Freedom
of Speech ties noose around cult's neck: Scientology's
suicide
Recently, the
notorious Scientology company cobbled together yet another
attempt to defend their attacks against freedom of speech on the
Internet. This latest attempt has been motivated by the latest
exposures in the media of Scientology's baseless -- and very
often quite vague -- threats against both http://www.Google.COM/
and http://www.Archive.ORG/
This time the notorious company is trying to claim that the
Internet is responsible for murders of Scientologists and
further attempts to equate free speech and human rights
activists to Islamic terrorist mass murderers.
For rights
activists around the world, Scientology's endless claims and
bullying actions are nothing new and for the most part are
simply ignored outright. Scientology's actions are strongly
opposed by human rights activists and freedom of speech
activists around the world and activists have placed a wealth of
information about Scientology on the Internet consisting of
court transcripts, witness affidavits, and newspaper articles
covering child abuse, monetary frauds, periodic law enforcement
raids, and endless felony indictments. All of this information
shows -- to anyone who cares to bring up a search engine -- what
it is that Scientology actually stands for.
It is the truth
about Scientology that Scientology wants to put a stop to. The
company recognizes the Internet as the vehicle of its eventual
extermination. The overwhelming glut of information about the
company that's available on the Internet serves to inoculate
prospective business clients against purchasing any of
Scientology's bizarre products, and as revenues plummet, the
company gets ever more extreme in its efforts to squash all that
public information to keep prospective clients ignorant about
what they're buying.
In the past,
quite often when a media outlet published anything truthful
about Scientology, the company sued claiming libel. The
Washington Post, Reader's Digest, Time Magazine, and endless
other outlets were sued by legions of Scientology lawyers simply
for the audacity of exposing the truth.
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/time-cos.htm
Scientology has
never won any of their lawsuits yet -- according to a
once-secret in-house policy -- Scientology doesn't sue to win,
only to harass people into silence.
* http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Secrets/Fishman/Declaration/exhibg.html
* http://www.fairgamed.org/
Media outlets
that printed the truth about Scientology were -- and are --
protected simply because what they print is the truth
and, in all cases, even if something were incomplete or
inaccurate, there's no intention of malice. But because
Scientology needs to suppress and halt public discussion about
them, they use lawsuits alleging libel, copyright violations
(which they call "copyright terrorism,") and other
groundless claims to cause media outlets and individuals to
defend themselves, costing defendants tens of millions of
dollars to acquire the Judicial opinions that everyone --
defendants as well as the company -- knew were preordained.
Scientology's policy is that the purpose of a lawsuit isn't to
win but to harass and in the past that policy has cost magazine
and newspapers untold millions, and has driven at least one free
speech activist into exile.
* http://www.operatingthetan.net/
* http://www.keithhenson.org/
With the advent
of the Internet, much of that changed. Individuals who were
targeted, assaulted, harassed, and sued into oblivion by the
notorious company used to have to go down alone -- either
quietly without a squawk else screaming in vain to newspapers
who were too afraid to cover Scientology's abuse. In 1991,
however, ex-followers of the business cult created the
alt.religion.scientology newsgroup and victims started to
network among themselves. More: victims talked of what they saw
and did inside of Scientology, talking about what the
"secrets" were that Scientology sells to followers
only after many years of expensive indoctrination is purchased.
Many committed crimes on orders for the corporation and some
activists speak out to expose Scientology to try to make up for
their actions while they were customers.
* http://www.lermanet.com/
* http://www.torymagoo.org/
As the popularity
of alt.religion.scientology grew and more and more ex-customers,
newspaper and television reporters, law enforcement officers,
and even politicians started reading and participating in the
newsgroup, web sites covering the discussions and disclosures
started springing up all over the Internet. The ringing
Scientology heard in its ears was the death toll of
Scientology's secrecy and with it, Scientology knew, would go
its very existence. Few -- if any -- would purchase
Scientology's bizarre products knowing in advance what they were
buying and the Internet was telling anyone who bothered to bring
up a search engine what Scientology is really all about.
And that's an
important point: Scientology's owners didn't foresee what was
going to happen when the Internet became widely available to the
average citizen. As more and more verifiable facts about
Scientology and its core criminal basis were being reported on
more and more web sites, Scientology realized they had no web
sites of their own to try to spin and counter the truth. There
was a growing body of testable, verifiable evidence getting
reported on the network and none of it looked good for the
company. The company's eventual response was to launch a search
engine spamming effort that's called "cookie cutter spam
pages." Scientology created tens of thousands of
content-null web pages that are almost identical, changing only
the names of individuals they claimed are customers.
Each of these
tens of thousands of spam pages has claims that one can send
e-mail to individual Scientologists yet anyone who believes the
claims and tries to send e-mail winds up sending e-mail straight
to Scientology's owners.
* http://dannyvidislavsky.oursites.org/
* http://deanblehert.our-home.org/knowmore.htm
* http://paulceberano.oursites.org/myself.htm
* http://karina.our-home.org/myself.htm
The cookie-cutter
spam pages idea was quick, cheap, and simple... but it didn't
work: Search engines were equally as quick to recognize what the
company was doing and weighed their search results accordingly.
Scientology saw that search engines were still allowing people
to read the truth about their notorious company quickly with no
significant impediment.
Since they
couldn't spam flood search engines to make them useless to
people researching Scientology, they started going after
individual web site owners to try to remove the web sites
outright. They brought out their usual claims of libel,
copyright "terrorism," and even more stupidly, claims
of trademark violation. Any web site that had the name
"Scientology" in it were threatened and attacked.
(Even Cafe Express sites selling anti-Scientology T-shirts and
coffee cups were threatened and attacked by claims of trademark
infringement. The people at Cafe Express have always caved in to
these baseless threats.)
ISPs were flooded
with groundless -- and often vague -- complaints about web sites
(the frequency of these complaints being sent to endless
Internet hosts prompted the phenomena to be titled "Ava
Grams" in honor of one of the company more notorious
lawyers whose job it was to mail them. A parody RFC with a
well-known socket number was proposed to help automate
Scientology's endless fraudulent DMCA complaints.) Many ISPs who
knew about Scientology's history simply saw
"Scientology" at the top of the lawyer's letterhead
and capitulated in fear, pulling the web sites seemingly without
any qualms. ISPs that didn't know Scientology's history and then
bothered to check often discovered Scientology's "Fair
Game" and "Purpose of a lawsuit" written policies
on the very web sites they were ordered to remove thereby
simultaneously confirming that everything rights activists say
about the company is true while at the same time confirming the
validity of the fraudulent threat if they didn't capitulate to
the company's demands.
* http://www.fairgamed.org/
* http://crimjob.tripod.com/
Because
Scientology's bullying behavior was -- and continues to be --
widely exposed in the media, we end up observing what appears to
be a spiraling positive feedback loop, one that will eventually
destroy the notorious business yet which will likely take out a
lot of innocent people along with it: Scientology's criminal and
abusive actions result in web sites and media exposure. Routine
and some times massive public exposure drives the business's
revenues ever downward. Lost revenues cause the company's owners
to issue threats, demands, and ultimatums to its operators, the
gist of which is to some how stop the blood loss. Scientology's
operators assault freedom of speech on the Internet, in the
print media and elsewhere to try to put a stop to the exposures.
Their actions result in even more public exposures, criminal
indictments, and lost revenues.
It's a spiral
that Scientology can't break out of because the reason they
engage in the criminal and abusive behavior in the first place
is because they're "following the tech" -- written
policies that were cobbled together by the company's insane
founder L. Ron Hubbard when he was doped to the gills on illegal
drugs which muddled his mind to the point where his thought
processes closely resembled Jell-O pudding.
* http://www.cosvm.org/pinks.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/psycho.htm
* http://www.nots.org/fbiindex.htm
Since L. Ron
Hubbard was never wrong, and since L. Ron Hubbard said to always
attack, never defend, Scientology's owners are left having to
wallow in the rut Hubbard carved for them.
* http://www.xs4all.nl/~felipe/cos/translate.html
This brings us to
Scientology's latest series of lies where Scientology attempts
to side-step their defense of their anti-free speech actions by
attacking people who employ free speech. Let's pick through the
company's latest claims one by one, offering documents which
debunk them as we come to them.
Claims:
CHURCH OF
SCIENTOLOGY INTERNATIONAL STATEMENT
REGARDING COPYRIGHT INFRINGERS AND GOOGLE
Scientology likes
to claim that it's some how a religion however the company is
considered to be organized crime by numerous nations and by
endless court Judges around the world. In the United States Lt.
Ray Emmons of the Clearwater Police Department summarized
Scientology as organized crime.
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/cwfedmon.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hsd/cosfed2.htm
Certainly the
corporation's history shows it to be an organized criminal
enterprise which adopted the guise of religiosity to avoid
having to pay taxes on its ill-gotten gains. Scientology holds
the distinction of being the organization which engaged in the
single largest incident of domestic espionage against the United
States government in America's history, resulting in the
indictments of numerous ringleaders in what Scientology called
"Operation Snow White." Indeed many of the indicted
and "un-indicted co-conspirators" named in Snow White
are still running the criminal enterprise:
* http://www.cosvm.org/stipofev.htm
* http://www.raids.org/
* http://www.cosvm.org/
No government
agency in the United States "recognizes" Scientology
as a religion. The company likes to claim that the IRS some how
does yet the IRS isn't a government agency, and in any event the
IRS has the company fraudulently recognized as a tax-exempt
charity organization, not as a religion. Besides, the
United States government isn't Constitutionally allowed to
dictate what is a religion and what is not.
* http://www.xenu.net/archive/IRS/
A preponderance
of all available evidence is likely to yield the undeniable
opinion that Scientology is first and foremost organized crime,
certainly not some how a religion. Scientology could be
turned into something resembling a religion and that's already
been done: It's called "the Free Zone."
* http://www.fzint.org/
And, of course,
Scientology likes to claim that it's hatred of free speech is
some how motivated by going after copyright infringers. In fact
Scientology's hatred of free speech on the Internet is motivated
by the corporation's recognition that the Internet is killing
their company. Some of the most freakishly bizarre claims the
company has made over the past 10 years have included the notion
that free speech activists are some how "copyright
terrorists." Indeed, the company has started to claim that
the Islamic terrorist attacks in New York were some how caused
in part by Internet activists (the claims are hard to follow;
they attempt to link the New York terrorist attacks to human
rights and freedom of speech activists in
alt.religion.scientology using vague, disjointed rhetoric that
presumably makes sense to the profoundly insane.)
Claims:
Media
reports reflecting partisan opinions and incorrect
interpretations concerning Google's decision to remove links
to web pages containing copyright infringements have largely
obfuscated the real issues. Thus, we are providing this
clarification.
Note the use of
the logical fallacy known as "begging the question."
Here the company is claiming that some anti-Scientology web
sites contain copyrighted materials and that they some how
infringe upon said copyrights. The company doesn't mention any
specifics because they're lying. The entire Operation Clambake
web site was ordered removed by the company claiming that the
web site: contained copyright infringements, contained trademark
violations, incited hate speech, and incited violence against
Scientology's customers.
* http://www.xenu.net/
* http://www.chillingeffects.org/
Operation
Clambake has become the most widely known web site that
addresses Scientology's notorious activities, past and present.
It is the most linked anti-Scientology web site on the Internet
and is almost always the first web site result offered by Google
when people research the word "Scientology." It's no
wonder at all why Scientology has a pressing need to try to
remove Xenu.NET from the
network and from Google's search engine. If you check the web
site out, you'll find that none of Scientology's claims are even
remotely true.
Google caved in
to the company's threats and removed Xenu.NET
from their search results seemingly without even bothering to
check into the validity of the claims. (And who can blame them
given the overwhelming number of web pages that they would have
to examine every time they receive a complaint?) It wasn't until
free speech activists around the world wrote to Google that the
search engine operators investigated the web site, compared the
contents against Scientology's claims, and then reinstated Xenu.NET
because they found Scientology's claims were groundless.
Claims:
Scientology
churches have always supported the Internet.
No,
Scientologists who use the Internet are required to use a filter
that's been dubbed the "Scino Sitter" which keeps
customers from seeing anything remotely truthful about the
company.
* http://www.xenu.net/archive/events/censorship/
Additionally
endless Internet web sites cover Scientology's relentless
assault against the Internet in all its forms. Companies that
actually support the Internet don't ban their clients
from using it and they certainly don't try to remove newsgroups
from the Internet. In fact, "Scientology Vs. The
Internet" tells the whole story.
* http://www.skeptic.com/03.3.jl-jj-scientology.html
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/rmgroup.htm
Claims:
The Church
uses the Internet in its dissemination of the Scientology
religion to the people of the world.
Actually no, they
don't. The core products that the corporation sells has to do
with ways to scrape off invisible murdered space aliens that
Scientology calls "Body Thetans." These
"BTs," as the company calls them, are responsible for
all of humanity's woes, mental, emotional, and physical. It's
only after clients have subjected themselves to lengthy and
expensive "training routines" that they are eventually
informed that all the previous "training" and
"auditing" that they paid for was "not
really" the problem.
It takes
something like $160,000 or much higher before customers are
informed that the real reason they have problems is
because a Galactic Ruler named Xenu collected citizens of his
over populated galaxy, froze them, transported them to Teegeeack
(which is now called Earth) chained them to volcanoes, then blew
them to bits with fusion bombs. These invisible murdered aliens
attach themselves to people and cause most of -- if not all of
-- their problems.
None of the core
products sold to clients are covered by any of the web sites
that the Scientology company puts on the Internet. The reason is
obvious: Few -- if any -- would buy the company's products if
they knew what they were really buying before hand. Indeed, the
company used to deny outright that flying saucers, Xenu, BTs,
fusion bombs, and all the other drug-induced delusions L. Ron
Hubbard came up with were part of Scientology. It took numerous
media exposures before the corporation grudgingly started
admitting to what the rest of the world was reading and viewing
in the popular press about what Scientology really sells.
Not only does the
corporation not "use the Internet in its dissemination of
the Scientology 'religion'" to cover the core
aspects of what they sell, try telephoning up one of their
business offices out in the meat world and asking them about
Xenu, Body Thetans, "clusters," "thetan
hands," "wall of fire," "incidents 1 and
2..." Ask and you'll be told either that the person doesn't
know anything about what you're talking about else you'll be
told that these things are "not discussed until
parishioners are ready for it." Hubbard claimed that people
who found out about Xenu (which is described in the document
called "Operating Thetan 3" or "OT3") would
get pneumonia. Curiously, after media exposures of these core
products the company sells were exposed by the media, massive
epidemics of pneumonia remained mysteriously unreported.
Just a few years
ago if you had called you would have been told that Xenu was a
hoax -- or a "forgery" -- being passed around on the
Internet to make Scientology look like a ridiculous flying
saucer cult. Curiously, now that the truth about Xenu and all is
widely available all over the world thanks to the Internet,
Scientology still persists in not "using the
Internet in its dissemination of the Scientology religion."
They still haven't given up trying to stifle free speech,
seemingly clinging to the notion that some how Xenu, court
transcripts, once-secret in-house documents, and all the rest
will some how simply disappear from the public domain if they
just sue and threaten to sue everyone on the Internet who covers
what Scientology is really all about.
Claims:
The Church
has established a significant multimedia Internet presence
since its launch in 1996 of one of the largest and most
technically advanced web sites. Our sites comprise more than
140,000 individual pages of material and include virtual tours
of our major churches, images, multimedia files, and text.
Actually almost
all are "cookie cutter spam pages." Of the few that
are not, just try finding testable, verifiable facts rather than
unevidenced claims. In many cases the notorious corporation
doesn't even admit that they own and run web sites; the company
is so notorious that they have to employ what they call
"Suitable Guises" to hide their true identity behind.
* http://www.cosvm.org/guise.htm
* http://www.lisamcpherson.org/sp_times_4-20-01_brick_bad.htm
Claims:
Unless
certain rules are applied on the Internet, our desired global
freedom to communicate and exchange information will be
corrupted by cyber-terrorism that often masquerades as
free-speech activism.
There you have
it: The dissemination of factual, truthful, and verifiable
information about Scientology and its criminal basis is some how
"cyber terrorism." Lately the company has been trying
to jump on to the terrorism bandwagon, claiming that peaceful
pickets and protests against Scientology's homicides and abuses
is some how "terrorism." Some how http://www.xenu.net/
is "cyber terrorism" to the Scientology company. Bring
up Xenu.net and check it out:
do you see anything that can even remotely be considered
"terrorism" on the web site? Then ask yourself what
the probable sanity is of the individual within the Scientology
company that came up with the bizarre notion.
To be fair,
Scientology isn't the only unscrupulous business out there in
the real world trying to make money off of the terrorist attacks
in New York, and trying to advance their money-driven agenda off
of the threat of terrorism. Scientology is just one of -- if not
the most -- disgusting businesses to so do. Scientology tried to
deliberately disrupt relief efforts in the aftermath of the
terrorist attacks in New York, facts of which were uncovered in
intercepted mailing list e-mails that are widely available on
the Internet.
* http://www.cosvm.org/disrupt.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/disruptc.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/disruptd.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/disrupt8.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/disrupt7.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/disrupt.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/disruptc.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/disruptd.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/magoovm.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/disrupt8.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/disrupt7.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/telavcr.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/jimmail1.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/mjonesad.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/looters.htm
Much of the
embarrassing information available on the Internet has been
seized in Federal raids or -- like the deliberate disruption
attempts in New York -- were intercepted by human rights
activists. Most of the times the corporation claims it's
copyrighted to try to remove it from the public domain yet when
they do so, they're confirming for the media the validity of the
damaging materials. So Scientology is left with no choice but to
claim the information is forgeries or a hoax.
One such document
recently was claimed to be a forgery in front of a judge. It's a
"training routine" which trains Scientologists to lie.
* http://www.holysmoke.org/cos/latey.htm
And there's also
"Operating Thetan level 8" or "OT8" which
the company also claims is a forgery even after they raided and
sued an ex-customer claiming copyright violations for having it.
OT8 is extremely embarrassing because it's anti-Christian. It's
possibly a forgery or some kind of hoax but that doesn't explain
why the company at one time claimed it belonged to them.
Regardless, OT8 looks just as crazy, using the same insane
rhetoric L. Ron Hubbard was well known for, that there's a good
change that it is close to the version of OT8 Scientology
eventually sells to its customers.
Claims:
Thus,
limitless "tolerance" of abuse will inevitably bring
on overregulation if a few dishonest individuals are allowed
to flout the law and corrupt this communication medium for
everyone.
Looks like
Scientology, the Mormons, McDonnald's, Amway, State Farm, and
other businesses that have their criminal scams and frauds
exposed on the Internet are the only ones trying to "over
regulate" freedom of speech on the Internet. Record
companies and music makers are widely evidenced to be violated
by people trading music all over the Internet freely.
Scientology, Mormons, McDonnald's, Amway et al. are the ones
going after speech on the Internet; and it's always been
speech that exposes the crimes and abuses of these
businesses.
Claims:
In any
event, those who were victimized or saw their rights violated
will sooner or later rise to defend themselves and lawfully
restore their interests.
Scientology is
one to talk about the rights of others, huh? Not only did
Scientology try to remove newsgroups from the Internet that were
-- and are -- read by tens of thousands of people around the
world, but the organization maintains a series of prisons for
their clients that they call their "Rehabilitation Project
Force" or "RPF" for short. Here we have a
business that gets routinely picketed and protested around the
world for homicides and massive abuses of Scientologists and
non-Scientologists alike telling us that they're some how
victims of web sites that cover the truth about Scientology.
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/brainwas.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/brainwas.doc
The whole point
of civil rights activism, human rights activism, and
Constitutional rights activism is to put a stop to abuses being
conducted by governments, agencies, organizations, and
businesses like Scientology. Scientology's claims that activists
are against their own ideals is rather like vegetarians who eat
meat -- it's a contradiction in terms.
Claims:
Church
actions are confined to two circumstances:
1. Violations of the Church's intellectual property rights
Hardly. The
organization doesn't subscribe to what they call "wog
law" which, according to U. S. Title 17, includes
"Fair Use" doctrine which provides for the partial
replication and dissemination of otherwise copyrighted
materials. More: The notorious company doesn't recognize the
fact that all prongs of the Fair Use doctrine allow for the
non-commercial disclosure of otherwise copyrighted materials.
And for all that, Scientology doesn't recognize the fact that
court documents are in the Public Domain.
* http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html
The organization
threatens to sue any web site owner that uses the name
"Scientology" in it, claiming trademark violations.
The fact that anyone may use a trademark provided it is
non-commercial and is not done to deliberately confuse customers
is something that the Scientology company doesn't want to comply
with. On the Internet Scientology has lost domain name disputes.
* http://www.freezone.org/news/media/wipo.htm
In their infamous
attempt to remove the alt.religion.scientology newsgroup from
the Internet, the company claimed that they some how had the
right to cancel everyone's free speech rights because the name
of the newsgroup contained the trademarked name
"Scientology." Does that sound like they're
"protecting Church intellectual property rights?" The
newsgroup has ex-victims of the business participating in it,
covering what they went through while customers of the company.
The newsgroup also had free speech and human rights activists
finding out what Scientology is all about. More: The newsgroup
has newspaper reporters, television reporters, law enforcement
officers, and the odd politician reading the newsgroup.
The need to
suppress the free expression of what Scientology is really all
about culminated in the business "spam flooding" the
newsgroup with forgeries purporting to be from actual
participants but containing neo-Nazi text and then later random
words. This attack was dubbed "sporgery" and resulted
in at least a million sporgeries being injected into the
newsgroup to try to make the newsgroup unreadable.
The effort failed
for two reasons: automatic sporgery detecting software was
employed to automatically remove it even as it was being
injected, and a public and open news server was donated by one
of the good guys to provide a database free from sporgery. The
FBI also interviewed an activist who turned over a pile of
documentation three inches thick which gave names, dates, and
times of Scientologists who were caught using calling party ID
(CPID) and ANI logging at Internet Service Providers sites.
Years later, a
follower of Scientology escaped from the company -- quite
literally jumping on a jet airplane while being followed by
corporate leaders -- after 30 years of being with the company.
She reported what she knew of the sporgery attacks and her web
site contains her reports.
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/sporgart.htm
* http://www.torymagoo.org/
* http://www.skeptictank.org/scan.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/forge.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/sporge.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/compcrm1.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/sprgwng.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/trkmony.htm
Claims:
2. Hate
speech that advocates violence against the Church or its
members
Threatening
speech or expressions calculated to incite hate enjoy no
protection under the Constitution. Robust critical speech
should always be sheltered by the First Amendment, as long is
it does not trample the boundaries created by law and
jurisprudence in an effort to protect the people from improper
verbal abuse and its adverse consequences.
We always note
that the organization doesn't provide any testable references to
back up claims like these. Where is this mysterious hate speech
on the Internet? Where is anything on the Internet that
advocates violence against the notorious business? If the
corporation knows of any such hate speech that advocates
violence against Scientology's customers, why doesn't the
company inform their local police about it? Isn't it their civic
duty to report such things to the authorities?
And in fact one
can't find any web site or newsgroup where there's any hate
speech covering Scientology -- and certainly none that calls for
or advocates violence against Scientology customers. It's just
not done and it's not done for a reason: most web sites that
cover the company's abuses are created by human rights
activists, freedom of speech rights activists, and ex-customers
of the company. Their motivates are to help keep others from
being victimized, killed, swindled, or otherwise abused by the
company. Claiming that activists advocate hatred against victims
of Scientology is a logical contradiction; activists are out
there trying to help Scientologists learn what it is
they're actually buying, and trying to keep other prospective
customers from falling into the same trap.
In fact in the
entire history of Scientology's assaults against the Internet
there has only been one web site that contained an appeal to
violence against a Scientology business and that web site was
almost certainly posted by the Scientology organization itself
to try to use it to back up their unevidenced claim that there's
hate speech against their business on the Internet. The web site
was dubbed the "Dexter's Laboratory" web site and when
activists found out about it they flooded the "free web
pages" Internet Service Provider with numerous complaints
and the web site was taken down within days of its discovery.
[Note: No
references to "Dexter's Lab" can be located on the
net, nor in any archive. Copies that were pulled by activists
for evaluation to see if the identity of the individual who
posted it have all apparently been erased by activists since
none have kept a copy.]
After that
incident human rights and free speech rights activists started
to keep a vigilant eye open for any further attempts by the
Scientology organization to sneak such things back onto the
Internet -- whether Scientology posted Dexter's Laboratory or
not, activists make sure that any new attempt will be dealt with
likewise.
Obviously the
organization would like to pretend that the extensive coverage
of their criminal indictments, Xenu, bannings around the world,
and all the rest are some how "hate speech."
Scientology has a set of mock "laws" that they call
"high crimes" and among them are the "high
crimes" of mocking, ridiculing, or discussing the company
in "unfavorable light." The real world doesn't
subscribe to the company's mock "laws" and yet the
company sure does try very hard to make the real world comply
with them.
In any event,
Scientology, if you'll let us know where there's hate speech
advocating violence against your company anywhere on the
Internet, we'll take care of it for you, okay? Thanks in advance
for your cooperation.
And obviously the
claim that "Church actions are confined to two
circumstances" is an easily demonstrated lie. Scientology's
actions against free speech activists out in the meat world are
notorious.
When long-time
human rights activist Mr. Keith Henson was picketing and
protesting two homicides committed at the hands of Scientology,
the organization stalked, photographed, and harassed he and his
family for the audacity of pushing for criminal indictments in
the two homicides and for the audacity of pushing for criminal
investigations.
When the activist
exposed fragments of Scientology's quack medical frauds on the
Internet, the business sued him claiming that the evidence Mr.
Henson had included in an affidavit to a Judge was some how a
copyright infringement -- ignoring utterly Fair Use which allows
for the non-commercial dissemination, and ignoring the fact that
court documents are public record unless they've been sealed by
the courts.
* http://www.keithhenson.org/
* http://www.operatingthetan.net/
* http://www.bobminton.org/
Scientology isn't
a company with one of the higher body counts out there in the
real world (Union Carbide probably holds that record) yet it's
certainly the company with the most bizarre ways of killing its
customers. Scientology likes to claim that free speech and human
rights activists some how endanger its clients yet an
examination of Scientologist gruesom homicides find that it's
always been at the hands of fellow Scientologists.
* http://www.whyaretheydead.net/
* http://www.lisamcpherson.com/
* http://www.holysmoke.org/sm/stacy-moxon-meyer.htm
Claims:
Since the
founding of the first church of Scientology in 1954,
Scientology churches around the world have consistently
championed all forms of freedom.
Of course not.
Scientology's history has been one of totalitarian control over
its customers, assaults upon governments, law enforcement
agencies, regulatory agencies, newspaper reporters, and anyone
else who exercises their rights. Scientology's history was
covered in the book "Bare-Faced Messiah" which details
the notorious business's nearly fascist control of its followers
at the hands of an insane megalomaniac -- L. Ron Hubbard.
* http://www.nots.org/
After the
publication of that book, the organization sued trying to stop
its dissemination. Ms. Paulette Cooper's book "The Scandal
of Scientology" resulted in the organization framing her
for making bomb threats to try to punish her for exercising her
rights of free speech. The evidence that Ms. Cooper had been
framed was retrieved by Federal agents when they systematically
raided Scientology business offices in the United States,
uncovering documents that described what Scientology called
"Operation Freakout PC."
* http://www.holysmoke.org/pc/pc.htm
Scientology's
claim to "championed all forms of freedom" is further
evidenced to be a lie when one looks at the business's use of
the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA.) Scientology was one of
the biggest advocate of passing the FOIA so that they could find
out what the FBI and other law enforcement and intelligence
agencies knew of the company's criminal activities. (Federal
agents knew quite a bit and also labeled L. Ron Hubbard insane:
"Appears mental" being scribed on one of the FBI's
internal documents.)
* http://www.nots.org/fbiindex.htm
Scientology also
wanted the passage of the FOIA so that they could try to confirm
the blatant lies of their mad messiah L. Ron Hubbard who claimed
he was some kind of Navy war hero despite all the available
evidence to the contrary.
* http://www.xs4all.nl/~kspaink/cos/warhero/
With the passage
of the FOIA, Scientology found out that the FBI did in fact have
all the goods on L. Ron Hubbard and the criminal enterprise he
created. Worse: Scientology retrieved Hubbard's Navy records
which utterly and profoundly contradicted everything the insane
messiah had ever told his followers about his Navy career.
In order to
"champion all forms of freedom" Scientology launched
an internal operation they called "Operation Snow
White" which sought to infiltrate and break into government
buildings so that damaging and embarrassing evidence could be
stolen or altered, and so that Scientology could insert positive
documents into agency files to try to make Hubbard and his
company look like it was a legitimate business rather than
organized crime run by a mental case.
* http://www.cosvm.org/stipofev.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/cosuics.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/germnw.htm
Claim:
This
includes being one of the first to expose the existence of
South African psychiatric slave-labor camps during the
apartheid era, and the atrocities committed on the people of
Bosnia-Herzegovina in the name of "ethnic
cleansing."
Scientology likes
to make a lot of claims about things that people have no way to
verify. Scientology was soundly exposed in Time Magazine's
"Scientology: The Thriving Cult of Greed" -- which got
Time sued by the company because everything Time exposed was
truthful. Scientology lost their lawsuit however they came out
with a "rebuttal" to the massive media exposure and
within that "rebuttal" Scientology claimed to have
helped to educate over a million African children.
A human rights
activist read that claim and decided it was one of the few
claims Scientology makes that could be verified. He wrote to an
African official and received confirmation that the company had
lied again. The African official stated that Scientology's claim
was "... just another fabrication."
* http://www.cosvm.org/africa.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/africa2.htm
Claims:
Scientology
churches were pioneers in the development of the U. S. Freedom
of Information Act and used that law to uncover secret U.S.
government chemical and biological warfare experiments that
had been perpetrated on the American people.
While it's true
that the Scientology company helped pass the FOIA, what the
company "forgot" to mention is that after the FOIA
passed and they retrieved L. Ron Hubbard's actual Navy war
record, they immediately labeled the documents forgeries. Since
they proved beyond any doubt that their mad messiah L. Ron
Hubbard was a pathological liar who couldn't keep his lies
straight, the company labeled the documents they received
"forgeries" and then cobbled together the claim that
the Navy must have given them some kind of "cover
story" since Hubbard was some kind of a secret agent.
As for
Scientology's claims to have "uncovered" secret
medical experiments being conducted against Americans by its
government, no, that's another lie. People who knew about these
actions -- which included the deliberate exposure of American
soldiers to differing dosages of radioactive elements -- wrote
books and told their stories to anyone who would listen.
Scientology wasn't unique in the fact that it acquired documents
confirming what was already being alleged out in the real world.
It's also
important to point out that Scientology's "Operation Snow
White" program -- which was never ended and by all apparent
indications is still going on strong today -- was successfully
stealing government documents. Blackmail and extortion were
among the most likely uses of such embarrassing documents
however it seems almost certain that Scientology had -- and
continues to have -- documents covering the government's abuses
of its citizens that the company can't make public otherwise
they would get raided and indicted again. The passage of the
FOIA allows Scientology to legally acquire copies of documents
they previously stole from the agencies and buildings they broke
into.
Claim:
The Church's
human rights journal, Freedom Magazine, has won numerous
awards for its journalistic integrity and its courageous work
in protecting the rights of minorities.
<laughing>
Scientology likes to give itself awards. What's not so funny is
the claims that Scientology some how protects the rights of
minorities. Scientology's mad messiah L. Ron Hubbard held some
ideals about Asians and Negroes that are widely reflected in the
actions of its current owners and operators. Hubbard complained
that China had too many "Chinks" in it and that they
"Smelled of all the baths they didn't take."
* http://www.spaink.net/cos/LRH-bio/chinamen.htm
* http://www-dot-lronhubbard-dot-org/eng/journal/page46.htm
Scientology so
"protects the rights of minorities" that they altered
L. Ron Hubbard's writings to remove Hubbard's racist remarks. If
you look at original versions of Hubbard's writings you'll find
out that Negroes "talk to hats" and that they don't
register on simple wheatstone bridges (that is, the Ohm meter
the company sells as an "e-meter") because they're too
unintelligent.
* http://www.cosvm.org/emeter.htm
Claim:
The Church's
own creed states that "all men have inalienable rights to
think freely, to talk freely, to write freely their own
opinions and to counter or utter or write upon the opinions of
others."
Which of course
only applies to customers in good standing. Which is why the
company imposes Internet censoring software to keep its
customers from reading anything remotely truthful about
Scientology.
If the business
really wanted its customers to think freely and for themselves,
they would welcome open and public discussions on all subjects,
not just Scientology. If Scientology was really interested in
free speech, why do they have the notorious history that they do
on and off of the Internet? Why do they have a lengthy and well-
deserved reputation for suing any newspaper or magazine which
publishes anything critical -- and factual -- about them?
Face it: If
Scientology adhered to this latest claim, they would be on the
Internet addressing each criticism point-for-point, knocking
back false allegations one by one, doing so easily because Trvth
is on their side. That they don't is obvious. That they can't
is equally obvious.
As bad as
Scientology's actions against free speech and freedom of thought
are outside of their company, it's worse for clients who are
still customers of the company. Scientology considers doubt
about the validity of what they sell to be a crime. Expressing
doubt about the effectiveness of Scientology's bizarre products
is a "high crime" in the company. Punishments are
meted out for thinking contrary to the dictates of "ethics
officers" and L. Ron Hubbard as described in the massively
altered documents Hubbard wrote that Scientology calls
"technology" and "bulletins."
Inside
Scientology, if someone expresses an opinion that's contrary to
L. Ron Hubbard's writings, her friends are required to write up
what Scientology calls a "Knowledge Report" or
"KR" for short. These "Knowledge Reports"
get filed in a number of places, one of which goes into the
paper files of the person being accused, another in the files of
the person informing on her friend, and others which may end up
in "case supervisor's" files or "ethics
officer's" files.
Punishment for
"wrong thinking" can range from minor to massive --
yet usually punishment always includes having to pay the company
yet more money to "clear" the "MU" -- or
"Misunderstood." Some of the minor punishments may
simply include having to pay for more endless
"training" courses which the individual may have
already paid for and have taken numerous times before. Some
punishments for "wrong thinking" take the form of
being assigned to the RPF (which has already been discussed.)
For lucky
individuals who resist attempts by the company to
"correct" their "wrong thinking," expulsion
from the company is their "punishment." If someone
gets thrown out of Scientology for the audacity of thinking for
themself, if they leave family members behind their loved ones
may be ordered to "disconnect" from the ex-customer
which means they must never speak with or exchange mail with
their loved ones ever again. Scientology breaks up families.
* http://www.cosvm.org/discon.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/family.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/family2.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/famly3.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/famly4.htm
Scientology
doesn't want people inside to think for themselves
because Scientology can't afford to have people --
customers or prospective customers -- think for themselves.
Scientology's written policy is to "duplicate" L. Ron
Hubbard and follow his "technology" exactly. To not do
so is something the company calls "squirreling" and
"squirreling" Hubbard's "tech" is another
High Crime that's punishable in a number of different ways.
If Scientology
really advocated that people have the right to think for
themselves, why do they refuse to inform prospective customers
about Xenu, Body Thetans, flying saucers, and all the other core
products that customers only find out about after they pay in
tens of thousands of dollars when it's too late to keep from
being swindled? If Scientology wasn't a bait-and-switch bunco
scam that doesn't inform prospective customers of what they're
going to have to purchase in the years to come, wouldn't they inform
them about "clusters," "magnetic ribbons,"
fusion bombs, and all that insane nonsense?
Claim:
In addition,
Scientologists honor free speech as a cherished Constitutional
right.
One wouldn't know
it by looking at their history. There might be a little bit of
truth in the suggestion that religions -- real religions,
not just criminal enterprises that adopt religious dressing to
avoid paying taxes -- have some kind of right to keep its
followers from speaking freely. Were Scientology actually a
religion, while it would be abhorrent to non-cultists, it might
be a valid suggestion that religious leaders have some kind of
right to keep followers in line. The Catholic church does it,
and so does the Mormon church, after all. Scientology must not
be excused for not allowing its customers to think and speak
freely. Worse: the company demands that others must not,
claiming that doing so is some how "hate speech that
advocates violence against Scientologists."
Claim:
But free
speech does not mean freedom to perpetrate a crime.
If Scientology
knows of any crimes being committed, shouldn't they report that
to their local police? Isn't it their civic duty to report their
discoveries of crimes to the authorities?
Instead the
organization tried to remove newsgroups that discuss the
criminal activities and internal workings of the notorious
company. Instead they file endless bogus DMCA complaints against
web site owners alleging copyright violations, trademark
infringements, hate speech that advocates violence against
Scientologists -- things that only Scientology's owners and
operators can see. Things like invisible "Body Thetan"
infestations, in fact.
Claims:
No matter
how disingenuously copyright violations are postured as an
exercise of "free speech," the unlawful use of
protected works was, is, and will continue to be a crime.
"Protected
works" are subject to Fair Use doctrine which specifically
allows for the partial or the complete replication of otherwise
copyrighted materials provided it's for non-commercial purposes
and is used in commentary or otherwise to expose or make a
point.
One may not point
at court documents which contain damaging evidence and then
demand that the public documents must not be part of the public
record because they're some how copyrighted. If we were to allow
any criminal organization the right to claim that evidence is
some how copyrighted and as such can't be entered into the
public record, we'll have financial records being copyrighted by
every criminal organization out there. Scientology wouldn't be
the only criminal enterprise to advocate such an absurd notion.
Claims:
If an
individual walked into a book store and took away and sold
volumes of an author's writings, or simply gave them away as
part of a super-communist phantasm designed for a
shared-and-equal-wealth Utopia, would any rational person
defend this act of theft as "free speech"? Of course
not. They would call the police.
And of course
nobody's doing that, on or off of the Internet. What is
allowed is that people may extract either whole or in part the
otherwise copyrighted works of others and disseminate them
freely according to Fair Use doctrine. Here the company is
trying to claim that somewhere on the Internet someone is
selling or giving away the company's expensive products.
The truth of the
matter is that the company has sued people for reproducing just
six lines of text; text that exposed the company's Xenu
bait-and-switch scam; text that was posted by free speech
activists who have been thorns in the side of the company for
many years; text posted by activists who have picketed and
protested against Scientology's homicides and other human rights
abuses.
The company also
tries to label human rights and free speech rights activists as
holding some other extreme ideologies -- people working toward
"a shared-and-equal-wealth Utopia." What motivates
activists is putting an end to Scientology's abuses; abuses
against not only innocent people out in the real world, but also
abuses that the company heaps upon its own hapless followers.
How so easily the company could simply dismiss free speech and
human rights activists were they actually motivated by some
lower ideal.
Claim:
The Digital
Millennium Copyright Act provides a mechanism that helps this
coexistence to be peaceful.
Actually, the
DMCA is universally recognized as very bad law. The first
massive media exposure of this bad law was -- you guessed it --
when Scientology was the first recorded company to abuse it. The
DMCA was first used when Scientology filed a bogus DMCA
complaint about one of their most hated enemies -- an anonymous
individual that went by the name "Mr. Safe." Mr. Safe
was a fellow Scientologist who was on the Internet publicly
exposing and discussing the company's altering of what is
supposed to be L. Ron Hubbard's inviolate
"technology." Mr. Safe had been exposing Scientology's
"squirreling" for a number of years yet they had been
unable to learn his identity so that they could silence him.
With the passage
of the now-infamous DMCA, Scientology was able to force AT&T
to divulge the identity of the Scientologist. It is somewhat
ironic that the Scientology company filed its bogus DMCA
complaint when Mr. Safe posted a copy of Scientology's
"Enemies List" which consists of hundreds of
individual's names, churches, and organizations that the
Scientology company calls its enemies. The act served to confirm
that the criminal enterprise maintains an "enemy list"
-- something they had previously denied ever since they started
trying to pretend they're some how a religion.
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/bsafefid.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/dchat1.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/dchat2.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/dchat3.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/handbill.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/fzcos1.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/safe12o9.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/safefrth.htm
AT&T handed
over the identity of their customer without blinking, not caring
one bit that they were putting the life of their customer at
risk. The day after AT&T handed the Scientologist over to
the company, Mr. Safe disappeared and hasn't been seen in public
since.
There was no
counter notification, no copyright violation (the "enemies
list" contained no copyright notice and had been disavowed
previously) and no adherence to the dictates of the DMCA. The
DMCA was used solely to acquire the identity of the
Scientologist so that Scientology could silence him -- which
they did.
Claims:
In a
landmark lawsuit brought by two Scientology-affiliated
organizations,
Translation:
Brought by Scientology. Scientology employs what they call
"suitable guises" and they adopt and discard names and
fake fronts as needed due to the notorious reputation of the
company. When Scientology informs people up front about who they
are, they meet with stiff opposition because most people, it
seems, know something about Scientology whether it's a vague
"didn't they kill that girl in Florida?" or a strong
"yes, we know all about Scientology." To combat their
own notorious reputation, Scientology creates "suitable
guises" and endless fake fronts to try to hide their
identity behind.
* http://www.cosvm.org/guise.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/cchr.htm
* http://www.cosvm.org/cchr3.htm
* http://xenutv.bogie.nl/trust/jeff-brick.htm
* http://www.lisamcpherson.org/sp_times_4-20-01_brick_bad.htm
* http://www.slatkinfraud.com/slaughter.php
Claim:
the US
District Court for the Northern District of California agreed
with their contention that ISPs may be liable for contributory
copyright infringement once they are made aware that
infringements are maintained on their systems. The judge's
ruling resulted in a notice-and-takedown procedure to remedy
copyright infringements.
What Scientology
"forgot" to mention is the racketeering activities
that took place during this kangaroo court "justice"
where money is what decided the case. In one of Scientology's
more freakish operations conducted against people who the
company perceives to be its enemies, a Scientology operative
spread blood all over one of the defendant's hotel room. The
"miss bloody butt" incident has never made it into the
popular press but that's understandable: what Scientology does
some times is so bizarre that credulity is stretched beyond the
breaking point.
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/mbb.htm
* http://www.cli.org/sysopl/Netcom.html
Scientology sued
innocent people to try to stifle other's free speech when said
others made public court documents; public documents that could
be acquired by anyone visiting a documents division of the
Department of Justice in Los Angeles, California. Now the
company wants to claim responsibility for getting the
notoriously bad DMCA law enacted. Well, okay, if they want to
take credit for another abuse of people's free speech, okay.
Claim:
This
notice-and-takedown procedure became an important aspect of
the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. It provides the
copyright owner with a remedy and absolves ISPs from
responsibility for content and liability if they remove
infringing materials, while depriving the violator of the
means to perpetrate his unlawful activity. The DMCA has thus
brought order to one area of the Internet that was in utter
turmoil prior to the Act.
It also allows
criminal enterprises who hate free speech to file bogus
complaints against their perceived enemies to learn their
identities so that they can be silenced. It also turns American
law on its ear, making people presumed guilty before a Judge
ever hears about it. It allows any notorious company -- not just
Scientology -- to point at anything on the Internet, claim it's
some how copyrighted, and get that information immediately
pulled from the Internet without the company being held liable
for the filing of their bogus complaints. It relieves ISPs of
liability at the cost of turning ISPs into Internet cops. More:
The DMCA is un-enforceable since the Internet is a world-wide
community, much of which recognizes the DMCA as the extremely
bad law that it is.
The DMCA could
conceivably be salvaged were lawmakers to add some provisions
for criminal and financial sanctions against companies who file
fraudulent and groundless complaints. Since Scientology doesn't
allow Fair Use doctrine, their endless bogus DMCA complaints
would result in the company being repeatedly punished until,
quite probably, a Judge issued an injunction against them or a
Judge recalled the bad law.
Claims:
In March
2002, acting according to the provisions of the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act, the Church asked Google to remove
their links to certain specific copyright infringements.
No they didn't.
The facts of the matter can be checked out on the Chilling
Effects web site simply by looking at the bogus DMCA complaints
that Scientology sent to Google. The company had issued their
usual claims of copyright violations, trademark infringements,
and hate speech fomenting violence and they listed web pages
that did no such thing -- including the main web page.
* http://www.chillingeffects.org/
* http://www.xenu.net/
Claims:
Google
responded by eliminating the links. These actions on both
sides were routine and carried out pursuant to the DMCA.
Except that
Google -- like many ISPs -- apparently didn't bother checking
into the allegations before doing so. It's suspected that all
Google saw was that the well known -- and extremely notorious --
Scientology company had sent them one of their equally notorious
threatening letters causing them to capitulate immediately to
their demands apparently without even a cursory examination to
see if Scientology's latest claims were true.
Claims:
However,
this time the often unpredictable currents of the Internet
pushed Google out of the routine and into a storm of protest.
Taken aback by this reaction, Google rapidly moved to put the
Church's cease and desist letters up on a public website. If
the intent of this action was to appear "politically
correct" or to chill the Church's dedication to defend
the copyrighted works of the Scientology religion, no adverse
affect has been created.
No, what actually
happened was that free speech activists from around the world
found out about the attempts to stop Operation Clambake's
freedom of speech so they flooded Google with timely,
accurate, and verifiable documentation covering Scientology's
well known history of lies and abuses both on the Internet as
well as off. In addition a special envoy of free speech
advocates scheduled a meeting with the Google people to discuss
Scientology and its war against the Internet.
Google took a
close look at Scientology's bogus DMCA complaints and without
doubt they took a look at every web page on Operation Clambake
that Scientology claimed was some how in violation of
copyrights. Google saw that Scientology's claims of trademark
violations weren't even covered by the bad DMCA laws. Google
also found that there were web pages that the company claimed
held copyrighted materials -- such as the main web page -- that
damn well obviously didn't. On a few of the web pages there were
-- and are -- text that covers L. Ron Hubbard's drug-induced
writings covering his flying saucer hallucinations -- something
Hubbard called "very space opera." These constituted
Fair Use doctrine and have been reproduced and discussed in
countless magazine articles, newspaper exposures, and even on
television documentaries covering the company.
After Google did
their homework, they reinstated their links to the web site and
to the cached web pages, and they forwarded to the Chilling
Effects organization copies of the bogus DMCA complaints --
presumably to show the world only only just how faulty the DMCA
is, but also to add further to the growing body of evidence that
shows what Scientology is really all about.
Claims:
In fact, the
Church views it favorably that anyone who is interested can
see the letters for themselves, uninfluenced by the hysterical
rhetoric that was used by some media to mischaracterize their
content and import.
Yeah. It's a
wonder that the company didn't immediately sue Google for
copyright violations, claiming that their DMCA complaints were
some how copyrighted and that by sending them to Chilling
Effects, Google was violating their copyrights. It probably
irritates the living shit out of the company to see some of
their bogus DMCA complaints getting wide public dissemination.
Now the
organization is aware of the fact that there's a central
depository for their endless complaints that are readily
viewable by the rest of the world. Will that curb their abuse of
the bad DMCA laws? <laughing> If you think it will, the
Scientology organization also has a Bridge to Total Freedom they
would love to sell to you.
Since the
organization doesn't mind having their bogus DMCA complaints
being made public in yet another massive media exposure, do them
a favor and go check them out for yourself. They claim they
don't mind, after all.
Claims:
We are
scarcely alone in utilizing the DMCA to protect our
intellectual properties.
The logic fallacy
known as "begging the question." Where, exactly are
any of their "intellectual properties" on Operation
Clambake's web site? There's a great deal of court documents
covering Scientology's felony indictments, affidavits from
eyewitnesses about Scientology's crimes and abuses, accounts of
Scientology child abuse, assaults against free speech, and a
bewildering variety of other information covering Scientology on
the Operation Clambake web site, but where are these
mysteriously invisible "intellectual properties?" Why
did they feel the need to lie, claim trademark violations, and
talk about "hate speech" that "advocates violence
against Scientologists" in their endless complaints if in
fact there's valid "intellectual properties" they're
trying to "protect?"
Interestingly
enough, there are copies of Scientology's once-secret
in-house documents that are widely available on the Internet
which might conceivably still be considered "intellectual
properties" of this bizarre company. Even ignoring the
Fishman Affidavit which was made widely public and which was
apparently later sealed, one can find probably all of the
once-secret documents on the Internet thanks not only to the
Internet, but also thanks to courts and Judges all over the
world who have made documents seized by law enforcement agencies
part of the public record.
* http://sf.irk.ru/www/ot3/otiii-gif.html
Conceivably these
once-secret texts might be considered to be "intellectual
property" yet the cat's out of the bag. Not only is this
information widely available all over the world thanks to a
number of factors already mentioned, but much of it covers quack
medical fraud, written policies that call for criminal actions
against individuals, Judges, police officers, government agents,
and entire governments.
* http://www.xenu.net/archive/go/
It's important to
point ot that Scientology's "Guardian Office" was
later renamed to the "Office of Special Affairs" and
that many of the criminals who were indicted and un-indicted are
still running things. The GO/OSA is also known as
"Department 20" which continues its criminal
activities virtually unabated by all external indications.
Anyway, the
Scientology company is trying to claim that it's some how the
same as a record industry that works to keep people from making
copies of their music. Isn't Scientology supposed to be a
religion? They like to claim it is and yet they try to claim
they're a company that's the equal to the music industry.
As an aside, the
music industry often has a "try before you buy" policy
and, of course, the music that they sell is offered on the radio
and on MTV for free. Music companies also have free giveaways of
their company's products for advertising and other reasons.
Music companies don't sell music with covers claiming they're
from Metalica but -- when the customer gets it home and opens
them -- turns out to actually contain Barry Manilow.
Contrast that
against what the Scientology company does. Not only does
Scientology not inform prospective customers what they're buying
-- Body Thetans and all that other bait-and-switch claptrap --
but everything they sell is sold for money. There's no giveaways
in the Scientology company.
The music
industry also doesn't break into government buildings and steal
or alter documents -- at least not to degree that Scientology
did -- and still appears to do.
* http://www.cosvm.org/stipofev.htm
Scientology is
utterly unlike any other company one could care to point at.
Scientology is certainly unlike any real religion one could care
to point at. Scientology does, however, closely resemble
organized crime and it is the coverage of Scientology's history
and its current activities is by all external indications what
the company seems to want removed from the Internet. Amusingly
Scientology's activities committed in pursuit of this agenda
serve merely to confirm and verify the public record that the
company tries to suppress.
Claims:
Considering
that hundreds of cease and desist letters are generated by
copyright owners every day, it is oddly disproportionate that
so much attention has been focused on the handful sent out by
Scientology churches.
Presumably it's a
conspiracy. But in fact it's because other companies actually
file valid complaints that are also specific rather than vague;
complaints that actually cover copyright violations, don't hold
bizarre rants about trademarks, hate speech, and violence. Valid
DMCA complaints may eventually be submitted and carried on the
Chilling Effects web site yet that seems unlikely since valid
DMCA complaints are of little to no interest to free speech
advocates and human rights activists.
There's not a
little irony in the fact that Scientology points out that its
own actions almost stand alone as being abusive. While
Scientology would like to pretend it's some how being picked
upon, visit the Chilling Effects web site and take a look at the
other companies that file abusive complaints using the notorious
DMCA laws and see if Scientology is in good company.
Claims:
V. FREE
SPEECH VS. HATE SPEECH
It has long been an established legal principle that open
incitement to violence against another is not protected by the
First Amendment, neither on nor off the Internet.
And yet
Scientology can't point to a single web site which advocates
violence -- or which contains "hate speech" -- against
their company anywhere on the Internet. Nor can the company
point to any of the message postings in the
alt.religion.scientology newsgroup which supports their claims.
Particularly the notorious company can't point to a single web
page on any of the web sites that they lied to about to either
Google or to Wayback which contained a single comment advocating
violence.
What all of the
web sites that Scientology files bogus complaints about contains
is factual, testable, verifiable
documentation covering Scientology's criminal history and
covering its abuses of the courts today. Particular focus on
many web sites is the horrid anti-Human Rights conditions that
Scientology customers are subjected to by this company's owners
and operators.
Free speech
includes consumer advocacy, expression of ideologies advocating
free thought, civil rights, human rights, Constitutional rights,
and public exposures of organizations that hold such things in
utter contempt. Honest citizens of the world consider such
ideals to be positive ideologies which serve to protect the
health and safety of honest citizens. Scientology considers such
ideals to be hate speech which advocates violence. The fact that
human rights activists do what they do for Scientology's
victims is completely relevant to what motivates Scientology's
claims.
Claims:
If an
individual shouted from his rooftop that he was going to throw
a bomb through his neighbor's window, no one would accuse the
intended victim of attempting to stifle free speech when he
called the police.
And yet nobody
has ever advocated such actions on the Internet, not on any of
the web sites that Scientology attacks, not on any of the
newsgroups where Scientology is exposed.
Claims:
Hate speech
is also a factor that often motivates the Church in its
actions. Unfortunately it usually remains unreported by media,
thus depriving the public of the full picture.
And in fact
nobody in the media can ever find any claimed hate speech or
advocacy of violence. If Scientology's owners would point out
where these alleged hate speech web sites are, or where the
alleged violence-advocating web sites are, I'm sure the media
would love to carry such news.
But in actual
fact the media understands Scientology. Reporters are told in
school that when they interview someone, or when they work to
get a story, the people they interact with are going to see them
-- the reporter -- as a resource for disseminating their own --
the people they interview -- agendas. The media looks at the
Scientology company's history and its claims, notes that the
owners and operators exhibit a pathological inability to tell
the truth even when honesty would serve, and either discount the
claims else pass some of them along without comment.
In many media
newspaper reports one can find unadulterated Scientology claims
that gets passed through without comment because the reporter
feels they should allow the company to express their twisted
version of the story -- knowing that their readers will compare
Scientology's claims against the rest of the story and see which
version is backed up by evidence.
When someone
makes claims about hate speech and violence, however, reporters
want specifics, not vague, unevidenced claims. Reporters who
want to be responsible don't reprint irresponsible claims. That
is why the media focuses on Scientology's hatred of free speech
and doesn't decide to pass along Scientology's more bizarre
conspiracy theories involving hate speech, violence, mind
control, Marcabian invasions, and some of the other nutty claims
they make.
Claims:
It has been
necessary to take legal action on several occasions due to
threats and actual violence against our churches. Hate speech
and extremist propaganda on the Internet have repeatedly
driven unstable individuals to commit felonious acts against
Church members and Church property, as in these examples:
What Scientology
doesn't tell you is that all acts of violence ever conducted
against Scientologists have always been at the hands of fellow
Scientologists. On the rare occasions where human rights or
freedom of speech rights activists have been physically
assaulted by Scientologists and defended themselves, the courts
have looked at the videotapes and have always ruled in
favor of the activist.
The company
doesn't seem to care that people catch their assaults on free
speech and human rights activists, in fact.
In the
"vicious" Word document referenced below, Scientology
sent out one of their business operators to assault Mr. Robert
Minton, not caring that there were two video cameras recording
the assault. In fact in Clearwater, Florida it's difficult to
get the police to do anything about Scientology's violence
against activists. You can see this in the Scientologist hammer
assault against video journalist Mark Bunker referenced below.
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/vicious.doc
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/mbunke11.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/mbunke12.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/mbunke13.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/mbunke15.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/mbunke16.htm
* http://www.skeptictank.org/hs/mbunke17.htm
* http://www.bobminton.org/
Horribly, when
human rights activists were holding a memorial service for Lisa
McPherson (a Scientologist that was murdered by Scientology
because she was talking to her friends and family about
escaping) Scientology blew out the memorial candles in a
re-enactment of what they did to Lisa's life. What makes it
relevant to the history of assaults against activists is that
these incidents of behavior from Scientology's customers and
owners reflect the mind set that clients slowly adopt the longer
they subject themselves to Scientology's debilitative
"training routines."
It's no mystery
why Scientology has a long history of assaults against human
rights activists. It's an artifact of the mind-warping
"processing" that L. Ron Hubbard came up with while
heavily doped to the gills. Doctor Carl Sagan -- planetologist
and popularizer of modern science -- once said that L. Ron
Hubbard had managed to come up with written procedures for
driving people insane.
Take a look at
some of the incidents the company claims some how justifies
their assault on the Internet. Every one of their claims are
either so vague as to be un-verifiable, else it's about fellow
Scientologists attacking Scientologists. This last is rather
telling since if you look at Scientology homicides, they're
always committed at the hands of fellow Scientologists. (That
summation includes the numerous "suicides" and
freakish homicides that have taken place inside of Scientology's
Fort Harrison Hotel in Clearwater, Florida. Indeed, the number
of homicides Scientology has committed in that building has
resulted in activists calling it the "Fort Homicide
Hotel." Scientology "training routines" are so
debilitative to the mental health of its clients that suicides
and killings should be expected to result.)
* http://www.lisamcpherson.org/
* http://www.whyaretheydead.net/
Claims:
o A
Scientology Church was fire-bombed twice with a dozen molotov
cocktails doing extensive damage to the front of the church.
Here's a vague
claim that activists have been trying to pin down for a number
of years now. No police report seems to have been filed on
this... at least nobody can find any specifics about this claim
to substanciate it. If this actually happened, why won't
Scientology tell us specifics? The answer should be obvious: it
most likely never happened or, if it did, it was done by a
Scientologist who was trying to violently exact revenge against
the company for being swindled and defrauded for many years
before Scientology's debilitative "training routines"
and "courses" made him snap.
* http://www.cosvm.org/oobe.htm
* http://www.linkline.com/personal/frice/bugger.htm
When these
incidents are reported in the news, gallows humor among
activists often remark, "Another satisfied customer."
It may be an unkind remark yet it has always -- without
exception -- been proven to be an accurate unkind remark.
In any event even
if this actually did take place, why does the Scientology
company claim it's justified in attacking free speech on the
Internet?
It's also
probably relevant that Scientology seems to have mysterious
fires whenever the rent and the bills for one of their offices
is long past due.
* http://www.ami.com.au/~bradw/cos/Lisa/fires.htm
Or maybe
Scientology's history of having fires when the bills are due
aren't quite so mysterious after all. (The web page referenced
above is somewhat out of date since Scientology has held at
least two new fires since September of 1999, to my
recollection.)
Claim:
o A staff
member was stalked and shot at.
Why was there no
police report filed? If this actually happened, wouldn't
Scientology provide specifics to back up their allegations? And
wouldn't the media carry a story about this incident? Of course
Scientology's owners might like to claim there's a massive
world-wide conspiracy at work to keep such incidents out of the
news, but if that's their explanation, why didn't they offer it?
Claims:
o A crazed
gunman went into a church and shot a pregnant staff member
whose unborn child suffered fatal birth defects and later
died. The woman is now paralyzed. He then set fire to the
building and took another female staff member hostage.
These is one of
the longer running Scientology lies. In fact this was an
incident that took place in Oregon where a Scientologist
came in to a Scientology business and started shooting the place
up and setting things on fire. "Another satisfied
customer." Why didn't Scientology mention the fact that
this act -- and all other acts of violence against
Scientologists -- is committed by fellow Scientologists?
Not only was the
shooter a fellow Scientologist but the baby in question didn't
die and was reported in the news as having been delivered just
fine with no complications at all. The woman who was shot lost
the use of her legs yet horribly she's being used by the company
to market the company's public relations lies about how they're
some how a "church" that's subject to violent assaults
by "anti-religious" nut cases. And yet the company
consistently "forgets" to mention the fact that the
nut case in question was yet aother Scientologist who snapped
due to Scientology "processing."
* http://www.cosvm.org/oregon.htm
Scientology
owners and operators have uttered these lies under oath in
United States courts with no compunction against perjury. It's
not as if they didn't know that they were lying, that the
shooter was a Scientologist and that the baby didn't die, it's
that Scientology doesn't care about the truth of the
matter. They get away with lying under oath or -- if not sworn
in -- lying to the Judge about it.
What Scientology
lacks is real incidents of violence against its customers
by non-Scientologists. What Scientology lacks is real
murders of Scientologists by non-Scientologists. Because there
are none, Scientology makes up these stories building on actual
incidents committed at the hands of fellow Scientologists. And
because these "shore stories," as Scientology calls
them, become part of the pathology of the company's public
relations mythology, ringleaders even |