Scientology
The following will be on the LMT website as an introduction to some of the
essays submitted by Scientologists to the LMT Literati Contest 2000. I am
posting this to a.r.s. after reading a post by Scientologist "Patrick Light"
under the heading "Minton's legacy of disgrace."
This Scientologist speaks of "spitting in the face of justice," "headstrong
vanity," "self-destruction," terms which all describe his own organization
but which he is too deluded to be able to see.
Scientology continues to attack the LMT, Bob Minton and all other critics so
viciously because we are all successfully bringing an end to the abuse,
deception and fraud of Scientology by providing meaningful information about
this organization on the Internet. We are also providing individual
assistance on a daily basis to people who have been hurt by Hard Sell,
Disconnection, Fair Game and other destructive Scientology policies. For
Scientology, the combination of these two factors means the end of their
lucrative scam, so that what we are actually witnessing is the desperate
defense of a dying hoax.
Stacy Brooks
Essays by Scientologists
We received eleven essays written by Scientologists, and we thoroughly
reviewed their essays along with all of the others in determining who would
win. While the judges did not feel that any of the Scientologists' essays
were good enough to award them a prize, we do want to recognize their efforts
and present a sampling of their work in the hope that their contributions
will serve to shed light on the issues we at the LMT are trying to resolve.
These Scientologists really do believe what they have been told by OSA about
why I left Scientology, why Vaughn Young left, why Jesse Prince left, why
Peter Alexander, Arnie Lerma, Monica Pignotti, Mark Plummer, Marjorie
Wakefield, Hana and Jerry Whitfield, and all of the former members who are
now critics of Scientology left. They really do believe that we are lying
about what happened. They believe that we all committed such horrific crimes
that we were compelled by our own innate goodness to leave Scientology in
order to protect Scientology from our evil selves. This is what they have
been told, and they believe it, because to believe otherwise would raise too
many questions that cannot be asked, and certainly cannot be answered.
But there is a more disturbing aspect of this situation. It is a perspective
that John Carmichael, an OSA operative in New York, voiced to me at a
conference back in 1998.
John and I used to be very good friends when we were both in the Guardian's
Office and later OSA. Our friendship was based on the fact that neither of us
was willing to agree to all of the capricious and often abusive orders that
used to rain down upon us from upper management. I spent many hours trying to
recruit John into the Sea Org so that he could be promoted to the upper
management levels of OSA, but he always steadfastly refused to subject
himself to what he considered to be the degraded lifestyle of the Sea Org.
I had known John from 1978 until 1989, when Vaughn and I finally escaped from
the Sea Org. Now I was seeing John again for the first time since I had left,
nearly ten years later. Remember, John and I had been very good friends.
We saw each other in the lobby of the hotel where the conference was being
held. We were both glad to see each other after such a long time. But John
was clearly torn between being glad to see his friend and worried about what
I was doing.
"Stacy! You shouldn't be doing this!" he said to me.
"But John," I replied, "you know as well as I do that there are things going
on in Scientology that have to be changed."
"But you have to make the changes from inside, Stacy! You shouldn't be
talking about these things outside of Scientology."
John and I ended up talking for an hour about this. His point was that no
matter how bad things had gotten for me I should have found a way to correct
them as a Scientologist in good standing. My point was that I tried
everything I could think of to correct things as a Scientologist, but there
was no way to make the changes that needed to be made when the people who
were perpetrating the abuses were the most senior Scientologists in the
organization. So the only thing to do was to leave Scientology and try to
stop the abuse from outside the organization.
John couldn't accept this at all. No matter how bad things were, nothing
could justify airing Scientology's dirty laundry to wogs. That was the bottom
line, and nothing I said could get John to change his mind about that.
John got in a lot of trouble for having such a long conversation with me. The
next time I saw him, a month later, he wouldn't even look at me. He held his
hands up in front of his face, as if he would turn to salt if he saw me, and
he said, "I can't talk to you, Stacy!" He hasn't been willing to speak to me
since then.
I often thought about that conversation with John Carmichael while I read the
essays submitted by Scientologists.
Not one of the Scientologists expresses any interest whatsoever in finding
out more about the abuse described by former Scientologists like me. None of
them expresses any interest in finding out what kind of harassment Bob Minton
has been subjected to. In fact, they don't express an interest in finding out
if there is truth to any of the things critics of Scientology have to say.
It is this willful and deliberate ignorance and refusal to look at any
negative information about Scientology that bewilders and frustrates the
critics. As I read the Scientologists' essays I finally realized why this
situation cannot resolve. It is inherent in the Scientology mindset.
It is not the nature of a critic's past activities that makes him or her a
criminal. It is the fact of being a public critic of Scientology. The crime
is being publicly critical of Scientology. If Bob Minton were a wealthy
public Scientologist paying for services on the Freewinds and making
donations to the Super Power Building, IAS, WISE, ABLE, and The Way To
Happiness Foundation, his business dealings with Nigeria would be the subject
of endless articles in the WISE magazines about his "successful actions" and
Bob would be a celebrity, given the red carpet treatment.
But because he is publicly critical, he is targeted for destruction, and
Scientologists see nothing wrong with this because to destroy a perceived
enemy of Scientology is the greatest good for the greatest number of
dynamics. In the Scientology ethics system it is not the particular act that
determines whether one is ethical or not. It is whether one is acting in the
best interests of Scientology. If the action is going to help Scientology, it
is ethical. If it is going to hurt Scientology, that very same action is
unethical.
This is the danger of the Scientology system, that what is ethical or moral
is defined only within the system itself, as though anything outside of the
system is expendable. This is why non-Scientologists perceive it as
dangerous, and this is why Scientologists cannot see the danger. Tory
Bezazian's analogy to the film, The Truman Show, is extremely helpful in
explaining this phenomenon to non-Scientologists. Only that which is in the
"show" is reality, just as only that which is within the Scientology system
is real. Outside the show nothing exists, just as for a Scientologist the wog
world does not exist as a viable option for the future. What it amounts to
for a Scientologist is this: for better or worse, the Scientology system is
all there is, so I'd better make the best of it.
I found Maureen O'Keefe's essay to be the most illustrative, albeit
inadvertently, of the Scientology mindset.
Maureen states that "One's conclusions are only as good as the data on which
they are based. Faulty data never leads to an accurate conclusion. Accurate
conclusions are vital to successfully solve the problems posed by life." Yet
she is unwilling to accept the possibility that she is forming opinions and
coming to conclusions about critics based on faulty data that she is being
given by her Scientology sources. She is unwilling to consider the
possibility that her conclusions might be wrong because that would not be the
greatest good for the greatest number of dynamics.
It would not be good for Scientology for the information being made available
by the critics to be true. Therefore, it is false.
In another paragraph Maureen states: "The ability to think for oneself and
act in accordance with the dictates of one's own conscience requires that a
person be able to be responsible. When a member of any group merely does what
he is told, he is not being responsible - he is being a robot. When a member
of any group becomes incapable of making decisions based on his own
observations and feels he must do exactly as his superiors wish whether he
agrees or not, that person ceased taking responsibility for himself and his
group at a much earlier date."
This is a breathtaking example of the kind of denial the Scientology system
engenders in its members. This is exactly what Maureen and other
Scientologists are doing - they have set aside their own critical thinking
skills in favor of the privilege of being a member of Scientology. Maureen
cannot use her own observations to make decisions because the decisions she
would make would be contrary to the greatest good for the greatest number of
dynamics. If she were to base her conclusions on her own observations Maureen
would be forced to find fault with Scientology and this is not permissible.
She has no choice but to do exactly as her superiors wish whether she agrees
or not. Therefore, she agrees.
The irony is that it was exactly for this reason that I left Scientology. I
was not able to think for myself and form my own conclusions without finding
myself in grave danger of psychological, emotional and physical harm. I was
faced with a choice: either continue to put myself in danger by acting in
accordance with the dictates of my own conscience, or cease taking
responsibility for myself and my group and start doing exactly as I was told
by my superiors. The only way I could see to take responsibility for myself
and my group was to leave it and seek help elsewhere to bring about the
ethical and moral changes I saw needed to be made.
This is what I am continuing to do to this day, yet Maureen and her fellow
Scientologists cannot accept this. It cannot be true that my leaving
Scientology was an ethical decision on my part. It cannot be true because it
would be bad for Scientology; therefore, it is false. What if Maureen began
to take responsibility for the things she sees within Scientology that are
not ethical? What would happen to the life she has so carefully and
painstakingly created for herself?
In another section of Maureen's essay she takes up the subject of ethics
directly. It is in this section that the hypocrisy of the Scientology mindset
is most clearly illuminated.
After explaining the eight dynamics, Maureen states: "People… place different
importance on different dynamics. We are surrounded by examples every day.
How about the man who abandons his wife and children to take up with a
prostitute just because she inflates his ego and makes him feel important.
This man would be said to have a stronger urge toward survival on the First
Dynamic than he had on his Second Dynamic. Because his actions are
destructive to his family and himself, sooner or later, he will experience
the same pain he has caused his family…. In a decaying society as we find
here in the United States at this writing, far too many people are interested
solely in their first dynamic. The result is the increasing divorce rate,
crime and other social ills. A person who only cares about himself is on the
way out, for life to be lived to its fullest requires active participation on
and responsibility for all eight dynamics."
Here is another instance of utter denial on the part of a Scientologist for
what Scientology itself is doing.
What about the woman who contacted me at the LMT several months ago,
desperate because she had lost her husband to Scientology? They had been
married for nearly twenty years and had had a wonderful relationship. They
had two teenage daughters and a really happy family. Then he did a management
seminar and soon began disappearing for months at a time to take Scientology
services. He emptied their bank account, used all the credit on their credit
cards, didn't pay their taxes and put them in debt to the IRS by nearly
$100,000.00. When she told him she was worried about their finances, her
husband became very angry and told her to stop criticizing Scientology. When
she told him their daughters missed their father and wondered what had
happened to him, he threatened to disconnect from her if she said anything
bad about Scientology to their children.
The woman called me after she discovered that her husband had become a staff
member at a Scientology organization. She told me he had gotten the family
into nearly $200,000.00 debt and she was stunned that any organization would
allow someone to treat their family the way he was treating his. She said she
had written several reports and had had several phone calls with
Scientologists trying to sort this out, but it was just getting worse and
worse. She asked what I thought she should do. Although Scientologists like
Maureen will probably not believe this, I advised the woman to write a
Knowledge Report to the proper people within Scientology, because, I told
her, it is off-policy in Scientology for anyone to be recruited on staff when
they have such terrible debts. If the proper people in Scientology found out
what had happened, I told her, they would ensure that her husband took
responsibility for the debts.
To my surprise, no one did anything at all. The woman again asked what she
should do and I told her to write another report, this time cc'ing me at the
LMT to let Scientology know that she was in touch with me. The woman did
this, and only then was her husband ordered off staff to handle his debts.
But he also told his wife he wanted a divorce because she was antagonistic to
Scientology for having gotten in touch with the LMT. Now Scientologists like
Maureen are calling Bob Minton a hate monger and the LMT a hate group. Why?
Because we are trying to help people who have been treated the way this woman
was by Scientology?
Is this what Maureen calls ethical behavior? Yet within Scientology, this is
indeed considered ethical. It is ethical for this man to run up huge debts
for his family as long as the money is going toward Scientology services. But
it is unethical for this man to remain with his wife and children if they are
critical of Scientology.
This is only one example of the kinds of calls we get at the LMT every day.
Scientologists like Maureen do not believe this; they think I am lying about
this. Of course, I am not lying. But Maureen must believe that I am a liar
because if I were telling the truth, it would open the door to the
possibility that other information being made available by Scientology
critics is true. Therefore, it is false.
In another paragraph of Maureen's essay she talks about the good works
Scientologists do for the community: "For instance, for the past three years
I have personally organized the Christmas Food Drive at the Church in Boston
for the benefit of the Sandown Food Pantry. This community project ensures
that the children of needy families in Sandown, New Hampshire are provided
with, amongst other things, healthy nutritious snacks in school. As it is
hard for a child to learn when he is hungry or improperly nourished, the
donations from the Food Drive seeks to help these children get a better
education."
This is a stunning example of the cynicism and hypocrisy of Scientology's
dealings with what they call the "wog world," or the world outside of
Scientology.
Sandown, New Hampshire is the town where Bob Minton lives. For the past three
years Maureen has been in charge of a harassment campaign against Bob in
Sandown. Maureen has organized several mailings to the approximately 4,000
citizens of Sandown and has herself written at least one letter that has been
sent to all the citizens of Sandown. All of the fliers and letters have been
derogatory about Bob and Bob has received many phone calls from his neighbors
sympathizing with him about being the target of such a hate campaign by
Scientology. The reason Maureen started her Sandown Food Pantry project was
that many of the citizens of Sandown complained to the Scientology
organization in Boston about the fliers that were being sent to them.
Maureen's food drive is an effort to correct the bad public relations she
created by her campaign of character assassination against Bob Minton in his
New Hampshire hometown.
Maureen concludes her essay with a suggestion for how the conflict between
Scientology and its critics can be resolved: "Now the simplest way to put an
end to the matter is for those attacking Scientology to just decide to stop
attacking and stop. As L. Ron Hubbard clearly stated in an article entitled
"Critics of Scientology: 'If you will leave us alone we will leave you
alone.'…."
She leaves out the most important part of that quote, so let me make it
available to you here:
"We are slowly and carefully teaching the unholy a lesson. It is as follows:
'We are not a law enforcement agency. BUT we will become interested in the
crimes of people who seek to stop us. If you oppose Scientology we promptly
look up - and will find and expose - your crimes. If you leave us along we
will leave you alone.'
"It's very simple. Even a fool can grasp that.
"And don't underrate our ability to carry it out."
I don't think there is a better quote by L. Ron Hubbard for showing the true
motive for attacking people who criticize Scientology. As I said earlier, the
Scientologists' essays have been very instrumental in revealing the real
source of concern for critics of Scientology.
This is how a Scientologist justifies refusing to look at the critics' data:
It would not be good for Scientology for the information being made available
by the critics to be true. Therefore, it is false.
What the Scientologists seem to be saying is this: A person who has never
been in Scientology cannot possibly know anything about it. A person who has
left Scientology cannot possibly be telling the truth about it. The only
valid source of information about Scientology is a Scientologist in good
standing.
But if a Scientologist is unwilling or unable to look at both sides of the
issue, then how can a Scientologist be a valid source of information? The
truth is that any serious critic of Scientology who has honestly analyzed the
data on both sides knows more about Scientology and understands it more
thoroughly than any current Scientologist. Furthermore, Scientologists who
decide to evaluate the information on both sides of the Scientology issue
inevitably decide to leave the organization because they do not want to be
part of it once they see it for what it really is.
One of the essays this year was submitted by Rick Sherwood, who said he has
been in Scientology for forty years. He began his essay with an attack on the
LMT as a hate group and continued with the following: "I am entering this
contest to keep the contest honest and in the hope that the Lisa McPherson
Trust will select at least one winning piece unlike those this same contest
awarded substantial money awards to last year. Those essays were by people
who had never been Scientologists, who knew nothing firsthand about
Scientology, and who were bound and determined to make the religion of
Scientology the target of ridicule and hurtful actions."
This is a perfect example of how a Scientologist is fed wholesale falsehoods
and accepts them as truth without bothering to inspect or verify the
information at all. The winners of the Literati Contest last year were Joe
Cisar, Scott Mayer and Arnie Lerma, all long-term former Scientologists who
have spent many years struggling to come to terms with their own experiences
as Scientologists.
It is time for Scientologists to demand the truth and take their heads out of
the sand about the abuse and deceit being perpetrated on a daily basis by
their organization.
Stacy Brooks
From: Stacy Brooks <stacybrooks@lisatrust.net>
Subject: LMT Literati Contest 2000: Essays by Scientologists
Date: Sat, 16 Dec 2000 22:24:18 -0500
Organization: Lisa McPherson Trust, a Scientology watchdog group
Message-ID: <lcco3to2ib56pqjbkkfvfa606jfbrf3g4r@4ax.com>