Академический Документы
Профессиональный Документы
Культура Документы
page: 1
23
log in
join
share:
cuckooold
So what is Scientology? Is it a set of beliefs (scientific), or a religion? Let us jump head-first into the rabbit hole
of this bizarre cult/religion.
It seems one cannot discuss Scientology without discussing its founder Lafayette Ronald Hubbard (more
commonly known as L. Ron Hubbard). During his life Hubbard served in the U.S Marine Corps, as well as
being an officer in the U.S Navy during WW2. Wikipedia notes that he was in command of 2 ships in the Navy,
but was removed from his post due to his superiors assessing him as incapable of command. Hubbard was also a
writer of science fiction, tending towards the pulp fiction end of the genre. Hubbard developed a self-help
system he named Dianetics that he called 'the modern science of mental health'. He referred to Scientology as a
religion, and in 1953 he incorporated the Church of Scientology in Camden, New Jersey.
en.wikipedia.org...
So what is Scientology? The belief that immortality is real, and that humans have forgotten their 'true immortal
nature' is central to the religion, and the way in which one is able to realise this is called 'auditing' which seems
to be a mix of counselling and interrogation. Controversy has shadowed the cult, more or less since its
beginning, and they are very aggressive in making money out of both official, and potential church members.
According to Wikipedia:
Scientology is one of the most controversial new religious movements to have arisen in the 20th century. The
church is often characterized as a cult and it has faced harsh scrutiny for many of its practices which, critics
contend, include brainwashing and routinely defrauding its members, and harassing its critics and perceived
enemies with psychological abuse, character assassination and costly litigation. In response, Scientologists
have argued that theirs is a genuine religious movement that has been misrepresented, maligned and
persecuted. The Church of Scientology has consistently used litigation against its critics, and its aggressiveness
in pursuing its foes has been condemned as harassment
One of the beliefs in Scientology is that our souls (referred to as Thetans) reincarnate, and these 'souls' have
lived on other planets before making their way to earth. I'm not certain if there's some warp device that enables
this, but I'm willing to suspend my disbelief at this point and go 'OK, slightly out there, but no less so than
mainstream Christianity or Islam. Things get pretty Ca-Ca pretty quickly when one scratches beneath the
surface.
en.wikipedia.org...
Xenu (/zinu/ ZEE-noo), was, according to Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard, the dictator of the "Galactic
Confederacy" who 75 million years ago brought billions of his people to Earth (then known as "Teegeeack") in
a DC-8-like spacecraft, stacked them around volcanoes and killed them using hydrogen bombs. Official
Scientology scriptures hold that the essences of these many people remained, and that they form around people
in modern times, causing them spiritual harm. These events are known within Scientology as "Incident II",and
the traumatic memories associated with them as "The Wall of Fire" or the R6 implant. The narrative of Xenu is
part of Scientologist teachings about extraterrestrial civilizations and alien interventions in earthly events,
collectively described as "space opera" by Hubbard. Hubbard detailed the story in Operating Thetan level III
(OT III) in 1967, warning that the R6 "implant" (past trauma)[8] was "calculated to kill (by pneumonia, etc.)
anyone who attempts to solve it"
Alright!! This is what we're looking for. A true bizarro UFO cult which appears to spring straight out of the
pages of a science fiction (pulp) novel. Could there be a connection with Hubbard's prior vocation - no way; if
the man says aliens, aliens it must be!
Weird Stuff
There's so many weird connections between Scientology, mind control, and intelligence organisations it can be
difficult to know where to begin. Is it in fact possible that Scientology was an Mk-Ultra type exercise in mind
control?
Over at our invisible friends : ourinvisiblefriends.com...
Remember the clipboard guys that used to stop you in the street and ask you if you were happy? Or theyd try to
get you to do a personality test and then sell you a copy of Dianetics?
I swear the only people who read that book are the ones who had to. I did, as part of my Scientology training,
and when the critics said Ron Hubbard never edited his work or permitted other to edit it, believe them. A more
drawn out, turgid story I have yet to read. At least he wrote it himself, which is not the case with the personality
test. It was taken directly from classified CIA material.
After Navy service in World War II, Dr. John Gittinger joined the CIA in 1950 specifically to do brainwashing.
He finished the work begun on the Personality Assessment System and provided the CIA with a neat little road
map for exploiting an individuals weaknesses.
Hubbard wanted to know the mental traits of his students/customers too. Like the CIA, he knew a persons
weaknesses could be manipulated.
Gittinger and his Personality Test was classified until 1962. It was a covert operation under the guidance of
Sidney Gottlieb, ex Nazi now living in the US with a new name and head of MK ULTRA.
Did Hubbard's insistence on using this CIA test give reason to believe he had personal knowledge of Mk-Ultra
type tests which could be used to manipulate people? Do not forget Hubbard's own connection to the Navy, and
Naval intelligence.
Im seeing a pattern here. So many co incidences that Ron Hubbard and the CIA are working hand in glove.
They both want control, and by giving Ron the classified information, he was able to further research in the
field much faster in a way the CIA could not have done. In return, the CIA would probably turn a blind eye to
his shenanigans.
Continued...
edit on 24-4-2014 by cuckooold because: (no reason given)
cuckooold
And Weirder
While we're at it, why not have a look at a few of Hubbard's friends and associates.
Jack Parsons (born Marvel Whiteside Parsons) was an American rocket engineer and chemist who worked for
NASA, was was instrumental in designing the solid rocket fuel that helped the U.S to get to the moon. Parsons
was also a 'Thelemite Occultist', the religious movement headed by none other than the Beast Aleister Crowley
himself. So where does Hubbard come into this? Let us invoke Wikipedia yet again to look at this weirdness,
getting weirder...
en.wikipedia.org...
After a brief involvement in Marxism, Parsons converted to Thelema in 1939, the English occultist Aleister
Crowley's new religious movement. He joined the Agape Lodge in 1941, the Californian branch of the
Thelemite Ordo Templi Orientis (OTO), alongside his first wife Helen Northrup and, at Crowley's bidding, he
took over the position of lodge leader from Wilfred Talbot Smith in 1942. Parsons began running the lodge from
his manor homenicknamed "the Parsonage"on Orange Grove Boulevard, Pasadena, where he let out rooms
to a variety of occultists, scientists, and bohemians. Among them was L. Ron Hubbard, with whom he began the
Babalon Working, a series of rituals designed to invoke the Thelemic goddess Babalon to Earth. Parsons
continued the procedure with Marjorie Cameron, whom he married in 1946. After Hubbard stole his life
savings, Parsons sold the Parsonage, resigned from the OTO and went through various jobs, while acting as a
consultant for the Israeli rocket program. He lost his security clearance amid the developing climate of
McCarthyism and accusations of espionage and was left unable to work in rocketry. Parsons died in a home
laboratory explosion in 1952 at the age of 37; police ruled it an accidental death, but many of his associates
including Cameronsuspected suicide or murder.
So Hubbard ripped off the life savings of Jack Parsons, as well as seducing Parson's girlfriend. Despite being in
a so-called 'open relationship', I'm sure this did little so assuage the anger of Parsons. Did Hubbard also steal a
bunch of teachings of Parsons/the O.T.O, and wrapping them up in some of his science-fiction, deliver them as
his new religion?
disinfo.com...
www.mt.net...
Scientology Today
Today, Scientology is a huge and sprawling organisation, wealthy beyond belief. They have a reputation for
engaging in aggressive litigation to silence their critics. South Park had an episode which made fun of
Scientology and Tom Cruise, and Cruise tried to silence this episode.
Is Scientology still deeply connected to both occult belief, and intelligence agencies? Considering the amount of
influence they have, as well as an enormous database of just about anyone who has ever come into contact with
the organisation, one wonders about what certainly looks a little fascistic from a certain angle. It reeks of
perhaps the Jacques Vallee control system, and the players involved seem connected to much of 20th century
conspiracy theory.
And Finally (a bit more to do with UFOs)...
To end on a light note, about a year ago, the Church of Scientology received an apology from the London based
Sun newspaper, offering an apology to aliens for linking them to Scientology, in response to lawyers from the
church demanding an apology.
www.news.com.au...
THE London Sun newspaper has apologised to aliens for linking them with the Church of Scientology.
The one-sentence mock apology, which is trending on Twitter as the "best newspaper apology ever", is the Sun's
response to a demand by lawyers advising Scientology's UK branch leaders.
The church - which says humans are aliens who landed on earth - took offence when the Sun published an
article about flying saucers sighted over its headquarters in the English countryside.
The church demanded the apology for the article, subtitled "Close encounter of the absurd kind", and got more
than it bargained for.
And finally...
Apparently, the Church of Scientology have carved a giant 'hello' to E.T and UFOs.
www.dailymail.co.uk... return-followers-Armageddon-Earth.html
EXCLUSIVE: Pictured up close for the first time, Scientology's 'alien space cathedral and spaceship landing
pad' built in the New Mexico desert for the 'return of followers after Armageddon on Earth'
Tunnels stretch for hundreds of feet into cliff behind unassuming facade and reportedly hold sacred texts
Mysterious pair of overlapping circles with a diamond inside believed to be navigation markers for space craft
Compound is 20 miles from nearest town and has a landing strip and its own water supply
Stay tuned for Part III of Space Brothers and the Cult of the UFO ...
Grimpachi
My friend wound up moving out of the country and he hasn't heard from his family since he left the cult. I have
heard plenty of stories about their creepy weirdness but keep in mind that those within Scientology are not made
aware of Xenu and all that crap until they bilk you of many hundred thousands of dollars and you have spent
many tens of years within the organization and have been repeatedly brainwashed.
Anyone interested on the real scoop about Scientology should check out this link: Mark Bunkers XENU TV
UNIT76
anon72
A blow to my UFO mind really. As I said, I have not gone down this side/path of UFO-Aliens.
SloAnPainful
-SAP-
Specimen
posted on Apr, 24 2014 @ 12:05 PM
link
And yet, E.t still don't give crap.
S&F.
TheToastmanCometh
I've heard the $cis started to move in to that area recently, most likely to prey on old people, but I try to stay my
distance.
Aleister
I'm not a fan of scientology, as I've said before. Too much emphasis on money and control. Hubbard's data from
his important decade, though, first class all the way. What he did basically is take eastern religion and yoga,
westernize the language, and come up with techniques to get-people-there fairly quickly. Not bad work from a
guy who was such a jerk a few years before (when he himself hadn't been "audited" enough to work on his own
stuff) to his friend Jack Parsons and others.
AutumnWitch657
Once you get on their mailing list you can paper your walls with the onslaught of material they keep sending.
Read this, sign up for that, spend money here, on and on for years. Not the way to make friends or influence
people, imnho.
AutumnWitch657
Phage
Jack Parsons (born Marvel Whiteside Parsons) was an American rocket engineer and chemist who worked for
NASA, was was instrumental in designing the solid rocket fuel that helped the U.S to get to the moon.
There were no solid fueled rockets in the Apollo program. He may have worked on solid fueled rockets but it
didn't have anything to do with getting to the Moon.
Now...back to scientology.
BASSPLYR
UNIT76
fwiw, i think this "unconfirmed" yet interesting material might be worth throwing into the mix at this point..
...take eastern religion and yoga, westernize the language, and come up with techniques to get-people-there
fairly quickly...
is more-or-less the mechanism being used in various other pickle factories across the world
i think what hubbard did with scientology was a logical extension of the groundwork laid down by people like
lovecraft (and like the hubbard/parsons link, i think there's an interesting smokescreen there with lovecraft &
some of his "friends")
as for all these pickle-factories across the world, trying to fill-in the gaps we call prehistory ..no matter how i
approach the subject it seems all roads just lead back to rome anyway
...oh, and all hail xenu
cuckooold
posted on Jun, 5 2014 @ 03:33 AM
link
A bit of news on a current lawsuit concerning Scientology:
www.courthousenews.com...