http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yts2URb0Qv4
http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runninscared/2011/08/tory_christman_top_25_crippling_scientology.php
Excerpt:
Jenna Miscavige Hill was one of three young ex-Scientologists who started a website about what it was like to grow up in the church, exscientologykids.com. But it was that second name that also thrust her to prominence. Jenna is niece to Scientology's supreme leader, David Miscavige, so her criticisms of her uncle's church -- on Nightline for example! -- have made her a real problem for DM's outfit.
Patty Moher has never received, publicly, the credit she deserves for bringing to the public the notorious 9-minute Tom Cruise video that caused such a sensation in January, 2008, and helped launch the Anonymous movement. She was integral to bringing it to other people who later got much of the credit. Now an outspoken, brash critic of the church she once belonged to, she told me she's ready, finally, to take a bow for springing Tom's bizarro moment on the world.
http://www.showbizspy.com/article/121493/russell-brand-not-allowed-to-mention-scientology-at-vmas.html
Excerpt:
British comedian Russell Brand has been banned from mentioning Scientology while he’s hosting the MTV VMAs in September.
The eccentric funnyman, known in America for starring in the film Forgetting Sarah Marshall, says he’s not allowed to make jokes about the controversial religion (of which actor Tom Cruise is a follower) – or swear.
He reveals, “I’ve been warned when I’m presenting there are two things I am never allowed to say.
“One – c***. And two – Scientology.
“There is one sentence that could join both of those words but I’m going to try and not say it.
“I have a problem when people tell me not to do something. When I was going to meet the Queen the protocol people told me how to bow, not to curtsy, not to speak until I was spoken to. But all I could think of was, ‘Grab her tit’!”
Russell has previously worked for MTV, but was sacked after turning up for work on September 12, 2001, dressed as Osama bin Laden.
http://www.pynkcelebrity.com/archives/67646
Excerpt:
Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes were in LA this weekend – they’re pictured here on their way to the Katy Perry concert. It’s odd that the Cruises skipped the black tie event at the Scientology Celebrity Center for it’s 42nd anniversary the same weekend. All the top Scientologists were there – Travolta, Priscilla, Jenna, Jason Lee, Erika Christensen. Juliette Lewis etc.
Interesting….but we’re guessing they had a BETTER time seeing Katy Perry!
Interesting….but we’re guessing they had a BETTER time seeing Katy Perry!
Anderson Cooper interviews Scientology CCHR's Bruce Wiseman
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5kIDLG-hjK8
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kendra_Wiseman
Excerpt:
Kendra Wiseman is one of the founders of Exscientologykids.com, a website that offers "non-judgmental support for those who are still in Scientology, discussion and debate for those who've already left, and a plethora of easy-to-understand references for the curious." She is the daughter of Bruce Wiseman, president of the Citizens Commission on Human Rights, a Scientology-sponsored organization opposed to the practice of psychiatry.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jenna_Miscavige_Hill
Excerpt:
Jenna Miscavige Hill is a former Scientologist who, after leaving the Church of Scientology in 2005, has become one of its most prominent critics. She is the daughter of Ron Miscavige, Jr.[1] and the niece of current church leader David Miscavige.[2][3]
Hill, with Kendra Wiseman and Astra Woodcraft (both also raised in Scientology), founded the website exscientologykids.com.[4] She has been interviewed about her experiences within Scientology by a number of media outlets, including ABC's Nightline in April 2008.[5][6]
In 2000, when Hill was 16, her father and mother left Scientology. Hill states that due to the Scientology-ordered practice of disconnection with relatives and friends who don't support Scientology or are hostile to it, letters from her parents were intercepted and she was not allowed to answer a telephone for a year.[7][8]
She described her experience from ages five to 12 thus: "We were also required to write down all transgressions ...similar to a sin in the Catholic religion. After writing them all down, we would receive a meter check on the electropsychometer to make sure we weren't hiding anything, and you would have to keep writing until you came up clean
http://www.therazzline.net/article/real_situation_what_to_do_part_2.html
Excerpt:
Bruce Wiseman is a writer and financial consultant living in Los Angeles. He can be reached at www.brucewiseman.net
This article is in two parts.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primary_Colors_(film)
Excerpt:
Following the publication of the book in 1996, director Mike Nichols paid more than $1 million for the screen rights.[6] At the Cannes Festival, Thompson said she did not base her film character on Hillary Clinton while Travolta said he based his on several presidents, but mostly on Bill Clinton.[1]
Director Nichols was criticized for cutting an interracial love scene from the final version of the film. He responded that he had removed the scene because of unfavorable reactions from a preview audience.[1]
The film also generated controversy, partly for its depiction of a Clinton-like character as it was also released close to the Lewinsky scandal.[4][7][8][9][10]
[edit] Reception
The movie received a mixed reception from critics. Variety's reviewer called it a "film à clef" and said that the American public was likely to accept it as a factual account because it so closely mirrored real life characters and events.[11] The Los Angeles Times gave high marks to the movie, noting Travolta's close mirroring of Bill Clinton, but describing Thompson's character as actually not based on Hillary Clinton.[12] Entertainment Weekly called Travolta "Clintonian".[13] The Cincinnati Enquirer gave accolades to the character portrayals of Bill and Hillary Clinton.[14] Syndicated reviewer Roger Ebert said the movie was "insightful and very wise about the realities of political life"[15] and the Cincinnati Enquirer said the movie was a "nuanced dissection of how real American politics work".[14] According to a review in The Deseret News, the last half of the movie dragged, Travolta's performance seemed more like an impersonation than actual acting, the movie lacked subtlety or depth, and it was loaded with cheap and obvious jokesBest political speech ever - John Travolta in Primary Colors
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0aXOKLbdtyA
http://articles.latimes.com/1997-03-03/entertainment/ca-34288_1_primary-colors
Excerpt:
Wanted: Extras for 'Primary Colors'
An open casting call for extras for the upcoming Universal Pictures movie "Primary Colors," starring John Travolta, will be held next weekend at Universal Studios' Stage 23.
Men and women, ages 18 and up, both SAG and non-union, are welcome. Aspirants are asked to dress casually.
The call will be on Saturday and Sunday. People whose last names start with A through F should arrive by 10 a.m., G through M by 11 a.m., N through S by noon and T through Z by 1 p.m.
http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/contributor/1800016652/bio
Excerpt:
By 1983, she had adopted the surname Kelly Preston and had made the leap to primetime when cast as a flirtatious teen vamp in the short-lived series "For Love and Honor" (NBC, 1983-84). Romantically linked to a number of eligible Hollywood bachelors during the 1980s - including Charlie Sheen and George Clooney - Preston married Travolta in 1991, a man with whom she would share both a family and a controversial belief in the religion of Scientology, after meeting the actor on the set of their film, "The Experts," (1989). Ironically, it was her role of the selfish, upwardly mobile girlfriend of fellow real-life Scientologist Tom Cruise in Cameron Crowe's sports agent-skewing romantic comedy, "Jerry Maguire" (1996) that best illustrated her previously untapped skills as a comic force to be reckoned with.
http://www.slate.com/articles/life/faithbased/2007/07/for_the_love_of_xenu.html
Excerpt:
But reaching such a conclusion, as I have discovered, isn't bound to win a religion writer any friends. I recently wrote an article (subscription required) for the New York Times Magazine about Milton Katselas, the acting teacher of Giovanni Ribisi, Anne Archer, Tom Selleck, George Clooney, and many other stars. Katselas is a Scientologist, and there are those in the acting community who steer clear of his school because of its perceived connection to Scientology. (Although, to be fair, Elfman broke with Katselas because he wasn't Scientologist enough.)
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/15/magazine/15Katselas-t.html?pagewanted=all
Excerpt:
But there are dissenters too. Students have left Katselas’s school, the Beverly Hills Playhouse, because of the unspoken pressure they felt to join the Church of Scientology, the controversial religion founded by L. Ron Hubbard in the 1950s. Nobody ever told them to join, but they could not ignore how many of their classmates and teachers were Scientologists. Or the fact that Milton Katselas, the master himself, credits Hubbard for much of his success in life. And the assorted weirdness: one of Katselas’s students works a day job at the Scientology Celebrity Centre, where Tom Cruise and John Travolta study, and one zealous television star left the playhouse because she said she believed that Katselas wasn’t committed enough to Scientology.
Before trying to metabolize this strange cocktail of Hollywood, dreams both deferred and achieved, and Scientology, consider the very sincere professions of faith in a bearded, baritone septuagenarian with a Mediterranean temper who began as a student of Lee Strasberg and became the teacher of Ribisi, Daly and Carradine; of Michelle Pfeiffer, Tom Selleck, Tony Danza, Priscilla Presley, Patrick Swayze, Cheryl Ladd and hundreds more.
Richard Lawson, a Katselas student and occasional Scientologist, who now teaches at the playhouse, says that Katselas’s teaching helped him cheat death in 1992 when his plane from LaGuardia crashed in Flushing Bay and he was submerged underwater. “I just got this inspiration to overcome it, to fight with everything I had to get out,” Lawson told a reporter in 1998. “One of the things I attribute that to is the teachings of Milton.” Anne Archer, who discovered Scientology at the playhouse nearly 30 years ago, says, “I have seen performances sometimes in that class that are so brilliant that they’re better than anything I have seen on the stage or film.” Her husband, the producer Terry Jastrow — also a Scientologist — says that Katselas changed the texture of his daily existence: “I go out in the world and look at human behavior now. I see a woman or man interacting with a saleslady, and I see the artistry in it.
http://ac360.blogs.cnn.com/2010/03/25/scientology-a-history-of-violence/
Excerpt:
Anderson Cooper | BIO
AC360° Anchor
This week we begin a five-part investigation into allegations made by a number of former high ranking members of the Church of Scientology. The allegations are about physical abuse they say took place within the Sea Organization, the international management branch of the church.
Men and women, ages 18 and up, both SAG and non-union, are welcome. Aspirants are asked to dress casually.
The call will be on Saturday and Sunday. People whose last names start with A through F should arrive by 10 a.m., G through M by 11 a.m., N through S by noon and T through Z by 1 p.m.
http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/contributor/1800016652/bio
Excerpt:
By 1983, she had adopted the surname Kelly Preston and had made the leap to primetime when cast as a flirtatious teen vamp in the short-lived series "For Love and Honor" (NBC, 1983-84). Romantically linked to a number of eligible Hollywood bachelors during the 1980s - including Charlie Sheen and George Clooney - Preston married Travolta in 1991, a man with whom she would share both a family and a controversial belief in the religion of Scientology, after meeting the actor on the set of their film, "The Experts," (1989). Ironically, it was her role of the selfish, upwardly mobile girlfriend of fellow real-life Scientologist Tom Cruise in Cameron Crowe's sports agent-skewing romantic comedy, "Jerry Maguire" (1996) that best illustrated her previously untapped skills as a comic force to be reckoned with.
http://www.slate.com/articles/life/faithbased/2007/07/for_the_love_of_xenu.html
Excerpt:
But reaching such a conclusion, as I have discovered, isn't bound to win a religion writer any friends. I recently wrote an article (subscription required) for the New York Times Magazine about Milton Katselas, the acting teacher of Giovanni Ribisi, Anne Archer, Tom Selleck, George Clooney, and many other stars. Katselas is a Scientologist, and there are those in the acting community who steer clear of his school because of its perceived connection to Scientology. (Although, to be fair, Elfman broke with Katselas because he wasn't Scientologist enough.)
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/15/magazine/15Katselas-t.html?pagewanted=all
Excerpt:
But there are dissenters too. Students have left Katselas’s school, the Beverly Hills Playhouse, because of the unspoken pressure they felt to join the Church of Scientology, the controversial religion founded by L. Ron Hubbard in the 1950s. Nobody ever told them to join, but they could not ignore how many of their classmates and teachers were Scientologists. Or the fact that Milton Katselas, the master himself, credits Hubbard for much of his success in life. And the assorted weirdness: one of Katselas’s students works a day job at the Scientology Celebrity Centre, where Tom Cruise and John Travolta study, and one zealous television star left the playhouse because she said she believed that Katselas wasn’t committed enough to Scientology.
Before trying to metabolize this strange cocktail of Hollywood, dreams both deferred and achieved, and Scientology, consider the very sincere professions of faith in a bearded, baritone septuagenarian with a Mediterranean temper who began as a student of Lee Strasberg and became the teacher of Ribisi, Daly and Carradine; of Michelle Pfeiffer, Tom Selleck, Tony Danza, Priscilla Presley, Patrick Swayze, Cheryl Ladd and hundreds more.
Richard Lawson, a Katselas student and occasional Scientologist, who now teaches at the playhouse, says that Katselas’s teaching helped him cheat death in 1992 when his plane from LaGuardia crashed in Flushing Bay and he was submerged underwater. “I just got this inspiration to overcome it, to fight with everything I had to get out,” Lawson told a reporter in 1998. “One of the things I attribute that to is the teachings of Milton.” Anne Archer, who discovered Scientology at the playhouse nearly 30 years ago, says, “I have seen performances sometimes in that class that are so brilliant that they’re better than anything I have seen on the stage or film.” Her husband, the producer Terry Jastrow — also a Scientologist — says that Katselas changed the texture of his daily existence: “I go out in the world and look at human behavior now. I see a woman or man interacting with a saleslady, and I see the artistry in it.
http://ac360.blogs.cnn.com/2010/03/25/scientology-a-history-of-violence/
Excerpt:
AC360° Anchor
This week we begin a five-part investigation into allegations made by a number of former high ranking members of the Church of Scientology. The allegations are about physical abuse they say took place within the Sea Organization, the international management branch of the church.
http://bigbangtheory.wikia.com/wiki/Sheldon_Cooper
Excerpt:
Sheldon Lee "Shelly" Cooper, B.S., M.S., M.A., Ph.D., Sc.D., is a Caltech theoretical physicist who shares an apartment with his colleague and best friend, Leonard Hofstadter. Originally from Texas, Sheldon started college at the age of 11, receiving his first Ph.D. at 16. Sheldon was involved in numerous experiments as a wunderkind, such as his plan to provide free electricity for his town by building a nuclear reactor - a plan stopped by government pen pushers claiming it's illegal to store yellowcake uranium in a garden shed! Unashamedly geeky, he has no qualms about speaking Klingon, wearing vintage t-shirts sporting superhero logos, or spouting various historical and cultural anecdotes (e.g., his account of the introduction of the fork into Thailand). While he might claim to be the perfect human specimen, Sheldon does have his faults. Appearing to have Asperger's Syndrome as well as Obsessive Compulsive Personality Disorder, Sheldon is characterized by: a strict adherence to routine; an overtly intellectual personality; a tenuous understanding of irony, sarcasm and humor; and a general lack of humility or empathy, the former of which is demonstrated in the fact that he has no problem voicing to his peers his admiration for his superior intellect.
The Big Bang Theory Theme Song
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=REw5-_rpFDE
The Big Bang Theory - Penny's Christmas gift to Sheldon
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mlhHTdDqoBc
Sheldon and Halloween's Bizinga
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CR6SJonegzQ&feature=related
Penny, Penny, Penny, Penny, Penny, Penny
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nqDPvnmrYp4&feature=related
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thought_experiment
Excerpt:
A thought experiment or Gedankenexperiment (from German) considers some hypothesis, theory,[1] or principle for the purpose of thinking through its consequences. Given the structure of the experiment, it may or may not be possible to actually perform it, and, in the case that it is possible for it to be performed, there need be no intention of any kind to actually perform the experiment in question. The common goal of a thought experiment is to explore the potential consequences of the principle in question.
http://www.splicetoday.com/moving-pictures/chuck-lorre-television-s-maestro-of-hate
Excerpt:
No controversy ever seemed to arise from the set of Dharma & Greg, but star Jenna Elfman turned out to be a pretty hardcore Scientologist, so there's no guessing what Lorre may have had to deal with behind the scenes.
It's possible that Chuck Lorre is as big a jerk as Charlie Sheen or any of the other ornery actors he's butted heads with. And it's also possible that his characters, which constantly zing each other with savage putdowns and barely conceal their mutual contempt, aren't based on any of his own experiences. But at the moment it feels like life is imitating fiction closely, and that Lorre has at the very least had bad luck ending up time and time again working with notoriously troubled stars. So here's hoping for his sake that everybody on The Big Bang Theory and Mike & Molly is a joy to work with.
http://chucklorre.com/index-2hm.php?p=177
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Elfman
Excerpt:
Family
Richard is the son of novelist Blossom Elfman (aka "Clare Elfman"), and the older brother of musician and film composer Danny Elfman, with whom he founded Oingo Boingo, an eclectic band popular in the 1980s & 1990's. Richard is brother-in-law of Danny's wife, Bridget Fonda, father of Bodhi Elfman, father-in-law of Bodhi's wife, Jenna Elfman, and father and business partner in Buzzine Networks with son Louis Elfman. Richard currently resides in the Hollywood Hills.
http://www.factnet.org/Scientology/against_sci.htm
Excerpt:
Scientology, Collective Security, and F.A.C.T.Net Inc.
Scientology is one of hundreds of organizations accused of using coercive mind control upon which FA.C.T.Net collects information. F.A.C.T.Net does not focus solely on Scientology but it has gradually created the worlds largest electronic library on Scientology for the following reasons:
1.) Scientology is involved on a global level in more current civil and criminal litigation than any other organization using coercive mind control.
"Scientology is evil: its techniques are evil: its practice is a serious threat to the community, medically, morally, and socially; and its adherents are sadly deluded and often mentally ill .... (Scientology is) the world's largest organization of unqualified persons engaged in the practice of dangerous techniques which masquerade as mental therapy."
-- Justice Anderson, Supreme Court of Victoria, Australia.
"Report of the Board of Inquiry Into Scientology,' presented to both houses of Parliament, Victoria, Australia, 1965.
"Report of the Board of Inquiry Into Scientology,' presented to both houses of Parliament, Victoria, Australia, 1965.
2.) Scientology appears to have been involved in more past civil and criminal litigation than any other organization using coercive mind control. Over me last forty years, total worldwide lawsuits certainly run in the thousands.
"The crime committed by these defendants is of a breadth and scope previously unheard of. No building, office, desk, or file was safe from their snooping and prying. No individual or organization was free from their despicable conspiratorial minds. The tools of their trade were miniature transmitters, lock picks, secret codes, forged credentials and any other device they found necessary to carry out their conspiratorial schemes."
"The crime committed by these defendants is of a breadth and scope previously unheard of. No building, office, desk, or file was safe from their snooping and prying. No individual or organization was free from their despicable conspiratorial minds. The tools of their trade were miniature transmitters, lock picks, secret codes, forged credentials and any other device they found necessary to carry out their conspiratorial schemes."
-- U.S. federal prosecutor's memorandum to the judge urging stiff jail sentences for nine top leaden of Scientology who had pleaded guilty to burglaries, forgeries, infiltration, obstruction of justice, and other crimes against more than 100 U.S. Federal agencies, including the Dept. of Justice, the Dept. of Defense, and the IRS, in U.S. v. Heldt et al. 688 F.2d. 1238. (D.C. Cir 1980) Cert. Den. 456 U.S. 926 (1982).
"This is a criminal organization day in and day out. It makes Jim and Tammy (Baker) look like kindergarten."
"This is a criminal organization day in and day out. It makes Jim and Tammy (Baker) look like kindergarten."
--So says Vicki Aznerand, one of the six top executives in Scientology until her defection in 1987.>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Ron_DeWolfe
Excerpt:
Affidavit for a US District Court
An Affidavit for the U.S. District Court for the District Of Massachusetts
My father obtained the rights to the E-meter in 1952 from Volney Mathison in the same manner that he does everything— through fraud and coercion. My father learned about the E-meter from Mathison who developed it and my father fraudulently extracted those rights from Mathison so that my father could use it in Scientology auditing.
My father has always used the confidential information extracted from people during auditing sessions to intimidate, threaten and coerce them to do what he wanted, which often meant getting them to give him money. My father routinely used false threats and auditing information particularly about crimes people had committed to extort money from them.
My father has always held out Scientology and auditing to be based purely on science and not on religious "belief" or faith. We regularly promised and distributed publications with "scientific guarantees". This was and has always been common practice. My father and I created a "religious front" only for tax purposes and legal protection 'from fraud Claims'. We almost always told nearly everyone that Scientology was really science, not a religion, but that the religious front was created to deal with the government.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volney_Mathison
Excerpt:
Inventor
In 1935, Mathison was employed building short wave radios.[3] Mathison invented a device called an electroencephaloneuromentimograph or E-meter.[11] He came up with the design for the device and subsequently built it in the 1940s.[1][12] It was initially known as the "Mathison Electropsychometer".[13] The E-meter "has a needle that swings back and forth across a scale when a patient holds on to two electrical contacts".[1] Mathison was a chiropractor and psychoanalyst.[1][11][14][15] He used the device with his patients in order to investigate their inner problems.[13] He then employed self-hypnosis tapes, and instructed his patients to use these in order to address their "inner" issues.[13] The device became popular and was used among other chiropractors.[1] John Freeman writes in Suppressed and Incredible Inventions, "Recalling my visits at the height of his career, I remember that, while his results were outstanding, he was typically fought by the Medical Profession."[13]
Mathison was a follower of Dianetics founded by L. Ron Hubbard.[12] Hubbard incorporated Mathison's device into Scientology practices.[11] Hubbard often called the inventor of the E-meter simply "Mathison" in his writings.[11] According to author Paulette Cooper, Scientologists erroneously referred to the inventor of the E-meter as "Olin Mathison".[11] Simon Singh and Edzard Ernst write in Trick or Treatment that "The E-meter was also widely used by the Church of Scientology, so much so that many Scientologists believe that it was invented by their founder L. Ron Hubbard."[1]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-meter
Excerpt:
An E-meter is an electronic device used during Dianetics and Scientology auditing.[1] The device is a variation of a Wheatstone bridge, which measures electrical resistance and skin conductance. It is formally known as the Hubbard Electrometer, for the Church's founder, L. Ron Hubbard.[2] Most of the Scientology concepts associated with the "E-meter" and its use are regarded by the scientific and medical communities as pseudoscience and the device itself is essentially a modified ohmmeter.
The Church of Scientology restricts the use of the E-meter to trained Scientologists, treating it as "a religious artifact used to measure the state of electrical characteristics of the "static field" surrounding the body". The meter, when used by a trained Scientologist, is claimed to reflect or indicate whether or not a person has been relieved from spiritual impediment of past experiences.[3] Officials within Scientology assert that the E-meter is intended for use only in Church-sanctioned auditing sessions and is in itself not a curative or medical device.[4] The E-meters used by the Church of Scientology are manufactured by Scientologists at their Gold Base facility.[5]
http://members.tripod.com/cic_ops/cescah.htm
Excerpt:
When you do connect the dots you will see a terrible picture emerge:
http://www.wc.com/dkendall
http://www.lermanet.com/cos/serpent.htm
Excerpt:
Title: "SERPENT IN THE WHITE HOUSE" Chapter 1, Laundering Dianetic (reference:clinton and scientology)
Author: cescah@my-dejanews.com
Date: Sat, 26 Sep 1998 17:25:22 GMT
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientology_controversies#L._Ron_Hubbard_and_starting_a_religion_for_money
Excerpt:
http://home.snafu.de/tilman/quilt.txt
Excerpt:
https://whyweprotest.net/community/threads/clearwatergate-us-politics-and-scientology.25276/
Excerpt:
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Fishman/Declaration/dmdec.txt
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janeane_Garofalo
Excerpt:
http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Ron_DeWolfe
Excerpt:
Affidavit for a US District Court
An Affidavit for the U.S. District Court for the District Of Massachusetts
My father obtained the rights to the E-meter in 1952 from Volney Mathison in the same manner that he does everything— through fraud and coercion. My father learned about the E-meter from Mathison who developed it and my father fraudulently extracted those rights from Mathison so that my father could use it in Scientology auditing.
My father has always used the confidential information extracted from people during auditing sessions to intimidate, threaten and coerce them to do what he wanted, which often meant getting them to give him money. My father routinely used false threats and auditing information particularly about crimes people had committed to extort money from them.
My father has always held out Scientology and auditing to be based purely on science and not on religious "belief" or faith. We regularly promised and distributed publications with "scientific guarantees". This was and has always been common practice. My father and I created a "religious front" only for tax purposes and legal protection 'from fraud Claims'. We almost always told nearly everyone that Scientology was really science, not a religion, but that the religious front was created to deal with the government.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volney_Mathison
Excerpt:
Inventor
In 1935, Mathison was employed building short wave radios.[3] Mathison invented a device called an electroencephaloneuromentimograph or E-meter.[11] He came up with the design for the device and subsequently built it in the 1940s.[1][12] It was initially known as the "Mathison Electropsychometer".[13] The E-meter "has a needle that swings back and forth across a scale when a patient holds on to two electrical contacts".[1] Mathison was a chiropractor and psychoanalyst.[1][11][14][15] He used the device with his patients in order to investigate their inner problems.[13] He then employed self-hypnosis tapes, and instructed his patients to use these in order to address their "inner" issues.[13] The device became popular and was used among other chiropractors.[1] John Freeman writes in Suppressed and Incredible Inventions, "Recalling my visits at the height of his career, I remember that, while his results were outstanding, he was typically fought by the Medical Profession."[13]
Mathison was a follower of Dianetics founded by L. Ron Hubbard.[12] Hubbard incorporated Mathison's device into Scientology practices.[11] Hubbard often called the inventor of the E-meter simply "Mathison" in his writings.[11] According to author Paulette Cooper, Scientologists erroneously referred to the inventor of the E-meter as "Olin Mathison".[11] Simon Singh and Edzard Ernst write in Trick or Treatment that "The E-meter was also widely used by the Church of Scientology, so much so that many Scientologists believe that it was invented by their founder L. Ron Hubbard."[1]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-meter
Excerpt:
An E-meter is an electronic device used during Dianetics and Scientology auditing.[1] The device is a variation of a Wheatstone bridge, which measures electrical resistance and skin conductance. It is formally known as the Hubbard Electrometer, for the Church's founder, L. Ron Hubbard.[2] Most of the Scientology concepts associated with the "E-meter" and its use are regarded by the scientific and medical communities as pseudoscience and the device itself is essentially a modified ohmmeter.
The Church of Scientology restricts the use of the E-meter to trained Scientologists, treating it as "a religious artifact used to measure the state of electrical characteristics of the "static field" surrounding the body". The meter, when used by a trained Scientologist, is claimed to reflect or indicate whether or not a person has been relieved from spiritual impediment of past experiences.[3] Officials within Scientology assert that the E-meter is intended for use only in Church-sanctioned auditing sessions and is in itself not a curative or medical device.[4] The E-meters used by the Church of Scientology are manufactured by Scientologists at their Gold Base facility.[5]
http://members.tripod.com/cic_ops/cescah.htm
Excerpt:
When you do connect the dots you will see a terrible picture emerge:
- Clinton is represented by David Kendall. David Kendall is employed by the DC law firm of Williams and Connoloy who also represent David Miscavige, the leader of Scientology.
- Clinton has stated that he was roommates in College with a scientologist and that he was impressed with them.
- Clinton's 1996 inauguration speech began with the sentence, "We're going to build a bridge to the 21st century."
- Travolta has stated that Clinton approached him about the problem in Germany for Scientology. If Clinton was aware aware of the Germany situation before he met with Travolta he should also be aware of Scientology's record since our government security was breached by Scientology's intelligence agency in the 70s. Shouldn't Germany be afraid of the same thing?
- Sandy Berger said on Meet The Press to Tim Russert that the reason Clinton got involved on the Germany/Scientology issue is that "Clinton is a bear on freedom of religion" and that Scientology is "being persecuted for its beliefs not its actions." That was a bold lie that all of you should have written to your Congressman and Senators about. Anybody who is informed truthfully knows that Scientology's actions are extreme and illegal. Our Government should know that better than anyone considering the 1979 felony convictions of 11 top level scientologists. None of this makes any sense unless Clinton is a scientologist. The Primary Colors association is clearly a brilliant stab at disinformation on their part. Scientology created that scandal. They covered everything up with that. The media was not interested in the truth about Scientology they just wanted to know if Clinton was selling favors as per the norm for him. Without the Primary Colors controversy Clinton and the State Dpt. could not have intervened on behalf of Scientology. Primary Colors was just the cover for the truth. The truth is that the Clinton administration has helped Scientology ascend to its greatest level of acceptance ever. There are people trying to expose Scientology all over the world while the United States Government goes ass backwards to try to help it grow. Wake up people!
- The "hands of hope" fiasco with Hillary.
- In the March 1997 issue of "Ethique et Liberte," a French Scientology publication, Bill Clinton contributes an article about drugs. This serves to legitimize Scientology in France. Doesn't Clinton know that the head of the French Scientology chapter was convicted of second degree murder on November 22, 1996? Of course he does, the article was damage control.
- The tax break for Scientology came in 1993, the year Clinton took office. Primary Colors wasn't created at this time so what gives? This IRS decision was in direct opposition to a Supreme Court ruling in 1989 in a 5-2 decision in "Hernandez vs. Comm. of IRS" which ruled that Scientology did not deserve tax exempt status.
- The Justice Department is helping Scientology in Clearwater regarding Lisa McPherson.
- The State Dept. refused to comment when asked about Madeleine Albright's apology to Germany for the State Dpt's accusations which were over the express wishes of Congress.
- Greta Van Sustern's hubby, big time Scientology lawyer, John Coale is representing Julie Hyatt Steele in her law suit against Mike Isikoff, the Newsweek reporter who first broke the Lewinsky scandal. Steele has also just been indicted by Ken Starr for obstruction of justice in the Clinton impeachment.
http://www.wc.com/dkendall
http://www.lermanet.com/cos/serpent.htm
Excerpt:
Title: "SERPENT IN THE WHITE HOUSE" Chapter 1, Laundering Dianetic (reference:clinton and scientology)
Author: cescah@my-dejanews.com
Date: Sat, 26 Sep 1998 17:25:22 GMT
TITLE: SERPENT IN THE WHITE HOUSE subtitle: how the satanic underground of scientology seized the Executive branch of The United States Government reference: Clinton and scientology [In response to the e mail I'm getting I want to stress the need to suspend judgment. Read it as a novel, but it isn't. All of the facts are facts. I've stated my conclusions first. You're free to disgard them. Make up your own mind. All of the facts I used in my analysis are going to be laid out. There are so many. If you feel that it's meaningless coincidence turn away. But facts are facts. how many of you knew that Clinton said, "Im proud to announce the opening of a nationl museum of scientology on the mall?" What explanation would satisfy you. How gullible are you? That choice is yours. read on---] ------------------------------------------- CHAPTER ONE: Laundering Dianetics (part one)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientology_controversies#L._Ron_Hubbard_and_starting_a_religion_for_money
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http://home.snafu.de/tilman/quilt.txt
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https://whyweprotest.net/community/threads/clearwatergate-us-politics-and-scientology.25276/
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http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Fishman/Declaration/dmdec.txt
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janeane_Garofalo
Excerpt:
Garofalo commented on her April 28, 2006 show supporting the Scientology-linked New York Rescue Workers Detoxification Project, a controversial treatment for workers suffering ailments from 9/11 clean-up efforts in New York City.[24]
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