75 million years ago by a cruel galactic ruler named Xenu. Naturally, those thetans had to be audited.

An Internal Revenue Service ruling in 1967 stripped Scientology's mother church of its tax-exempt status. A federal court ruled in 1971 that Hubbard's medical claims were bogus and that E-meter auditing could no longer be called a scientific treatment. Hubbard responded by going fully religious, seeking First Amendment protection for Scien- tology's strange rites. His counselors started sporting clerical collars. Chapels were built, franchises became "missions," fees became "fixed donations," and Hubbard's comic-book cosmology became "sacred scriptures.'

During the early 1970s, the IRS conducted its own auditing sessions and proved that Hubbard was skimming millions of dollars from the church, laundering the money through dummy corporations in Panama and stashing it in Swiss bank accounts. Moreover, church members stole IRS documents, filed false tax returns and harassed the agency's employees. By late 1985, with high-level defectors accusing Hubbard of having stolen as much as S200 million from the church, the IRS was seeking an indictment of Hubbard for tax fraud. Scientology members "worked day and night" shredding documents the IRS sought, according to defector Aznaran, who took part in the scheme. Hubbard, who had been in hiding for five years, died before the criminal case could be prosecuted.

Today the church invents costly new services with all the zeal of its founder. Scientology doctrine warns that even adherents who are "cleared" of engrams face grave spiritual dangers unless they are pushed to higher and more expensive levels. According to the church's latest price list, recruits -- "raw meat," as Hubbard called them -- take auditing sessions that cost as much as $1,000 an hour, or $12,500 for a 12 1/2-hour "intensive."

Psychiatrists say these sessions can produce a drugged-like, mind-controlled euphoria that keeps customers coming back for more. To pay their fees, newcomers can earn commissions by recruiting new mem- bers, become auditors themselves (Miscavige did so at age 12), or join the church staff and receive free counseling in exchange for what their written contracts describe as a "billion years" of labor. "Make sure that lots of bodies move through the shop," implored Hubbard in one of his bulletins to officials. "Make money. Make more money. Make others produce so as to make money . . . However you get them in or why, just do it."

Harriet Baker learned the hard way about Scientology's business of selling religion. When Baker, 73, lost her husband to cancer, a Scientologist turned up at her Los Angeles home peddling a $1,300 auditing package to cure her grief. Some $15,000 later, the Scientologists discovered that her house was debt free. They arranged a $45,000 mortgage, which they pressured her to tap for more auditing until Baker's children helped their mother snap out of her daze. Last June, Baker demanded a $27,000 refund for unused services, prompting two cult members to show up at her door unannounced with an E-meter to interrogate her. Baker never got the money and, financially strapped, was forced to sell her house in September.


Before Noah Lottick killed himself, he had paid more than $5,000 for church counseling. His behavior had also become strange. He once remarked to his parents that his Scientology mentors could actually read minds. When his father suffered a major heart attack, Noah insisted that it was purely psychosomatic. Five days before he jumped, Noah burst into his parents' home and demanded to know why they were spreading "false rumors" about him -- a delusion that finally prompted his father to call a psychiatrist.

It was too late. "From Noah's friends at Dianetics" read the card that accompanied a bouquet of flowers at Lottick's funeral. Yet no Scientology staff members bothered to show up. A week earlier, local church officials had given Lottick's parents a red-carpet tour of their center. A cult leader told Noah's parents that their son had been at the church just hours before he disappeared -- but the church denied this story as soon as the body was identified. True to form, the cult even haggled with the Lotticks over $3,000 their son had paid for services he never used, insisting that Noah had intended it as a "donation."


The church has invented hundreds of goods and services for which members are urged to give "donations." Are you having trouble "moving swiftly up the Bridge" -- that is, advancing up the stepladder of en- lightenment? Then you can have your case reviewed for a mere $1,250 "donation." Want to know "why a thetan hangs on to the physical universe?" Try 52 of Hubbard's tape-recorded speeches from 1952, titled "Ron's Philadelphia Doctorate Course Lectures," for $2,525. Next: nine other series of the same sort. For the collector, gold-and-leather-bound editions of 22 of Hubbard's books (and bookends) on subjects ranging from Scientology ethics to radiation can be had for just $1,900.

To gain influence and lure richer, more sophisticated followers, Scientology has lately resorted to a wide array of front groups and financial scams. Among them:


CONSULTING. Sterling Management Systems, formed in 1983, has been ranked in recent years by Inc. magazine as one of America's fastest-growing private companies (estimated 1988 revenues: $20 mil- lion). Sterling regularly mails a free newsletter to more than 300,000 health-care professionals, mostly dentists, promising to increase their incomes dramatically. The firm offers seminars and courses that typically cost $10,OOO. But Sterling's true aim is to hook customers for Scientology. "The church has a rotten product, so they package it as something else," says Peter Georgiades, a Pittsburgh attorney who represents Sterling victims. "It's a kind of bait and switch." Sterling's founder, dentist Gregory Hughes is now under investigation by California's Board of Dental Examiners for incompetence. Nine lawsuits are pending against him for malpractice (seven others have been settled), mostly for orthodontic work on children.
Edited by Roxdog, Jan 18 2008, 11:26 AM.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
chrisfarb
Member Avatar

Roxdog
Jan 18 2008, 11:25 AM
chrisfarb
Jan 17 2008, 04:05 PM
Read some books before you call it a scam. If you already have, well then, oh well.
Any book in particular or just some books? :P

Anyone who has looked into Scientology the least little bit will realize what it is.

It is a scam.

They have scammed BILLIONS of dollars and that is just the beginning of the egregious sh^t they have done...

Quote:
 
The Church of Scientology, started by science-fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard to "clear" people of unhappiness, portrays itself as a religion. In reality the church is a hugely profitable global racket that survives by intimidating members and critics in a Mafia-like manner. At times during the past decade, prosecutions against Scientology seemed to be curbing its menace. Eleven top Scientologists, including Hubbard's wife, were sent to prison in the early 1980s for infiltrating, burglarizing and wiretapping more than 100 private and government agencies in attempts to block their investigations. In recent years hundreds of longtime Scientology adherents -- many charging that they were mentally of physically abused -- have quit the church and criticized it at their own risk. Some have sued the church and won; others have settled for amounts in excess of $500,000. In various cases judges have labeled the church "schizophrenic and paranoid" and "corrupt, sinister and dangerous."

Yet the outrage and litigation have failed to squelch Scientology. The group, which boasts 700 centers in 65 countries, threatens to become more insidious and pervasive than ever. Scientology is trying to go mainstream, a strategy that has sparked a renewed law- enforcement campaign against the church. Many of the group's followers have been accused of committing financial scams, while the church is busy attracting the unwary through a wide array of front groups in such businesses as publishing, consulting, health care and even remedial education.

Hubbard kept adding steps, each more costly, for his followers to climb. In the 1960s the guru decreed that humans are made of clusters of spirits (or "thetans") who were banished to earth some 75 million years ago by a cruel galactic ruler named Xenu. Naturally, those thetans had to be audited.

An Internal Revenue Service ruling in 1967 stripped Scientology's mother church of its tax-exempt status. A federal court ruled in 1971 that Hubbard's medical claims were bogus and that E-meter auditing could no longer be called a scientific treatment. Hubbard responded by going fully religious, seeking First Amendment protection for Scien- tology's strange rites. His counselors started sporting clerical collars. Chapels were built, franchises became "missions," fees became "fixed donations," and Hubbard's comic-book cosmology became "sacred scriptures.'

During the early 1970s, the IRS conducted its own auditing sessions and proved that Hubbard was skimming millions of dollars from the church, laundering the money through dummy corporations in Panama and stashing it in Swiss bank accounts. Moreover, church members stole IRS documents, filed false tax returns and harassed the agency's employees. By late 1985, with high-level defectors accusing Hubbard of having stolen as much as S200 million from the church, the IRS was seeking an indictment of Hubbard for tax fraud. Scientology members "worked day and night" shredding documents the IRS sought, according to defector Aznaran, who took part in the scheme. Hubbard, who had been in hiding for five years, died before the criminal case could be prosecuted.

Today the church invents costly new services with all the zeal of its founder. Scientology doctrine warns that even adherents who are "cleared" of engrams face grave spiritual dangers unless they are pushed to higher and more expensive levels. According to the church's latest price list, recruits -- "raw meat," as Hubbard called them -- take auditing sessions that cost as much as $1,000 an hour, or $12,500 for a 12 1/2-hour "intensive."

Psychiatrists say these sessions can produce a drugged-like, mind-controlled euphoria that keeps customers coming back for more. To pay their fees, newcomers can earn commissions by recruiting new mem- bers, become auditors themselves (Miscavige did so at age 12), or join the church staff and receive free counseling in exchange for what their written contracts describe as a "billion years" of labor. "Make sure that lots of bodies move through the shop," implored Hubbard in one of his bulletins to officials. "Make money. Make more money. Make others produce so as to make money . . . However you get them in or why, just do it."

Harriet Baker learned the hard way about Scientology's business of selling religion. When Baker, 73, lost her husband to cancer, a Scientologist turned up at her Los Angeles home peddling a $1,300 auditing package to cure her grief. Some $15,000 later, the Scientologists discovered that her house was debt free. They arranged a $45,000 mortgage, which they pressured her to tap for more auditing until Baker's children helped their mother snap out of her daze. Last June, Baker demanded a $27,000 refund for unused services, prompting two cult members to show up at her door unannounced with an E-meter to interrogate her. Baker never got the money and, financially strapped, was forced to sell her house in September.


Before Noah Lottick killed himself, he had paid more than $5,000 for church counseling. His behavior had also become strange. He once remarked to his parents that his Scientology mentors could actually read minds. When his father suffered a major heart attack, Noah insisted that it was purely psychosomatic. Five days before he jumped, Noah burst into his parents' home and demanded to know why they were spreading "false rumors" about him -- a delusion that finally prompted his father to call a psychiatrist.

It was too late. "From Noah's friends at Dianetics" read the card that accompanied a bouquet of flowers at Lottick's funeral. Yet no Scientology staff members bothered to show up. A week earlier, local church officials had given Lottick's parents a red-carpet tour of their center. A cult leader told Noah's parents that their son had been at the church just hours before he disappeared -- but the church denied this story as soon as the body was identified. True to form, the cult even haggled with the Lotticks over $3,000 their son had paid for services he never used, insisting that Noah had intended it as a "donation."


The church has invented hundreds of goods and services for which members are urged to give "donations." Are you having trouble "moving swiftly up the Bridge" -- that is, advancing up the stepladder of en- lightenment? Then you can have your case reviewed for a mere $1,250 "donation." Want to know "why a thetan hangs on to the physical universe?" Try 52 of Hubbard's tape-recorded speeches from 1952, titled "Ron's Philadelphia Doctorate Course Lectures," for $2,525. Next: nine other series of the same sort. For the collector, gold-and-leather-bound editions of 22 of Hubbard's books (and bookends) on subjects ranging from Scientology ethics to radiation can be had for just $1,900.

To gain influence and lure richer, more sophisticated followers, Scientology has lately resorted to a wide array of front groups and financial scams. Among them:


CONSULTING. Sterling Management Systems, formed in 1983, has been ranked in recent years by Inc. magazine as one of America's fastest-growing private companies (estimated 1988 revenues: $20 mil- lion). Sterling regularly mails a free newsletter to more than 300,000 health-care professionals, mostly dentists, promising to increase their incomes dramatically. The firm offers seminars and courses that typically cost $10,OOO. But Sterling's true aim is to hook customers for Scientology. "The church has a rotten product, so they package it as something else," says Peter Georgiades, a Pittsburgh attorney who represents Sterling victims. "It's a kind of bait and switch." Sterling's founder, dentist Gregory Hughes is now under investigation by California's Board of Dental Examiners for incompetence. Nine lawsuits are pending against him for malpractice (seven others have been settled), mostly for orthodontic work on children.
If you at least read Dianetics I would be impressed. Sending people over to these sites to find out what it's about is like sending people over to Screw Loose Change or Jref to find out what Loose Change is about.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Roxdog
Member Avatar

Quote:
 
If you at least read Dianetics I would be impressed.

It's sitting in my parents library. I've looked through it. Utter crap.

Quote:
 
Sending people over to these sites to find out what it's about is like sending people over to Screw Loose Change or Jref to find out what Loose Change is about.

Nope. Nothing like that at all. Not even close. SLC and JREF don't have the public track record that that BS scam cult has. Can you dispute anything specific addressed on the sites I posted? No, you cannot. Because it is all true. Are you a scientologist? OT6? OT7? It's a scam. Hubbert was a fruitcake who had a knack for attracting fellow fruitcakes and exploiting them financially. And now his pathetic legend lives on in a bunch hollywood morons....The end.
Edited by Roxdog, Jan 18 2008, 12:29 PM.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Travis
Member Avatar

They hang about near my Uni offering free stress tests. They don't tell people they are Scientologits straight of. Scientology is a reflection of the times, people have rejected their religions and they need something to feel the gap. However, they may of very well jumped out of the frying pan into the oven.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
alexvegas
Member Avatar
alex25smash
I guess some people just need other people to tell them how it is
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Reggie_perrin

http://www.mirror.co.uk/showbiz/2008/01/19/tom-cruise-in-9-11-lies-web-rant-89520-20290748/

Tom Cruise in 9/11 'lies' web rant
By Fiona Cummins 19/01/2008

Tom Cruise sparked fresh doubts over his grip on reality yesterday after he claimed US officials had lied in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks.
The Hollywood star has already been widely ridiculed after his nineminute rant about Scientology was leaked on the internet earlier this week.
Now a video promoting the bizarre cult shows Cruise, 45, let rip about the response to terrorism.
Over footage of New York devastation, Cruise's voice says: "The EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) came out and said the air was clean.
Advertisement

"Of course as a Scientologist you go, 'That's a lie'. You just go, 'Liar'."
A narrator then brags how Cruise "personally saw to the establishment of a detox project".
The Cruise-funded scheme referred to has been widely criticised.
Senior New York medical officer Dr Kerry Kelly said: "It's hard to have faith in it. You just stay there until you feel fine."

Edited by Reggie_perrin, Jan 19 2008, 07:59 AM.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Shagata Ganai
Member Avatar
Multiple Criminal Theorist
Another secret society with ReallyScary rules. No, thanks. Hubbard was a crank who could attract money, a shameless hustler. I Did "battle" with "recruiters" for years on the sidewalks of an east coast city. Most of 'em were pretty creepy, in one way or another.
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
Q
Member Avatar
A Higher Evolution
For those who watched the video and failed to understand anything, it's mostly because he didn't really say anything.

Some terms used

SP: Suppressive Person, one who seeks to improve oneself by undermining others.
PTS: Potential Trouble Source, one who is potentially underminable by an SP.
Ethics: What's supposed to handle both the above, but usually applied in a far more fascist way. It creates a culture of everyone looking over eberyone else's shoulder to make sure they're not deviating from doctrine.
KSW: Keeping Scientology Working, a very holy document force-fed to public and staff alike.

Quote:
 
Keeping Scientology Wanking

THIS POLICY LETTER IS TRUE. IT WAS TRUE IN 1965 WHEN I WROTE IT, AND IN 1970 WHEN I WROTE THIS PART IN ALL CAPITAL LETTERS BECAUSE YOU IDIOTS CAN’T OBEY A SIMPLE ORDER EVEN THOUGH YOU’RE THE MOST VALUABLE BEINGS ON THE PLANET. IT WAS TRUE AGAIN IN 1980 WHEN I CAUGHT A COUPLE OF SEA ORGERS HAVING A “QUICKIE GRADE” IN THE FILM STORAGE UNIT. THEY WERE COMMUNIST SP’S SENT IN TO DEGRADE THE TECH, AND THEY DIED OF CANCER AS A RESULT.

There are ten (10) reasons for a failure of orgs [organizations] to make money. Ten reasons. Not nine. Not eleven. Ten. There have always been ten, and there will always be ten. Ten sounds right. It feels right, like the Ten Commandments, but modern and scientific. There have never been nine. Ever. And while I think of it, we are at war with East Marcabia. We have always been at war with East Marcabia. Reports at any time of a war with West Marcabia were fraudulent, propagated by evil psychs [psychiatrists] in an attempt to destroy Scientology.

A failure to follow policy has caused untold millions to be squandered, despite the tech [alleged technology] I have given you. A lot of very intelligent people have tried to contribute to the tech, but you don’t see them around anywhere, do you? That’s because they were SP’s [suppressive persons] bent on destroying humanity. They’re gone, I’m here. Draw your own conclusions, but be aware that a failure to act will result in the total destruction of every man, woman, and child on this planet for all eternity. And you’ll never get to levitate or see the future, either.

It doesn’t matter to me. I have already risen out of the mud, and I have a summer home on a planet far, far away. How I came to rise above the squalid muck of stinking, putrid existence that the rest of you inhabit, to create the only hope for mankind, is a discussion for another time. Or perhaps a major motion picture.

This may be talked about as “undemocratic,” or “not cool, Ron.” Fine. What has democracy and group-think ever given us but affluence, personal freedoms, human rights, jazz, the Beatles, baseball, manned space travel, medical miracles, the internet, and cappuccino to go for under $3 at Dunkin’ freakin’ Donuts?

This is not some game. Life is a game; Scientology isn’t. I have done the work, all of it, and someday extensive reports of my exacting scientific research will be published. I promise you that, just as I promise you that I am a war hero, and that I never made a dime from Scientology. For now, one only needs to follow Source [lrh doctrine]. You must hurry, though. There is little time left before this hellish world looks like the jungles of Southeast Asia, littered with the bodies of stone temple pilots.

So when Miss Pattycake comes to you like a little bunny, all namby-pamby, her glasses fixed with adhesive tape, don't be reasonable. Ask her if she got her name from old Bing Crosby/Bob Hope movies. Ask her if she wants to be a panty-waist dilettante or a tiger with a glare in her eye. A glaring, surviving tiger. Then get her to open her checkbook and start writing. If you can’t remember all ten points, at least remember Number One: MAKE MONEY. MAKE MORE MONEY. MAKE OTHER PEOPLE PRODUCE SO AS TO MAKE MORE MONEY.

Do that and we’ll win. Much love,
Ron
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
mynameis
Member Avatar
Internet Jujitsu
Anonymous hackers going after the CoS.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JCbKv9yiLiQ
Offline Profile Quote Post Goto Top
 
1 user reading this topic (1 Guest and 0 Anonymous)
ZetaBoards - Free Forum Hosting
Fully Featured & Customizable Free Forums
Learn More · Sign-up for Free
« Previous Topic · The Lounge · Next Topic »
Add Reply