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The Wall Street Journal
There's no particular reason for the world to worry about a smallish cult
that believes invisible 75 million-year-old thetans are floating around our
skulls. The search for the meaning of life in the vastness of the universe
preoccupies most people at some time or another, though they usually find
their way into houses of worship, therapeutic counseling or the local liquor
store.
When instead they come calling on the National Security Adviser, it may be
time for a reality check. Some of the weirdest conversations of the day
concern Sandy Berger's meeting with John Travolta, along with Tom Cruise
the chief ornaments of the Scientology movement. Scientology's founder, L.
Ron Hubbard, professed to believe the evil galactic overlord Xenu shipped
frozen thetans to Teegeack, better known as planet Earth, dropping them down
volcanoes and pulverizing them with hydrogen bombs and setting their souls
adrift. By now it seems you can't understand the universe without plumbing
thetan influence in the White House, the halls of Congress, and the murky
heart of the IRS.
Mr. Travolta brought the cult to our attention again thanks to an article
in George magazine describing how the actor and the President of the United
States enjoyed an apparently mutually beneficial meeting last spring at a
volunteerism conference in Philadelphia. The actor was there to deliver a
speech about Scientology's educational materials. What concerned the
President, Mr. Travolta suggests, was the big screen filling up with Jack
Stanton, the Clintonesque President in "Primary Colors" -- the
movie Mr. Travolta was just then making, having eaten himself into a
properly presidential profile. It's probably unlikely that a film directed
by Mike Nichols would ever treat Stanton/Clinton as anything but a charming
rogue and shrewd manipulator. But the prospect of a wide screen valentine
became ever more probable as Mr. Clinton took the moment to feel Mr.
Travolta's pain. And told him he would try to make it go away.
Who is hurting Mr. Travolta? The German government, that's who. Like the
U.S. prior to a 1993 tax settlement mysteriously upgrading the cult to the
status of a tax-exempt religion, Germany considers Scientology a business
run by extremists and has put the church under surveillance. Assisted by
frightened escapees, the Germans make the case that Scientology exploits the
weaknesses of its members for profit that at the very least should be taxed.
This creates the worst kind of pain for Scientology, which reaps millions
from "auditing," cleaning a "preclear" of repressed
memories. With millions of years of memories, getting cleared and achieving
ever higher levels of purity can be a lengthy and costly experience. It also
yields intensely private information that is carefully stored in files.
For some, the process has also been dangerous. Earlier this month, German
police searched five Munich locations of the sect after the suspicious death
of a cult member. In Clearwater, Florida, a young woman mysteriously died
after being held at a Scientology hotel. Maybe Mr. Clinton could send down
Janet Reno for an investigative weekend in her old neighborhood.
But back to Mr. Berger, who found Presidential whim expanding his duties to
include stilling an actor's pain. Asked by "Meet the Press" about
his briefing of Mr. Travolta last September, the National Security Adviser
looked like he might eat his tie as he downplayed the meeting as a normal
response to reports of religious persecution by the German government. His
real goal, he said, was to get an autograph for one of his kids; we note he
didn't ask for educational materials.
Mr. Berger is not the only official caught up in Scientology's web. Senator
Alfonse D'Amato, about whom no movie we know of is being made, has scolded
Germany at a hearing organized by the Commission on Security and Cooperation
in Europe. And by the time the House finally defeated a resolution
criticizing Germany late last year, a flabbergasted Madeleine Albright had
already endured several ludicrous discussions with Germany's equally
flabbergasted foreign minister, Klaus Kinkel. A federal immigration judge
added to the surreal merriment by granting asylum in November to a
preposterous German woman who feared returning home because she is a
Scientologist.
But if that is all weird, it is nothing compared with the mysteries
surrounding the decision of the IRS to suddenly grant Scientology a
tax-exempt status after years of litigation. Our Elizabeth MacDonald
reported that in the secret settlement the IRS dropped its position that
"auditing" fees were not deductible, a position that had been
upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. In return it got $12.5 million and a
promise that the cult would drop its numerous lawsuits against the IRS
and its agents. The IRS says it is investigating the leak.
Meanwhile, Scientology is litigating with everyone else in sight; why not,
after having intimidated the biggest gun on the block? The IRS has lately
announced its desire to turn itself into a friendly agency. How about an
auditing session? Leading off with this question: Is there anyone at the
IRS who seriously thinks that the unbelievable sums of money Scientology
spends on lawsuits meet the agency's requirement that a charity spend its
funds only on charitable purposes?
Copyright (c) 1998 The Wall Street Journal
OTIII is here :
http://www.lermanet.com/cos/exhibita.html
Further facts
about this criminal empire may be found at
Operation Clambake and FACTNet.
Newsgroups: alt.religion.scientology
Subject: Secrets of the Universe
From: Arnie Lerma
Date: 18 Jul 1998 06:56:28 -0700
Review & Outlook 24 February 1998
The Secrets of the Universe
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XENU.NET
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