- Mégalomanie
et paranoïa de la scientologie
Une
ARCHE construite en plein désert pour les scientologues
de l'an 63'000 ... !
|
"Quand
on veut s'imposer pendant des millions d'années on
ne se soucie pas d'avoir des esclaves ni
d'être escroc"
Nicole
Barbier
- 23 novembre 2005
|
- Selon
la doctrine hubbardienne cette ARCHE permettra dans
des millions d'années de retrouver les écrits
de son Maître SURPROTECTEUR ! Mais il nous paraît
évident que la scientologie cache bien d'autres
choses dans cet endroit désertique.
-
- Sur
cette carte
satellite (Latitude/Longitude
N 35 31 56.59
W 104 37 45.48) d'une zone située dans le désert du nouveau Mexique vous pouvez y apercevoir une
piste d'atterrissage et un double cercle (Mothership Symbols)
avec une petite route
tortueuse. Un symbole jusqu'alors inconnu et
qui est celui du CST, la Church Spiritual Technology).
-
- La surface de la propriété scientologue est
d'environ 1400 hectares, soit 14 km² , soit 14 % de la surface de Paris
(Paris= 102 km²). Le sigle du CST couvrant à lui seul 1km².
-
- Selon
un ex-cadre de la scientologie Internationale (Int.) ayant travaillé 28 ans pour la
scientologie cette ARCHE comprend un
tunnel
creusé dans la montagne, précédé d'un bâtiment de garde, fermé par des
portes
anti-explosion nucléaire qui contient des plaques
d'inox
gravées avec les écrits hubbardiens.
-
- Située
à des kilomètres de tout lieu habité, cette
construction se trouvant dans
une zone sujette à de fréquents tremblements de terre (tremblement de niveau 5 (Richter)
en août 05, dans la région) a sans doute
coûté une petite fortune afin de lui éviter
tout écroulement ! (Exemple:
Richter niveau 5 en août, pas très loin)
-
- Cette
Arche est destiné aux futures générations
de scientologues qui venant d'autres planètes pourront
retrouver les écritures sacrées de
leur Maître SURPROTECTEUR: le
mégalomane Lafayette Ron Hubbard .... !
- Pour
cela les
"fumeux" écrits de Ron Hubbard ont été reproduits par
la scientologie sur du papier à l'épreuve du
temps infini (sans blâââgue...) et déposés dans
d'innombrables
boîtes en titane (à quel prix ...?).
-
- Une
telle cache entasse sans doute bien d'autres
choses précieuses... L'endroit semble désert, mais
il est plus que probable qu'il recèle aussi un camp
de
concentration privé totalement illégal ou des victimes du goulag scientologue
sont
chargées du maintien de leur ARCHE: le "RPF du RPF".
-
- Les
premières vidéos montrant l'Arche
de la scientologie
-
Vidéo 1
: Présentation
d'une construction pharaonique de la scientologie au
nord du Nouveau Mexique
Vidéo 2 :
La
scientologie refuse de répondre aux questions de la
chaîne de télévision KRGE
Transcription
de la vidéo 1
Remarque
: ces vidéos n'étant plus disponibles
en voici une autre sur le même sujet
Scientology Bunker in New Mexico
Trementina Base
August 2007
- Red Ice Creations

A Place in the Desert for New Mexico’s Most Exclusive Circles
From the state that gave us Roswell, the epicenter of UFO lore since
1947, comes a report from an Albuquerque TV station about its discovery of
strange landscape markings in the remote desert. They’re etched in New Mexico’s
barren northern reaches, resemble crop circles and are recognizable only from a
high altitude. Also, they are directly connected to the Church of
Scientology.
The church tried to persuade station KRQE not to air its report last week
about the aerial signposts marking a Scientology compound that includes a huge
vault “built into a mountainside,” the station said on its Web site. The tunnel
was constructed to protect the works of L. Ron Hubbard, the late science-fiction
writer who founded the church in the 1950s.
The archiving project, which the church has acknowledged, includes engraving
Hubbard’s writings on stainless steel tablets and encasing them in titanium
capsules. It is overseen by a Scientology corporation called the Church of
Spiritual Technology. Based in Los Angeles, the corporation dispatched an
official named Jane McNairn and an attorney to visit the TV station in an effort
to squelch the story, KRQE news director Michelle Donaldson said.
The church offered a tour of the underground facility if KRQE would kill the
piece, the station said in its newscast. Scientology also called KRQE’s owner,
Emmis Communications, and “sought the help of a powerful New Mexican lawmaker”
to lobby against airing the piece, the station reported on its Web site.
More: http://cryptome.org/cst-bunker.htm
CNN report on the “Scientology Circles”
Download
the video CNN report on the “Scientology Circles”
(video .flv
- 7,54 Mo)
FLVPlayer
(telecharger.com)
Trementina Base
According to the CST, the purpose of the base is to provide storage space for
an archiving project to preserve L. Ron Hubbard’s writings, films and recordings
for future generations. Hubbard’s texts have been engraved on stainless steel
tablets and encased in titanium capsules underground. The project began in the
late 1980s.
The base includes a number of dwellings and the archives themselves, the
latter in a network of underground tunnels. The base also has its own private,
concrete airstrip, the San Miguel Ranch Airport (NM53); it is not shown on FAA
sectional charts or in navigation databases by the owner’s request.
More: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trementina_Base |
-
- Les
cartes satellites montrent où se situe
l'Arche de la scientologie
- Le
symbole de la «Church Spiritual Technology»
(CST) est visible de l'espace
- Latitude/Longitude
N 35 31 56.59
W 104 37 45.48
-
- Dans
cette zone
située au Nord du Nouveau Mexique on peut
remarquer (en utilisant le zoom) la présence
d'une piste d'aterrissage en présence de deux
cercles qui s'entrecroisent avec chacun un losange
en son centre : un symbole jusqu'alors quasi inconnu et
qui est celui du CRT - la Church Religion Technology.
-
- 1/Images
satellite
-
- Source
: http://terraserver-usa.com
(photos
satellite de la zone où se trouve l'Arche
de la scientologie)

-
- 2/
Images satellite (détail)
-
- Source
: http://terraserver-usa.com (zoom
sur l'Arche scientologue dans le désert
du Nouveau Mexique)
-
|
-
- Arche
de la scientologie - Les
tentatives de censure commencent !
-
- La
scientologie fait de gros efforts pour
empêcher
-
la diffusion d'une émission de la chaine locale KRQE News13
-
- [texte
intégral]
- source
: http://www.krqe.com/expanded.asp?ID=12982
-
- Scientologists try to stop
KRQE report about compound
Source: KRQE News 13
- ALBUQUERQUE -- KRQE
News 13 has been working for months to bring you a story Monday night about a
hidden Scientology compound in New Mexico. On Monday, the church worked just as
hard to stop anyone from seeing that report.
-
- The Church of Spiritual Technology flew their administrator to Albuquerque
from Los Angeles. She visited the station with an attorney in an attempt to stop
the story from airing.
-
- The story is about a compound hidden deep in a remote part of New Mexico.
Among other interesting features are markings in the landscape that can only be
seen from the air and a vault built into a mountain side.
-
- In the meantime, the Church of Spiritual Technology is doing all it can to
stop this story from hitting the airwaves.
-
- They and their attorney sat down with News 13 to try to convince us this
story should stay private.
-
- They also sought the help of a powerful New Mexican lawmaker, who called News
13 to say the scientologists had been "good neighbors" in San Miguel County, and
encouraged the station not to air the story.
-
- The church administrator says the organization has also called the president
of KRQE-TV’s parent corporation, Emmis Communications, to get him to put a halt
to the story.
|
|
-
- Transcription (This isn't a perfect transcript, but should be enough to inform readers
of the gist of this news coverage).
-
- KRQE Report on Trementina Scientology Vault
11-21-2005 (10PM)
-
Video available here
-
- (Anchors) A very secret, well-guarded vault sits in the mountains of
Northern New Mexico.
- One that very few people know about.
-
- It's a vault that is sacred to the Church of Scientology. So, what's in that vault, and why is it such a secret? News 13's Kim Vallez finds out.
-
- (Reporter Vallez) John Travolta. Leah Remini. Kathryn Bell. Kirstie
Alley. Jenna Elfman. These are reportedly the most famous faces of
Scientology. Well, aside from Tom Cruise of course.
-
- (Oprah Show Excerpt
: Oprah asks Tom, "Have you ever felt this way
before ?" as crowd screams, while Tom Cruise jumps on the couch)
-
- Who could forget this jumping on the couch incident on Oprah
? Cruise, so in love with Katie Holmes, something he attributes to
Scientology.
-
- (Tom Cruise
: "There's things in my life, Scientology and tools that I've
spoken of before, that I apply to my life")
-
- The first major religion to be created in the 20th Century. The man
behind it, the author who brought the world Battlefield Earth and other
sci-fi thrillers. L. Ron Hubbard taught his followers that man has lived
through many past lives and is immortal. And to be happy, a person must deal
with bad spirits and memories of past traumas. All those teachings are being preserved, and stashed, right here in New
Mexico.
-
- "This thing is built into the face of a rock."
-
- Few people have been inside.
-
- (Reporter Vallez) "The compound is very secluded and hidden. To get to it
you have to drive nearly an hour out of Las Vegas, through miles and miles
of barren pasture land. You then drive through some mountain areas, and then several miles of
winding, dusty dirt road. At the end of the County Road sits 40 private
acres. And visitors say, several miles beyond this, sits a massive, lavish
compound. And this vault. It may look like a house, but if you look closely, you
see the secret it conceals.
-
- (Visual: House, 3
-story, sits against hillside,
and graphic traces an exterior wall behind it, which is the face of the
vault).
-
- (Police Spokesman Gallegos) The actual vault area is built up into the
side of the mountain.
-
- Las Vegas (New Mexico) Police Chief Tim Gallegos, is one of very few
non-Scientologists to go inside. He toured the vault 12 years ago.
-
- (Gallegos) If I remember correctly, it was about 300 feet deep, at that
time.
-
- The things he saw, haven't faded from his memory.
-
- (Gallegos) They have a CD. They're using some special paper that they're
actually printing this on. It's got special ink and its supposed to last
forever. They were titanium plates and some other things.
-
- All this, Gallegos said, is used to preserve the teachings and writings
of L. Ron Hubbard. The paper, similar to that used for money. And, the
titanium plates, they were actually inscribed and etched
-
- (Gallegos) yes, like etched. Exactly. And they had a process of doing it.
-
- The boxes they are stored in -- also Titanium.
-
- (Gallegos) They were a little bit larger than, maybe, a case of paper. A
box of paper. And all of these things were put in there. And they had
special screws and a special way of actually sealing the box. They had these
things lined up. I want to say, they are probably four or five feet
tall, and I don't remember how many containers actually fit on three shelves
of these mobile racks, that they were wheeling them in.
-
- (Les Montoya) Very unique. It's very unique.
-
- San Miguel County Manager Les Montoya has not been allowed in the vault,
but has visited the compound twice. And he's learned the story behind it.
-
- (Montoya) We asked the question, how, why was the facility located in San
Miguel County and they said they went through a series of questions and
concerns regarding the future of the Earth basically, and they're saying
look, of maps throughout the world, this was one area that met all their
requirements. And so they set up shop there.
-
- One interesting thing that can't be seen from a ground tour, is this
symbol (Visual : Double Interlocked Circles with Diamond Centers, the CST
logo) within the trees, which Sky Ranger videotaped from the air. It's a
symbol that can be seen all the way from space. We haven't been able to
determine what the symbol means to believers, but we do know it's a
registered trademark of the Church of Spiritual Technology -- A branch of
Scientology which actually owns the New Mexico property. (Visual : Satellite
Photo of CST Creston property). This very same symbol shows up on a
property in California.
-
- Did you know that this compound even existed here
?
-
- (Interviewee) No.
-
- If you ask around in Las Vegas (New Mexico), very few people even know of
this secret vault. When they find out.
-
- (Interviewee) Wow
...
-
- Did you know this existed
?
-
- (Interviewee) No I did not. Now I do.
-
- Those who do know, have their own theories.
-
- My opinion right now is that it is individuals that have a strong belief
in what Mr. Hubbard pressed on, and they're willing to put a lot of energy
and effort and resources into preserving what his belief was.
-
- (Gallegos) Being a police officer, of course, right away you're
suspicious. Because, the first question is, why are they here, why are they
spending so much money here and what are they doing. But, with that being
said, I didn't see anything that would lead me to believe, that they were
doing anything but what they said they were doing.
-
- Most people do agree, this small hidden New Mexico town, seems an
unlikely place for a Science Fiction like religion of the future.
-
- (Gallegos) I would say it's like putting this country guy in the middle
of a fancy dinner in California someplace.
- We were denied permission to visit the vault when we put our story
together. However, Church representatives offered us today a chance to go
inside, if we agreed to cancel tonight's story. We declined.
-
- (Anchor) Thank you Kim. And we want to apologize for that interruption at
the top of Kim's story. The cable broadcasting network for some reason chose
that exact moment to do a systemwide emergency broadcast. What you missed is
some of the faces, the famous faces attached to Scientology, John Travolta,
Leah Remini. Kirstie Alley. Jenna Elfman. And Tom Cruise, of course.
-
- We're told there are about 200 to 250 Scientologists living here in New
Mexico. Most of them are not affiliated with the remote mountain compound,
but rather with the Church, here in Albuquerque.
-
- Visual
: Poll results
-
- Today's KRQE question asked,
- if you consider
Scientology a religion.
-
- 7% of those voting said yes,
-
- 90% said no,
-
- and 3%
aren't sure
|
(end)
(This isn't a perfect transcript, but should be enough to inform readers
of the gist of this news coverage). |
-
|
A Place in the Desert for New Mexico's Most Exclusive
Circles
By Richard Leiby Washington Post Staff Writer Sunday,
November 27, 2005 Secret Flying Saucer Base Found in New Mexico
?
Maybe. From the state that gave us Roswell, the epicenter of UFO lore since
1947, comes a report from an Albuquerque TV station about its discovery of
strange landscape markings in the remote desert. They're etched in New Mexico's
barren northern reaches, resemble crop circles and are recognizable only from a
high altitude.
Also, they are directly connected to the Church of Scientology.
(Cue theremin music.)
The church tried to persuade station KRQE not to air its report last week
about the aerial signposts marking a Scientology compound that includes a huge
vault "built into a mountainside," the station said on its Web site. The tunnel
was constructed to protect the works of L. Ron Hubbard, the late science-fiction
writer who founded the church in the 1950s.
The archiving project, which the church has acknowledged, includes engraving
Hubbard's writings on stainless steel tablets and encasing them in titanium
capsules. It is overseen by a Scientology corporation called the Church of
Spiritual Technology. Based in Los Angeles, the corporation dispatched an
official named Jane McNairn and an attorney to visit the TV station in an effort
to squelch the story, KRQE news director Michelle Donaldson said.
The church offered a tour of the underground facility if KRQE would kill the
piece, the station said in its newscast. Scientology also called KRQE's owner,
Emmis Communications, and "sought the help of a powerful New Mexican lawmaker"
to lobby against airing the piece, the station reported on its Web site.
McNairn did not respond to messages requesting comment; an employee said that
McNairn was traveling last week, and that no one else from the church would be
able to comment.
What do the markings mean? For starters, the interlocking circles and
diamonds match the logo of the Church of Spiritual Technology, which had the
vault constructed in a mesa in the late 1980s. The $2.5 million construction job
was done by Denman and Associates of Santa Fe, but company Vice President Sally
Butler said of the circles, "If there is anything like that out there, it had
nothing to do with us."
Perhaps the signs are just a proud expression of the Scientology brand. But
there are other, more intriguing theories.
Former Scientologists familiar with Hubbard's teachings on reincarnation say
the symbol marks a "return point" so loyal staff members know where they can
find the founder's works when they travel here in the future from other places
in the universe.
"As a lifetime staff member, you sign a billion-year contract. It's not just
symbolic," said Bruce Hines of Denver, who spent 30 years in Scientology but is
now critical of it. "You know you are coming back and you will defend the
movement no matter what. . . . The fact that they would etch this into the
desert to be seen from space, it fits into the whole ideology."
Recall if you will that Scientology traces most of mankind's woes to an evil
alien lord named Xenu, a galactic holocaust perpetrated 75 million years ago,
and, uh, the field of psychiatry. (The latter is a particular concern, as all of
America now knows, of movie star Tom Cruise.)
The church maintains two other vaults in California to preserve Hubbard's
materials and words, according to Hines and another longtime staff member who
also quit a couple of years ago, Chuck Beatty of Pittsburgh.
"The whole purpose of putting these teachings in the underground vaults was
expressly so that in the event that everything gets wiped out somehow, someone
would be willing to locate them and they would still be there," said Beatty, who
spent 28 years in Scientology. Some loyalists are tasked specifically with the
"super-duper confidential" job of coming back to Earth in the far-off future, he
added.
The billion-year contracts are signed by members of what Hubbard, a Navy
lieutenant in World War II, called the church's Sea Organization. The motto of
that cadre, according to Beatty and Hines, who said they were both members, is
"We come back."
The New Mexico site is about a 2 1/2 -hour drive east of Santa Fe, near the
small town of Trementina. The contents of the vault itself are not secret --
they were shown in 1998 on ABC News's "20/20."
"Buried deep in these New Mexico hills in steel-lined tunnels, said to be
able to survive a nuclear blast, is what Scientology considers the future of
mankind," ABC's Tom Jarriel said in his report. "Seen here for the first time,
thousands of metal records, stored in heat-resistant titanium boxes and playable
on a solar-powered turntable, all containing the beliefs of Scientology's
founder, L. Ron Hubbard."
Other religions preserve their sacred texts. Nothing strange there.
Scientology leaders apparently just don't want to misplace theirs, and maybe
this is why somebody put the giant circles on the scrubland. Because there's
nothing worse than arriving from deep space, and not knowing where to
park.
The Washington
Post Company - 2005 |
1.
Les 1ères, secondes et 3e épouse de Ron Hubbard
2.
Lafayette Ron Hubbard Junior - (dit «Nibs»), Alexis, Arthur, Diana, Katherine,
Quentin, et Suzette.
3.
Quentin Hubbard s’est suicidé en 1979.
4.
Nibs Hubbard (L. Ron Jr.) a cosigné avec Bent Corydon, l’ouvrage «Hubbard,
Messie ou Cinglé» (Messiah or madman)
5.
C’est au Docteur Joseph A. Winter que l’on doit l’introduction du livre La Dianétique.
Il rompit ensuite avec Hubbard et le critiqua dans un
ouvrage paru en 1951. "Le rapport d'un Médecin
à propos de la Dianétique». L'introduction écrite par Winter fut ôtée des
futures éditions de la Dianétique.
6.
Il y a eu plusieurs «Premier Clair». La plus ancienne est Sonia Bianca, étudinate
qui ne pu montrer ses aptitudes de clair en 1950, et
disparut. le second fut John McMaster, staff scientologue,
qui devint le premier clair - puis le premier "Pape"
scientologue - nommé par Hubbard en 1963. Hubbard le
déclara peu après "suppressif".
7. C’est David Mayo
qui fut le Superviseur de Cas supérieur International
(Senior C/S Int) ainsi que le co-auteur de la série
des bulletins de NOTs avec LRH. Il
se sépara ensuite de la scientologie
et ouvrit un groupe "squirrel" dont la maman de Michelle Miscavige
(l'épouse de David Damien Miscavige), fut l'une des
premières clientes.
8.
Le Washington Post du 18 août 1978 écrit que c’est Henning Heldt. M. Heldt fut
condamné à la prison avec Mary Sue Hubbard.
9.
Mary Sue passa un an en prison fédérale pour vol de documents fédéraux, écoutes
illicites, cacher un fugitif, et conspiration pour entraver
la justice.
10.
Née le 8 mars 1950, Alexist Hollister est née de l’union d’Hubbard avec sa
seconde épouse Sarah Northrup Hubbard Hollister. Hubbard se vanta qu’Alexis fut
le «premier bébé dianétique»,
mais ayant divorcé de sa mère, il prétendit qu’elle n’était pas sa fille et la
déshérita tout comme son aîné Ron Jr, né de sa première femme.
- Réponses
aux questions bonus-jokers
1.
David Miscavige vit dans le complexe scientologue armé de Hemet, Californie,
connu sous le nom de «Gold Base».
2.
Personne ne sait comment le successeur de Miscavige sera nommé. Il ne semble
pas exister de mécanisme formel de succession.
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