Editorials › Activism, Andrew Morton, Anonymous, Australia, California, celebrity, Clearwater, David Miscavige, disconnection, Europe, Fair Game policy, Florida, Fort Harrison Hotel, Great Britain, Hemet, Hollywood, Katie Holmes, Kirstie Alley, Lisa Marie Presley, Lisa McPherson, London, Los Angeles, New York, Office of Special Affairs, Paulette Cooper, Police, protest, psychiatry, Sea Org, South Park, Suppressive Person, tax, Tom Cruise, Will Smith, Xenu
Published on Tuesday 18th March 2008
After an embarrassing string of high-profile defection and leaked videos, Scientology is under attack from a faceless cabal of online activists. Has America’s most controversial religion finally met its match?
Clearwater is prepared for its enemies. It’s a warm, if overcast, Saturday in February, but all the storefronts lining the sidewalks of this sleepy town on […]
Editorials › California, celebrity, David Beckham, David Miscavige, Hemet, Hollywood, John Travolta, Katie Holmes, Kirstie Alley, Nicole Kidman, Penelope Cruz, Suppressive Person, Tom Cruise, United States of America, Victoria Beckham, Xenu
Published on Sunday 9th March 2008
In the religion children are regularly hooked up to a LIE DETECTOR made from SOUP CANS and ELECTRODES to test their commitment to the church.
Headley, 34, quit the faith after becoming disillusioned with it’s bizarre practises. He says of the 45-year-old Top Gun star, now second-in-command of the church: “Tom is on a mission… to turn EVERYONE into a Scientologist.
Hollywood star Tom Cruise is planning to build a bunker at his Colorado home to protect his family in the event of an intergalactic alien attack, according to new reports.
The Mission Impossible actor, who is a dedicated follower of Scientology, is reportedly fearful that deposed galactic ruler ‘Xenu’ is plotting an evil revenge attack on Earth.
Editorials › Andrew Morton, Beck, celebrity, Celebrity Centre, Chick Corea, David Miscavige, death, Europe, Giovanni Ribisi, Great Britain, Hollywood, Isaac Hayes, Jason Lee, Jenna Elfman, John Sweeney, John Travolta, Juliette Lewis, Katie Holmes, Kelly Preston, Kirstie Alley, Lisa Marie Presley, London, Nancy Cartwright, Nicole Kidman, Office of Special Affairs, Panorama, psychiatry, Sea Org, Suppressive Person, Tom Cruise, Victoria Beckham, Will Smith
Published on Thursday 14th February 2008
I was skimming through High Winds when I came across an article winningly headlined ‘Handling Suppression on the Fourth Dynamic’ (by then I had learnt that the ‘fourth dynamic’ meant the whole of mankind). In a tone of unforgiving militancy, it talked of ‘eradicating SPs’, and crowed about how they had ’shut down’ one particular defector who had criticised the movement. ‘Unemployed and abandoned by his family, this squirrel had schemed to make money by hawking his lies in a book. But the Office of Special Affairs had a court declare his book libellous. He has now been forced into bankruptcy…’
Editorials › celebrity, Celebrity Centre, Clearwater, Fair Game policy, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Florida, Greg Garcia, Hollywood, Isaac Hayes, John Travolta, Katie Holmes, L. Ron Hubbard, litigation, Los Angeles, Mary Sue Hubbard, My Name is Earl, Operation Snow White, Paul Haggis, Paulette Cooper, politics, Priscilla Presley, psychiatry, Sea Org, South Park, Tom Cruise, TV, United States of America, Will Smith, Xenu
Published on Sunday 20th January 2008
In July, 1968, following a governmental review, the Minister of Health told Parliament that the organisation “alienates members of families from each other” and had “authoritarian principles and practices” that were a “potential menace to the personality and well being of those so deluded as to become its followers”.
Editorials › Andrew Morton, Australia, celebrity, Europe, Florida, France, Germany, Great Britain, John Travolta, Katie Holmes, L. Ron Hubbard, Los Angeles, Mimi Rogers, Nicole Kidman, Norway, Panorama, Sea Org, South Park, tax, Tom Cruise, Victoria, Xenu
Published on Friday 18th January 2008
The famous eyes stare and his head lolls about at the wonder of it all while gibberish pours from his lips. Tom Cruise is extolling the glories of Scientology. “It’s rough and tumble. It’s wild and woolly and it’s a blast,” he declares, throwing his carefully dishevelled head back and roaring with laughter. “It’s really […]
Editorials › celebrity, Celebrity Centre, John Travolta, Katie Holmes, L. Ron Hubbard, Office of Special Affairs, psychiatry, Suppressive Person, Tom Cruise, United States of America, Xenu
Published on Friday 18th January 2008
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.
News › Andrew Morton, David Beckham, David Miscavige, disconnection, Europe, Germany, Great Britain, Hemet, Katie Holmes, L. Ron Hubbard, litigation, Los Angeles, Mimi Rogers, Nicole Kidman, Penelope Cruz, Sea Org, Shelley Miscavige, Sofia Vergara, Suppressive Person, United States of America, Victoria Beckham
Published on Monday 7th January 2008
The biographer of Princess Diana alleges Cruise is consulted by Scientology leader David Miscavige on “every aspect of planning and policy” and is tailoring his career to fit the aims of Scientology.
Miscavige is said in the book to have gone to extraordinary lengths to charm Cruise, even ordering his staff to plant a field full of wild flowers at a Scientology base in California after Cruise had told him of his fantasy to run through a wildflower meadow with his then newlywed wife Nicole Kidman.
The relationship between the two men is so close that, according to Morton’s book, Miscavige even joined him on honeymoon in the Maldives after his wedding to Katie Holmes in 2006.
A controversial book about Tom Cruise claims the star is second in command of the Church of Scientology.
The unauthorised biography, by Princess Di’s writer Andrew Morton, claims he is consulted by leader David Miscavige on “every aspect of policy”, and that he tailors his career to the cult’s aims.
Morton also suggests Scientologists, fearing Nicole Kidman’s influence, asked Cruise to take a course in 1999 pinpointing “those in his life who create difficulties” - leading to their divorce in 2001.
Editorials › Beck, California, celebrity, Charles Manson, Ethan Suplee, Giovanni Ribisi, Greg Garcia, Internal Revenue Service, Isaac Hayes, Jason Lee, John Sweeney, John Travolta, Juliette Lewis, Katie Holmes, Kirstie Alley, L. Ron Hubbard, My Name is Earl, Panorama, Priscilla Presley, South Park, Tom Cruise, TV, United States of America
Published on Saturday 9th June 2007
The brilliantly slick My Name Is Earl carries the karmic principle through to its logical/absurd conclusion with reformed felon Earl Hickey making up for past wrongs by doing good deeds. It’s a feelgood kind of show. Yet there’s something rotten at the heart of Earl if you believe the whispers. Critics claim there’s an unholy influence by the Church of Scientology on the show with jobs for the boys and a crypto religious subtext just two of the allegations. I thought it was all about making a better world?