There's been a huge amount of media attention given to the new
unauthorized biography of Tom Mapother Cruise as the author embarks on a publicity tour.
Oddly enough, the same day the book was released, a mysterious video clip of Tom Cruise at a Scientology function appeared on the web. It was immediately removed, but not before other viewers had a chance to grab it.
You can still see it here:
http://gawker.com/...
This video was only intended for internal use only, possibly as a suppository. This is Tom Cruise on Tom Cruise, Scientologist. The message to the audience, the elite of the International Association of Scientologists, is this, "I'm working my butt off. You need to do more. We all need to do more. Hip hip hooray!" Here are my thoughts on this video. This is the stuff Scientology doesn't want the outside world to hear. Tough tooties for them! It's all over the web now!
Tom Cruise is one of the most controversial, high profile members of
Scientology. As a celebrity, he has face and name recognition throughout
the world, and Scientology uses this advantage to access high level
government officials and politicians whenever possible to get Scientology's
message across.
Scientology has a very strong public relations thrust, and actively
seeks out any official who will respond to the allure of a visit
with Tom Cruise. Mr. Cruise's job is to put a positive face on
Scientology programs, a position he is well-qualified to fill.
He is very facile with his ability to present falsehoods as reality.
He is also skilled at saying nothing of substance for minutes at a
time. Listen carefully to his words. His sentences are convoluted,
jumping from topic to topic with little continuity.
Certain statements stand out in this interview.
"Why ask permission?" he says. "We are the authorities." This bizarre
attitude puts a certain perspective on Scientology activities.
After 911, Scientology Volunteer Ministers crossed barricades meant
to keep the public out of the danger zone at Ground Zero.
In Beslan, authorities had to remove Volunteer Ministers who were
harassing grief-stricken parents and teachers following a terrorist
attack on a public school that left over 300 children dead.
After the recent shootings at Virginia Tech, Scientology Volunteer
Ministers set up their yellow tent in the center of the staging area
and began trying to recruit the vulnerable survivors of this tragedy.
Their tent was later moved to the periphery after complaints.
Scientologists don't ask permission, because they're aware that the
answer will most likely be a resounding, "No!"
There is a great deal of Scientology hype surrounding 911, especially
regarding the toxic stew released into the air following the collapse
of the Twin Towers. Tom Cruise and Scientology swiftly moved to take
advantage of this tragedy, and there was a great deal of publicity
from media coverage of his presence at the grand opening of the
New York Rescue Workers Detoxification Program. This program utilizes
L. Ron Hubbard's "purification rundown," an unscientific and potentially
dangerous process that exposes rescue workers to excessively long
sauna sessions coupled with toxic doses of vitamins. This same program
is used by Narconon, a Scientology front group which targets drug
addicts and their families.
The Narconon program also was allowed to reach children in California
public schools with a drug education presentation that eventually was
rejected by the state following a review of its materials at the
state level. Hawaii and Boston, MA quickly followed suit, expelling
this unscientific, inaccurate and misleading program from public
schools.
"For once," Tom says, "We have the whole track. We have the tools we
can apply to ourselves and apply to others. You know the tech and you
apply it correctly and it's KSW." This sentence is an excellent
example of Scientology's internal language, words that only make sense
to another Scientologist.
"Whole track" refers to your entire history; not only in this lifetime,
but all your past lives back to the beginning. Some of Scientology's
courses are directed towards helping people recover these forgotten
memories of past identities and accomplishments. Scientologists are
not allowed to discuss this with others, however. It would be very
awkward should two Julius Caesars meet each other in this life.
The tech is an arcane labyrinth of L. Ron Hubbard's creation. Scientologists
believe that the tech is the answer to any problems in life and
society. And, by correctly applying the tech, it will always work,
and this leads to KSW. This acronym stands for Keep Scientology Working.
You will often hear Tom refer to KSW. And if applying the tech doesn't
work, it's your fault, but it's an opportunity to sell you another
course to help you with that.
Scientology uses Tom Cruise to promote their "study tech" to the world.
This video includes comments from John Danielson, ex-Chief of Staff
to the Secretary of Education under the first Bush administration,
Dr. Rod Paige. When he left office, Dr. Paige founded Chartwell, an
education consultancy company. He was joined by Mr. Danielson. In 2005,
Dr. Paige promoted Scientology's program in St. Louis, MO. A number
of teachers protested this L. Ron Hubbard program, and it was quickly
dropped. Paige and Danielson, however, continue to promote the program.
Dr. Paige was recently honored by Tom Cruise's invitation to join him
for the premiere of Cruise's new film, 'Lions For Lambs.' His other
guests were high level members of Scientology.
"LRH has given us study tech, he's given us data series, he's given
us PTS SP tech," Cruise explains. LRH is Scientology-speak for
L. Ron Hubbard. PTS SP tech refers to identifying and handling
Scientology critics, ex-members, and people who oppose the organization's
activities such as this project. An SP is what's called a "Suppressive
Person," who, Hubbard wrote, "...may be tricked, lied to, deprived of
property..." PTS is a Potential Trouble Source. It could be a concerned
relative trying to extract a family member from Scientology's grasp.
It could also be a media figure who is saying negative things critical
of Scientology's program. It could even be you. It is anyone
Scientology sees as an enemy.
The Scientology front group dedicated to eradicating psychiatry is
CCHR, Citizen's Commission of Human Rights. Jan Eastgate, the president
of CCHR, says, "Tom is more involved in CCHR than any other Scientologist
that I've come across in my 27 years."
Tom reserves his most vituperative prose for Scientology's Enemy #1,
the mental health industry in general, and psychiatry in particular.
Here, his speech turns violent, with references like "crush these guys.
I've had it. I've absolutely had it. Psychiatry doesn't work. No
mercy. None. You know what? Go to guns. I've just had it."
"Go to guns" is a fighter pilot term. Tom isn't a fighter pilot, but he
played one in a movie once.
When Tom Cruise laughingly relates a tale of a young woman asking him,
"Who are you?" he is amused that his answer, "I am a Scientologist,"
doesn't satisfy her curiousity. It should be perfectly clear. If you
are a Scientologist, you are being trained to mimic L. Ron Hubbard;
his personality, his logic, his delusions. When you are a Scientologist,
you are in the process of becoming Ron. You, as a person with interests,
goals and ambitions are nothing. If you are a Scientologist, you have
a set of attributes that should satisfy interviewers. You are a Scientologist.
That is all that matters.
Scientology is well aware of the value of celebrity. In 1955, founder
L. Ron Hubbard launched Project Celebrity, in which trusted members
were assigned a celebrity. Their job was to learn all about their
target, and cross their path at every opportunity. The ultimate goal
was to bring these celebrities into an auditing session, sell them
on Scientology, and use them to reach the masses, just as they
have been doing with Tom Cruise, John Travolta and lesser Hollywood
luminaries.
A partial list of Scientology's celebrity targets included Fred Allen,
Arthur Godfrey, Cecil B. DeMille, Bing Crosby, Vincent Price, Red
Skelton, Bob Hope, Billy Graham, Bishop Fulton Sheen, Groucho Marx
and Liberace.
Scientology has a very strong intention to influence world leaders.
Issues like psychiatry, literacy, drug rehabilitation are social hot
buttons used to foster positive public relations and support from
officials at many levels. Many of those who fall under this influence
unfortunately don't take the time to look beyond the glossy brochures,
handbooks and magazines given them by the organization. This can lead
to squandering public money on Scientology's fraudulent, ineffective
programs rather than legitimate programs addressing the same issues.
Celebrities such as Tom Cruise are invaluable. As the narrative boasts,
Tom Cruise can bring Scientology "straight into the corridors of power.
His presence alone opens the door to expansion." People reach for the
tech, "because they know Tom Cruise is a Scientologist."
Outside of the inclusive Scientology reality, sometimes referred to
as 'The Truman Show,' this could be perceived as boastful exploitation.
But Tom is too high on Scientology to notice.
When he approaches the question, "What is a Scientologist?" Tom Cruise
is in full-blown cult mode. "A Scientologist does. He...or she, has
the ability to create new and better realities and conditions...it's
something that, I don't mince words with that...you know, that policy,
it's like when I read it, I just went Poof!"
According to Tom, Scientologists, "We are the authorites on getting
people off drugs. We are the authorities on the mind. We are the
authorities on improving conditions."
But you will notice that Tom Cruise's most flesh-eating grin is reserved
for his anecdote about being asked, "Have you ever met an SP?" He
bares his teeth and expresses a yearning for the day when SPs are merely
a legend, extinct. Once again, SP stands for 'suppressive person.'
One who can be tricked, lied to, deprived of property and, if possible
destroyed utterly."
"Wow, SPs," he chuckles. "Maybe some day, we'll just read about them in
the history books."
He is talking about the conversion or removal of the 2% of the population
Hubbard said was suppressive. The removal of 2% percent of 7 billion people
sounds like the makings of a titanic holocaust, the deaths of millions of
people who refuse to embrace the teachings of L. Ron Hubbard. And the
scary thing is, Tom seems to genuinely believe it. He would sacrifice millions,
to acquire his perfect Scientology world, and laugh about it later.
The truth is, there are more SPs than Scientologists in the world.
It could get real messy.
If one wishes to understand Scientology, the first thing you will learn
is, everything comes from one man, L. Ron Hubbard. Hubbard died in 1986,
his work reflects the beliefs and behaviors of the 1950s, and his
writings cannot be altered. They can, however, be "corrected." Last
year, the Scientology organization released new, corrected versions of
Hubbard's work. Critics suspect the new volumes lack the sexist, racist
and homophobic aspects of Hubbard's teachings.
Hubbard had a goal that his followers are still trying to fulfill. He
repeatedly wrote about a global Scientology government, in sometimes
frightening terms.
In a lecture entitled "Future Org Trends" given
January 9th 1962, L. Ron Hubbard said:
"You want to know what happens when you clear
everybody in that neighbourhood, the only thing that
[Scientology] center can become used for is a
political center. Because by the time you've done all
this, you are the government..."
"Once the world is Clear - a nation, a state, a city
or a village - the Scientology-organization in the
area becomes its government! And once this has taken
place the only policy accepted as valid is Scientology
policy."
And more ominously,
"It is not necessary to produce a world of clears in order to to have
a reasonable and worthwhile social order; it is only necessary to
delete those individuals who range from 2.0 down, either by
processing them enough to get their tone level above the 2.0 line...
or simply quarantining them from the society."
- L. Ron Hubbard, _The Science of Survival
SPs are considered Fair Game within Scientology. Although the organization
claims that fair game has been discontinued, the actual phrase from
L. Ron Hubbard says "DECLARING" people Fair Game was banned. Treating
people as fair game, however, continues to this day.
link to:
xenu.net
xenutv
stop-narconon
narconon-exposed
xenu-directory.net