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In fear of Xenu; Thanks to a leaked Tom Cruise video, Scientology just got even weirder
National Post
Friday, January 18, 2008
Page: A17
Section: Issues & Ideas
Byline: Jonathan Kay
Source: National Post
Scratch the surface of Scientology and you
will find a lot of weird and wild tidbits. To name but a few: The
high school science-class "electro-psychometer" used to probe the
bodies of new recruits for "hidden crimes," the requirement that
members are made to pay cash for their supposed enlightenment, the
Buzz Lightyear-like code words embedded in the mountain of vacuous
bureaucratic baffle-gab set out by founder L. Ron Hubbard, the
creepy measures used to enforce internal discipline (presided over
-- I am not making this up -- by an "Office of Special Affairs") and
the lurid science-fiction plot line that governs the religion's
mythology at its most esoteric levels -- involving a pan-Galactic
alien ruler named Xenu who summoned billions of humans to our planet
75 millon years ago and then blew them up with atom bombs … after
stacking their bodies around volcanoes for some unknown reason.
But perhaps the weirdest part of it all is that Hubbard himself
-- a paranoid megalomaniac and sci-fi writer who cobbled the roots
of Scientology together out of eastern mythology, utopian futurism,
and his own eccentric phobias and schoolboy's love of campy
sci-fineologisms -- was able to attract followers despite being
quite plain about the mercantile side. A quote of his from a 1980
Reader's Digest article sums it up: "If a man really wants to make a
million dollars, the best way would be to start his own religion."
It is perhaps because Scientology combines Hubbard's love of
technology with a hair-trigger phobia of anyone who threatened his
lucrative business model that Scientologists were among the first to
recognize the information-sharing possibilities of the internet --
which they promptly tried to censor.
Back in the early 1990s, when the net was a mere nerd-nest of
text-only discussion groups, Scientologists targeted "copyright
terrorists" by trying to shut down whole discussion boards --
including the Usenet newsgroupalt.religion.scientology, which they
claimed violated the Scientology trademark.
They have also tried to get Google to exclude anti-Scientology
websites from its search results, and used hardball legal tactics to
harass, bankrupt and intimidate their critics --many of them
disaffected former members. In the United States, the Church of
Scientology also has been a staunch backer of draconian copyright
legislation. If you want to know whether Scientology qualifies as a
"religion" on par with other bona fide faiths, try to imagine the
Catholic Church or the Saudi royal family charging people tens of
thousands of dollars to learn their religious tenets, and suing
anyone who dared republish the Koran™ or Bible™ on the internet.
Of course, people have the right to embrace fringe faiths. At the
very least, it must be admitted that Scientologists don't strap
bombs to their chests. And it is also true that their entry-level
teachings generally promote peace, honesty and tolerance of other
faiths. If people want to spend their time and money poking each
other with eMeters and learning about what Xenu did 75 million years
ago, I suppose that's fine by me.
Unfortunately, however, Hubbard's cosmic theories were hardly
free of bigotry. One of his beliefs was that the tortured souls of
the aforementioned victims of Xenu continue to pollute the minds of
modern humans --an idea that led Hubbard to all manner of bizarre
theorizing about psychology. This included the notion that
psychiatrists are part of a movement rooted in Xenu's genocide plot,
and thereby constitute the source of all human suffering. It is this
belief, which remains embedded in Scientology's teachings, that
prevents many of us non-believers from having normal relationships
with Scientologists.
In the summer of 2005, the National Post editorial board hosted a
group of Canadian Scientologists who were angry about an article
we'd run slamming Hubbard (Or "LRH," as the man is known --
Scientologists love acronyms). They were doing OK with us -- until
one of my fellow editorial board members asked our guests about
their views on mental health issues, at which point things went all
Xenu in a hurry.
They repeated the Scientologist dogma that mental ailments --
conditions that doctors now know to have a biological basis as
surely as cancer and influenza -- are a sort of imaginary miasma
summoned into existence by negative thoughts and the evil residue
from your past lives -- i.e., if you're bipolar, it's your fault. We
were particularly scandalized that one of the emissaries was a
professional educator in her day-to-day life, yet seemed entirely
beholden to Scientological conspiracy theories about psychiatric
medication. Amazingly, these folks seemed genuinely amazed that the
media was more interested in Tom Cruise's loony comments about
Brooke Shields' postpartum depression than the fact that the Church
had recently dispatched aid workers to Indonesia.
As for Cruise, he is the most prominent movie star Scientologist
(a recent book claims he is number two in the organization's
hierarchy). But he is hardly alone. As early as the 1950s, LRH
targeted celebrities whom he thought would spread his message to the
rest of America. "Celebrities are very Special people and have a
very distinct line of dissemination," he would later write. "They
have comm[unication] lines that others do not have and many medias
[sic] to get their dissemination through."
Another LRH diktat advises that Scientology "Celebrity Centres"
should "work to rehabilitate old or faded artists." The biggest
success story in this latter category was John Travolta, whose faith
moved him to adopt the LRH space epic Battlefield Earth onto the big
screen, with comically horrid results.
In Cruise, though, I'm wondering whether the celebrity strategy
hasn't backfired. His behaviour often seems out-and-out unhinged.
The tabloids have done a particularly brisk trade feeding the idea
of Katie Holmes as a brainwashed love-slave coerced into delivering
a baby according to LRH's bizarre guidelines. (Like the cult leaders
and dictators with whom critics have compared him, LRH imagined
himself to be an expert on everything -- including pediatrics. He
even made up a detailed recipe for a barley-based baby cereal,
which, if mothers actually used exclusively, would lead to scurvy.)
And yet notwithstanding all of this flim-flam, Scientology is
still a going concern --if not as a serious faith, then at least as
a business model. And apparently, many of its adherents find it
genuinely inspiring and life-changing. These include Cruise himself,
who appeared this week in an internal Scientology video that someone
leaked to You-tube. (It has since been taken down at the Church's
request. But Google around, and you should be able to find it.)
The video provides a fascinating insight into the mind of a true
zealot. In it, Cruise throws around Scientology acronyms casually --
e.g., SP, or "Suppressive person," a category that presumably
includes me -- which suggests the video is directed toward current
members who might be induced to climb the ladder into the upper
echelons. (Like characters in a Dungeons & Dragons game,
Scientologists achieve different levels of "clarity" as they pay
more money; once totally "Clear," they are permitted to become an
"Operating Thetan," a designation that itself has eight
roman-numeral-designated levels.)
Set to Mission Impossible-style music, and punctuated with
dramatic camera-click scene changes, the footage is meant to be
inspiring. But to the non-believer, Cruise's remarks come off
instead as disturbingly weird -- alternating as they
dobetweenmeaningless slogans and wildly delusional boasts, with the
transitions mediated by violent spasms of laughter. A typical
passage: "So, for me, it really is KSW [Keeping Scientology
Working], and it's just like, it's something that, uh, I don't mince
words with that" -- followed by: "Being a Scientologist, when you
drive past an accident, it's not like anyone else. As you drive
past, you know you have to do something about it, because you know
you're the only one that can really help."
We also learn that Scientologists are the "authorities in getting
people off drugs. We are the authorities on the mind. We are the
authorities on improving conditions. Criminals, we can rehabilitate
criminals. Way to happiness, we can bring peace and unite cultures."
These claims are so over the top, they may help definitively sink
Cruise's career: The next time I see him on the big screen, I doubt
I'll be able to think about anything other than that disturbing
cackle. This is Hubbard's plan in reverse: Rather than redeem
Scientology according to LRH's blueprint, Cruise has merely drawn
attention to the religion's weirdness -- and his besides.
The scary thing is that, but not for an attentive mother, I might
have become a Scientologist myself.
When I was 12 years old, I got a mailing from Dianetics --
Scientology's storefront self-help arm -- urging me to come downtown
for a free personality assessment. I thought it sounded cool, so I
threw on my coat then and there. My mom took one look at the
brochure and said, "I'm coming." Once we got there, I filled out a
questionnaire and answered a few questions -- the results of which,
naturally, indicated that I could profit from Scientological
de-programming. "Thank you very much -- not interested," my mom
interjected, before grabbing me and whisking me out.
Thanks for saving me, mom. I don't want to get mushy here, but in
my eyes, your Inner Thetan will always have the status of Clear,
with an Operational ranking of VIII and a tone-scale reading of +40.
May the force -- or whatever the heck LRH called it --always be with
you.
jkay@nationalpost.com
Illustration:
• Black & White
Photo: / L. Ron Hubbard, founder of the Church of
Scientology.
Idnumber: 200801180048
Edition:
National
Story Type: News
Length: 1571 words
Keywords:
CHURCHES; CULTS; CRUISES
Illustration Type: P
PRODUCTION FIELDS
NDATE:
20080118
NUPDATE: 20080118
DOB: 20080118
POSITION: 1

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