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Never released to the general public before, this is the training manual for Scientology's para-military / para- administrative arm, called "Sea Org". Warning: much of it is unintelligible Hubbardian babble salad psychological breakdown aids. Boilerplate & Contents: To the student This course pack contains all of the written issues of the Welcome to the Sea OrgCourse. Your new course pack includes such features as:
This pack has been produced with the aim of making your study as rapid and free from distraction as possible. Good luck in your training! The Editors Contents: KEEPING SCIENTOLOGY WORKING
WELCOME TO THE SEA ORG TAPES
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| The first celebrity to leave Scientology Jason has a long list of acting credits in film and TV and has done extensive voice-over work through the years. His talents were also used in countless Scientology PR and training videos, including a recruitment video for Scientology's Sea Org. He is the first celebrity to leave Scientology and publicly discuss his involvement and then disillusionment with the group. He made it to OT V on Scientology?s ? Bridge to Total Freedom? and discovered the best way to get free was to get up and walk out the door. Jason Beghe/USA: Scientology's First Celebrity Defector Reveals Church Secrets (villagevoice.com - April 15th, 2008) Television Star Exits Scientology (foxnews.com - April 15, 2008) Video: Today Tonight Australia reports on Greg Beghe speaking out about the cult of scientology after leaving (foxnews.com - April 15, 2008) Jason Beghe rechnet mit Scientology ab (spiegel.de/ - 18. April 2008) Video: Jason Beghe on Scientology: The Full Interview (XENUTV - 21 avril 08) English Actor Jason Beghe: Scientology Is 'Brainwashing' (foxnews.com - April 16, 2008) Actor Jason Beghe:"Das Ziel von Scientology ist "eine gehirngewaschene, roboterartige Version von Ihnen" zu schaffen" (foxnews.com - April 16, 2008) Deutsch |
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Made in September 1967. The tape runs approximately 40 minutes, in which Hubbard talks about various subjects, including the Sea Org and an alleged conspiracy against Scientology, orchestrated by a secret society of about a dozen men who controls all mental health groups in the world. He talks about how Scientology, however, has sent in agents against these people. Hubbard also talks about having made a breakthrough, discovering things that "were the demise for this civilisation". He says this information is "carefully arranged to kill anyone if he discovers the exact truth of it" and that he got injured and "almost lost this body" obtaining the material. He doesn't give much details about what the information is "because it's very likely to make you sick too". What he is talking about is the story about Xenu. "Ron's Journal 36" was made in 1982 and is a short Christmas greeting to all scientologists and a pep talk from Hubbard, although some people speculate the person on the tape may not be Hubbard but a soundalike, since Hubbard lived in hiding at this time. The quality of RJ67 is pretty good. RJ36 is so-so with some background noises.
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Scientology's Secret War Against Psychiatryby Chris Owen
What is the overall goal of Scientology? To "clear the planet", right? Wrong; for it turns out that L. Ron Hubbard secretly abandoned this goal in 1969, in a secret minute which he sent to his wife Mary Sue, Controller of the Guardian's Office (GO). The document in question was one of the tens of thousands released by the US Government following the criminal conviction of Mary Sue Hubbard and her GO colleagues in 1979. We've all seen examples of how obsessively paranoid Hubbard was about psychiatry, a trait very much institutionalised by Scientology. In Ron's Journal '67 (RJ67), a tape which is still required listening for Scientologists, he declares:
He had already tried to play an active part in bringing down psychiatry. In 1966 he issued a confidential directive, "Project Psychiatry" (SECED 61 WW of 22 February 1966), which is almost certainly still in force — as well as being a study item for GO recruits, it is listed as one of the items on the President CSI Full Hat Checksheet completed by Scientology President Heber Jentszch in 1988. Hubbard declares, without any noticeable sense of irony or, for that matter, any awareness of grammar:
(Replace "psychiatrist" with "Scientologist" here and this passage takes on an interesting new meaning! It is also ironic, not to say hypocritical, that in Introduction to Scientology Ethics, Hubbard should write: "As the society runs, prospers and lives solely through the efforts of social personalities, one must know them as they, not the anti-social, are the worthwhile people. These are the people who must have rights and freedom." Anyone who criticises Scientology is, by definition, an "antisocial personality" and therefore logically should not have rights and freedom.) Hubbard demanded in "Project Psychiatry" that Scientologists and Scientology-hired private investigators should find
Unfortunately for Hubbard, the private investigator he hired leaked his minute to The People newspaper, which duly denounced him ("One Man Britain Can Do Without", The People, 20 Mar 1966). This deterred him not a jot. By the end of the 1960s he was criss-crossing the Mediterranean in a motley fleet of ships, getting into trouble with governments across the region. His paranoia deepened dangerously. He became convinced that the problems encountered by Scientology were the product of a sinister international conspiracy, which he detailed in a minute to Mary Sue Hubbard, "Concerning Intelligence" (10 March 1970):
The scale of this supposed conspiracy eventually prompted Hubbard to make a momentous decision: he would change entirely the stated goal of Scientology and Dianetics since their establishment 20 years previously. At the end of Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health, he urged: "For God's sake, get on and build a better bridge!". Since then, the promotion and distribution of "The Bridge to Total Freedom" was his top priority. But no longer. Only a small number of Scientologists — probably not more than a few score members of the Guardian's Office — saw Hubbard's minute of 2 Dec 1969 to Mary Sue, "Intelligence Actions — Covert Intelligence — Data Collection". It was and presumably remains highly classified; for my money, it is perhaps the most important single document to have been released following the trial of the GO felons. The last page of the document is headlined "The War". Underneath Hubbard declares:
Hubbard is here saying that Scientology's core goal is no longer the spread of his "tech" but the complete destruction of all other mental health practices. This was not idle talk, as the GO made strenuous efforts to attack psychiatrists — an effort which is still going on, in the shape of Scientology's continued denunciations of psychiatrists and psychiatric drugs such as Prozac. There is certainly little doubt that Scientology's current leaders share Hubbard's objective of the eradication (extermination?) of psychiatry. David Miscavige has been reported to have pledged that psychiatry will have been eliminated by the year 2000. No doubt this promise will quietly be dropped when the millenium comes around and psychiatry continues in rude good health. This statement by Hubbard is, of course, not one which has ever been publicised. It's hard to avoid the conclusion that the many thousands of people who joined Scientology while this policy was in force — it may still be — were, in a sense, parting with their money under false pretences. Scientology makes much of the need to "get tech in" and "clear the planet", objectives which (in non-Scientology-speak) most other religions share. One wonders what the reaction of ordinary Scientologists would have been if they had learned that their leader had secretly committed them to an entirely different goal. This secret policy change also has a major impact on an argument ongoing elsewhere on a.r.s. Roland Rashleigh-Barry suggested last week that Scientology might at some point opt for a mass suicide. In the light of its war against psychiatry, this seems distinctly unlikely. It is made all the more so by the fact that Hubbard's anti-psychiatry complex worsened still further in the years before his death. In the 1950s and 1960s, he frequently claimed that psychiatry was a perverted Russo-German doctrine, which he contrasted with Scientology as "the only Anglo-Saxon science of the mind" (there was a strong nationalistic tinge to it in the early days). By the mid-1970s he had become firmly convinced that psychiatry was more than just an Earthly problem. He had already alluded to the role of psychiatrists in Xenu's genocide in 1968's OT 3 and his 1977 script "Revolt in the Stars" (based on OT 3). While in hiding in Washington, D.C. around 1975, he began secretly to research what he believed was the underlying secret of the universe: a cosmic war between the "Soldiers of Light" and the "Soldiers of Darkness". He characterised people as being either "players", "pieces" or "broken pieces". Only a small number are the players, these being the Soldiers of Light and Darkness, manipulating the rest to achieve their ends. The Soldiers of Darkness have appeared in various forms through the "trillenia", generally as priests or psychiatrists. According to Hubbard, they return life after life to sabotage the work of the Soldiers of Light and torment the degraded beings, the PTSes and the "robots" (ordinary people, whom he regarded as being incapable of decision). Most of the bulletins in which Hubbard outlines these theories are reportedly highly classified and have never received broad distribution, but I recall having seen one — HCO Bulletin of 26 August 1982, "Pain and Sex" — in one of the red Tech Volumes. It is extraordinary even by Hubbard's standards — he claims that both pain and sex were invented long ago by cosmic psychiatrists to torment people. (Presumably this was written during one of Hubbard's periods of impotence). I think you can guess who the Soldiers of Light are supposed to be! It's highly likely that Hubbard has left his successors a number of documents detailing the cosmic psychiatric conspiracy which has caused, as he put it, "the ruin of this sector of the universe". I can't see any chance of Scientology deciding to physically eliminate itself before it manages to take out psychiatry — which, at the current rate, is going to take a very long time indeed. Psychiatry, remember, is no longer just an Earthly but a universal problem; there is no escape to a psych-free place. In fact, as Scientology is (according to Hubbard) the first and only technology of its kind anywhere in the universe, Earth is the first and currently the only place where psychiatry can be beaten. Until it is, there could be no mass suicide or departure for a better place. There is no better place. In short, Hubbard's own manic paranoia has trapped Scientology into trying to achieve a fundamentally impossible goal: I would willingly bet that there will be psychiatrists for far longer than there will be Scientologists, and who knows? I might even collect my bet before I die of old age…
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LA SCIENTOLOGIE DANS LES MÉDIAS
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Un must: "Ron Hubbard, le gourou démasqué" Ce livre de Russell Miller révèle la face cachée de la scientologie. On y découvre un Ron Hubbard, malade, mythomane et poursuivi par la justice. Il est disponible en format pdf ou html sur notre site. Nous avons également publié une version résumée.
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