Scientology
From: The Rockingham News, July 31, 1998.
Local man helps many leave Scientology.
Sandown - Just who is 51 year-old Robert Minton, and why has he
spent almost $2 million dollars helping people he feels have
been victimized by the Church[sic] of Scientology?
If you ask him, the Boston resident who owns a summer home on
Fremont road in Sandown will tell you it's because he doesn't
believe in Xenu, an evil galactic overlord who controlled nine
planets in this section of the galaxy 75 million years ago and
then decided to do a little population control by wiping out 7
billion people.
It is something Minton contends Scientologists are taught. And
it's an expensive lesson, he says, costing as much as $360,000
to get to the top levels of the church[sic].
According to Minton, Scientologists are taught that Xenu
injected all the "bad" people with glycerol and alcohol, froze
them and then sent them in rocket ships to Teegeak (the
Scientologists' name for Earth) where they were deposited in
volcanoes on the Canary Islands and Hawaii.
Minton feels the methods used by the church[sic] brainwash
people and, after extended exposure to these techniques, the
critical thinking capabilities of their brains are shut down.
"By the time they learn about Xenu, it wouldn't matter if the
story was a thousand times more bizarre." Minton says. "You're
not able to think, to make critical decisions. It's really
chilling what these people do."
After learning of what he calls an illegal attempt by the
church[sic] to remove a Web site containing information taken
allegedly from their sacred scriptures, he began to study the
church[sic].
"What could be said about somebody that's so bad that they try
to stop free speech," Minton said was his initial thought.
Kevin Hall, human rights officer for the church[sic]'s Boston
location, said the reason the church[sic] was upset about the
information on the Web site was it had been altered and was
untrue.
After the untimely death of church[sic] member Lisa McPherson
in 1996, Minton said he became more concerned about what was
going on in the church[sic]. He said McPherson was locked up for
17 days in a Scientology headquarters in Clearwater, Fla., when
she was in need of medical aid.
"I thought this was pretty appalling," Minton says. "We got
together and said we're not going to let this get swept under
the carpet."
Minton felt moved to pay the attorney fees in a wrongful death
suit McPherson's parents filed against the church[sic]. Since
then, he has assisted others he feels have been victims of the
church[sic].
He bought a house for Stacy Young and her husband who ran a
shelter for cats, which was shut down, Minton said they feel, as
retribution for their leaving the church[sic].
Minton is currently preparing to assist another church[sic]
deserter who, Minton said, plans to come forward with
information about what goes on within the confines of
Scientology. One of those former church[sic] members who doesn't
want his identity or whereabouts revealed, has information that
apparently upset the church[sic], Minton said.
When contacted by phone, the former church[sic] member
described Minton as an angel come to help him.
Hall said Wednesday, Scientologists question the methods used
by psychiatrists, especially the involuntarily commitment of
individuals to institutions.
"When they do it involuntarily, it's pretty un-American and
un-constitutional," Hall said. "Drugging is merely masking
problems and leads to addiction. Mental instability is usually
something physical." Hall added, "that's what we're fighting."
A retired investment banker, Minton has returned to Sandown for
the past eight summers and, until last weekend, church[sic]
protesters have not targeted his rural home, although they have
picketed his Boston residence.
The Church[sic] of Scientology is skeptical of Minton's
motives, and a spokesperson said he wants to know why the
Sandown summer resident is on a crusade to reform the
church[sic] and why he is "spreading lies." "He's trying to
destroy the church[sic]," said Hall.
Minton says the mind-control techniques the church[sic] uses
could account for why people haven't come forward until now. He
says the church[sic] instill fear in members.
"you can become outside your body, can control matter, energy
and space," he said church[sic] members are told. "If I don't
like you, I can with my eyes kill you."
Hall says Minton fails to recognize the good work the
church[sic] has done.
"When he spreads things, he certainly doesn't talk about
literacy programs, criminal rehabilitation programs in inner
cities around the country," Hall says. "He's not a nice guy."
Although the estimated number of Scientologists in New
Hampshire doesn't even make a dent in the estimated 8 million[sic]
members worldwide [55,000 in the USA; 70,000 world-wide], Hall says they are around. He says there is a
small mission in Concord and estimates about 500[sic] members live in
New Hampshire. Due to the size of the New Hampshire mission[sic],
Scientologists have had to leave the state to reach the highest
levels of the church[sic], he said.
Two of the protesters who picketed outside Minton's Sandown
home last weekend live in Newfields.
Part of the allure of Scientology, Minton said, is the fact
that several well-known actors who have joined the church[sic]:
Tom Cruise, John Travolta and Lisa Marie Presley, to name a few.
He said the celebrity names make people think if people like
that are involved it must be legitimate.
Hall says the philosophy of the church[sic] centers on helping
people and improving their ability to deal with and live their
lives. As for the skeptics, he says, they should not listen to
Minton's claims.
"The church[sic] has a long track record of improving life.
Millions[sic] of people attest to it," Hall said. "What people should
do is look at the material on Scientology and think for
yourself; learn to understand life, think for yourself."
From: bob@minton.org (Bob Minton)
Subject: "Local man helps many leave Scientology"
Date: Sun, 02 Aug 1998 08:42:20 GMT
Message-ID: <35cf2653.41963471@news.tiac.net>
Church[sic] says he distorts truth.
by Lara Bricker, Staff Writer