Las Vegas org closed

LATE BREAKING LULZ

The owner of the building of the Las Vegas ideal org was so displeased with the bad PR the monthly protests generated he cancelled the lease and another religious group got the property.  Moar on Enturb.

SF Weekly gives a double shot

San Francisco Weekly provides two offerings: Anonymous 101 and Scientology’s Antagonists.

“They are really no different from the Ku Klux Klan in terms of their masks and hatred and their jollies of riding horses around and harassing Scientologists,” church leader Jeff Quiros says.

Police don’t see Anonymous as a threat: “I think they’re really cool,” Sergeant Carl Tennenbaum says. “They’re really cooperative. They have a right to be here.”

Keep postulatin’, Jeffy.

Roger Friedman on Isaac Hayes

Roger Friedman, Fox News columnist and a friend of Isaac Hayes, writes an article on the late artist that paints a sympathetic picture of a man struggling with personal matters:

In March 2006, news came that Hayes was resigning from “South Park.” On March 20, 2006, I wrote a column called “Chef’s Quitting Controversy,” explaining that Hayes was in no position to have quit anything due to his stroke. But Scientology issued the statement to the press saying Hayes had resigned, and the press just ate it up. No one spoke to Isaac directly, because he couldn’t literally speak. “Chef” was written out of the show.

Isaac’s income stream was severely impaired as a result. Suddenly there were announcements of his touring, and performing. It didn’t seem possible, but word went out that he’d be at BB King’s in New York in January 2007. I went to see him and reported on it here.

The show was abomination. Isaac was plunked down at a keyboard, where he pretended to front his band. He spoke-sang, and his words were halting. He was not the Isaac Hayes of the past.

What was worse was that he barely knew me. He had appeared in my documentary, “Only the Strong Survive,” released in 2003. We knew each other very well. I was actually surprised that his Scientology minder, Christina Kumi Kimball, with whom I had difficult encounters in the past, let me see him backstage at BB King’s. Our meeting was brief, and Isaac said quietly that he did know me. But the light was out in his eyes, and the situation was worrisome.

Roger also asks some interesting questions:

Why, for example, was a stroke survivor on a treadmill by himself? What was his condition? What kind of treatment had he had since the stroke? Members of Scientology are required to sign a form promising they will never seek psychiatric or mental assistance. But stroke rehabilitation involves the help of neurologists and often psychiatrists, not to mention psychotropic drugs — exactly the kind Scientology proselytizes against.

Has Scientology added another name to its ever-expanding list of people pushed into death through psychological manipulation and fraudulent medicine?

Scientologist on the radio

A Scientologist caller, Richard, calls into Pat Thurston’s show on KGO radio when Scientology critic Ford Greene.  The Scientologist comes off as the sort of person he intended to not come off as: a cult member who spouts off the party line and rejecting all attempts at answering any questions.

HOST: “There are people who have reached the upper OT levels, who then have left the church of Scientology, and who have exposed the material that they were taught, at least at OT7.  Is that true?”

CALLER: “They’re lies.”

HOST: “Why would they lie?”

CALLER: “Well, they hate Scientology.  You’re promoting hatred.  This is a hate program. If you were talking about Jews, the Nazis–” (you get the point)

Jeff Hawkins in The Portland Mercury

Jeff Hawkins, former Int base staffer, tells his tale in print last week.

As he worked his way around the world, doing stints at the church’s Edinburgh and Copenhagen branches, Hawkins was exposed to more and more weirdness. In 1971 he was invited aboard L. Ron Hubbard’s ship, Apollo, where he met the Scientology leader and was given the mission of marketing and disseminating the church to the masses, Hawkins says.

At the time, Hubbard had established his own “photography organization” to promote the church—which Hawkins claims consisted of Hubbard dressing up in a khaki suit, pith helmet, and ascot scarf, and staging bizarre photo shoots on beaches around the world whenever Apollo would dock. Hawkins also alleges that Hubbard was always accompanied by what he called his “messengers”: stunning, provocatively dressed young women.

“He’d establish these sets, somebody would write a script, and L. Ron Hubbard would take these photographs,” says Hawkins. “The whole thing would look terrible. But of course you could never say anything negative about Hubbard’s work.”

Interesting article is interesting, and would not be in print today if Anonymous was failing.  Downstat OSA is downstat.

Private Investigator on Scientology

I’m going to let this statement by Paul Barresi speak for itself:

The freedoms we enjoy in the United States are both a wonderful and a dangerous thing. Scientology represents the latter.

In 1987, Tom Cruise found himself caught up in an eerie citadel, spun around him by one of Scientology’s most loyal member’s [sic], Mimi Rogers, and in my view, he has been nothing more than a puppet on a string ever since.

Contrary to what most think, Cruise does not make a move without the approval of his handler. He can’t wipe his own rear end without first getting permission from those who have control over him. Even his attorney Burt Fields has his hands tied.

Rest assured, the Scientology [organization] makes all decision having to do with Cruise’s personal and professional life.

Short of kidnapping him and deprogramming him, like an addict riddled with cocaine, there is no hope.

Sadly, unless there is some divine intervention, in my opinion, Cruise will be los t in shallow and in misery for the rest of his life.

With regard to my handing the lawsuit documents over to the New York Daily News, I merely wanted to point out that Cruise’s name tacked on to a law suit, gets peoples attention. Fact is, he is not one of the ring leaders. He is nothing more than a “yes man” who does what he is told — period.

Moar ink for Anonymous

The Atlantic region version of Frank Magazine publishes an Anon in its collage of pictures from the Halifax Pride Parade.  Click for a biggie:

Jason Beghe crashes stats

Jason Beghe, actor and former Scientologist who left the cult earlier this year, speaks to Idol Chatter about his experience.

Beghe was no less outspoken with Idol Chatter: “In my humble opinion, Scientology is not a religion. It’s a dangerous religious cult: a cruel, sadistic business practice. Just because the IRS gave it tax exempt status does not make it a religion. Ninety percent of ex-Scientologists–and there are millions out there–do not consider it a religion.”

Round one: HUEG SUCCESS

Attorney Graham Berry who has been retained by some Anonymous in DC to help bring down the cult, has posted the following tl;dr to Enturbulation.org.  Here are some snippets: Read the rest of this entry »

RICO Lawsuit by Ex-Scientologist

While I personally don’t believe this lawsuit will go anywhere, it’s gaining popular attention and mentions David Miscavige - something that he absolutely hates.  So it’s good.

Using the RICO statute, former Scientologist Peter Letteres filed a lawsuit in the Southern District Court in Florida on July 15 against the church alleging harassment, according to the New York Daily News’ Rush & Molloy gossip columnists.

Letterese reportedly calls the Church of Scientology a “crime syndicate” in the suit and wants it dismantled under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization law.

Tom Cruise is said to be the “right-hand man” of church head, David Miscavage, according to Letterese.

”[Miscavage is] aided and abetted by the actions of Tom Cruise, his right-hand man for foreign and domestic promotion, as well as for foreign and domestic lobbying. He has assisted the syndicate in acquiring funds and [made] his own donations of money believed to be in the multiple tens of millions of dollars,” Letterese reportedly alleges in the suit.