The Church of Scientology Crackdown


You’ve probably already seen this incredible exposé of the Church of Scientology and leader David Miscavige, courtesy of Joe Childs and Thomas C. Tobin of the St. Petersburg Times. The entire three-part series is now available online.

If it’s the beginning of the end for Scientology, fantastic, but I don’t know how much of an effect these articles will have.

Still, I am pleasantly surprised that a newspaper bankrolled this type of report. Normally, I would’ve expected this kind of piece to run in a magazine. If newspapers supported this kind of reporting more often, no doubt they would become more relevant and thus be more likely to get out of the dire straits they’re in right now.

Charles McAlpin, the Portland Skepticism Examiner, said this in an email:

I used to volunteer with cult awareness, and I can tell you that these people were huge names in Scientology. A public statement against Scientology by any one of the four would be earth-shattering news, and the four of them together have to have that organization shaken to its core.

He adds in his post that this sort of article would not even have been possible a decade ago because the Scientologist leaders would have bullied or harassed the reporters into silence.

(Thanks to Charlie and Brian for the link!)

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12 Responses

  1. avatar K Says:

    As a person who lives near Clearwater and has family members who work for the St. Pete Times, I’ve heard that Scientologists are buying these papers up from stores or are stealing them from coin-operated newspaper boxes and later burn them. It’s crazy to what lengths they’ll go to cover it up, but there is still plenty of bad publicity going around.

  2. avatar llewelly Says:

    Perhaps this is an optimum time for skeptics to dismantle the claims of Scientology. Strike when the iron is hot?

  3. avatar schism Says:

    If it’s the beginning of the end for Scientology, fantastic, but I don’t know how much of an effect these articles will have.

    If the “effects” on the Catholic church after waves of pedophilia scandals are any indication, Xenu and co. will survive just fine.

  4. avatar Charlie Says:

    The church probably has billions of dollars at its disposal, so this is far from the end of Scientology. That’s okay; that’s not why these articles are so good to see.

    Here’s the thing: the church is losing control of its image, and it is losing its ability to silence critics. That is going to change a lot of lives for the better.

  5. avatar trixr4kids Says:

    Earlier this year, here in Southern California, a local news station (KESQ-News Channel 3) aired a multi-part investigation of Scientology. Reporter Nathan Baca interviewed Tommy Davis, the cult’s chief spokesperson.

    The entire interview is brilliant–Baca basically lets Davis hang himself. But don’t miss part 7: that’s the part where Baca mentions the Xenu story, and Davis is reduced to saying that asking a religious person to explain his religion’s core beliefs is offensive.

  6. avatar trixr4kids Says:

    Oops, here’s the link to that KESQ interview:

  7. avatar trixr4kids Says:
  8. avatar freddie mac Says:

    from here: http://www.tampabay.com/news/article1012234.ece

    ““One thing I do know is Dave Miscavige, and I’ve known him from December 1999 on and way before that,” Walsh said. “And I never saw any change in his personality when he became a defendant in the case. He didn’t become more antagonistic. He did not become more violent. And he’s never been irrational.””

    never been irrational? he’s a scientologist.

  9. avatar Paul Lundgren Says:

    K’s opening comment struck me as funny. These people just don’t get it…it’s the INTERNET that is the opponent for which they have no defense. They can burn all the newspapers they want…it’s the millions of people being able to access information and church documents from Xenu.net that leaves them flayed open for the ruthless cult they are.

  10. avatar Zar Says:

    They got Mike Rinder to talk??? That’s really amazing; this guy was incredibly high-ranking and in charge of the Church’s investigative/propaganda/dirty tricks organization. He has a lot of skeletons in his closet. I know he’s been out for a long time (tons of people are leaving, which isn’t surprising as few cults outlast their founders), but I never thought he would speak up. This is really, really big.

  11. avatar gribblethemunchkin Says:

    I always considered Scientology to be a potential “Big religion” in the making. I found it fascinating watching how they elevated L Ron to some kind of semi deific level of wisdom and ability when the guy’s actual history is anything but. Relieved from command of his boat during WW2, sent to a mental hospital, lousy sci-fi writer, tax dodger, fraudster, eventually forced out by his own church. Yet now its L Ron had magic powerz!

    If this can happen in the 20th century with the level of record keeping we have available to us, how can people not believe it happened 2000 years ago in a time of greater belief in the supernatural, less understanding of science and less accurate record keeping.

  12. avatar Carnival of the vacationing blogger #2 : The Uncredible Hallq Says:

    [...] In the middle of the seriousness spectrum, in the “should I laugh or cry” territory, is a three part expose of craziness inside the Church of Scientology. Hat tip goes to Greta Christina for posting it on Facebook, but also to Hemant. [...]

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