http://press.xtvworld.com/article7973.html
Deep in the lonely, isolated wilderness of New Mexico resides a secret cult compound built and maintained by a flying saucer cult.
USA, November 30, 2005 (XTVWorld.Com) -- The United States
Department of Internal Revenue calls the organization a for-profit
business and the United States Supreme Court agrees; "Time"
Magazine called the organization a cult of greed and power; human
rights activists throughout the world call the organization an
international crime syndicate; dozens of courts throughout the
world have called it dangerous, corrupt, venal, and criminal; Tom
Cruise calls it his "church."
Who are they? Where are they? Why are they there? These questions and more are answered here.
L. Ron Hubbard was a third-rate Science Fiction writer in the 1930s and 1940s who tried to make a living writing for a penny a word. World War Two put his career briefly on hold long enough for him to be giving command of a coastal submarine chaser for the United State's Pacific Coast. He promptly attacked Mexico and depth-charged a magnetic anomaly off the coast of Oregon, and he was relieved of command twice and called unfit to perform any duty. He never saw combat. Hubbard abandoned his first wife and children after the war, and later in life he denied ever knowing them.
Hubbard found it impossible to go back to scrounging out a living writing; he told a few science fiction writers that he had a plan on how to make real money. Hubbard sat down in his office one day and three weeks later he had written the book "Dianetics." Most reviewers of the book called it pure nonsense; several reviewers noted that the book is one long abortion fantasy with sexual sadism and women-hating liberally sprinkled within. Hubbard, however, called his book "The Modern Science of Mental Health."
The book "Dianetics" became a brief fad and several thousand copies were sold to ignorant readers who believed it was actual, scientifically researched science. Hubbard created a "Dianetics Foundation" to sell medical "Dianetics cures" and medical treatment to his new customers, even though he was not a physician and his foundation was not licensed to practice medicine.
The fad died out and Hubbard's "foundation" was facing bankruptcy. Hubbard had another idea to make money: he told several of his writer associates that writing for a penny a word was stupid and that to really make money one should start a religion. Hubbard pursued what he called (in writing) "the religion angle," and he told the staff of his "Dianetics Foundation" that the religion angle was not to be taken seriously, and that it was only a matter of taxation, "lawyers and accountants."
L. Ron Hubbard took "Dianetics" and expanded it into what he called "Scientology," borrowing the word from a previous (German) writer. For the next 34 years he wrote all kinds of science fictional stories and claims, only this time he called his stories "technology" and he sold that "technology" for very high prices to his Scientology customers.
A very large part of that "technology" involves flying saucers and aliens from outer space. Hubbard insisted, and sold to his customers as a matter of scientific fact, that 75,000,000 years ago there was an evil tyrant named Lord Xenu. Xenu had a very large population problem that he needed to solve, and he solved it by murdering trillions of people; he packaged these people by freezing them in a mixture of alcohol and glycol, and then transported them all to Earth which, 75,000,000 years ago, was then known as Teegeeack. Xenu then dropped the frozen bodies of these space aliens into Earth's volcanoes, and then Xenu dropped hydrogen bombs on the volcanoes. This released the souls of the space aliens, which Hubbard called "Thetans," to roam in the atmosphere of Teegeeack (Earth).
Not content with killing trillions of people, Xenu wanted to control and confuse these "Thetans" so that they would never remember who they are. So Xenu trapped all of these trillions of souls using a magnetic tape and then he brainwashed them by showing them movies. One movie he showed them, which Hubbard called "Implanting," was Christianity, Jesus, and the Christian Heaven ("the R6 Implant" according to Scientology); Xenu also implanted the other religions into these Thetans, as well as most phobias, and also the "belief" that the physical universe is real.
The brainwashed Thetans now believed in religion, were fearful of irrational things, and believed they were physical beings. Hubbard wrote and lectured that Lord Xenu used religions such as Christianity, Islam, Judaism, and others, as a tool to control and dominate these Thetans. Lord Xenu then dropped these Thetans back on Teegeeack (Earth) where they roamed, looking for bodies to inhabit.
Humanity evolved ("from clams" according to Hubbard, which he called "boohoos and weepers") and the Thetans attached themselves to the human bodies.
And that is, according to Hubbard and the Scientology Corporation, how life currently exists on Earth today: every human being is covered in Body Thetans (the spirits of murdered aliens from outer space), and that alien infestation is the source of all of humanity's problems.... and only Scientology can remove these Body Thetans.
And that removal is not cheep. Most Scientology customers spend around US$400,000 to have their imaginary Body Thetans removed from them. (Tom Cruise, for example, has spent millions of dollars getting his Body Thetans removed.) Other victims have also spent a million dollars or more having their Body Thetans removed.
Along the way, a very great many Scientology victims have died due to Scientology; most have killed themselves, and others have died in very strange and mysterious circumstances. At least one was even tortured and killed while at Scientology Headquarters in Clearwater Florida (see http://whyaretheydead.net for a brief list of dead victims).
Meanwhile, Hubbard turned his business into an international Mafia-like organization that engaged in various crimes such as the infiltration and theft of documents from a number of prominent private national and world organizations, law firms and newspapers; the execution of smear campaigns and baseless law suits to destroy private individuals who had attempted to exercise their First Amendment rights to freedom of expression; the framing (of crimes) of private citizens who had been critical of Scientology, including the forging of documents which led to the indictment of at least one innocent person; violation of the civil rights of prominent private figures and public officials; the burglary of Government offices; the theft of Government property; the interception of private Governmental communications; the obstruction of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Grand Jury investigation into those burglaries; thefts, and electronic "buggings" of government offices and private citizen's residences and business offices; the harboring and concealment of a fugitive from justice; and the making of false declarations to the federal Grand Jury.
In 1986 Hubbard died a raving psychopath while hiding from the FBI, INTERPOL, and NSA--- a hunted fugitive and a convicted felon. His third wife, and 10 other Scientology crime figures, were sent to prison.
This finally brings us to Trementina, New Mexico. Scientology salespeople and staff members who wish to help "clear the planet" of Body Thetans may sign up for the Scientology Corporation's "Sea Organization." Sea Org victims sign a contract that says they will work for Scientology for one billion years. This means they have pledged many of their future lives, as well as their one and only real life, in the service of Scientology.
In the desert near Trementina, and also near Las Vegas, New Mexico, the Scientology flying saucer cult purchased land, around the year Hubbard died, that will house all of Hubbard's written works. The vault is located at Latitude North 35 degrees 31 minutes 56.59 seconds, Longitude West 104 degrees 37 minutes 45.48 seconds. Included at the site is a huge symbol gouged into the Earth ("Teegeeack" according to Scientology) that is there to help guide returning Sea Org staff members, in flying saucers, back to Scientology after they reincarnate on other planets, thousands and millions of years from now.
At present (year 2005) there are 53,000 Scientologists in the United States and another 19,000 Scientologists in the rest of the world. The Scientology Corporation claims they have over eight million customers, but that claim is known to be false.
Contact: http://www.holysmoke.org/nchra/