Scientology. It’s religion, with a little dash of celebrity and a lot of intrigue.
The celebrity captain of the Church is undoubtedly Tom Cruise who is said to be one of the church’s highest ranking members. His first wife Mimi Rogers got him into it. Second wife Nicole reportedly dabbled but stayed true to her Catholic roots. And despite converting in the first few weeks of their relationship, scientology is said to be one of the main factors in Katie Holmes deciding to file for divorce this week.
But did you know that these celebrities are also members of Scientology?

John Travolta is a celebrity Scientologist
The more you read about the ‘religion’ (which enjoys tax-free status as a religious organisation) the easier it is to understand why Katie might want to get herself and her 6 year old daughter Suri as far away from it as fast as possible.
Here are a few weird facts about Scientology:
1. Scientology was founded by a science fiction and self-help writer.
In the 1950s L. Ron Hubbard, who originally made a living as a novelist, moved into self-help books and then took the next logical step and founded a religion. Scientology is pitched as a way for people to improve themselves and their lives. The religion allows adherents to progress through various “levels” – which they must pay for. The levels involve course-work, counselling, and tasks, for which Scientologists pay a lot of money.
2. The innermost secrets of Scientology centre around an evil being named Xenu.
exscientologykids.com, a website penned by children who were born and raised in the religion, reveals that: “75 million years ago, an evil being named Xenu decided to solve a population problem on his galactic colony by exiling a bunch of people to Earth. When the souls started leaving the bodies, he captured the souls and forced them into a huge implant station and made them watch movies that ‘implanted’ them with false pictures of Christ, and other historical events that Hubbard says didn’t actually happen.”
3. Scientology was responsible for the largest case of domestic espionage in US history.
Starting in 1973, “Operation Snow White” planted operatives inside the IRS, the FBI, the Justice Department, and the American Medical Association among many others, stealing and copying tens of thousands of documents that might be useful in threatening or silencing Church opponents. It was not uncovered until four years later.
4. Scientology used to be run from a boat.
In the 1960s a ship called The Apollo sailed the Mediterranean and later the Caribbean and that’s where all the religion’s followers hung out. Hubbard was “commodore” and his followers, known as the Sea Organization, served as a private navy. His most trusted aides were teenage girls who wore a uniform of hot pants and platform shoes. There was also a special Scientology band called the “Apollo All-Stars.” Rocking.
5. The most fervent followers of Scientology (the ‘Sea Org’) sign billion year contracts.
Members of the Sea Org, which was founded out of those people who used to chill with Hubbard on the Scientology boat, must sign a billion-year contract dedicating their life to Scientology and are paid about $50 a week. Critics believe that the Sea Organization is one of the most abusive groups in the world.
6. Some Scientologists aren’t allowed to have children or get sick.
Sea Org members are not permitted to have children while working for the organization. Women who get pregnant are either pressured to abort the baby, or they must leave. Sea Org members are not provided health insurance, are not given sick days, and the Sea Org will not purchase their medicine for them. Sickness is also treated as the fault of the sick person.
7. You’re not allowed to complain.
Letters that Sea Org members write to their families are screened before they are passed on to make sure they do not contain any negativity or messages of unhappiness. The Sea Org management reserves the right to ship different family members off to work in other countries or areas without any approval from the spouse. If the family complains, they are punished.
8. The church is being investigated by the FBI.
Th
e investigation began in December 2009, with a focus on “human trafficking” within the Sea Org at the Gold Base in California. The investigation remains open.
9. The birth and upbringing of children is strictly controlled.
There are strict rules surrounding their upbringing, including strict diets and no contact with anyone outside of the religion. When it’s time to be audited, children are encouraged to “spy” on their parents and tell the church everything that is going on in their household. Scientologists also believe in silent births, which basically means there are to be no spoken words by anyone attending. Hubbard believed that words spoken during times of pain and unconciousness can have an adverse effect on one later in life.
Rupert Murdoch has also attracted the attention of the church after slamming it on Twitter over the weekend to his 270,000 followers:
We asked Clinical Psychologist Jo Lamble for her view on how one person’s religious beliefs can affect a relationship:
“If you come from two different faiths or cultures, the relationship can come unstuck when important decisions need to be made. If children come along for example, tension can arise when deciding how to raise them – within what faith or as part of which strong culture. Two people can be madly in love and 100% committed, but the relationship can still be torn apart by the differences. Even if couples make joint decisions in the early days, one person may change their mind down the track. When this happens, there can be a lot of resentment, which is erosive within a relationship. Many couples not only survive the differences, but thrive on them if they have very open expectations and are willing to revisit past decisions.” – Jo Lamble
Katie Holmes converted to Scientology before marrying Tom Cruise, do you think religion was a factor in their break up? Why do you think so many celebrities are attracted to Scientology?











Comments
89 Comments so far
I get so impatient with religions – belief systems usually contrived by men for the convenience of men.
It shocks me to see women involved ; particularly when they seem so desperate to have a leading role in something so patriarchal….Men don’t want them there – unless they’re prepared to do menial tasks or behave in an insultingly subservient capacity.
I totally mistrust the “wisdom & truth” in religious texts that are covered in so many human fingerprints.
The way some men use religion as an excuse to bully, harass, beat, murder & maim others, particularly women is sickening.
Religious hierarchies are at heart, fascist……..and their followers brainwash children to be the same. The genuine folk are kind and well-meaning and don’t do “good deeds” to acquire holy brownie points to get into heaven at our expense.
Spirituality (if it’s a real thing) and religion are not actually connected……spirituality must surely be our most personal quality and it can’t be “owned”
I’m interested in the truth – whatever that is……..and I choose to KEEP IT SIMPLE………that’s it……
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pain is a natural way of unbearable pain, not to express it is not human to spy on one family is a betrayal of family values, what happens in the family unit is private unless some one is badly hurt. Faith is within u what u feel to some one with greater power than any one, the bible says if u have faith as a mustard seed u can move mountains i have done things with not alot of money no one knows only God and my family. I respect every one’s faith but i don’t think any one practice’s their faith 100%. not in this era any way.
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This website is really a stroll-by way of for all of the information you wanted about this and didn’t know who to ask. Glimpse right here, and you’l definitely uncover it. louisen.com
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Just curious if this article is based on properly reported facts about Scientology or just rumours? Some of the things I read about Scientology sound so completely crazy I wonder if it’s embellished and/or accurate. Either way, the secrecy surrounding the organisation and the fact they have a ‘Celebrity Centre’ (gag) make it pretty creepy.
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I don’t judge this religion. Same goes for any other religion. I’m pro choice.
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It totally bums me out when I learn that a celebrity whose work I enjoy is a Scientologist. I definitely become a non-fan…even more so after reading the village voice article another poster linked to…
http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runninscared/2012/02/scientologys_di.php
how anyone can support and associate with this type of organization beyond comprehension
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Scientology seems very weird to me but really all religions were started by one person saying things that others thought sounded ridiculous so it’s really no different.
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sci-fi writer is hardly the prophet Muhammad
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I find it really interesting that time gives credibility to or validates religion. We seem to think scientology is laughable because it was ‘made up’ by someone less than a decade ago. But a couple of thousand years? LEGIT!
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I agree. The LDS community cops a lot of flak regarding their prophet (at least I think he’s their prophet) Joseph Smith. Because LDS is a new religion there’s lots of historical information on how he was basically a charlatan, while other religious leaders lived so long ago we don’t have much dirt on them.
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This is a very informative site managed by a former Scientologist:
http://www.xenu.net/
I read up on this years ago when Tom Cruise was being more vocal than usual about his “religion” and it gave me the heebie-jeebies, and also made me quite angry at the damage Scientology has done to many people over the years. Hopefully Katie and Suri can get away from its influence without too much trouble!
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True story I was rejected from Scientology. Not that I wanted to join but as an 18 yr old did a free IQ test to settle a bet with then bf (to see who was smarter). Whilst they were grading it we were made to watch a recruiting film in a dark room. I mocked it and laughed all the way through (um it’s loco) whilst then bf sat silently. We walked out, I was handed my results and roughly walked to the door. Waited outside for bf for 2 hours!
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Elisabeth Moss?! Nooooooooooooooooooooo!
You forgot Beck. I was devo when I found that out.
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NOOOOOOO!!!!!!!
*Puts fingers in ears*
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Will Smith and Jada Pinkett-Smith are also missing from the list.
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Many celebrities are insecure, they are also monied. Enough said.
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I have to chuckle at Rupert Murdoch tweeting about the Scientologists being “evil….creepy” pot-kettle methinks…
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i missed the bit that defines Scientology as a religion. They don’t seem to believe in a god (jokes about Tom Cruise looking in the mirror aside) or a supernatural being if you don’t like the reference to a god.
No god, means no church and no religion. No religion means no tax benefits.
Clearly I am clueless which is why I am not a member.
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Not necessarily, not all religions are monotheistic. Not that Im defending Scientology.
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Scientology gives me the heeby-jeebies. I don’t understand how people can have such faith and trust in a science-fiction writer and believe he’s telling them the truth about aliens and whatnot.
[ http://perthwife.wordpress.com/ ]
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cuckoo! cuckoo!
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J-lo is missing off that list. Apparently J-Lo is also a scientologist and also I thought James Packer was aswell?
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I think James has walked away from it.
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Celebrities are attracted to it because the rules don’t apply to them. They get to hang out at the Scientology Celebrity Center and get crazy things done for them by the drones – such as the meadow of wildflowers Tom Cruise had planted overnight for him and Nicole to run through. Or Tom’s movie bus.
Your article doesn’t mention some of the worst abuses – young children forcibly separated from their parents, rebellious Scientologists locked up sometimes for years on end and tortured, anyone trying to leave the church being denied communication with friends and family who stay. It’s horrifying.
Anyone who wants to read more about the abuses of this ‘church’ should read the testimony of Debbie Cook, a former Scientology bigwig who escaped.
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Their anti-psychiatry stance is also quite frightening.
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Yes, remember the public slanging Tom gave Brooke Shields over her use of psychiatry & medication for PND?
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I loved her response: “He should go back to saving the world from aliens and mind his own business.”
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this is scary stuff!! no wonder Katie wants to leave! i cant get over the silent birth part………….
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That is incredibly abusive right there. I don’t know how she did it, unless she was heavily drugged which raises further questions, including for Suri.
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I endeavour to always be respectful to other people’s beliefs and religions, but i really struggle with scientology..
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Looking at the gallery, it seems that you are also required to show as much boobage as possible. Or perhaps this is a recruitment technique?
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‘Boobage’ – haha my new favourite word:)
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I’m kind of bummed by some of the people in that list.
I guess maybe Hollywood stars see it kind of like another exclusive club they get to be members of (if money is what talks in this organisation, they are probably well looked after).
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It’s probably great for networking!
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This scares me…..
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Me too. Although I can kinda see how someone could get suckered into it if they were in a vulnerable position. And I read that once you get into the higher levels and the really crazy stuff that it’s so easy to believe it cos everyone around you is part of the religion too.
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Looking closely at any religion turns up some very ‘interesting’ concepts. Can’t eat meat on certain days, can’t have sex before marriage, must pray facing a certain direction. These all seem perfectly reasonable to people who follow the associated religions and quite strange to those who don’t.
Whilst I don’t see a great amount of difference between the idea of a world created by an almighty God and one orchestrated by an alien I do take issue with the idea that your worth in the church is directly related to your financial contribution.
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A billion-year contract? And I thought my one-year one was too long….
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You’d at least want free healthcare
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The only difference between a religion and a cult – in a cult there is a guy at the top who knows it’s a scam. With a religion, that guy is dead.
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This is so weird. Good onya Katie. ESCAPED.
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Unfortunately her daughter won’t, and in some respects Kate won’t.
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If You have to “comb a cat’ and ‘walk on pavement’ in order to get married , I think I’ll give it a miss.
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First time I have ever liked Rupert Murdoch.
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Same!!
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Rupert is in the enviable position in that he is too big to really get at. I mean what can they say or do that shut him up? Drag up lurid sex tales? I don’t think he is worried. And his papers provide the mouth piece he can reply to anything they say.
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it feels like you just have to ask ‘are some people really that stupid to follow this so called church knowing the dedicated (read : crazy) people of Sea Org have to sign ‘a billion year contract’ among the countless other ridiculous things involved with this religion?’
the answer is obviously ‘yes, yes they are’…which is baffling.
I hope Katie & Suri can ‘escape’ from Tom and all his craziness, it’ll be hard work….the scientology followers (high up in the ‘church’ especially) sound like a bunch of nutcases, run & run fast!!
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wow – on the presumption that these are facts, how can anyone look at these and think yes this scientology sounds great?
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Scientology. Hillsong. Amway :p
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Starting up a religion is really starting to sound like a good tax free way to do business
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Mamamia should do an article on Hillsong! This was really interesting though
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You forgot the Mormons and their ‘magic’ oops sorry ‘celestial’ underpants!
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Celestial underpants???
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A temple garment (also referred to as garments, or Mormon underwear)[1] is a type of underwear worn by members of some denominations of the Latter Day Saint movement, after they have taken part in the Endowment ceremony. Garments are worn both day and night and are required for any previously endowed adult to enter a temple.[2] The undergarments are viewed as a symbolic reminder of the covenants made in temple ceremonies, and are viewed as either a symbolic or literal source of protection from the evils of the world.[3]
Thanks to Wiki
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But what if they shart?
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Snorted!
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You rock, cuppy
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I don’t really think it is fair to pick on peoples beliefs because they don’t align with yours, yes the Mormans have this garment but is it any different to a scull cap worn by Jewish men? Or a head covering worn by Muslim women?
We need to be tolerant towards each other and live and let live. So long as no one is in danger and it is legal than go for it, be a Catholic or a Mormon or a Jedi Knight. Each to their own.
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This whole article is about poking fun at ‘extremely different’ religions. But to be fair the Freemason’s bbq aprons are funny too.
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Freemasons have BBQ aprons?
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They have these leather aprons that get adorned as they move through the ranks of their lodge. I looked after my Pop’s one at his funeral.
Freemasonry isn’t a religion, though.
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My parents used to sell Amway crap after they met a couple named Ken and Barbara. Ken was super creepy.
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ken and barbie? noooooo! reminds me of that katie holmes movie where there were scary amway people…anyone?
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The movie was Go
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Can I add Landmark Education to this list?!
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Yes!! I once went to my cousin’s “graduation” from a Landmark course. What a creepy, manipulative, money sucking group that was, praying on people who are insecure at a low ebb in life, ran by “volunteers” whilst “Mr Landmark” is making a motza!
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It all sounds pretty freaky, but if you compare without bias to other mainstream religions it is probably no worse.
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Any ‘religion’ that separates you from loved ones based on the fact they don’t believe what you do is exerting too much influence, and is a cult in my book, not a religion.
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Might be your definition, but not the actual one. Here is the definition of cult.
1. a particular system of religious worship, especially with reference to its rites and ceremonies.
2. an instance of great veneration of a person, ideal, or thing, especially as manifested by a body of admirers: the physical fitness cult.
3. the object of such devotion.
4. a group or sect bound together by veneration of the same thing, person, ideal, etc.
5. Sociology . a group having a sacred ideology and a set of rites centering around their sacred symbols.
For a second I thought I was reading an introduction to the Catholic church.
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My thoughts exactly!
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Craig How can that be a religion? it`s a cult based on fear.
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Aren’t all religions based upon fear? Fear that if you aren’t “good” you will go to hell. Fear if we support gay marriage then homosexuals are going to take over and start converting our kids. Fear that other religions are trying to infiltrate our country. Fear is the central part of religion. Feel free to say “not my church”, everyone does, but I have been to many and they are all the same under the facade.
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Scientolgoy freaks me out.
But, all these facts mentioned in this post… does the Church of Scientology confirm that these are true?
If they do, how can anyone think it’s a good idea to join such a scary group?
And if they don’t, where does this information come from?
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the Cof$ doesn’t tell anyone anything other than basic guiding philosophy and a lot of esoteric waffle unless they have signed up for several thousand dollars of auditing. The further you get into it the more you find out. Most of the information comes from former church members who got out.
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A close friend’s brother got sucked in to Scientology and it took him over 25 years to get out of it. It involved some really weird stuff, including sessions of detoxing and kind of LSD type tripping reliving past bad experiences. Then he always had to donate a portion of his income to the church and do lots of duties for the church. Very strange indeed.
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I thought you were talking about Christianity for a second.
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I’m sorry, but as a Christian I know first hand that we don’t have to or are forced to donte a portion of our income to the church. it’s just a choice. What a lot of people don’t realise is that as a Christian, we have choices with how much we want to be involved with the church. so christianity is nothing like the church of scientology. we’re not in any kind of contract with the church or anything like that. i’ve never been told i’ve had to donate my income to the church I attend or have to be involved with church activities.
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Most scientologists aren’t in a contract with the church. Being a member of Sea Org is more like being a priest than being just a gular church-goer.
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I think Opus Dei members, part of catholic church, pay their wages to a house fund and are allocated a small sum back.
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Kate Ceberano? SERIOUSLY?????????
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I’ve read an interview where it was mentioned that Kate’s grandmother was a nanny for L. Ron Hubbard. She was raised as a Scientologist.
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Well there you go! I’ve certainly learned something today!
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I know that shocked me as well as a few others on the list!
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Peggy from Mad Men is a Scientologist?! Can’t see Don Draper being ok with that.
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It’s a cult, plain and simple. There are vast amounts of money in this so-called ‘religion’ and also many stories of human rights abuses over the years from ex-members etc. I truly hope this organisation is intensively investigated in all countries that operates in. There’s no smoke without fire.
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Founder Hubbard once said “the best way to make money is to start a religion”
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Similar things could be said about the Cathlic Church too though.
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My thoughts exactly. Anyone seen the Vatican lately? It’s not exactly a hovel.
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Actually Lisa Marie quite pointedly left the church not long ago.
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