Debunking Scientology - Debunking Tom Cruise
http://www.pasadenaweekly.com/features/feature/feature.html
Debunking a movement
Exposing some of the unsavory claims that Tom Cruise, John Travolta
and other celebrities would rather you didn't know about Scientology
By Carl Kozlowski
For nearly 20 years, Tom Cruise has been Hollywood's Golden Boy. The
star of Top Gun," "Risky Business" and, most recently,
"The War of the Worlds," Cruise has attributed his vast success
to being a follower of Scientology, a self-help movement-turned-religion
which claims the ability to "clear" its followers from all
their problems. It seemed like the perfect match: the man with the
perfect smile advocating for a group that offers perfection.
But in May, Cruise seemingly went, well, a little crazy. He suddenly
announced his engagement to Katie Holmes, an actress whom no one had
ever seen him with before late April. He leapt on Oprah's couch like a
5-year-old on a sugar kick. And just when you thought Tom could use a
good dose of Ritalin, he was embarrassing himself on the "Today
Show" by arguing that he knew more about psychiatry and its alleged
evils than his interviewer, Matt Lauer.
Suddenly, people were wondering what was wrong with Mr. Perfect. And
his attempts to pump up his church amidst all the publicity appear to
have backfired, provoking widespread media coverage of Scientology
that is reopening a 50-year history of claims alleging overarching
greed, fraud, judicial chicanery, near-terroristic threatening of the
church's critics, and the fact that the heart of the church's beliefs
center around the claim that every human's stresses are in reality the
souls of aliens attaching themselves to their bodies.
Throw in claims of mysterious deaths, an affidavit claiming that the
church attempts to coerce abortions from its staff members, and a host
of Web sites exposing some of Scientology's dirtier little secrets and
suddenly the perfect church doesn't seem, as Cruise and others like
him might lead you to believe, all that perfect.
The endless loop
A band of ex-members are making sure the full extent of Scientology's
dark side is exposed for all to see.
The method they're using to attack the multibillion-dollar,
multi-operational, worldwide institution is surprisingly simple:
exposing Scientology's darkest secrets, which for nearly 50 years were
only revealed to their top members, on the Internet. And the church
has responded by softening some of its more blatant recruitment
tactics while its leaders claim its more extreme aspects are
aberrations of the past.
Even better, it all started with a connection in Pasadena. For it was
here, in the late 1940s, that eventual Scientology founder L. Ron
Hubbard - then a middling science-fiction author - fell into the
warped social circle of famed JPL rocket engineer Jack Parsons, who
proudly considered himself to be the Antichrist and frequently
conducted orgies and other debauched events amid the wealthiest
streets of Pasadena. According to the book, "Sex and Rockets: The
Occult World of Jack Parsons," by John Carter and Robert Anton Wilson,
both Hubbard and Parsons shared a fascination with occultism and
infamous black magic practitioner Aleister Crowley.
"While there's quite a bit of indications that he was involved in
Parsons' magic movement, Scientology claims that Hubbard was really an
opposing undercover agent trying to expose them," said Timothy Miller,
a professor of religious studies at the University of Kansas who
specializes in "new religious movements."
"Hubbard met lots of people everywhere he went," countered Chel
Stith, a 34-year member and president of the Los Angeles Church of
Scientology, during a recent interview. "But if you look at everything
Hubbard devoted his life and writings to, helping elevate mankind to
their best nature, it doesn't match in any way with the idea of living
a life filled with random sex and drugs."
Miller points out that Scientology has been riddled with
inconsistencies, mixing positive and negative qualities, since its
very founding in 1950 by Hubbard, who created the church as a
self-help movement after publishing a "modern guide to mental
health" called "Dianetics."
For instance, they've proven to be one of the most litigious groups in
America, barraging their critics and opponents with countless lawsuits
and often outspending their way to victory. Yet speculation that some
members have died as a result of the church's "care" is more
questionable.
Miller, along with many other authorities on the church and
ex-members, also takes issue with church leaders' membership figures,
in which they estimate eight million members in more than 150 nations.
Stith claims an LA County membership of 40,000. Some peg the real
total as low as 50,000 members whose excessive financial commitment
propels the church's unknown worth into estimated tens of billions of
dollars.
Miller also takes issue with whether the church subjects its live-in
members to slave labor, a frequent accusation in which critics claim
that many Scientology staffers are subjected to working at least 60
hours a week for as little as $4 a week.
"People get very devoted to their religious, social and political
causes, but to my mind, slave labor has to be something you don't
wanna do and you have to be locked up to do it," said Miller. "Most
religions want money, but they seem unusually good at it. The prices
they charge are extraordinary, but people voluntarily pay."
What constitutes "extraordinary," exactly?
Scientology consists of an extensive series of highly invasive personal
tests called "audits" and classes that a member must take to
climb the church's "bridge," a series of levels that gain them
greater and greater insights into their true nature and a clearing of all
the issues that vex their mental and emotional lives.
The problem is that the big final lesson is basically a riddle: Now
that you know what you are not, begin to find out what you are.
Basically, the church offers a never-ending trip into the
subconscious, only one that's far less enjoyable than dropping out of
college and following the Grateful Dead.
And most members never even get to that official final level of OT
VIII (Operating Thetan at the eighth level) - the biggest reward, at
which they're also told they have the power to control time and space,
create universes and never get sick again. So the level everyone
really strives for is OT III, where the first lessons about aliens and
immortality come in.
"They have beliefs in reincarnation and past lives," explained
Miller. "And they believe that they are basically immortal, because
the more dedicated members in an elite level called Sea Org sign
billion-year contracts to work for the church. Imagine making it to the
highest level and learning that it's basically an endless loop of lessons
and auditing that you'll never really get out of."
Sea Org
Along the way, members learn that their lifelong beef with their dad
or their bad luck at finding well-paying employment doesn't just stem
from internal hurdles. Nope, those forces that are holding them back
are really "thetans," alien spirits that have been clinging
to human bodies by the thousands ever since an evil intergalactic alien
overlord named Xenu tried to imprison them on earth 75 million years
ago.
By the time a member gets to hear these "truths" and feel
stupid about them (many are rumored to endure psychological breakdowns
upon realizing their years in the group have been all for naught), they've
already typically been sucked in financially to the tune of $30,000 to
$500,000, are considered by many critics to be brainwashed and likely
have been "disconnected" from the lesser beings known as their
families.
Not surprisingly, Stith takes issue with many of these claims as well.
"We have brochures when you tour our facilities that make the costs
clear, and we charge from nominal amounts like $65 to higher level
amounts like $2,000 depending on whether you want to keep learning
more, but the more expensive ones are four-month courses. We don't ask
people to tithe 10 percent of their incomes, as in Christianity. And
you can take or leave any aspect of our church at any time if it
doesn't work for you," Stith said.
"What inspired me to join was I was looking for answers and solutions.
I read 'Dianetics' and thought it was a solution for helping other
people," said Tory Christman, a former member now living in Burbank
who spent 31 years in Scientology between 1969 and 2000 before
quitting. "But I got near the top and realized it was a scam. I was OT
VII for seven years and they wound up saying we weren't trained right
and needed to retrain from scratch. A bunch of us finally went 'forget
it.'"
Christman offered a sarcastic, no-nonsense assessment of Scientology
and what she flat out terms its "evil" qualities. She was
especially happy to talk because she had just realized that that day
was the 5-year anniversary from the day she walked out on the organization.
Christman's duties within Scientology had consisted of working for the
Office of Special Affairs, a notorious "security"-oriented faction
within Scientology that critics claim is responsible for the church's
frequent stream of lawsuits targeting their enemies, and even more
unsavory tricks such as character defamation designed to scare
opponents into submission under what is known as "Fair Game"
tactics.
"I don't think any of us say you should or should not have beliefs,
but I speak out because of Fair Game, where you can lie, cheat and
attack those who differ with you," explained Christman. "I was in
charge of setting up phony accounts on the Internet that were designed
to shut down free speech by blocking out opponents' sites or
trick-routing people to pro-Scientology sites when they were looking
for opposing information."
Along the way, Christman tried to join Sea Org, a branch of Scientology
whose members are deemed more "elite" than others despite
the fact they're the only members required to sign the big
billion-year commitment and they have to live in group settings while
considerations of marriage and children are seriously frowned upon as
distractions from working for the cause.
In fact, in what might be the most disturbing revelation of all,
anti-Scientology Web sites feature the signed affidavit of Mary
Tabayoyon, a former high-level Sea Org staffer who revealed that the
church attempts to verbally coerce and harass Sea Org members into
having abortions. A hard copy of the affidavit was also provided to
the Weekly by her attorney, Graham Berry, and reveals her own
experience and that of others, in which pregnant people were urged to
abort because children were a distraction from working for the church.
"The majority of members live out in the public, but the Sea Org gets
young, idealistic people to come in and save the planet and they give
them a lot of power to control things and that's how they keep them,"
said Christman. "Who else would give people that young such power?
Kids get into that thing, and it's a trap, a very bad trap. I gave
them my whole adult life. I don't want others to do the same unless
they know both sides."
For her part, Stith claimed that allegations of coerced abortions are
patently ridiculous, stating that her sister is a member of Sea Org,
has five children and moved to St. Louis and then Albuquerque simply
because the church offered positions in those cities as a slower-paced
alternative in which to better raise her family. And Stith herself
proudly noted that she herself is a mother of four, and is an artist
who merely works 40 hours a week for the church.
"We would never advocate or pressure someone to have an abortion. We
don't deny someone's legal right to have one if they choose, but we do
try to teach people to be responsible both in using birth control but
also in raising their kid if at all possible if they have one anyway,"
Stith said. "It's right there in 'Dianetics.'"
Searching the Web
For Christman, the will to leave came from her disgust with the most
two-sided aspect of Scientology. There is perhaps nothing Hubbard
claimed to hate more than psychiatry, which many critics and
historians believe stemmed from the fact he had a lifelong love of the
sea that led him to join the Navy, only to be diagnosed as mentally
unstable and discharged from the service.
Hubbard retaliated by inventing Dianetics, crafting a self-help
philosophy that was supposedly gleaned from the best of the lessons he
learned from diverse cultures while traveling the earth since
childhood. (Numerous judges and historians have proclaimed Hubbard as
everything from an outright liar to wildly exaggerating his life's
adventures, however.)
And as Scientology flowed out from there, he made sure his followers
believed that the answer to nearly every sort of affliction lay in
"clearing" the body through auditing or taking a bizarre mix of
vitamins and other allegedly natural materials rather than turning to
traditional medical professionals.
The ironic and even shocking fact is that upon Hubbard's death in 1986
at age 74 (so much for immortality), the coroner's report revealed
that he had "a band aide affixed to the right gluteal area where 10
recent needle marks are recognized of 5-8 cm." Meaning, the King of No
Medicine had himself been shot in the ass with something soon before
his death.
And the fact that the "post mortem examination was refused because of
religious reasons" also proved strange - as a member of the District
Attorney's office advised "immediate toxicology be performed on body
fluids." The fluids, which were not handed over easily by church
officials, were also found to have traces of the anti-anxiety
medication Vistaril.
"I speak out because I know tons of people who died in Scientology,
because of their fraud with guys like Tom Cruise telling people not to
take meds. Those are abuses that should not be allowed," said
Christman, who finally walked out after suffering grand mal seizures
when the church refused to let her take epilepsy medications. "Hubbard
was on meds all his life and he had them the whole time."
Stith, however, denies the allegations that Hubbard was on mental
medications.
"He might have been taking some medicine for asthma, but he certainly
was not under any medicine for psychiatric reasons," she said, despite
being told that the Weekly had a copy of Hubbard's death certificate
and coroner's report showing otherwise.
Judging from what a reporter who covered Hubbard's early Florida days
has to say, it sounds like the founder was out to sea in more ways
than one.
"Hubbard was seeking a land base for what had been a seagoing
operation for a long time, and he, in the early '70s, decided to build
in Clearwater, Fla. Until then, for years they were more or less
chased around the world by police and refused berthing rights," said
Rich Lieby, a Washington Post reporter who started writing about
Scientologists up close while working for the local Clearwater
newspaper. "Hubbard was in the Navy in World War II so he called
himself the commander and transformed Scientology into the Sea Org,
giving a nautical flavor to all the uniforms. "
Lieby's recollections of the way Scientology operated in Florida -
creating an East Coast outpost nearly more impressive than their
expansive California holdings - sheds light on several of the business
practices of Scientology.
First they used a front organization to buy the property, calling
themselves the United Churches of Florida without actually uniting
with other churches.
At the same time the Scientologists were building their national
headquarters, the FLAG Land Base, in a town that was leery of a church
fixated on aliens, Hubbard's wife and eight of his minions were
convicted in Washington for waging a massive infiltration of the
federal government through the use of phony IRS and Justice Department
badges. The illegal activities were in the midst of Scientology's
battle with the IRS over receiving tax-exempt status as a legally
sanctioned church.
European countries had gotten wise early, with Britain banning the
entry of Scientologists from 1968 to 1980 and Germany having already
established their permanent ban on the church because it felt it was a
cult of personality in the Nazi vein, but the US government found
itself reeling from the fact it looked the other way just a little too
long. The Scientologists' dream of morphing from self-help group to
official religion had begun back in 1969, when Hubbard suddenly
ordered crosses with discreetly odd designs - which were in fact
modeled on his warlock hero Aleister Crowley's Satanic Cross - planted
in the lobbies of all the Scientology offices nationwide.
The Scientologists finally won their battle for tax-exempt religious
status in a secret agreement with the IRS in 1993, in which they paid
a penalty of $12 million, but church leaders weren't only hoping to
avoid taxation of its vast holdings. In fact, they were canny enough
to know that due to church-state separation, police and other
authorities would be highly unlikely to investigate the church's
operations.
A final bonus was the knowledge that church divisions like Christman's
Office of Special Affairs could get away with utterly outrageous
intimidation tactics - ranging from incessant phone calls and wiretaps
to spreading flyers accusing critics of being pedophiles and filing
enough lawsuits to drive opponents bankrupt via legal costs alone -
because no one would ever believe a church could be that crazy.
Their biggest battleground in recent years, however, seemed to be on
the Internet. Not only did the church encourage members to post
generic happy Web sites about their membership, but they also engaged
in devious tactics such as Christman alleged earlier.
Yet Scientology couldn't clamp down on free speech and cyberspace
forever, and their membership is believed to have decreased sharply in
the past decade as anyone is free to now read about the church and
many of its "truths" on the Web.
A powerful team
The latest wave of publicity, caused by Cruise's aggressive
proselytizing and anti-psychiatric arguments, is perhaps a desperate
and clueless attempt to win back young minds and reverse the slide.
Renowned ex-Scientologist Arnie Lerma notes that the church realized
it had to soften its approach and reinvent some of its techniques.
Gone were most of the hard-sell membership-drive techniques of the
past, when church members needled passersby to take "personality
tests" that allegedly would reveal the stressful areas Scientology
could help a person eliminate and then sign them up for books and
classes.
As the head of Lermanet.com, Lerma has drawn on his decade-long
membership in Scientology to craft perhaps the most extensive and
highly updated anti-Scientology Web site in the world. Lerma was
actually working for Scientology in 1969, having joined at 17 after
buying Hubbard's tales of being a war hero and nuclear physicist. He
was around for the early days of Clearwater and got to know Hubbard on
a very close level.
Ultimately, that closeness to Hubbard would be key to Lerma's break up
with Scientology, as he recalls falling in love with the founder's
daughter, Suzette. As marriage and family are frowned upon within Sea
Org members as unnecessary distractions from church devotion, they
were about to elope when she spilled the beans in one of her auditing
sessions.
"I was given the option of leaving Florida with all my body parts
intact if I told her the wedding was off, and that's a quotable fact,"
said Lerma. "So I told her and she cried. I was shocked like shock
therapy and that woke me up. I was free."
Indeed, Lerma has become one of Scientology's most fervent critics,
with his site tagging itself "Exposing the Con." He says he
was there the day Hubbard ordered the Satanic Crosses rolled into church
offices, as the church replaced its secular signs and symbols across
the board with occult imagery designed to mislead the public and more
importantly, the government into believing they were a fairly
mainstream religion.
He has experienced retaliation for his Web work, in the form of a raid
on his house by Scientologists and US marshals who searched all his
computer drives for the church's copyrighted materials, such as
information on thetans and climbing the Bridge. Yet he has soldiered
on, as nothing was found worthy of shutting his efforts down.
In contrast, a decade ago Scientologist lawyers were able to launch
100 suits at a time against the former top anti-cult web group, the
Cult Awareness Network, drive it into bankruptcy and then purchase the
name. Today, calls to CAN are fruitless, as Scientology members trick
concerned family members with claims that CAN is objective and
membership in the church is harmless. The very fact that Lerma is up
and thriving online is just one sign that the church might be losing
its grip.
"They love luring celebrities because they think it helps them win
over countless more young people, and the celebrities stay with it
both because every imaginable whim is catered to but because they've
revealed every blackmailable secret in their auditing sessions over
the years," said Lerma. "Meanwhile, those stars' needs are met by
staffers who are either in it for life and vastly underpaid or by
members who have run out of money for the church's services and are
basically slaving to pay it off."
Just as the roots of Scientology began here in Pasadena with the
bizarre friendship of Hubbard and Jack Parsons, its weaknesses with
the Web also began here, in a US District Court in Pasadena. The case
Church of Scientology International vs. Fishman and Geertz resulted in
the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in San Francisco denying
Scientology's appeal to seal its "upper level materials" about
the OT levels, Xenu and other high-level church secrets.
The case began with a 1991 lawsuit against former Scientologist Steven
Fishman and his psychiatrist, Dr. Uwe Geertz, after they were quoted
at length in a classic Time magazine expose on the church. Fishman had
been convicted several years before of taking part in a Scientology
securities class action fraud scheme in Florida, and in order to
defend himself fully in this lawsuit without a lawyer he had won the
right to use the previously secret materials in his defense.
Geertz's attorney, Graham Berry, heard about Fishman's materials and
offered to help him as much as he could for free. When the men teamed
up to accomplish a staggering success against Scientology that finally
enabled the "upper materials" to stay open and be read anywhere,
the truth was finally free and available to anyone exploring Scientology
on the Web.
"Robert Vaughn Young was a high-level Scientology executive who
escaped the church, and he said the Internet would prove to be the
church's Waterloo and lead to their demise," said Berry, who has spent
the past decade as a living victim of the church's retaliatory
techniques. "I believe that's self-evident with the fact Fishman filed
a worldwide affidavit where the information on Scientology is on the
'Net for free while its members traditionally paid up to a
half-million dollars to reach the same level of knowledge."
After helping win the Fishman case, Berry found his homosexuality
outed on the Web, along with further accusations that he was a
pedophile. He believes that Scientologists set out to slander him on
nearly every level and managed to break him financially by tying up
all his time through a string of lawsuits against him. The final blow
came when Scientologists convinced the state's judicial system to
label Fishman a "vexatious litigant," a label that cost him his
ability to practice law in California and, amazingly, can't appeal his
way out of.
Yet even now, living off government assistance and the kindness of
friends and acquaintances, Berry remains unbowed and to this day
travels to conferences around the world to speak out against the
church's ruthless tactics.
"Scientology will never understand how strongly friends can support
you, and it drives them nuts that I'm not in a gutter somewhere,"
Berry noted. "But I will not remain silent, for they already have done
all they can against me. I have nothing left to lose, and sometimes
that's the most powerful state to be in."
Scientollywood
A glimpse of the church's property holdings in LA
- Joe Piasecki
These days you can't turn a corner in Hollywood without bumping into a
scientologist.
The same, it seems, is true for property owned by the Church of
Scientology.
The Weekly has connected ownership of more than a dozen properties in
Hollywood to the Church, thanks to some help from LA County Assessor's
Office Press Deputy Robert Knowles.
An exhaustive search would be difficult to conduct, since many of the
properties associated with the church are held under names other than
the church, namely a company called Building Management Services
(BMS).
BMS properties include the Scientology Celebrity Center at 5930
Franklin Ave., the L. Ron Hubbard Museum and corporate offices at 6331
Hollywood Blvd. and the Scientology Testing Center at 6724 Hollywood
Blvd.
Other BMS properties include 4734, 4820, 4833 and 5165 Fountain Ave.;
1326 N. Berendo St.; 1339 N. Catalina Ave.; 1715 Ivar Ave. and 1827 N.
Bronson Ave.
Also, according to Assessor's Office records, the Church of
Scientology Celebrity Centre International owns 1825 and 1830 N.
Bronson Ave.
The massive scientology property at the mailing address 4810 Sunset
Blvd. in Hollywood could not be located in the database.
The Church of Scientology owns at least one piece of vacant property,
but county databases do not identify addresses for vacant land.
- Joe Piasecki
The name "Scientology"® is trademarked to the "Church" of Scientology. Neither this web page, nor this web site, nor any of the individuals mentioned herein assisting to educate the public about the Scientology organization's "Volunteer Minister" program are members of or representatives of the Scientology organization. Quotes used within this web page and within this web site are used according to the Fair Use laws of the United States.
If you find anything inaccurate or otherwise mistaken on this web page, please send a correction to Fredric L. Rice at the e-mail address offered below -- with our thanks.
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