Hmm...

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earthquake~weather wrote:stephanie .... its sad how many people dont understand just how serious depression can be..... im glad to hear you are doing ok now tho....
mental illness is very much real, and not limited to dramatic types like schizophrenia. if only more people believed that.....then fewer people would stick it out and suffer longer than they have to, thinking it will all just go away someday.....
streetsoldier wrote:Funny you should mention the "rank = money" method within Scientology; it is also (and barely veiled) shown in the second season of The 4400, in which a prominent actress advances from "1st Key" to "3rd Key" within one week, while staying at a "4400 Center" run by one of the returnees, a man who's seemingly driven by control and power.
Hmm...
HurryKane wrote:
It is not a religion. A bizarre story made up for kicks by a sci-fi writer, about 75 million year old aliens taking over everybody and getting exorcised from today's humans via soup cans, is hardly a religion.
It is a cult that preys upon weak and downtrodden people...
GalvestonDuck wrote: It does appear to be very cult-like and it probably is a cult.
HurryKane wrote:This is a good (old) read about $cientology, with several instances of people ripped off by the church--including an elderly widow who ended up losing her home--and how the church tried to discredit the author: http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/%7Edst/Fishman/time-behar.html
bevgo wrote:Stephanie--I too have a chemical imballance resulting in depression. Have been on meds for years they saved my life
wx247 wrote:Did anyone else see his interview with Matt Lauer on Today? The guy is a certifiable nut job.
GalvestonDuck wrote:HurryKane wrote:
It is not a religion. A bizarre story made up for kicks by a sci-fi writer, about 75 million year old aliens taking over everybody and getting exorcised from today's humans via soup cans, is hardly a religion.
It is a cult that preys upon weak and downtrodden people...
Heck, a lot of non-believers try to claim that Christianity and God is science fiction also. And even within the Christian faith, there are those who argue that certain religions are cults (I've heard several try to say the Catholic church is a cult).GalvestonDuck wrote: It does appear to be very cult-like and it probably is a cult.
See, I agree with you there.HurryKane wrote:This is a good (old) read about $cientology, with several instances of people ripped off by the church--including an elderly widow who ended up losing her home--and how the church tried to discredit the author: http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/%7Edst/Fishman/time-behar.html
"The church?" So, see...you have it defined in your mind as a religion also.
Like I said, Scientology wouldn't be for me. I dealt with a cult once here in Texas. I didn't like being told that my baptism wasn't valid and that I couldn't be saved if I didn't speak in tongues. But if that's what helps them in their lives and gives them peace, good. I'm not gonna knock their faith or their religion. It's not my place to do that. I'd just appreciate it more if they didn't disrespect mine.
HurryKane wrote:
It is not a religion. A bizarre story made up for kicks by a sci-fi writer, about 75 million year old aliens taking over everybody and getting exorcised from today's humans via soup cans, is hardly a religion.
It is a cult that preys upon weak and downtrodden people, then sucks all the money it possibly can out of them. Any organization where it costs increasingly larger amounts of money to achieve a state of grace (they call it 'clear') should not be called anything but a cult.
The higher muckity-mucks in $cieno will go to any lengths to stop any bad publicity about them--they call it "Fair Game." This can include absolutely destroying the lives of reporters, journalists, average joes, and others who publicly disagree with $cienos and point out the rampant abuse of the lesser $cienos (i.e. the poor ones--celebs get a cheap and pretty ride) and their insidious attempts to infiltrate all areas of society. Fair Game can even include injurying the parties that $cieno finds objectionable. Fair Game was supposedly cancelled in 1968 but it is still in use today.
The $cienos are so against psychiatry that they are pushing a bill in Florida to keep children in public schools from using mental health services--and to have any mental health diagnosis the child receives become a permanent part of their school record. Currently this notation is only in school record if the school takes part in the treatment, or if special classes are required. You can read about their bill here: http://www.sptimes.com/2005/04/09/State ... sh_m.shtml
They also run Narconon, which purports to help people get off drugs. Administrators of Narconon programs tell people in the program that psychiatry kills. Narconon costs a hell of a lot of money, too--it is said it takes $15,000 to get all the way through the program. The true Narcotics Anonymous, sometimes unofficially called NarcAnon, is free. It's rather obvious they chose the Narconon name to confuse and take advantage of people in desparate situations. They also hide behind other front organizations with names like "Citizens Commission on Human Rights" and "Applied Scholastics."
My point here is that they are not some harmless little 'religion' minding their own business. They are actively and, more importantely, subversively trying to stop millions of people from benefiting at all from psychiatry and psychotropic medications. And while they're doing that, they are getting hideously rich off emotionally weak people who can ill afford to give up everything they own and be segregated from their families and loved ones.
They make me sick. Betcha couldn't tell
GalvestonDuck wrote:HurryKane wrote:This is a good (old) read about $cientology, with several instances of people ripped off by the church--including an elderly widow who ended up losing her home--and how the church tried to discredit the author: http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/%7Edst/Fishman/time-behar.html
"The church?" So, see...you have it defined in your mind as a religion also.
GalvestonDuck wrote:Like I said, Scientology wouldn't be for me. I dealt with a cult once here in Texas. I didn't like being told that my baptism wasn't valid and that I couldn't be saved if I didn't speak in tongues. But if that's what helps them in their lives and gives them peace, good. I'm not gonna knock their faith or their religion. It's not my place to do that. I'd just appreciate it more if they didn't disrespect mine.
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