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Tom Cruise: Executing the Suppressive Person Doctrine
Over the last six weeks, and erupting in the September Rolling Stone cover
article, Tom Cruise has been talking up a volcano of media about his role as the
hit man Vincent in the movie Collateral, and his character's "antisocial
personality." He even had a ninety minute tête-à-tête
two weeks ago with the French Minister of Finance Nicolas Sarkozy when Cruise
was in Paris promoting the film.
“Antisocial” is a common enough English language adjective.
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1 a: tending to interrupt or destroy social intercourse b: hostile
to the well-being of society c: characterized by markedly deviating behavior <antisocial
actions> <crime is antisocial> <antisocial persons> 2: averse to
the society of others or social intercourse: misanthropic.
— Webster's Third New International Dictionary
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Cruise is employing the term in his media comments and in his portrayal of
Vincent, however, with the special meaning he was taught in Scientology.
From The Scotsman, August 23:
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when he talks about the role, and how it demanded a lot of research
into what he terms “anti-socials”, he begins to sound uncomfortably
intense and earnest.
“I’ve studied anti-social behaviour and personalities,”
he says, “and in Scientology, there is a large body of knowledge about anti-socials.
So I worked hard to create Vincent’s moral code from that.”
— news.scotsman.com
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On one of its web sites, Scientology presents
an essay by cult founder L. Ron Hubbard entitled “The Antisocial Personality”
that identifies what Hubbard says are such persons’ “characteristics.”
This essay is taken from a “technical bulletin” Hubbard wrote dated
September 27, 1966, which is almost identical to the online version except
for, notably, its title: “The Antisocial Personality —The Anti-Scientologist.”
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When the legal or political structure of a country becomes such as to favor
such personalities in positions of trust, then all the civilizing organizations
of the country become suppressed and a barbarism of criminality and economic duress
ensues.
Crime and criminal acts are perpetrated by antisocial personalities. Inmates
of institutions commonly trace their state back to contact with such personalities.
Thus, in the fields of government, police activities and mental health, to
name a few, we see that it is important to be able to detect and isolate this
personality type so as to protect society and individuals from the destructive
consequences attendant upon letting such have free rein to injure others.
As they only comprise 20% of the population and as only 2½% are truly
dangerous, we see that with a very small amount of effort we could considerably
better the state of society.
Well-known, even stellar, examples of such a personality are, of course, Napoleon
and Hitler. Dillinger, Pretty Boy Floyd, Christie and other famous criminals were
well-known examples of the antisocial personality. But with such a cast of characters
in history we neglect the less stellar examples and do not perceive that such
personalities exist in current life, very common, often undetected.
— L.
Ron Hubbard
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Contract killer Vincent, Cruise is telling the world, is just such a common,
undetected antisocial personality, an Anti-Scientologist.
New York Daily News August 1, 2004:
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"I've never played a character like this before," says Cruise in
an exclusive talk with the Daily News. "Vincent interested me because he
is such an anti-social personality, bringing destruction and chaos with him wherever
he goes. He's a force of nature."
— nydailynews.com
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“Chaos” is an interesting choice of terms too for Cruise. Hubbard
called the antisocial personalities at one time “Merchants of Chaos,”
and Scientologists still use that label. From the Scientology Technical Dictionary:
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Merchant of Fear or Chaos Merchant and which we can now technically call the
suppressive person.
— L.
Ron Hubbard
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Also from the same Tech Dictionary, the definition for “Antisocial Personality:”
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we’re calling it a suppressive because it is more explicit.
— L.
Ron Hubbard
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As Vincent, Cruise is dramatizing a member of the class of people about whom
he has been well indoctrinated in Scientology, the class called variously “suppressives,”
or “antisocials,” “Suppressive Persons,” or “SPs.”
USA Today August 3, 2004
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To nail Vincent's "antisocial personality" and die-hard commitment
to his job, Cruise explored his dubious moral code. Vincent, he says, doesn't
think he's "doing anything wrong" and isn't aware of "the chaos
that he wreaks." All he knows is that he has to kill five people by 6 a.m.
— usatoday.com
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MTV August 4, 2004
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"This guy being an antisocial personality, the things that concern him
aren't the same things concern a social personality," he said. "One
of the keys is that people, when they're doing things, they do believe that they're
right in doing them and they have it all justified as to why it's OK.
— mtv.com
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This "social personality" is another Scientology term that has a
very specific meaning to members of the cult. Hubbard writes in the same bulletin
"The Antisocial Personality —The Anti-Scientologist."
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The social personality can be defined most easily by comparison with his opposite,
the antisocial personality.
This differentiation is easily done and no test should ever be constructed
which isolates only the antisocial. […]
As the society runs, prospers and lives solely through the efforts of social
personalities, one must know them as they, not the antisocial, are the worthwhile
people. These are the people who must have rights and freedom. Attention is given
to the anti-social solely to protect and assist the social personalities in the
society. […]
Thus it is the twelve given characteristics alone which identify the antisocial
personality. And these same twelve reversed are the sole criteria of the social
personality if one wishes to be truthful about them.
— L.
Ron Hubbard
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Cruise insists that he is no antisocial or Suppressive Person, but the SPs’
opposite.
ABC News August 2, 2004
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"I look for characters that I feel are going to be challenging.
This is definitely right out there. A very, very complex character, playing this
anti-social personality." […]
"Just looking at the moral code, looking in terms of what
I know about life, he's the antithesis of who I am and how I feel about people
and humanity," Cruise said.
— abcnews.go.com
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Boston Herald August 4, 2004
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“I play a character who is the antithesis of who I am,”
Cruise said. “Everybody has a different moral code, and the things that
concern him are not the things that concern a social personality, and this guy
is an antisocial personality.”
— bostonherald.com
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Cruise’s insights about his Suppressive Person Vincent not thinking he's
doing anything wrong, and about antisocials believing that they're right in doing
what they do and having it all justified as to why it's OK, also derive from Scientology
“scripture.”
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Even the antisocial personality, in his warped way, is quite certain
that he is acting for the best and commonly sees himself as the only good person
around, doing all for the good of everyone — the only flaw in his reasoning
being that if one kills everyone else, none are left to be protected from the
imagined evils. His conduct in his environment and toward his fellows is the only
method of detecting either the antisocial or the social personalities.
— L.
Ron Hubbard
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It is clear that Cruise, who is now regularly referred to in the media as a
“devout Scientologist,” is indoctrinated enough in Scientology administration,
“ethics” system and “technology” for the organization’s
leadership to have him speak publicly about the subject, and even to talk about
the “Suppressive Person” doctrine, and he is dedicated enough to do
the public speaking they’re having him do. He knows what the SP doctrine
is, and he executes it in his role as Tom Cruise, Scientology Agent.
Scientology teaches that Suppressive Persons, or Antisocials are a class comprising
two and a half percent of earth's population, and are the cause of all illness,
accidents and any bad condition. Scientology states that SPs are completely evil
and irredeemable, "truly dangerous," committing crime continuously,
"psychotic," and deserving of no civil rights. Scientology also teaches,
and Cruise knows, that the Antisocial Personality, the SP, is, as the Hubbard
bulletin but not the online version says, the “Anti-Scientologist.”
The opponents or critics of Scientology or any of its doctrines, policies or practices
are the people that the organization identifies as Suppressive Persons. From Hubbard
Policy Letter of December 23, 1965, revised January 8, 1991 “Suppressive
Acts Suppression of Scientology or Scientologists:”
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A SUPPRESSIVE PERSON or GROUP is one that actively seeks to suppress
or damage Scientology with suppressive acts. […]
Suppressive acts are defined as actions or omissions undertaken
to knowingly suppress, reduce or impede Scientology or Scientologists.
— L.
Ron Hubbard
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Hubbard wrote, and Scientologists accept as “scripture,”
that all critics of Scientology are criminals with criminal pasts for which they
could be imprisoned, and Hubbard threatened that his organization would
find and expose the crimes of anyone who opposes Scientology.
Scientology’s
policy and practice for the treatment of people identified as Suppressive
Persons, universally known by the name Hubbard gave it, “Fair Game,”
calls for malignities against the SPs, the “enemy,” such as lying
to, tricking or suing them, and criminal, violent acts acts, such as theft, injury
or destruction.
In another policy letter, called menacingly “Battle Tactics,” Hubbard
expanded on the need and opportunities for Fair Gaming Scientology’s SP
“enemies.”
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"We must ourselves fight on a basis of total attrition of
the enemy. So never get reasonable about him. Just go all the way in and obliterate
him.[...]
One cuts off enemy communications, funds, connections. He deprives
the enemy of political advantages, connections and power. He takes over enemy
territory. He raids and harrasses.[...]
The prize is "public opinion" where press is concerned.
The only safe public opinion to head for is they love us and are in a frenzy of
hate against the enemy, this means standard wartime propaganda is what one is
doing, complete with atrocity, war crimes trials, the lot. Know the mores of your
public opinion, what they hate. That's the enemy. What they love. That's you.
You preserve the image or increase it of your own troops and
degrade the image of the enemy to beast level. [...]
Wars are composed of many battles.
Never treat a war like a skirmish. Treat all skirmishes like
wars."
— L.
Ron Hubbard
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In heading for that safe public opinion of a frenzy of hate against the people
Scientology declares “SPs” and “enemies,” and in their
campaign to degrade these people’s images to beast level, the organization
publishes and disseminates mountains of generalized as well as individualized
defamatory and hateful attacks, which Hubbard termed “Black Propaganda”
or “Black PR.” Hubbard himself Black PRs the SP class as “insane,”
“criminal,” dramatizing a “continuous determination to destroy,”
“the only thing wrong in this universe,” and responsible for “fill[ing]
the institutions with victims, the hospitals with the sick and the graveyards
with the dead.”
According to the “Suppressive Person” doctrine, SPs, Scientology’s
“enemies,” “oppose violently any betterment activity or group,”
and “have a deep but carefully masked hatred of anyone who seeks to help
them.” For example, from "The Antisocial Personality – The Anti-Scientologist:”
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If anyone were to promise to make others stronger or brighter,
the antisocial personality suffers the utmost agony of personal danger.
They reason that if they are in this much trouble with people
around them weak or stupid, they would perish should anyone become strong or bright.
—
L. Ron Hubbard
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From the Scientology Technical Dictionary:
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He goofs up or vilifies any effort to help anybody and particularly
knifes with violence anything calculated to make human beings more powerful or
intelligent. A suppressive automatically and immediately will curve any betterment
activity into something evil or bad.
— L.
Ron Hubbard
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Important to the Suppressive Person doctrine is Hubbard’s and the organization’s
claim that Scientology makes human beings more powerful and intelligent, stronger
and brighter, in fact, that Scientology is the only system and procedure to make
people more powerful and intelligent, and stronger and brighter.
From Hubbard’s policy letter of February 14, 1965, “Safeguarding
Technology:”
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In fifty thousand years of history on this planet alone, man never
evolved a workable system. It is doubtful if, in foreseeable history, he will
ever evolve another.
Man is caught in a huge and complex labyrinth. To get out of it
requires that he follow the closely-taped path of Scientology.
Scientology will take him out of the labyrinth. But only if he
follows the exact markings in the tunnels.
It has taken me a third of a century in this lifetime to tape
this route out.
It has been proven that efforts by man to find different routes
came to nothing. It is also a clear fact that the route called Scientology does
lead out of the labyrinth.
— L.
Ron Hubbard
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To devout Scientologists, because Scientology is the only “technology”
that works to improve mankind, make everyone smarter, more able, and, very importantly,
more ethical, and get us out of the trap that Scientology also says everyone,
except them, is in, learning, applying, spreading and defending the “tech”
and their identities as Scientologists is all important. From Hubbard policy letter
of February 7, 1965, “Keeping Scientology Working:”
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We're not playing some minor game in Scientology. It isn't something
cute or something to do for lack of something better.
The whole agonized future of this planet, every Man, Woman and
Child on it, and your own destiny for the next endless trillions of years depend
on what you do here and now with and in Scientology.
This is a deadly serious activity. And if we miss getting out
of the trap now, we may never again have another chance.
— L.
Ron Hubbard
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Another key component of the SP doctrine is the concept of the “Potential
Trouble Source,” or “PTS,” which is the state, condition and
identity of anyone “connected” to a Suppressive Person or a Suppressive
Group. Connection to an SP or an SP group, Scientology teaches, is the cause of
all illness, and the cause of people “roller-coastering,” losing their
“gains,” their increased power, ability and intelligence “gained”
from the organization’s technology. From the definition for “Potential
Trouble Source” in the Scientology Technical Dictionary:
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Somebody who is connected with an SP who is invalidating him,
his beingness, his processing, his life. [cite]
Means the case is going to go up and fall down. He's a trouble
source because he's going to get upset. He's a trouble source because he's going
to make trouble. And he's trouble for the auditor and he's trouble for us and
he's trouble for himself. [cite]
It means someone connected to a person or group opposed to Scientology.
It is a technical thing. It results in illness and roller-coaster and is the cause
of illness and roller-coaster. [cite]
— L.
Ron Hubbard
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Hubbard laid down the law in a number of policy letters, and in his book Introduction
to Scientology Ethics, about what constitute Suppressive Acts that make a
person an SP and that make people connected to the SP PTS. For example, from his
policy letter “Suppressive Acts Suppression of Scientology and Scientologists:”
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Suppressive acts are clearly those covert or overt acts knowingly calculated
to reduce or destroy the influence or activities of Scientology or prevent case
gains or continued Scientology success and activity on the part of a Scientologist.
As persons or groups that would do such a thing act out of self-interest only
to the detriment of all others, they cannot be granted the rights ordinarily accorded
rational beings.
— L.
Ron Hubbard
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Scientology publishes in its “scriptures” a long list of Suppressive
Acts or “High Crimes” that make a person a Suppressive. These High
Crimes include serious felonies such as murder and arson, and many acts that a
reasonable person would view as innocuous and any citizen’s right, such
as public statements against Scientology or Scientologists, testifying before
state or public inquiries into Scientology, reporting Scientology or Scientologists
to the civil authorities, public disavowal of Scientology, demanding the return
of fees, publicly departing Scientology, making private plans to leave, informing
others one is leaving, or continued adherence to a person or group pronounced
a Suppressive Person or group.
Scientology teaches that SPs, the people who criticize, and perhaps otherwise
oppose the influence or activities of Scientology, are so hateful, or frightful,
or powerful that Scientologists under the organization’s command may not
deal with them or even grant them credence. Scientology’s leadership threatens
that anyone who grants credence to an SP will be guilty of a Suppressive Act and
the Suppressive Person doctrine will be applied to him.
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It is a SUPPRESSIVE ACT to deal with a Declared SUPPRESSIVE PERSON [...] To
maintain a line with, offer support to, or in any way grant credence to such a
person indicates nothing more than agreement with that person's destructive intentions
and acts.
[... ] to deal with one constitutes no less than a Suppressive Act. Such an
act is cause to have levied against you the same per policy Church justice procedures
afforded any Suppressive Person. Full ethics penalties will be applied.
— Scientology Policy Directive 28 13 August 1982
Suppressive
Act Dealing With A Declared Suppressive Person
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The Suppressive Person doctrine teaches that Scientology alone has the “technology”
to detect and to shatter SPs, the people who oppose the organization’s influence
or activities, and the organization teaches its adherents in this detection and
shattering “tech.” When Tom Cruise says that he “studied anti-social
behavior and personalities,” he doubtlessly studied Scientology’s
“PTS
and SP Course,” also called the “How
to Confront and Shatter Suppression Course.”
The organization’s “devout” celebrities,
just like its non-celebrity devotees, are indoctrinated in this “technology”
of detecting and shattering the SPs, Scientology’s “enemies,”
“opponents” or “critics” that they encounter in life.
Scientology then uses
these indoctrinated celebrities’ status to promote the Suppressive Person
doctrine to others in the organization’s publications, advertising and events.
The organized Fair Gaming of Scientology’s opponents, is not carried
out by the celebrities, of course, because this would cause bad PR for the celebs.
Fair Game operations are the responsibility of the SP
doctrine enforcement personnel in the Religious Technology Center and the
Office
of Special Affairs, which are arms or networks in the global Scientology enterprise
directly under the control of cult leader David Miscavige.
We whom Scientology’s leaders have declared to be “SPs” and
are the cult’s Fair Game targets strenuously object to celebrities like
Cruise using their star status and their easy access to national and international
media and to officials to promote and forward the cult and its “technology”
that target us. We are particularly concerned with Scientology’s current
and increasing use of celebrities and supercelebrities to sell the public, media
and government officials on the Suppressive Person doctrine. The
Suppressive Person Defense League, which is dedicated to defending SPs and
uniting SPs to stand up against the SP doctrine and its executioners, calls on
Cruise, and all Scientologists, to immediately cease all support for this pernicious
doctrine, and to cease all support for Scientology until the cult ceases teaching
and enforcing this doctrine.
We are not saying that there are not antisocial people in the world, or that
such antisocial people are not evil or dangerous, or that they do not cause great
damage and suffering. Psychology, psychiatry, science and the courts have recognized
that such persons exist much longer than Scientology has existed. What we are
saying, however, is that the people Scientology’s leaders, personnel and
celebrities identify as “SPs” and “enemies,” as evil,
criminal and insane, and target as Fair Game, are not antisocial at all, not evil,
not criminal, and not insane. Scientology’s SP targets are generally and
simply ordinary, good, social people who criticize or oppose some of this global,
totalitarian cult’s policies, practices or claims.
There are in fact a great number of Scientology organization policies and practices
that are themselves antisocial, that are hostile to the well-being of society,
averse to the society of others or social intercourse, or misanthropic, and which
call out to good people for criticism. Many of the cult’s claims for its
“technology,” such as raising IQ, even claiming “about one point
per hour,” are provably false, and should be denounced as fraud. The Suppressive
Person doctrine, which brings Scientologists to view opponents of the organization’s
reprehensible policies and practices and fraudulent claims as SPs, and opens them
up to Fair Game, is itself an extremely antisocial, dangerous doctrine and very
criticism-worthy. Scientology’s policy and practice of “Disconnection,”
which is rooted in the SP doctrine, and by which the cult breaks up families and
destroys personal or professional relationships, is damnable.
Contrary to what the Suppressive Person doctrine states, SPs, the Scientology
organization’s critics or opponents, do not fear people getting better,
or stronger or smarter. They don’t oppose violently any betterment activity
or group, don’t hate anyone who seeks to help them, don’t vilify efforts
to help anybody, don’t knife anything calculated to make human beings more
powerful or intelligent, and don’t curve any betterment activity into something
evil or bad. Scientology’s “scriptural” assertions that “SPs”
do these things are false and defamatory, intended to black PR the good people
who oppose the cult’s bad policies and practices, to degrade their image
to beast level, so that Fair Gaming them becomes laudable.
Scientology does not detect, target, Fair Game or shatter actual antisocial
persons, but declares good, loving people to be “Antisocials” or “SPs”
and then goes about targeting, Fair Gaming and shattering them. The cult equates
the good people it targets with gangsters or murderers, but the cult doesn’t
target or Fair Game gangsters or murderers. Scientology equates its SP targets
with the al-Qaeda terrorists who attacked the U.S. on September 11, but doesn’t
go after terrorists, and the cult equates the good people it Fair Games with Hitler
and Stalin, but does nothing about the despots or their regimes in power around
the world.
The Suppressive Person doctrine is a doubly cruel thought system and organizational
rule, because the good people who comprise its SPs are usually already Scientology’s
victims. People that Scientology defrauds, often out of huge sums of money, have
every reason to criticize the cult’s false claims, delivery failures and
the Scientologists who carried out the fraud. Such criticisms, however, make the
fraud victim a Suppressive Person, and a target for Fair Game, thus twice victimized.
A person might have been horribly abused and victimized in Scientology, locked
up, ordered into the cult’s reindoctrination labor camps, or kept slaving
for years, but if he ever spoke out about the abuse he would be declared an SP
and Fair Gamed, a victimization which can be worse than what he endured inside.
In 1984 Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Paul G. Breckenridge, Jr. stated in
his judgment in the case of Scientology
v. Gerry Armstrong, which was affirmed
on appeal in 1991:
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In addition to violating and abusing its own members civil rights,
the [Scientology] organization over the years with its "Fair Game" doctrine
has harassed and abused those persons not in the Church whom it perceives as enemies.
The organization clearly is schizophrenic and paranoid, and this bizarre combination
seems to be a reflection of its founder LRH. The evidence portrays a man who has
been virtually a pathological liar when it comes to his history, background, and
achievements. The writings and documents in evidence additionally reflect his
egoism, greed, avarice, lust for power, and vindictiveness and aggressiveness
against persons perceived by him to be disloyal or hostile.
— Judgment
in Scientology
v. Armstrong
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From the evidence gathered since 1984 at the very least, similar conclusions
can be drawn. Hubbard has died, but the “Suppressive Person” doctrine,
and policies and practices for its execution, Fair Game, have continued in full
force in the Miscavige Regime. There also are signs that while the SP doctrine
is being pushed right now by Scientology, including by its celebrities, people
outside the organization are beginning to grasp what the doctrine actually is.
Neil Strauss writes in the September Rolling Stone:
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Since Scientology, in the popular imagination, is such a loaded
word -- often associated with heavy-handed recruitment tactics, strong-arm-lawyer
assaults and steep membership and course fees -- one would think that Cruise wouldn't
be so willing to take a journalist through that world.
"Who are those people that say those things?" Cruise
asks when I bring it up over lunch one day. "Because I promise you, it isn't
everybody. But I look at those people and I say, 'Bring it. I'm a Scientologist,
man. What do you want to know?' I don't mind answering questions."
He lists some of Scientology's selling points: its drug-abuse,
prison-rehabilitation and education programs. "Some people, well, if they
don't like Scientology, well, then, fuck you." He rises from the table. "Really."
He points an angry finger at the imaginary enemy. "Fuck you." His face
reddens. "Period."
— Rolling
Stone
[Excerpts from print version]
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We are the enemy Cruise imagines, the people he points angry fingers at, gets
red faced about, says fuck you to. Cruise knows, because he also knows that Scientology
is the “science of knowing how to know,” that people who don’t
like Scientology, who might comment on its heavy-handedness, strong-arm-lawyer
assaults, and fees fit for millionaires, are Suppressive Persons, SPs, Antisocials,
Anti-Scientologists. We are Scientology’s victims, and our further victimization
is what Cruise’s fees buy.
We’re looking back at Cruise, we’re bringing it, and we have some
questions. We want to talk with him about the Suppressive Doctrine that he was
taught in Scientology, and which victimizes so many good people. We’d like
to talk to him about his support of the organization that promulgates and enforces
this doctrine, its absence of science and reason, and the hatred and abuses it
engenders. We’d like to ask him if perhaps he’d risk being declared
SP himself, in order to criticize the doctrine, the hatred or the abuses, or to
speak up for the victims. We hope he gets in touch.
Gerry Armstrong
Suppressive Person Defense League
#1-45950 Alexander Avenue
Chilliwack, B.C. V2P 1L5
604-703-1373
spdl@suppressiveperson.org
www.suppressiveperson.org
Go to Update
09-21-2004
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