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June 25, 2004
Open Letter to
Superintendent, California Department of Education
State Board of Education
San Francisco School Board
Los Angeles School Board
Dear Mr. O’Connell and Board Members:
Regarding the issue of Narconon’s efforts to be accepted to provide presentations,
courses, seminars, education or treatment in association with the San Francisco
or Los Angeles School systems, or in association with any entity, it is obviously
necessary to understand what it is Narconon, as a piece of the Scientology organization,
teaches, and what it is trying with its actions and teachings to achieve.
An essential piece of what Narconon is teaching, and which governs its actions,
as directed by Scientology, both the organization and the “philosophy,”
is a concept known as the “Suppressive Person” doctrine. I have not
seen in the media coverage that I have read that the doctrine has been discussed
in connection with the issue of Narconon in the schools; but the “Suppressive
Person” doctrine is key, and indispensable to making an informed evaluation.
I have both personal and organizational reasons for writing this letter, and
for offering my knowledge and testimony to everyone regarding this subject. I
am the founder of the Suppressive
Person Defense League which is dedicated to the defense of Scientology’s
targets, who comprise the “Suppressive Persons.” I have been what
Scientology and Scientologists and, no doubt, Narconon, declare to be a “Suppressive
Person,” commonly called an “SP,” since 1982.
Scientology creator L. Ron Hubbard taught and Scientology teaches that SPs
are a class of human beings making up 2½ percent of the planetary population,
and that this class or type of being is responsible for all illness, accidents,
any bad condition. Scientology teaches that these people are completely evil and
irredeemable, “truly dangerous,” committing crime continuously, “psychotic,”
and deserving of no civil rights.
In 1953, just as he was getting his Scientology organization started, Hubbard
dubbed these people “Merchants
of Fear.” A decade later he called them “Merchants
of Chaos,” and in 1965 he labeled them “Suppressive
Persons,” or “SPs,” as these people are known to all Scientologists
today. Hubbard also described SPs as the “anti-social personality,”
and assigned to them specific, destructive psychological and behavioral characteristics
and “emotional tone level.”
Scientology publishes as Hubbard “scripture” about this class identified
as SPs:
"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
HCO B 27 September 1966 The Anti-social Personality The
Anti-Scientologist
There is no argument that these historical villains were not villainous, nor
that nasty, even evil personalities do not exist in the world and that many aren’t
undetected. The problem with the Scientologists’ Suppressive Person doctrine,
as they still teach and enforce it, Hubbard having died in 1986, is that people
whom Scientology, and its components, are declaring to be “SPs” and
“enemies,” evil and insane, are decent people who simply oppose or
even criticize any of this global cult’s policies, practices or claims.
Hubbard wrote, and the Scientologists still teach, that every critic of Scientology
is a “criminal,” and is to be treated as a criminal.
In another infamous “scripture,” which has been entered into evidence
and condemned in a number of judicial proceedings, Hubbard spelled out the treatment
for SPs, often termed the “Fair Game” policy.
"ENEMY – SP Order. Fair game. May be deprived of property or injured
by any means by any Scientologist without any discipline of the Scientologist.
May be tricked, sued or lied to or destroyed." — L.
Ron Hubbard
Since the Scientology enterprise has a number of policies and practices that
are opprobrious, and since the organization’s significant claims of results
for its “technology” and its intentions are false, there is much about
Scientology that good people with a brain and a heart should criticize. Scientology’s
endlessly repeated claim that its “technology” raises IQ, even claiming
“about one point per hour,” something educators would be attracted
by, is completely false, and should be criticized by everyone as the fraud it
is. Viewing critics of these criticism-worthy policies, practices and claims as
“Suppressive Persons,” and subjecting these people to fair game and
the threat of fair game, is opportunistic, irrational and dangerous, with no basis
in science, truth or humanity.
Following a lengthy trial in Los Angeles Superior Court in 1984 in Scientology
vs. Armstrong, case no. C420153, the Court rendered a decision that stated:
"In addition to violating and abusing its own members civil rights, the
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[ubbard]. 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." — Decision/Judgment
This decision was affirmed
on appeal in 1991.
Hubbard wrote for Scientologists in 1965, and Scientologists today accept his
pronouncement as unchangeable and vital “scripture:”
"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." — L.
Ron Hubbard
What Scientologists, including, unquestionably, Narconon’s Scientologists,
do with and in Scientology necessarily encompasses the teaching, executing and
living of the Suppressive Person doctrine.
Scientology proclaims that its “aims,” as laid down by Hubbard,
are:
"A civilization without insanity, without criminals and without war,
where the able can prosper and honest beings can have rights, and where man is
free to rise to greater heights." — L.
Ron Hubbard
These are nice aims or planetary conditions that no one, again with a standard
brain and a heart, would oppose. Scientology also asserts, however, that the only
thing standing in the organization’s way to creating this “world without
war, criminality and insanity and where all men are free to rise to greater heights”
are “Suppressive Persons.”
Scientology’s solution for the SPs, who are simply and demonstrably good
people who speak up about the organization’s antisocial policies and practices
and fraudulent claims, is to “shatter”
them. Scientology teaches that it possesses a “technology,” indeed
the “only workable technology,” to identify SPs and shatter them,
and sells courses in this “technology” to all Scientologists. The
Narconon arm of Scientology also sells and delivers courses in this “technology”
to its customers, and seeks to indoctrinate them in the basics of the Suppressive
Person doctrine to create in their minds the “reality” that the doctrine
requires.
The June 9 San Francisco Chronicle reveals that the Suppressive Person doctrine
is being taught in at least three courses on “Narconon’s 9 steps”
program.
-- "Ups and Downs in Life Course: Gains the knowledge to spot and handle
those influences in the environment that would cause him to lose any gains he
has made ...
-- "Personal Values and Integrity Course: Gains the data (needed) to
improve his survival potential. The course teaches him about the eight dynamics,
ethics, honesty and integrity, showing him how to correct antisocial behavior
by ridding himself of the effects of past harmful deeds ...
-- "Changing Conditions in Life Course: Covers the ethics technology
of L. Ron Hubbard and shows the individual exactly how to apply it to improve
conditions in his life ... http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2004/06/09/MNGO572ISD1.DTL
Promoting these three courses on its program, Narconon’s
web site states:
"THE UPS AND DOWNS IN LIFE COURSE gives the student the ability to spot
and handle those influences in his environment that would cause him to lose any
gains he has made.
He learns the characteristics of the social personality as well as those of
the anti-social personality so that he can spot the difference and better choose
his friends and associates. Completing this course makes the student less susceptible
to those who would influence him to revert to drugs.
THE PERSONAL VALUES AND INTEGRITY COURSE gives the student the data he needs
to improve his survival potential. It teaches the student the eight survival dynamics,
gives him invaluable knowledge about personal ethics, honesty and integrity and
shows him how to correct contra-survival behavior by ridding himself of past harmful
deeds.
THE NARCONON CHANGING CONDITIONS OF LIFE COURSE gives the student the exact
step-by-step technology he needs to improve his life.
This ethics technology was developed by L. Ron Hubbard and covers exactly
how to apply these steps to improve conditions in life. It also teaches the student
how to repair previous bad conditions and how he can apply this technology and
keep winning."
Hubbard’s Suppressive Person doctrine states that “ups
and downs in life,” which Scientology also commonly calls “roller-coastering,”
is caused by the person who is “losing his gains” being connected
to a Suppressive Person. The SP doctrine identifies such a person connected to
an SP as a “Potential Trouble Source” or “PTS,” because
the PTS person is “going to make trouble” for Scientology. Being “connected”
to a Suppressive Person makes a PTS person subject to Scientology’s infamous
practice of “Disconnection,” which has been used to break up countless
families. Scientologists are taught that disconnecting from the SP, severing all
ties, will end the PTS person’s going up and down and getting ill, and allow
him to continuing with Scientology’s program.
In its implementation of the SP doctrine Scientology states as unequivocal
organization policy
"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."
If Scientologists, Narconon personnel included, do not apply the Suppressive
Person doctrine to people whom organization leaders declare to be SPs, the Scientologists
know that they will themselves be declared SP, and the doctrine will be applied
to them. The doctrine is applied to Scientologist children, and they are required
to apply it others, and it is Scientology’s intention to get secular society’s
school children to apply it in their lives, to their fellow students, to their
teachers, family and friends. Such students would be joining the organization’s
cause, even if they didn’t call themselves Scientologists, by attacking
and shattering the organization’s opponents, the “SPs.”
The “anti-social personality” that a person is taught to spot by
“characteristics” on Narconon’s “Ups and Downs in Life
Course,” is the “Suppressive Person.” The characteristics for
identifying SPs in Narconon are identical to what all other Scientologists in
all other parts of Scientology use to identify SPs. The criticisms of Scientology
policies and practices that will result in a person being declared an SP in Narconon
are the same as the criticisms that will cause a person to be declared an SP in
the rest of Scientology.
Both the “Personal Values and Integrity Course” and the “Changing
Conditions of Life Course,” as described by Narconon, teach Hubbard’s
“ethics technology,” the organization’s system of rewards and
punishment based on the Suppressive Person doctrine. Hubbard wrote, and Scientology
teaches as “scripture:”
"The purpose of Ethics is:
TO REMOVE COUNTER-INTENTIONS FROM THE ENVIRONMENT.
And having accomplished that the purpose becomes:
TO REMOVE OTHER-INTENTIONEDNESS FROM THE ENVIRONMENT."
— L. Ron Hubbard
HCO PL Ethics 18 June 1968
The “counter-intention” to Scientology’s intentions, operations
and communications, the organization teaches, comes from “Suppressive Persons,”
who must be removed from the environment.
This removal of people identified as Suppressive Persons is not a peaceful
dismissal from Scientology’s premises or courses, but a violent shattering
of their personalities and lives. The
“battle tactics” Hubbard ordered for his Scientology troops’
“war” on SPs states:
"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."
Scientology teaches that “there is no more ethical group on this planet”
than themselves, and the organization claims that for this reason it has an undeniable
right to impose its system of “ethics” on mankind. In truth, Scientology’s
Suppressive Person doctrine, and the fair game to execute it, make Scientology
an extremely unethical organization. The “ethical level” of Scientology
and Narconon can be established by observing their response to criticism of their
policies and practices: they will not reason with their critics, the SPs, but
will only attack.
Scientology’s “logic” for its Suppressive Person doctrine
is syllogistic, circular, and so ridiculous and also dangerous that it cries out
for criticism. Scientology teaches that Hubbard’s knowledge and system,
and the organization’s personnel, the Scientologists, including the Narconon
Scientologists, applying that knowledge within that system are mankind’s
only hope, that Scientology is the only “technology” that “works”
to make people better, to clear the planet of dishonesty, crime, wars and insanity.
2 ½ percent of the population, Hubbard and Scientology teach, can’t
stand the idea of people getting better, and “going free,” but want
to keep people suppressed, ill and enslaved. Hubbard and his organization teach
that these are the Suppressive Persons, who oppose and criticize Scientology’s
policies, practices or philosophy because Scientology works.
That people whom Scientology declares to be SPs oppose and criticize the organization’s
policies, practices or philosophy also serves to “prove” to Scientologists
that their “technology” works. Since the “tech” works,
and is mankind’s only hope, Scientology also teaches, the criticisms of
people should not be addressed, but the critics, being SPs and criminal, should
be attacked as hard as the law will allow, and then some, and obliterated.
People outside of Scientology are only just beginning to understand the Suppressive
Person doctrine, even though numbers of individuals have known about organization
abuses and criminal activities for five decades, and several of these individuals
have made this knowledge available in readable scholarly books or studies. It
may be that the irrationality and extreme hatefulness of the doctrine have impeded
information diffusion, because it is hard and disconcerting to confront. Certainly
Scientology, by threatening knowledgeable expositors with the doctrine and its
execution that the expositors would expose, has actively sought to prevent this
information from being disseminated and assimilated. I believe, however, that
the SP doctrine inevitably will enter the public consciousness, that society will
reject it, and that the apparent “gains” obtained by doing what Hubbard
said to do, even if it apparently got some people off drugs, will be seen as not
only non-existent but ill-gotten.
Scientology has for as long as it has taught and enforced the SP doctrine ducked
discussion of the doctrine with the claim that such would be an improper questioning
of religion, of religious beliefs and religious practices. The organization has
made Hubbard’s “policies” and “directives” that
lay out the SP doctrine and its terms and definitions; SP, PTS, fair game, ethics,
counter-intention, etc., into “religious scripture.” Narconon’s
insistence that the Scientology “technology” it is teaching is “secular,”
in order to gain admittance into the secular school systems, and other secular
systems, permits the Suppressive Person doctrine to be publicly investigated without
in any way questioning what Scientology claims is “religious” doctrine.
There is a certain attractiveness to being a fighter in a war, the goal of
which is nothing less than total control in a world without war, crime and insanity,
and there is a seductiveness in having a group or class of person to vilify, to
blame for all the personal and societal “bad conditions” in the way
of that goal, and to fair game. There is as well the obvious advantage of the
Scientology side actually having an army to join, actually having battle tactics
and battle plans, well financed, and with sophisticated, professional mercenary
companies of lawyers, private investigators, public relations agents, intelligence
operatives in addition to their own troops, and a regiment of celebrities. The
Suppressive Persons have no army, and no celebrities, and have never organized
to fight back.
The Suppressive Person doctrine is very simplistic, but it justifies its own
execution, which is an aggressive, sophisticated, costly, threatening and debilitating
war of total attrition. The doctrine made Hubbard very wealthy, and it is an essential
part of “administration technology,” by which Scientology runs its
own “church” organizations, and which it exports into the secular
business world. The World Institute of Scientology Enterprises (WISE), an arm
of Scientology parallel to the Association for Better Living and Education (ABLE)
that houses Narconon, states as its primary purpose:
"To get LRH [Hubbard] administrative technology broadly in use in every
business, organization and nation of earth." — WISE International
Business Directory 2001
It is quite clear that if a person becomes devoted to pursuing the goals Scientology
gives him he will quit doing drugs, if he was doing them, since Scientology will
require that to continue pursuing Scientology goals he could not do drugs. It
is equally clear that persons who began to devote themselves to any number of
other pursuits, whether these required abstinence such as the military or prison,
or not, will also quit drugs. The question then becomes, does any school system
wish, or even have a right, put any of its students in a setting where they are
vulnerable to Scientologists getting them to pursue Scientology’s goals,
which includes the acceptance and application of the Suppressive Person doctrine?
Understanding Hubbard’s, Scientology’s and Narconon’s “science”
about drugs that their organization teaches is important, and understanding the
Scientologists’ actual intentions underlying their drug “science”
and their “humanitarianism” is equally important. Every person on
any school board, or anywhere, who is counter-intention to Scientology’s
intention to be accepted in schools, or anywhere, needs to know what they are
up against. Every such opposition and every criticism provides adequate motivation
to Scientology’s leaders to declare the opponent or critics an enemy and
suppressive.
Every SP welcomes your criticisms of anything to do with Scientology. Every
criticism shows a defect in the Suppressive Person doctrine. Enough criticism
and all society will see that the whole doctrine is defective, and it will cease
creating victims.
Yours sincerely,
Gerry Armstrong
#1-45950 Alexander Avenue
Chilliwack, B.C. V2P 1L5
604-703-1373
spdl@suppressiveperson.org
www.suppressiveperson.org
To see what has happened to an “SP” who is an average, common person
that has simply spoken out about Scientology’s fraud and antisocial doctrines,
policies and practices, please read http://www.gerryarmstrong.org/50grand/cult/index.html
To evaluate what Scientology’s actual intentions are regarding human
rights, since the organization portrays itself as a champion of human rights,
please see Scientology vs. Armstrong, Marin County California Superior Court Case
No. CV 021632, documents from which are available at http://www.gerryarmstrong.org/50grand/legal/a7/index.html
© 2004 SPDL, Gerry Armstrong, Caroline
Letkeman |