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    Tendo City Tendo City: Metropolitan District Ramble City So apparently psych is a pseudoscience...

     
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    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience...
    Smoke
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    Joined: 01-21-2000
    #21
    26th June 2005, 2:56 AM (This post was last modified: 26th June 2005, 9:31 AM by Smoke.)
    Quote:In the late 1940s, pulp writer L. Ron Hubbard declared:[indent] "Writing for a penny a word is ridiculous. If a man really wants to make a million dollars, the best way would be to start his own religion" [/indent]
    Reader's Digest reprint, May 1980, p.1
    Hubbard later created the Church of Scientology...
    GAF explains Scientology:

    FnordChan Wrote:http://www.xenu.net/archive/leaflet/Xenu.jpg

    Short version: L. Ron Hubbard invented (read: freely made up) the science of Dianetics, in order to help folks unlock their full human potential...for a price. This sparked Scientology, a religion Hubbard discovered (read: freely made up) that allowed folks to discover their amazing superpowers...for a much higher price. Cue cult activities and brutally milking folks of their cash. You can learn the gorey details by reading through xenu.net, the Hubbard biography Barefaced Messiah (available to read for free online), or the expose A Piece of Blue Sky: Scientology, Dianetcs, and L. Ron Hubbard exposed by Jon Atack. It all makes for fascinating, if somewhat disturbing, reading.

    Basically, you want to stay the hell away from Scientology.

    FnordChan, OT3
    Justin Bailey Wrote:They believe an alien named xenu caused a nuclear explosion several billion years ago to solve the overpopulation problem in the universe. The problem was, people souls (referred to as "body thetans") still were able to be blown around by the nuclear winds. Xenu then captured the thetans and placed them into cinemas where they watched movies on how they are supposed to live life and the concept of God, Satan, and Christ. After the movies were over the thetans flew around and inhabited people and still do to this day. The only way to become a free spirit is to rid yourself of these evil body thetans. This is Scientology's goal.

    No, I did not make any of that up.

    [Image: so.jpg]
    Quote: In 1968 Ethics was introduced in Sea Org. Crew were put into a chain-locker as punishment. A chain-locker is "a dark hole where the anchor chains are stored; cold, wet and rats," to quote one ex-Sea Org officer. A crew member that was put on ethics could spend up to two weeks in the tiny hole. Former Scientologists who served as crew together with Hubbard in the early years remember a five years old deaf and mute child being locked up in the chain-locker. Hubbard said she was not to leave the chain locker until she completed the formula by writing her name. Another witness claims that a three-year-old was once put in the locker.

    What is Scientology?
    Quote:The Church of Scientology is a vicious and dangerous cult that masquerades as a religion. Its purpose is to make money. It practices a variety of mind-control techniques on people lured into its midst to gain control over their money and their lives. Its aim is to take from them every penny that they have and can ever borrow and to also enslave them to further its wicked ends.

    It was started in the 1950s by a science fiction writer named L. Ron Hubbard in fulfilment to his declared aim to start a religion to make money. It is an offshoot to a method of psychotherapy he concocted from various sources which he named "Dianetics". Dianetics is a form of regression therapy. It was then further expanded to appear more like a religion in order to enjoy tax benefits. He called it "Scientology". Scientology is a confused concoction of crackpot, dangerously applied psychotherapy, oversimplified, idiotic and inapplicable rules and ideas and science-fiction drivel that is presented to its members (at the "advanced" levels) as profound spiritual truth.
    Quote:On the surface the Church of Scientology seems reasonable. The insane content of it is only revealed to a person when the early stuff has done its work and made them more susceptible. After a short while a person "believes" that Scientology is doing them good. They are then persuaded to help their new-found group further by donating money and/or working for the organisation for almost no money. Many people do exactly that.

    "Ethics" is used to good effect to trap a person. A person’s natural tendency to do good is worked upon. Yes - they want to be more ethical, but what is ethical? This is where a clever trick is pulled! "Ethics" is redefined by Scientology in such a way that to be ethical is to be a better Scientologist and obey the "church". Young people, not yet made cynical through the machinations of life and politics, are very keen to contribute to the world and to be ethical. So the "ethics" trick works easily into persuading them to join the "church". Many of them join an elite group called the "Sea Org" where they become brainwashed slaves. There they work a hundred hour week for almost no pay. There they are subject to every cruel whim of their masters. It is a living hell that they endure because of the conditioning they have received and this now perverted sense of ethics that they have accepted. The "Sea Org" is the ultimate in brainwashed slavery. They are expected to work harder and harder to achieve ever higher targets of production. If they fail to meet their targets there are various penalties. One of them is to be put onto a diet of beans and rice and to miss sleep. Another is to be sentenced to a period on the RPF (Rehabilitation Project Force). This is the equivalent to "hard labour". Such is the extent of their brainwashing that they actually write "success stories" when they complete their sentences.
    Xenu.net has a Time article from 1991 titled
    The Thriving Cult of Greed and Power

    Excerpts:
    Quote: According to the Cult Awareness Network, whose 23 chapters monitor more than 200 "mind control" cults, no group prompts more telephone pleas for help than does Scientology. Says Cynthia Kisser, the network's Chicago-based executive director: "Scientology is quite likely the most ruthless, the most classically terroristic, the most litigious and the most lucrative cult the country has ever seen. No cult extracts more money from its members." Agrees Vicki Aznaran, who was one of Scientology's six key leaders until she bolted from the church in 1987: "This is a criminal organization, day in and day out. It makes Jim and Tammy [Bakker] look like kindergarten."
    Quote:The founder of this enterprise was part storyteller, part flimflam man. Born In Nebraska in 1911, Hubbard served in the Navy during World War II and soon afterward complained to the Veterans Administration about his "suicidal inclinations" and his "seriously affected" mind. Nevertheless, Hubbard was a moderately successful writer of pulp science fiction. Years later, church brochures described him falsely as an "extensively decorated" World War II hero who was crippled and blinded in action, twice pronounced dead and miraculously cured through Scientology. Hubbard's "doctorate" from "Sequoia University" was a fake mall-order degree. In a I984 case in which the church sued a Hubbard biographical researcher, a California judge concluded that its founder was "a pathological liar." Hubbard wrote one of Scientology's sacred texts, Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health, in 1950. In it he introduced a crude psychotherapeutic technique he called "auditing." He also created a simplified lie detector (called an "E-meter") that was designed to measure electrical changes In the skin while subjects discussed intimate details of their past. Hubbard argued that unhappiness sprang from mental aberrations (or "engrams") caused by early traumas. Counseling sessions with the E-meter, he claimed, could knock out the engrams, cure blindness and even improve a person's intelligence and appearance.

    Hubbard kept adding steps, each more costly, for his followers to climb. In the 1960s the guru decreed that humans are made of clusters of spirits (or "thetans") who were banished to earth some 75 million years ago by a cruel galactic ruler named Xenu. Naturally, those thetans had to be audited.

    An Internal Revenue Service ruling in 1967 stripped Scientology's mother church of its tax-exempt status. A federal court ruled in 1971 that Hubbard's medical claims were bogus and that E-meter auditing could no longer be called a scientific treatment. Hubbard responded by going fully religious, seeking First Amendment protection for Scien- tology's strange rites. His counselors started sporting clerical collars. Chapels were built, franchises became "missions," fees became "fixed donations," and Hubbard's comic-book cosmology became "sacred scriptures.'

    During the early 1970s, the IRS conducted its own auditing sessions and proved that Hubbard was skimming millions of dollars from the church, laundering the money through dummy corporations in Panama and stashing it in Swiss bank accounts. Moreover, church members stole IRS documents, filed false tax returns and harassed the agency's employees. By late 1985, with high-level defectors accusing Hubbard of having stolen as much as S200 million from the church, the IRS was seeking an indictment of Hubbard for tax fraud. Scientology members "worked day and night" shredding documents the IRS sought, according to defector Aznaran, who took part in the scheme. Hubbard, who had been in hiding for five years, died before the criminal case could be prosecuted.

    Today the church invents costly new services with all the zeal of its founder. Scientology doctrine warns that even adherents who are "cleared" of engrams face grave spiritual dangers unless they are pushed to higher and more expensive levels. According to the church's latest price list, recruits -- "raw meat," as Hubbard called them -- take auditing sessions that cost as much as $1,000 an hour, or $12,500 for a 12 1/2-hour "intensive."

    Psychiatrists say these sessions can produce a drugged-like, mind-controlled euphoria that keeps customers coming back for more. To pay their fees, newcomers can earn commissions by recruiting new mem- bers, become auditors themselves (Miscavige did so at age 12), or join the church staff and receive free counseling in exchange for what their written contracts describe as a "billion years" of labor. "Make sure that lots of bodies move through the shop," implored Hubbard in one of his bulletins to officials. "Make money. Make more money. Make others produce so as to make money . . . However you get them in or why, just do it."
    They're in the schools:
    Quote:One front, the Way to Happiness Foundation, has distributed to children in thousands of the nation's public schools more than 3.5 million copies of a booklet Hubbard wrote on morality. The church calls the scheme "the largest dissemination project in Scientology history." Applied Scholastics is the name of still another front, which is attempting to install a Hubbard tutorial program in public schools, primarily those populated by minorities. The group also plans a 1,000 acre campus, where it will train educators to teach various Hubbard methods. The disingenuously named Citizens Commission on Human Rights is a Scientology group at war with psychiatry, its primary competitor. The commission typically issues reports aimed at discrediting particular psychiatrists and the field in general. The CCHR is also behind an all-out war against Eli Lilly, the maker of Prozac, the nation's top-selling antidepression drug. Despite scant evidence, the group's members -- who call themselves "psychbusters" -- claim that Prozac drives people to murder or suicide. Through mass mailings, appearances on talk shows and heavy lobbying, CCHR has hurt drug sales and helped spark dozens of lawsuits against Lilly.
    You don't want to cross them:
    Quote: Scientology devotes vast resources to squelching its critics. Since 1986 Hubbard and his church have been the subject of four unfriendly books, all released by small yet courageous publishers. In each case, the writers have been badgered and heavily sued. One of Hubbard's policies was that all perceived enemies are "fair game" and subject to being "tricked, sued or lied to or destroyed." Those who criticize the church journalists, doctors, lawyers and even judges often find themselves engulfed in litigation, stalked by private eyes, framed for fictional crimes, beaten up or threatened with death. Psychologist Margaret Singer, 69, an outspoken Scientology critic and professor at the University of California, Berkeley, now travels regularly under an assumed name to avoid harassment.
    Quote: The IRS and FBI have been debriefing Scientology defectors for the past three years, in part to gain evidence for a major racketeering case that appears to have stalled last summer. Federal agents complain that the Justice Department is unwilling to spend the money needed to endure a drawn-out war with Scientology or to fend off the cult's notorious jihads against individual agents. "In my opinion the church has one of the most effective intelligence operations in the U.S., rivaling even that of the FBI," says Ted Gunderson, a former head of the FBI's Los Angeles office.
    You REALLY don't want to cross them:
    Quote: Strange things seem to happen to people who write about Scientology. Journalist Paulette Cooper wrote a critical book on the cult in 1971. This led to a Scientology plot (called Operation Freak-Out) whose goal, according to church documents, was "to get P.C. incarcerated in a mental institution or jail." It almost worked: by impersonating Cooper, Scientologists got her indicted in 1973 for threatening to bomb the church. Cooper, who also endured 19 lawsuits by the church, was finally exonerated in 1977 after FBI raids on the church offices in Los Angeles and Washington uncovered documents from the bomb scheme. No Scientologists were ever tried in the matter.
    The "Church" of Scientology isn't so much a church as it is a criminal organization that could give the mafia a run for it's money.

    Here are the different levels of Scientology and what they'll cost you

    By pushing Scientology Tom Cruise is potentially harming people. I'm sure they treat him fine but the rank and file Scientologist can expect to be bilked out of their money at best, turned into a slave and killed at worst.

    List of those killed by Scientology
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    Messages In This Thread
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Dark Jaguar - 24th June 2005, 4:31 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Great Rumbler - 24th June 2005, 4:44 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by alien space marine - 24th June 2005, 6:14 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by A Black Falcon - 24th June 2005, 7:06 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Dark Jaguar - 24th June 2005, 9:22 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by A Black Falcon - 24th June 2005, 10:16 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by N-Man - 25th June 2005, 4:26 AM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by A Black Falcon - 25th June 2005, 8:52 AM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Dark Lord Neo - 25th June 2005, 9:55 AM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Sacred Jellybean - 25th June 2005, 10:32 AM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by A Black Falcon - 25th June 2005, 11:15 AM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by A Black Falcon - 25th June 2005, 11:56 AM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Dark Lord Neo - 25th June 2005, 12:25 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Dark Jaguar - 25th June 2005, 12:51 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by A Black Falcon - 25th June 2005, 2:34 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Dark Jaguar - 25th June 2005, 6:27 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Great Rumbler - 25th June 2005, 7:04 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Dark Jaguar - 25th June 2005, 7:58 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by A Black Falcon - 25th June 2005, 8:23 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Dark Jaguar - 25th June 2005, 9:25 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Smoke - 26th June 2005, 2:56 AM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Great Rumbler - 26th June 2005, 10:03 AM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Dark Jaguar - 26th June 2005, 1:12 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by A Black Falcon - 26th June 2005, 7:54 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Undertow - 27th June 2005, 7:55 AM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by alien space marine - 27th June 2005, 8:11 AM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Dark Jaguar - 10th July 2005, 6:03 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Great Rumbler - 10th July 2005, 6:49 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Dark Jaguar - 10th July 2005, 7:12 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Great Rumbler - 10th July 2005, 7:48 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Dark Jaguar - 10th July 2005, 8:17 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Great Rumbler - 10th July 2005, 9:02 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Dark Jaguar - 10th July 2005, 10:35 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Great Rumbler - 11th July 2005, 7:42 AM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Dark Jaguar - 11th July 2005, 11:44 AM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Great Rumbler - 11th July 2005, 11:47 AM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Smoke - 11th July 2005, 12:33 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Great Rumbler - 11th July 2005, 1:52 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Dark Jaguar - 11th July 2005, 4:31 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Darunia - 12th July 2005, 3:47 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Great Rumbler - 12th July 2005, 3:51 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Dark Jaguar - 12th July 2005, 5:27 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by A Black Falcon - 12th July 2005, 6:20 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Great Rumbler - 12th July 2005, 6:55 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Dark Jaguar - 12th July 2005, 10:41 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by nickdaddyg - 26th July 2005, 4:48 PM
    So apparently psych is a pseudoscience... - by Great Rumbler - 26th July 2005, 5:16 PM

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