Orange County Weekly: CCHR & Scientology makes moves on S Calif schools
Orange County Weekly
http://www.ocweekly.com/ink/archives/99/23news3-meltreger.shtml
Shock Therapy
By Tim Meltreger
The members of the Tustin-based Orange County chapter of the Citizens
Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) might say that OC schools are going
to hell in a handbasket-if they believed in hell.
CCHR is an anti-psychology operative of the Church of Scientology
whose members believe students in OC schools are going somewhere much
worse than hell-an insane, drug-induced stupor engineered by school
officials, psychiatrists and parents.
Speaking on Jan. 29 to a group of about 25 at Garden Grove Medical
Center, CCHR organizer Jacki Panzik said, "Something devastating has
happened to American education." Her evidence: "a sharp decline in
literacy and morality in our schools."
"This has not happened by chance, but rather it is the result of a
carefully orchestrated sequence of events," Panzik said.
For the next 90 harrowing minutes, a slide show and video presentation
provided terrifying proof of a several-hundred-year-old plot by
psychologists to undermine public education. Attendees listened
slack-jawed as CCHR volunteers described the creation of such
"fictitious" afflictions as Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD),
psychology-based classroom programs such as "Death Education" and
"Indoctrination into the Gay Lifestyle," and forcible drugging of
students by school officials.
Meanwhile, the trio of CCHR volunteers seated randomly throughout the
room acted as a sort of Greek chorus, peppering the presentation with
additional shocking details, as audience members-mostly gruff
old-schoolers and citizen-watchdog types-grunted, gasped and
vigorously shook their heads in horror. By the end of the meeting,
audience members decried the schools as tyrannical vessels of evil,
spawn of Hitler, and akin to homeowners associations.
Even a Scientologist may sometimes be right, and there's no question
that the diagnosis of cognitive disorders such as ADD (as well as
even-fishier-sounding maladies like Math Disorder and Oppositional
Defiance Disorder) and subsequent treatment with drugs like Ritalin
have skyrocketed in the past decade. Further suspicion might be raised
by the curious alliance between drug companies and ADD-research
facilities, such as UCI's Center for Child Development, which
diagnoses hundreds of OC children every year.
But what to make of the Church of Scientology, whose academic program,
which is known as Applied Scholastics, claims that all learning
disabilities are the result of "misunderstood words" and can be
remedied through the use of a simple dictionary? All of this is
explained in the Applied Scholastics book How to Use a Dictionary by
the probably late L. Ron Hubbard.
CCHR meeting organizer Clay Bock insisted that the organization does
not endorse specific curriculum for use in the classroom, but Tulia
Connan, director of the Los Angeles headquarters of CCHR, raved about
Applied Scholastics.
"There are a number of schools that are running with the program. It
is very successful. We can definitely recommend that," she said,
adding that some students using the program are graduating from high
school at 13.
The state Department of Education deemed Applied Scholastics textbooks
unsuitable for use in public schools in 1997. However, according to
the Applied Scholastics Web site, there are currently more than a
dozen private schools in Southern California using the materials,
including schools in Santa Ana and Orange. And although the church's
instructional materials have not made it into the public schools,
church members have continued to work at making inroads in recent
years.
A few Garden Grove Unified officials interviewed by the Weekly said
Bock has long since worn out his welcome there. He has appeared before
the Board of Education numerous times over the past few years to
complain about the district's math curriculum, charging that the
program attempts to "indoctrinate" and "scare the hell out of"
students. His letters proclaiming that Orange County schools "cannot
be trusted" have been published in the Times Orange County and The
Orange County Register.
In October 1997, Bock organized a "Back to Basics Education Crusade,"
but support dwindled considerably when several key participants
suspected the event was backed by Scientologists.
"I've been a Scientologist for 20 years; I don't make it a secret. But
this has never been about that," Bock claimed in a Reg report. "I have
two kids in public schools; I have a right to speak out on that."
The agenda for the crusade, however, revealed a number of topics that
bore striking resemblances to those on the docket at the January CCHR
meeting: the threat of psychology and the evil of school-to-work
programs.
Not all supporters pulled out of Bock's crusade, however. There was
still keynote speaker Carolyn Steinke, founder of the Palm
Desert-based Parents Involved in Education and the recipient of a 1995
award-from CCHR.
Bock considered last month's meeting a success and indicated that
whenever the organization meets, at least 90 percent of attendees
agree with the presentation. Given this fact, it's not surprising that
no one seems to notice the irony of an organization like the Church of
Scientology using CCHR as a mouthpiece in its battle against "mind
control." But then, given the public's perception of our failing
public schools, it might also be true that desperate parents will
listen to just about anyone.
Copyright © 1998, Orange County Weekly, Inc. All rights reserved.
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Date: Fri, 12 Feb 1999 04:06:06 GMT
OC Scientologists denounce psychology with a little mind control of their own
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