Taking over our government
Question answered by honorarykid in Scientology
Anonymous asked this question on 10/1/2000:
I saw this on the net. Could this be for real?
The goal of the department [of governmental affairs] is to bring
the government and hostile philosophies or societies into a state
of complete compliance with the goals of Scientology. This is
done by a high level ability to control and in its absence by a
low level ability to overwhelm. Introvert such agencies. Control
such agencies. --L. Ron Hubbard, evidence in Church
of Spiritual Technology v. U.S., November 22, 1989.
honorarykid gave this response on 10/1/2000:
Yes, that is a real L. Ron Hubbard policy. Scary, isn't it?
Hubbard also wrote other similar policies. I don't have the
issue date for this one [I'll look it up if you request it via
followup], but LRH also wrote:
"One day someone will say, 'This is illegal.' By then, make
sure the [Scientology] orgs say what's legal."
Hubbard made it quite clear that "Clearing the planet" was
the highest priority goal within the CoS. What does "clearing
the planet" mean? Turning everyone into Scientologists, of
course.
Clearly, Hubbard's goals for Scientology were nothing less
than world domination, not in the religious, but the political
sphere. Hubbard wanted to be the unquestioned guru of the
entire planet.
But it gets worse. Combine that goal of world domination with
another policy that Hubbard wrote:
"There are only two answers for the handling of people from
2.0 down on the tone scale, neither one of which has
anything to do with reasoning with them or listening to their
justification of their acts. The first is to raise them on the
tone scale by unenturbulating some of their theta by any one
of the three valid processes. The other is to dispose of them
quietly and without sorrow." - L. Ron Hubbard, from "The
Science of Survival"
Here, Hubbard is advocating that those people who refuse to
become Scientologists, who refuse to be brainwashed, who
refuse to allow one of the three "known" Scientology
processes to "unenturbulate their theta" be deleted from
society, "quietly and without sorrow."
If I recall correctly, we've seen these same kinds of
megalomaniacal policies before, in the first half of this
century. In the earlier case, it didn't seem to help anyone.
It certainly didn't help the millions of people on the receiving
end of the political equation. They were killed by huge human
killing factories.
And contrary to what they fervently believed, it didn't help
the people who were (temporarily) on the "dishing-out" end
of the political equation, either.
Anonymous asked this follow-up question on 10/1/2000:
Then what of the religious freedom the Scientologists keep
talking about? Are they openly out to destroy our system of
gouvernment and take away our freedoms under the Bill of
Rights?
Anonymous rated this answer:
honorarykid gave this response on 10/1/2000:
L. Ron Hubbard once said that only unaberrated people (i.e.
Scientologists) should have civil rights. I believe that Hubbard
would have destroyed your freedoms, had he gained the
political power he sought.
But he's now dead. The people currently in Scientology
probably don't want to take over the world. They're just
trying to be true to the writings of L. Ron Hubbard, without
fully understanding the insecurities and fantasies that drove
him.
Now that Hubbard's dead, they can moderate somewhat. To
be sure, they still try to manipulate the courts and important
leaders. They still work toward LRH's goal, but it's like
painting or composing without any artistry. They have no
focused leader and visionary who drives the group toward
world domination. Thank God.
A long time ago, on a.r.s, this topic was discussed. While
most critics realize that Scientology does not represent a
credible threat to the political systems of the planet, they
nevertheless keep on trying, and subverting and cheapening
in the process.
Most of the critics have bought into the idea that it's best to
nip these kinds of fascistic movements in the bud. Why wait?
What if Scientology were to find a new leader with drive and
vision, who would unethically use the loyalties of the many
well-brainwashed zealots within the church to get the ball
rolling once again?
honorarykid gave this follow-up answer on 10/3/2000:
After reading Frederic Rice's anwser, I saw his surprise at
seeing a Hubbard quotation dated from Nov, 11, 1989, more
than three years after Hubbard died!
I hadn't caught that error in my answer.
While there may have been some court filing or something like
that on 11/22/89, this date is bogus if it's being presented as
an original date for the quote by Hubbard.
However, the quote is real. It came much earlier than 1989.
It actually comes from an HCO called "Department of
Government Affairs" which was published August 15, 1960.
Return to The Skeptic Tank's main Index page.
The views and opinions stated within this web page are those of the
author or authors which wrote them and may not reflect the views and
opinions of the ISP or account user which hosts the web page. The
opinions may or may not be those of the Chairman of The Skeptic Tank.