Sect decides to fight
Viewers' choice: // Closeup on cultism
Date: Sunday, 29 August 1976
Publisher: Detroit News
Main source: link (137 KiB)
Viewers' choice: // Closeup on cultism
Date: Sunday, 29 August 1976
Publisher: Detroit News
Main source: link (137 KiB)
Though religious cults have existed elsewhere for thousands
of years, their ranks have only begun to swell in America in the past
few decades. They flourished particularly in the sixties, when celebrity
involvement — by the Beatles, among others — helped make cult
abbreviations like "TM" (for Transcendental Meditation) commonplace.
Unofficial
estimates place the number of cults in the United States today at
5,000, with an individual total of two million members. But as that
number grew, so did the controversy surrounding them.
Critics
have brought charges that the cults brainwash members and purposely
mislead them psychologically and financially before the United States
Congress. Parents of children who are involved in them have founded a
national organization called Citizens Freedom Foundation dedicated to
"educating the public to the dangers of religious cults." And a
45-year-old Methodist man from Tennessee named Ted Patrick is currently
facing $10 million worth of lawsuits for his efforts to "de-program"
young cultists.
ABC News (Ch. 7) will examine the
controversy Thursday at 10 p.m. in the hour-long special "ABC News
Closeup on New Religions: Holiness or Heresy?"
The
program, narrated by Jim Kincaid, will focus especially on two of the
most familiar religious organizations in the United States: The
Unification Church founded by South Korean evangelist Rev. Sun Myung
Moon, and the Church of Scientology, started by L. Ron Hubbard. It will
attempt to examine their social and political implications, as well as
their operation.
Moon's church declares its three main
goals as unification of religion, creation of the true family of man
with the founding of God-centered families and transcendence of all
racial, na- [rest of article missing]
Scientology Flagship shrouded in mystery // Vessel was focus of mutual suspicion between church, government
Date: Tuesday, 29 August 1978
Publisher: Los Angeles Times (California)
Author: Robert Gillette
Main source: link (361 KiB)
Date: Tuesday, 29 August 1978
Publisher: Los Angeles Times (California)
Author: Robert Gillette
Main source: link (361 KiB)
On June 25, 1971, a young Colorado woman named Susan Meister
died in an apparent suicide aboard the Apollo, the 3,280-ton flagship of
the Church of Scientology and for nearly a decade the personal yacht of
the church's founder, L. Ron Hubbard.
In mid-July that
year, according to State Department correspondence obtained by The
Times, Miss Meister's father traveled from Colorado to the Moroccan port
of Safi, 125 miles south of Casablanca, where the Apollo was then
moored, to inquire into his daughter's death. Meister is said to have
questioned the explanation of the death proffered by the ship's
officers, and indicated that he might seek an investigation of the
Apollo.
In turn — according to a Nov. 11, 1971, letter
from Assistant Secretary of State David M. Abshire to the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee — the Apollo's port captain threatened in the
presence of the American vice consul from Casablanca, William J.
Galbraith, that "he had enough material, including compromising
photographs of Miss Meister, to smear Mr. Meister first."
According
to the Abshire letter, "Mr. Hubbard was apparently aboard the Apollo at
the time of Mr. Meister's visit but declined to see him." Meister was
said to have left Morocco the day before the threat was made.
No
such smear occurred, and according to a church acquaintance of Miss
Meister's who has since renounced Scientology, any such threat would
almost certainly have been an empty one. "There was no way that girl
could have been involved in anything compromising. She was very quiet,
very nice," said the acquaintance, who asked not to be identified.
The
State Department letter also says that the same officer who allegedly
threatened to "smear" Miss Meister told Galbraith — whom the officer had
invited down from Casablanca — that "his organization, backed by money
and friends in high places, 'would cause a nosy vice consul severe
problems' " and that in Safi, where the ship was well liked, "
'Accidents could easily happen to people.' "
The Apollo's
two senior officers then filed a formal complaint with the U.S.
government, alleging that Vice Consul Galbraith had threatened them by
saying that he could "get the ship sunk . . . by the CIA" or have it
sabotaged "by getting a couple of bottles of Coca-Cola into the (engine)
oil, or, even better, commercial diamond dust."
Galbraith said these allegations, contained in a notarized statement, were a "complete fabrication."
The
incident at Safi appears to have marked a low point in a relationship
between the Church of Scientology and American diplomatic outposts
abroad that was generally characterized by mutual suspicion.
The
church, for its part, suspected U.S. diplomats and intelligence
operatives of fomenting trouble for it around the world. Government
officials in turn expressed bewilderment at the sometimes eccentric
behavior of the Apollo crew and wondered, in correspondence and cables
to Washington, whether the ship might be a cover for illicit activities
ranging from drug running to white slavery.
The 320-foot
ship was purchased in the mid-1960s and sold about 14 months ago,
according to church spokesmen. Built in 1937, it had once served as a
freighter and a ferry. Under the command of
"Commodore" Hubbard, as he
ranked himself aboard the ship, it became the headquarters and training
vessel of his "Sea Org," an elite management corps in the church.
But
over the years — as the Apollo plied a generally triangular course from
ports in Spain and Portugal, south to Morocco, west to Madeira and back
to the Iberian coast — the crew appears to have done its utmost to
obscure its relationship with Scientology.
Sailing under
Panamanian registry, the ship's owner was listed as the Operation and
Transport Corp., Ltd., a Panamanian company. OTC, the crew consistently
told skeptical press and local officialdom at its ports of call, was a
secular business management training firm whose clients could not be
divulged.
Adding to the aura of mystery, the ship
transmitted coded radio messages to New York and points unknown and
established land bases in Casablanca
and Tangier, cities steeped in intrigue.
and Tangier, cities steeped in intrigue.
The Apollo appears to have done little to dispel the air of mystery about it.
In
September, 1969, soon after the OTC established a land base at Tangier,
the American consulate at Casablanca cabled an account of a visit
aboard the ship, nothing that "all concerned have been completely
perplexed by the vagueness of the replies" to such questions as why the
ship was operated and what its crew was training to do.
An
Apollo brochure was said to explain that some 109 trainees aboard were
learning "the art and the culture of navigation, the theory of which,
when applied, demonstrates a very useful practice at sea."
Although
the Apollo was registered in Panama and owned by a Panamanian company,
the Panamanian consul general had no better luck in eliciting
information. He found, the U.S. cable said, that the Apollo was "in a
very bad state of repair" and believed that "the lives of the crew had
been in jeopardy while the vessel was at sea."
"The
Panamanian consul general has tried unsuccessfully to meet Commodore
Hubbard, who has taken a suite at the El Mansour Hotel and has
instructed the hotel personnel to refuse all telephone calls."
"It
is possible that Commodore Hubbard and his wife . . . are
philanthropists of some kind and/or eccentrics, but if one does not
accept this as an explanation, there has to be some other 'gimmick'
involved in this operation. What this gimmick might be is unknown here,
although people in Casablanca have speculated variously from smuggling
to drug traffic to a far-out religious cult."
At times the Apollo and OTC appear to have deliberately teased the curiosity of diplomatic officials.
From
Tangier in February of 1971, American Consul General Howard D. Jones
wrote to the U.S. legal attache in Madrid of a puzzling social encounter
with someone from the OTC.
"I recently met at a social
function a young, American lady associated with this new enterprise,"
Jones wrote.
"She introduced herself to an American standing with me in
this way: 'I am Meredith Thomas. I am here with a Panamanian
corporation, and that is all I can tell you.'"
"The air
of mystery on the good ship Apollo . . . may not mask any illegal
activity; still, I thought it worthwhile to check," Jones said.
Fourteen
months later, the U.S. consulate at Tangier dispatched a lengthy cable
to Washington reflecting a mixture of bemusement and bewilderment at the
semi-clandestine activities of Scientology in Morocco.
The April 26, 1972, cable from Tangier said:
"Little
is known of the operations of (the) Operation and Transport Company
here, and its officers are elusive about what it does. However, we
presume that the Scientologists aboard the Apollo and in Tangier do
whatever it is that Scientologists do elsewhere.
"There
have been rumors in town that the Apollo is involved in drug or white
slave traffic. However, we doubt these reports . . .
"The
stories about white slave traffic undoubtedly stem from the fact that
included among the crew of the Apollo are a large number of strikingly
beautiful young ladies. However, we are skeptical that a vessel that
stands out like a sore thumb, in which considerable interest is bound to
be generated, and with a crew numbering in the hundreds, would be a
reasonable vehicle for smuggling or white slaving."
On an
extended cruise through the Caribbean in the summer of 1975, rumors of
illicit or clandestine activity followed the Apollo from island to
island like seagulls behind a fishing smack.
In
September, 1975, the American Embassy in Trinidad cabled in a local news
roundup to Washington that the "controversial yacht Apollo seems to
have worn out its welcome in Trinidad."
Stories in a
weekly tabloid called The Bomb connected the ship with Scientology, told
the story of a leading local Calypso singer named Lord Superior who had
joined the church and then rejected it, and in the end "appear to have
soured the previously enthusiastic attitude of Trinidadians toward the
Apollo."
The Bomb also speculated that the ship was
linked to the CIA and Sharon Tate murders in Los Angeles.
That led to a
libel action by the Church of Scientology.
Church of Scientology members plead innocent to charges
Date: Tuesday, 29 August 1978
Publisher: Palo Alto Times
Main source: link (57 KiB)
Date: Tuesday, 29 August 1978
Publisher: Palo Alto Times
Main source: link (57 KiB)
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Nine members of the Church of Scientology,
including the wife of founder L. Ron Hubbard, pleaded innocent today to
charges they infiltrated federal agencies and stole government
documents.
U.S. District Judge George Hart made it clear
during the hour-long arraignment that he would reject church attempts to
turn their trial into a forum for alledging 28 years of government
harassment.
"The Church of Scientology is not on trial
here and it's not going to be on trial," Hart said. "There will be no
reference to religion throughout the trial.
"We're talking about stealing," the judge said. "That's a simple charge — like you went in a bank and took money."
It
also was disclosed that grand juries in New York and Tampa, Fla., are
investigating possible criminal conduct by the church, which already is
accused in a 29-count indictment of placing members in typist jobs at
the Justice Department and Internal Revenue Service to enable it to
steal stacks of secret documents.
Hart denied motions by
defense lawyers for a ruling sealing all documents in the case to
protect the privacy of the defendants. Prosecutors argued the maneuver
was intended for public relations purposes, noting the church has called
repeated news conferences to denounce the govenment and now wants to
prevent any adverse publicity from its alleged actions.
The
church has admitted copying govenment documents, but said it did so to
defend itself against harassment by the IRS, which has opposed granting
it tax-exempt status, the Justice Department and other federal agencies.
The
case is built around thousands of documents FBI agents seized in raids
on the church's Los Angeles and Washington offices on July 8, 1977.
Two
of the 11 defendents — Jane Kember and Morris Budlong, whom prosecutors
believe are in Sussex, England, did not appear for arraignment.
Those
appearing before Hart included: Mary Sue Hubbard, Sussex, wife of the
church founder; Henning Heldt, Los Angeles; Duke Snider, Mitchell
Hermann and Cindy Raymond, all of Hollywood; Richard Weigand, Van Nuys;
and Gregory Willardson, Beverly Hills.
They are charged
with two counts of conspiracy, 10 counts of theft of government
property, 10 counts of burglary and one count of intercepting oral
communications.
Two other suspects who entered innocent
pleas — Gerald Bennett Wolfe, of Areleta, Calif., and Sharon Thomas, Los
Angeles — allegedly are low-level church members who "infiltrated" the
IRS and Justice Department. They faced related, but slightly different
charges.
Church claims U.S. campaign of harassment // Scientologists advance charge as rationale for aggressive policies
Date: Tuesday, 29 August 1978
Publisher: Los Angeles Times (California)
Authors: Robert Gillette, Robert Rawitch
Main source: link (566 KiB)
Date: Tuesday, 29 August 1978
Publisher: Los Angeles Times (California)
Authors: Robert Gillette, Robert Rawitch
Main source: link (566 KiB)
The Church of Scientology contends that for more than 20
years it has been the target of a systematic campaign by the United
States government, together with "vested-interest pressure groups" such
as the medical professions, to "suppress the church's spiritual practice
and expansion."
The church advances this accusation as
the fundamental rationale for its aggressive policies of
defense-by-attack against individual critics, private groups and
government agencies perceived as "harassing" Scientology.
Church
spokesmen, moreover, expand upon the allegation of systematic
persecution to suggest that the church's chronic state of conflict with
the U.S. government, among others, symptomizes an erosion of democracy
of the kind that presaged the rise of Fascism in Germany in the 1930s.
"Genocide
didn't begin with gas chambers, it began with the suppression of a
single organization," Jeffrey A. Dubron, a spokesman for Scientology's
principal United States church in Los Angeles, said repeatedly during
interviews with two Times reporters.
Heber C. Jentzsch,
the church's chief West Coast spokesman, adds: "Religion is under
attack. We're not alone . . . It could result in vast devastation of an
entire society if allowed to proliferate."
In an effort to
substantiate its charges of persecution, the church says it has filed
more than 1,000 formal requests with federal agencies and nearly two
dozen lawsuits under the Freedom of Information Act since 1973 — and
that by this means has amassed some 200,000 pages of internal government
papers and correspondence from private citizens to government agencies
that refer to Scientology.
Yet a close examination of the
papers the church has culled from this mass of material and made
available to Times reporters as evidence fails to reveal any explicit or
unambiguous expression of interest on the part of any federal agency to
"suppress" or "harass" Scientology, alone or in collaboration with any
other agency or private group.
The documents do contain,
as the church contends, abundant speculation and rumor about
Scientology's motivations and activities, although the gossip in the
government's files was usually labeled for what it was.
Overall,
the papers reflect widespread skepticism that Scientology was a bona
fide religion. But at the same time, government agencies appeared
disinclined to regard it as subversive or dangerous.
As
one informational memo circulated within the Central Intelligence Agency
put it, L. Ron Hubbard, Scientology's founder, "appears to be a shrewd
businessman who has parlayed his Scientology 'religion' into a
multimillion-dollar business by taking advantage of that portion of
society prone to fall for such gimmicks."
The church considers this typical of the damaging false information that it says has plagued Scientology from its inception.
Another
CIA memo says, however, that the agency "has had no relationship with
Hubbard or with the movement, nor is there any evidence available that
would suggest political or subversive overtones."
During
11 hours of interviews, Dubron and Jentzsch began with the position that
the government agencies such as the FBI and CIA had engaged "systematic
harassment" of the church, in large part by circulating false
information about the church's beliefs and practices to other agencies
and to foreign governments.
As the evidence of intent was
discussed, the two spokesmen shifted to a position that "individuals"
in the FBI, the Internal Revenue Service and other agencies had acted on
their own volition to suppress the church.
Still later,
Dubron asserted that papers obtained under the Freedom of Information
Act "at the very least demonstrate gross incompetence" on the part of
agencies handling matters relating to Scientology — ranging from the
church's requests for tax exemption to visa applications from foreign
Scientologists.
"We feel we will be able to prove intent
(to harass)," Dubron said, adding in reference to the material obtained
under the Freedom of Information Act, "we feel certain it is in there."
If
such evidence does not emerge, Dubron said, it may be that it is hidden
in additional files the government has refused to surrender under
exemption clauses in the act. Or, he said, federal officials may have
destroyed such evidence to avoid embarrassment or never committed their
intentions to paper in the first place.
This hypothesis
is not implausible, but it does run counter to the success that other
controversial organizations have had in prying deeply embarrassing
documents from federal agencies by means of the Freedom of Information
Act.
There are, for example, the volumes of documents
brought to light beginning in 1974 that exposed a 15-year campaign by
the Federal Bureau of Investigation to disrupt organizations ranging
from the Communist Party to the Black Panthers to New Left groups
opposed to the Vietnam war.
In one such document, a May
10, 1968, memo from the FBI's "Cointelpro" campaign that conveyed the
bureau's intentions unequivocally, the late director J. Edgar Hoover
ordered his agents to "expose, disrupt or otherwise neutralize" the New
Left movement.
The FBI "must frustrate every effort of
these groups and individuals to consolidate their forces or to recruit
new or useful elements," Hoover wrote.
The Church of
Scientology, which includes the FBI on its list of agencies alleged to
have harassed the church, does not appear on published lists of
organizations the FBI targeted in its now-defunct Cointelpro campaign.
More
important, disclosure of the Cointelpro documents showed that in the
1950s and 1960s — precisely when Scientologists say they were under
concerted attack — federal officials did commit to paper their
intentions toward other groups, kept the paper and later surrendered it.
The
file of papers bearing on Scientology which the FBI has released under
the Freedom of Information Act consists almost entirely of citizen
inquiries about Scientology; responses from the FBI to the effect that
as an investigative agency it could offer no comment; and internal memos
on Scientology evidently written for the guidance of FBI offices in
handling public inquiries.
The memos consistently, from
the 1950s into the 1970s, assert that the FBI has not investigated the
Church of Scientology or its founder, Hubbard.
Three
inches thick, the FBI file covers 34 years, from 1940 through 1974. It
begins with a May 16, 1940 letter from Hubbard himself to the FBI, in
which Hubbard accuses the steward of the Knickerbocker Hotel in New York
of Nazi sympathies.
The FBI promptly opened a file
listing Hubbard as an "informant," then closed it two weeks later after
an FBI agent, seeking more information from Hubbard, found that he had
moved from his apartment and left no forwarding address.
Last
year, the Church of Scientology published a paperback book containing
what its spokesmen describe as the essence of available evidence for
government harassment of the church. Entitled "The American
Inquisition," the $5 book opens with a claim that in 1950 "the
government was excited by the possibility of monopolizing L. Ron
Hubbard's work and sought to force him into classified government
service."
"When Mr. Hubbard declined," the book
continues, "the government threatened him — and the war between
Scientology and the government was on."
It was, by all
indications, a peculiar war. The next year saw Hubbard visiting FBI
offices on March 7, 1951, to discuss his then current marital
difficulties, pass along the names of associates he believed to be
Communists, and advertise dianetics — his theory of the human mind's
operation — as a means of combatting communism.
The FBI's
summary of the interview, released under the Freedom of Information
Act, notes that Hubbard "declined to elaborate on how this might be
done."
By 1955, FBI memos indicate, the bureau had ceased acknowledging Hubbard's correspondence.
According
to the church's book, the next major incident occurred in the spring of
1958 when then Vice President Richard M. Nixon was alleged to have
dispatched two U.S. Secret Service agents to the Founding Church of
Scientology in Washington, D.C., to upbraid its staff for a slighting
reference to Nixon that had appeared in the church's magazine Ability.
"The
agents further demanded that all copies of the Ability issue be
recalled, that no further copies be issued, and that Nixon's name never
again be mentioned in the church magazine," the book asserts.
The
Secret Service has told the church that it has no record of such a
visit. The substantiation the church offered in its book is a letter
written by a former Washington Scientologist 16 years later, in
November, 1974. The letter says in part:
"A rumor
somewhat circulated through the organization that we had been visited by
the Secret Service on behalf of Vice President Nixon," but the author
leaves open the possibility that, "I am misidentifying it with other
visits from the FDA or the IRS."
Agents of the Food and
Drug Administration did visit a Scientology office in the Washington,
D.C. area in 1958. They seized 20,000 pills of a vitamin mixture the
church called "dianezene." The FDA said the pills were misleadingly
labeled "Special Anti-Radiation Compound" and were advertised as
conferring protection against radioactivity. According to the FDA, the
seizure was "uncontested" and the tablets were destroyed.
Five
years later — in an action the church considers one of the leading
government transgressions against it — the FDA returned to seize 100 of
Scientology's "E-meters" in Washington, charging that Scientologists
were using the electronic devices (which resemble simple lie-detectors)
in a counseling context that implied curative powers for illnesses.
The
church fought the FDA for the next 10 years and finally won the right
to use its E-meters in religious counseling so long as it imputed no
therapeutic value. But government documents the church made available to
The Times appear to conflict with, rather than support, its view that
the 1963 raid was part of a larger effort to suppress Scientology.
In
a 1968 letter to the British Ministry of Health, for example, the FDA
said, "Our seizure action of the Hubbard E-meters was directed solely
against the device, based on objectionable statements in various
materials which served as labeling."
The Church of
Scientology also contends that it was included on the White House
"enemies" list drawn up during the Nixon administration and that it has
been the target of a vendetta by the Internal Revenue Service.
"It
is not insignificant that the Church of Scientology was one of the
organizations named in the infamous Nixon 'enemies' list," Washington
church vice president Kendrick L. Moxon said in a federal court
affidavit filed May 6, 1976.
But a review of the
"enemies" list and associated memos that presidential counsel John Dean
disclosed in June, 1973, reveals no mention of the church, its founder
or its other officials among the more than 250 organizations and
individuals singled out explicitly for retaliation by the IRS and other
federal agencies.
The church does appear on a list the
IRS drew up in 1969 of organizations that — the agency said in an
attached memo — "by their very nature can be expected to ignore or
wilfully violate tax or firearm statutes."
The memo makes
no mention of "enemies" or any form of retaliation or harassment. The
context is that of an effort to consolidate files and eliminate
repetitive and overlapping field investigation on groups believed likely
to evade tax laws.
In the mid-1960s, the IRS revoked the
tax-exempt status of two principal Scientology churches, in Washington,
D.C., and Los Angeles. The California case is yet to be resolved, but
in 1969 the U.S. Court of Claims upheld the IRS action in the Washington
case, ruling that the church had "failed to prove," as the law
requires, that no part of the church corporation's net earnings inured
to the benefit of Hubbard, his wife or family.
Suspicion
within the Internal Revenue Service that the Church of Scientology and
its numerous subsidiary organizations was actually a "profit-making
scheme of a nonreligious nature" is reflected in an internal memo dated
March 27, 1967. Based on unspecified "investigative information," the
memo contends that since the early 1950s a "sizable amount of untaxed
income has been going to Hubbard generally via one of the (his)
controlled organizations, through English or Swiss banks."
Discussing
ways of taxing this income, the memo suggests imposing a 30%
withholding tax on monies flowing out of the United States to
Scientology groups abroad. But it notes that "this would net little tax
and not reach the real tax target — Hubbard."
Jentzsch,
the church's chief West Coast spokesman, said he took this remark to
mean that "they don't care about the money — they want to get Hubbard."
One
of the major themes weaving through Scientology's complaint of
government harassment is that the FBI, among other agencies,
deliberately circulated false and damaging information about the church
and its founder within the U.S. government and also passed it along to
other governments form Australia to Europe to Africa — thereby coloring
official attitudes toward Scientology around the world.
"Well-poisoning," is the phrase that Kenneth J. Whitman, president of the Church of Scientology of California, uses.
To
support this view, the church compiled and gave to The Times several
hundred pages of documents the U.S. government has turned over to the
church. The papers include internal memos, correspondence, State
Department cables and requests for information from several foreign
governments including Canada and Britain.
These papers,
among others obtained independently, do demonstrate that the FBI —
having not investigated the church — culled much of its information from
uncomplimentary newspaper and magazine articles, distributed it freely
to U.S. agencies and infrequently to foreign governments — but not to
the public.
The papers also indicate that throughout the
government, rumor and speculation linking Scientology to hypnosis and
the use or smuggling of drugs were common. (The church has consistently
denied any such associations and in January of 1976 federal drug
officials said in a court proceeding there was no drug investigation
under way.)
It is impossible to tell, on the basis of
papers the church has made available, whether, or to what extent, such
gossip weighed against the church in its dealings with governments.
There
is no indication, however, that U.S. agencies (including the FBI)
attached particular credence to the melange of rumor and news clippings
circulated by the FBI — or that they relied on such material as a basis
for regulatory decisions affecting the church.
A case in
point is the so-called "Foley memorandum," which the church regards as
one of the most egregious examples of damaging false information yet
unearthed from government files by the Freedom of Information Act.
Written
by one Shirley Foley of the U.S. Labor Department in November, 1967,
the memo is a nine-paragraph summary of a conversation with two IRS
attorneys written for his files.
When it was written —
and, the church says, distributed later to other federal agencies — the
Labor Department was considering whether to issue alien employment
certificates routinely to foreign Scientology ministers under rules that
apply to "bona fide" religious groups. The certificates were necessary
for admission to the United States.
The memo notes that
the IRS had tentatively revoked the church's tax- exempt status in
Washington, D.C., and California. It then makes passing reference,
without elaboration, to "evidence" that the Church of Scientology makes
wide use of LSD, uses electric shock in an initiation ceremony and that
"members of several families" have allegedly been "shot but not killed
by unknown persons because they objected to their teen-age children
becoming members."
(Scientology spokesmen say
categorically that the church has never condoned the use of drugs, does
not shoot people and has no initiation ceremony. As one of the basic
tenets of its doctrine, Scientology opposes the use of electroshock
therapy by the mental health professions.)
Church
officials say that during the late 1960s and early '70s a number of
foreign Scientology ministers were denied entry to the Unites States —
and that they are convinced the Foley memo was responsible.
"You
have one memo like this sent to 52 government agencies and it creates
havoc for a religion," church spokesman Jeffrey Dubron said. "The Foley
memo was sent to the Immigration and Naturalization Service to help in
judging whether Scientologists should be let in. Scientologists were not
let in. That's an exceedingly small logical jump to make."
Missing
from this deduction, however, is any evidence that the nine- paragraph
memo did in fact contribute to the Labor Department's denial of alien
employment certificates — or, if it did, that the gossip in it was a
deciding factor.
Apart from a 1975 letter of retraction
the church had demanded from the Labor Department, no other document in
the mass of material the church supplied to The Times refers to Foley,
his memo or the allegations in it.
On the contrary, in
subsequent letters to the Immigration and Naturalization Service —
written long before government officials had any reason to expect that
such correspondence might be made public through a Freedom of
Information Act — the Labor Department explained that its denial of
alien employment certification was based on two grounds: the IRS'
revocation of some Scientology churches' tax exemption and the fact that
the National Council of Churches did not include Scientology in its
directory of some 200 "recognized" religious groups.
In
1975, the Labor Department reviewed the status of the church, parts of
which had by then won or regained tax-exempt status, and declared it to
be a bona fide religious group. At the church's demand, the department
also affirmed that the Foley memo was "irrelevant, unverified, and based
on hearsay" and removed it from the files.
On at least
one occasion, one of Scientology's own public relations campaigns
appears to have backfired on it, leading to what it now decries as false
information in government files.
The alleged falsehood,
which crops up in a variety of government documents in the 1960s, is
that Scientology involves the study of a "Russian textbook on
brainwashing."
One such memo, written by the security
chief of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, in 1961, indicates that a
Scientologist's security clearance had been denied partly on this
ground.
The church acknowledges circulating what it
called a "Russian textbook of psychopolitics," in 1955 but insists that
it did so as a "public service" and did not subscribe to its contents.
This
message appears to not have been universally understood, however, for
the pamphlet's distribution evoked a number of letters from the public
and from at least one U.S. senator (Strom Thurmond, a South Carolina
Republican) to the FBI asking whether Hubbard, Scientology or his
Dianetics Research Foundation had Communist ties.
The
FBI, according to internal bureau memos released recently under the
Freedom of Information Act, looked the psychopolitics pamphlet over,
declared it to be of "doubtful authenticity," and said it was
"apparently a thinly veiled attack upon mental health programs along the
line that such programs are part of the worldwide Communist
conspiracy."
The notion that communism and the mental
health professions were somehow related appears to have coincided
closely with Hubbard's own views, although he has not acknowledged
writing the pamphlet.
In July, 1955, however, in one of
his letters to the FBI Hubbard averred that "attacks" upon his various
organizations during the previous five years had "found psychiatry and
Communist-connected personnel very much in evidence and both active with
defamation and very unreasonable — and unsuccessful — attacks."
The
letter does not mention the pamphlet. But six months later in another
letter to the FBI he enclosed a copy of it, along with a note that read
in part:
"This was compiled from Communist sources for use of our research department and people."
"It
may be that we will also use this in anti-Communist campaigns," Hubbard
said. "We have been seriously hurt by Communists and communism and we
see nothing wrong in our using their tactics against them."
Six
years later, in mid-1961, a new edition circulated around the country,
but evidently not under Scientology's name. Among the letters of
complaint received by the FBI was one from the Founding Church of
Scientology in Washington, D.C., addressed to the late director Hoover.
"Dear
Mr. Hoover," the May 16, 1961, letter says. "Enclosed is some Communist
literature received in the mail by us. Gads! How sickening!"
The FBI concluded that it was the same Russian brainwashing text of doubtful authenticity that Hubbard had submitted in 1955.
In
a statement the Church of Scientology hand-delivered to The Times on
Aug. 19, after having discussed at length with reporters its allegations
of government harassment, Whitman, the church's principal national
spokesman, said:
"The FBI cast the first stone at us even as we were becoming a religion nearly three decades ago.
"Now
at last we can prove their intentions and their methods, and we can
prove that our difficulties were part of a campaign of bloodless
genocide."
Whitman offered no new material to support his statement.
Perhaps
the most compelling explanation for Scientology's accusations of
persecution — and for the church's intensely combative responses —
appears in the December, 1971, report of an official British inquiry
into the "practices and effects" of Scientology.
The
inquiry was conducted by Sir John Foster, a Conservative member of
Parliament, three years after Britain had imposed a ban on foreign
nationals seeking entry to study Scientology. Foster was not
unsympathetic to the church, and recommended, in effect, that the ban be
lifted (it was not).
In his preface to a chapter entitled "Scientology and its Enemies," Foster wrote:
"The
reactions of individuals and groups to criticism varies from grateful
acceptance, or amused tolerance, at one end of the scale to a sense of
outrage and vindictive counterattack on the other. Perhaps unfortunately
(especially for its adherents) Scientology falls at the hypersensitive
end of the scale.
"Judging from the documents, this would
seem to have its origin in a personality trait of Mr. Hubbard, whose
attitude to critics is one of extreme hostility."
It could be said, Sir John concluded, that:
"Anyone
whose attitude to criticism is such as Mr. Hubbard displays in his
writings cannot be too surprised if the world treats him with suspicion
rather than affection."
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How many times is the word "church" used in this article? It's a pseudo Navy. In the real Navy, LRH could not live up to it's expectations and there lies his engram...that's why he needed to start his own fleet of three little ships sailing around the med and prove he could beat the law...and he did which is why he never served jail time and which is why his followers never will either, because they know how to make the law work for them and that is why scientology still works to this day because money and knowing "people up in higher places works" much of the time.
I think they are called the "elite" aren't they and we all have to abide by them. Not in my world...
I am still really fucked off with Lawrence Wright, who writes a really good book and fucks up big time by listening to the "elite" and not fact checking enough, but makes such a big thing about his fact checking.Friends in high places.I am still really fucked off with Channel 4. Friends in "high"places, and I am really fucked off with the BBC, friends in "HIGH" places, and I am really, really fucked off with some supposed EX Scientologists.FRIENDS IN HIGH PLACES!
And that was what the Sea Org was ALL about, wasn't it? The ELITE!
His whole supposed religious philosophy was born out of GAS in a dentist chair...well let me tell you L. Ron Hubbard, if you knew how many times I cursed you for having to sit in a dentist chair because of your god damned "religious philosophy" you would have me declared the worst enemy on earth, because it is Thanks to you I have spent so much time in my life in a dentist's chair.Now there's a fucking engram!
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