Scientology
It will be at the moment of Scientology's defeat that the inherent weakness of
their totalitarian propaganda will becomes visible. Without the force of their
movement, its members will cease at once to believe in the dogma for which
yesterday they still were ready to sacrifice their lives. The moment that
Scientology, that is, the fictitious world which shelters them, is destroyed,
its adherents will revert to their former status of isolated individuals who
either happily accept a new function in a changed world or sink back into their
old desperate superfluousness.
The members of Scientology's totalitarian movement, utterly fanatical as long
as their movement exists, will not follow the example of religious fanatics at
the demise of Scientology and die the death of martyrs (even though they were
only too willing to die the death of robots). Rather they will quietly give up
the movement as a bad bet and look around for another promising fiction or wait
until the former fiction regains enough strength to establish another mass
movement. Alternatively, they will come to the Lisa McPherson Trust for help.
Bob Minton
The description below of what ex-members will be like is a tad
condescending to me. Most ex cult members do not "sink back into
their old desperate superfluousness." Nor do most "look around for
another promising fiction" to fill the void left when they left a
cult. Cult members are not weaklings. I dare say that most people
would not survive very long in the Sea Org or in the rigors and
sacrifices that many cults demand.
Most cult members and ex-cult members I know are idealists, looking
to make the world a better place and improve themselves. They prove
their idealism by great sacrifice. The horrid thing is that they are
sacrificing to a false cause, a charade, an emperor with no clothes.
And the idealism and devotion of so many is wasted on a pipe dream.
That happened to me for 6 years. I wish I could get those years back.
But when I left I did not "sink back" into anything, and I certainly
didn't want to go through such an experience again. In fact, I would
say that ex-cult members are much more able to spot a scam when they
see it than most people.
When a Scientology staffer used a syringe to force a mixture of
aspirin, Benadryl and orange juice into McPherson's throat while others
held her down, it was "spiritual sustenance," the church argues.
From: Bob Minton <bobminton@lisatrust.net>
Subject: Scientology's moment of defeat
Date: Sat, 04 Nov 2000 15:38:08 -0500
Organization: Lisa McPherson Trust, 33 N. Fort Harrison Ave., Clearwater, FL 33755 Tel: (727) 467-9335
Message-ID: <ors80tkcvku2csdgnod13bc1orusg9bktd@4ax.com>
From: cultxpt@primenet.com (Jeff Jacobsen)
Subject: Re: Scientology's moment of defeat
Date: Sat, 04 Nov 2000 23:19:52 GMT
Message-ID: <3a049666.35469818@news.primenet.com>
This is like the story of the emperor's new clothes. No one dared say
that the king was naked until an innocent child loudly proclaimed the
obvious. Then everybody had a good laugh except the king and his
tailors.