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Scientology in Philadelphia Philadelphia To Soon Be Free Of Thetans (Or Whatever) (Philadelpy weekly - July 05, 2007) Church of Scientology buys site in Center City (Philadelpy weekly - July 01, 2007) Comments - (Philadelpy weekly - July 05, 2007) |
Philadelphia To Soon Be Free Of Thetans (Or Whatever)
As you may have heard, the Church of Scientology recently purchased a 15-story building on Chestnut Street along with a former toy store in order to expand in the City of Brotherly Love. (One can only wait until the first Scientologist member of the Philadelphia Phillies arrives; the Phils train in Clearwater, Fla., world headquarters of Scientology.) Just like Christians believe a Jewish carpenter 2,000 years ago was the Messiah and Jews believe they're the Chosen People of God™ and Hindus believe widows should be shunned (link to cnn,com) and Muslims believe in predestination and a lack of free will, Scientologists believe Xenu came to Earth 75 million years ago with a bunch of humans, who he then blew up with hydrogen bombs, and their spirits harass humans to this day, and Scientology can get rid of them. Fortunately for Scientology, and unfortunately for other religions, the religion has a group of high-powered lawyers. All hail Xenu! Or, uh, boooo, Xenu! Whichever one is right! Boooo psychiatry! How dare it attempt to help people through science instead of science fiction! And, of course, this new building will cost the city money: Property taxes for 2007 on the Chestnut Street parcels were $56,195, according to city records. But if the acquisition is deemed to be a house of worship, it will be exempted from taxes. The church does not pay tax on its headquarters at 1315 Race St., which it bought for $325,000 in 1979. Eh, at least it's not another dollar store. |
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Church of Scientology buys site in Center City It has purchased more spacious quarters on Chestnut Street and plans to expand
Retailers, restaurants and other businesses are flocking to Center City. Now comes another flock. The Church of Scientology last month paid just under $8 million for a vacant 15-story office building and an adjoining one-story former toy store in the heart of downtown: the 1300 block of Chestnut Street - across the street from Macy's and next door to the furniture store Mitchell Gold + Bob Williams. The Scientologists - outgrowing their modest home on Race Street - plan to combine and renovate the properties at 1312-16 Chestnut St. into a center that will include a chapel, offices, an academy, and displays on the church's community programs, said Bruce Thompson, public-affairs director of the Church of Scientology of Pennsylvania. He said the property, of which the church would be the sole occupant, would be "a real asset to the area" and "open to all," including other groups. He did not know how much the renovations would cost or when they would be completed. The move represents a bold step in Scientology's bid for visibility - literally. It will be the church's tallest building in the world, Thompson said. Scientology's local staff of about 35 people will triple, Thompson said. Scientology, which counts actors Tom Cruise, John Travolta and Isaac Hayes among its 10 million members, has been investing heavily in real estate and owns high-profile centers in London, Berlin, Madrid and New York. Property taxes for 2007 on the Chestnut Street parcels were $56,195, according to city records. But if the acquisition is deemed to be a house of worship, it will be exempted from taxes. The church does not pay tax on its headquarters at 1315 Race St., which it bought for $325,000 in 1979. Thompson said the church would sell the Race Street building, which will face the back of the expanded Convention Center. Scientology is a body of teachings created in the 1950s by L. Ron Hubbard, a science-fiction author who held that a person is in fact a being called a Thetan. Scientologists believe in one-on-one "auditing," or spiritual counseling. Locally, members also delivered 180 antidrug lectures in the last year, Thompson said. Thompson said there are "hundreds" of Scientologists across the region and more than 10,000 people on the local mailing list. Scientology has come under scrutiny for its methods of proselytizing and its involvement in the everyday lives of its members. Germany classifies it as a business, not as a religion. The Chestnut Street buildings were sold by Tony Goldman of Goldman Properties, a New Yorker who in the last decade has bought and developed millions of dollars in real estate in Center City's once-seedy 13th Street corridor, now known as Midtown Village. Goldman paid $2.45 million in 2001 for the high-rise at 1312-14 Chestnut, known as the Cunningham Building. In 2005 - shortly before Goldman announced plans to develop the property as condos - he paid $900,000 for the adjacent store at 1316. Goldman and his associates did not return phone calls for comment. "They were a pleasure to work with - I've rarely seen such efficiency from a buyer," said Jonathan Stavin of CB Richard Ellis, the sole broker in the transaction. Stavin said church officials from around the country visited the buildings during the "due diligence" phase of their purchase. The purchase did not sit well with broker Larry Steinberg of Michael Salove Co., who believed that the church would be an odd fit. "The two best retail spaces east of Broad on Chestnut Street are now unavailable," Steinberg said. But Stavin said the church would be open after usual office hours, enabling workers and members to patronize nearby retailers.
Contact staff writer Michael Klein at 215-854-5514 or mklein@phillynews.com. |
CommentsIf Tom Cruise can become the messiah of his own religion, then I'm sure Alycia Lane can become the messiah of her own religion. She can wear a bikini on special occasions to appease her followers who yearn to see her in one. Posted by: ALB at July 5, 2007 12:44 PM Prediction: First comment to complain about DMAC's descriptions of religious beliefs comes in less than 3 comments following this one. Posted by: SD at July 5, 2007 12:50 PM DMAC has religious beliefs? Posted by: Anonymous at July 5, 2007 01:05 PM I'm pretty sure all my descriptions are correct, though. Hell Helen's house, at least I'm not making priest/little boy jokes. Plus, my parents are on vacation this week and aren't reading, presumably. Posted by: dmac at July 5, 2007 01:26 PM Ok, enough with the ignorant, prejudiced bullsh1t comments. 1) Scientology has nothing to do with space aliens or whatever. It's not even a faith-system, it's a philosophy of self-improvement. 2) Tom Cruise is certainly no Messiah. He's an actor, and happens to be a Scientologists. People should not believe everything tabloids write. For accurate info on Scientology, how about checking out an actual Scientology book from the local library? Or see http://www.liveandgrow.org Posted by: Greg at July 5, 2007 02:42 PM You win, SD! Posted by: dmac at July 5, 2007 02:47 PM It has everything to do with space aliens. You should expect nothing less from a drugged out scifi writer. The problem is that it will cost you $$$$$ before they let you in on the alien crap. Posted by: what at July 5, 2007 02:53 PM Oh yes, another "Scientologists believe .." statement. See wikipedia.com where critics KNOW everything that Scientologists believe. That thinking must be something like Religion = Belief = Scientology = Belief = Criticize. But that isn't it, Scientology doesn't profess beliefs of that nature. Even the most hard headed critic can look through the Scientology.org website and understand something. Posted by: Terryeo at July 5, 2007 03:07 PM I might be more interested in scientology if Tom Cruise had married Alycia Lane and displayed pictures of her in a bikini to help convert people. No messianic children, though. Alycia Lane might not look at hot in a bikini with baby fat on her. Posted by: ALB at July 5, 2007 03:29 PM The very headline of this blurb displays its complete ignorance of what Scientology actually is. Posted by: Matt at July 5, 2007 03:59 PM Is there a religion that involves the study of Alycia Lane's bikini clad body? Posted by: ALB at July 5, 2007 04:09 PM Does Scientology detract at all from Barbaro worship, because if it does is it is vile and evil. Anything that draws from from the grace and glory of Barbaro is sinful. Posted by: yt at July 5, 2007 05:50 PM The author is an a-hole who has a crappy job and has nothing better to do. Posted by: chewyandberts at July 6, 2007 12:50 AM L. Ron Hubbard appears to be nothing more than a paranoid schizophrenic with delusions of grandeur and a heart full of greed and vice. He has put lie upon lie into books and called it infallible and unquestionable. Nowhere in Scientology texts will they show you real academic data that backs their claims. L. Ron says it's true so therefore it is. Scientology is not a cult because Scientologists say that it is not. I don't know about you, but I hold the opinion that repeating a lie enough does not make it true. Scientologists are comforted by the notion that L. Ron (God) has the one true answer for every problem in their lives, and if only they could do these "research backed" techniques they could cross the BRIDGE TO TOTAL FREEDOM (Heaven). You can see how an argument could be made that this is a religion. However, that's not the whole story. You see, Scientology gives nothing away for free. You must pay thousands upon thousands of dollars to advance in their "religion." They train those who work for the cult to be salespeople of sort. That's fine. People can purchase whatever whenever, but these people need to pay taxes. Furthermore, they punish you with security check auditing whenever you might say something about their "great" leader L. Ron. Our only hope is that this organization gets dismantled by the government so the people who believe this crap can get it for free. Posted by: El Rug Bluebird at July 6, 2007 01:55 AM Is Barbaro worship tax-exempt too? Posted by: Anonymous at July 6, 2007 09:45 AM The thing about Xenu and the hydrogen bombs is only partially correct. Most Scientologists do NOT believe that... yet; most have not reached reached OT3 (the "Wall of Fire"), which is where you learn the great big secret. That's why you have to "learning on a gradient," nobody would believe that if they told you right away. All those Scientologists out there, when you've paid your $300K (minimum) and the Wall of Fire DOESN'T involve Xenu, I owe you a Coke. Posted by: spninja at July 6, 2007 02:22 PM |
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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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He he, look how little Tom Cruise is!
Posted by: dmac at July 5, 2007 12:33 PM