legally on the internet Three Dutch Courts ruled that the following document can be published freely. So this page is: (Legal details here) Thank you Scientology, for proving that this $400.000 costing core-secret really is yours. Notes
[Operating Thetan Level 3] BODY THETANS by L. Ron Hubbard®
The head of the Galactic Federation (76 planets around larger stars visible from here) (founded 95,000,000 years ago, very space opera) solved overpopulation (250 billion or so per planet - 178 billion on average) by mass implanting.. He caused people to be brought to Teegeeack (Earth) and put an H-Bomb on the principal volcanos (incident II) and then the Pacific area ones were taken - in boxes to Hawaii and the Atlantic area ones to Las Palmas and there "packaged". His name was Xenu. He used renegades. Various misleading data by means of circuits etc was placed in the unplants. When through with his crime loyal officers (to the people) captured him after six years of battle and put him in an electronic mountain trap where he still is. "They" are gone. The place (Confederation) has since been a desert. The length and brutality of it all was such that this Confederation never recovered. The implant is calculated to kill (by pneumonia etc) anyone who attempts to solve it. This liability has been dispensed with by my tech development. One can freewheel through the implant and die unless it is approached as precisely outlined. The "freewheel" (auto-running on and on) lasts too long, denies sleep etc and one dies. So be careful to do only Incidents I and II as given and not plow around and fail to complete one thetan at a time. In December 1967 1 know someone had to take the plunge. I did and emerged very knocked out, but alive. Probably the only one ever to do so in 75,000,000 years. I have all the data now, but only that given here is needful. One's body is a mass of individual thetans stuck to oneself or to the body. One has to clean them off by running incident II and Incident I. It is a long job, requiring care, patience and good auditing. You are running beings. They respond like any preclear. Some large, some small. Thetans believed they were one. This is the primary error. Good luck. For the purpose of clarity, by BodyThetan is meant a thetan who is stuck to another thetan or body but is not in control. A Thetan is, of course, a Scientology word using the Greek theta which was the Greek symbol for thought or life. An individual being such as a man is a thetan, he is not a body and he does not think because he has a brain. A Cluster is a group of BodyThetans crushed or hold together by some mutual bad experience. BodyThetans are just Thetans. When you get rid of one he goes off and possibly squares around, picks up a body or admires daisies. He is in fact a sort of cleared Being. He cannot fail to eventually, if not at once, regain many abilities. Many have been asleep for the last 75,000,000 years. A BodyThetan responds to any process any Thetan responds to. Some BodyThetans are suppressive. A suppressive is out of valence in R6. He is in valence in Incident I almost always. One can't run a human being on these two incidents since human beings are composites and would not be able to run the lot. Aside from that, non-clears are way below awareness required to even find these Incidents. Huge amounts of charge have already been removed from the case and the BodyThetans by Clearing and OT I and OT II to say nothing of engrams and lower grades. Awareness is proportional to the charge removed from the case. Although a human is a composite being there is only one I (that is you) who runs things. Body thetans just hold one back. You will continue to be you. You, inside, can of course separate out BodyThetans and so solo auditing is the answer. How good do you have to be to run BodyThetans off? Well, if you didn't skip your grades, Clearing and OT II particularly, you should be able to command BodyThetans easily. Incident II is over 36 days long. Capture on other planets was weeks or months before the implant. Those on Teegeeack (Earth) were just blown up except for Loyal officers who were (shortly before the explosion on Earth) rounded up. Do not scan through the duration of 36 days. The volcanic explosion on Earth to the point where "the pilot" says he is mocking it up is only a few days. Sequence of Incident II for thetans on another planet -
The pictures contain God, the Devil, angels, space opera, theaters, helicopters, a constant spinning, a spinning dancer, trains and various scenes very like modern England. You name it, it's in this implant we call in its entirely "R6"- if one was a Loyal Officer on Teegeeack, the sequence was (1) capture (2) number 5 above on. If one was a citizen of Teegeeack there was only number 5 on. The material given at the various "volcanos' was longer or shorter, but dovetailed into the same sequence of pictures. We have the whole text but it is needless. People who feel dizzy have gotten into the spinning part. Incident I occurred about 4 quadrillion years ago plus or minus. it is very much earlier than Incident II which occurred only 75 million years ago (a bit less). Incident II is only peculiar and general on this planet and nearby stars, whereas Incident I is to be found on all thetans. [SNIP] The last line of OT-3:
Some abbreviations: BT - BodyThetan Incident One - The first incident on the Whole Track (see) for each Thetan (see). It consisted of an Angel blowing a trumpet and some noises. Hubbard explained that this was so powerful that from then on the Thetan compulsively continued recording every incident that happened over 4 quadrillion years until now. Incident Two - The second major incident on the Whole Track (see). Rud - Rudiment. SP - Suppressive Person. A critic of Scientology. Fe anyone who thinks that OT 3 is nonsense. TA - Tone Arm action - change of electrical resistance, supposed to show relief of emotional "charge" on the 'E-meter' (crude lie detector, price ~$4,000) Thetan - "An individual being ... not a body". This is Scientology's name for the soul or spirit. Valence - An adopted personality. Whole Track - The mental recording of all of the experience of the Thetan (see). Hubbard said that the Whole Track was 4 quadrillion years long. Eventually Thetans became the victims of their recordings and became entrapped (via the mechanism of the "Bank"). Hubbard claimed that only through Scientology could this compulsive recording of incidents stop. Scan of the first (handwritten) page: It is 1950, the year Hubbard published his signature book, Dianetics. Philip Seymour Hoffman plays Lancaster Dodd, who sails around in a boat called Aletheia, practising a new talking cure called "processing" and recruiting volunteers on billion-year contracts, while bullying critics or questioners. Hubbard sailed around in a ship called Apollo and did all these things. He called his talking cure "auditing". Anderson's use of the name Aletheia, a Greek word meaning "truth" or "disclosure", is presumably ironical. It was the word philosopher Martin Heidegger used in Being and Time (1927) to define what he meant by "truth". Does Anderson mean us to understand that his film discloses the truth about Scientology? Or merely that the charlatan Dodd has the vast pretentiousness to proclaim, like many another religious figure or snake-oil salesman, that he knows the truth about life, the universe and everything? If you know only a little about Scientology, Beyond Belief will be an eye-opener. It is the memoir of Jenna Miscavige Hill, niece of David Miscavige, the maestro who usurped power over the Church of Scientology after Hubbard died (or "dropped his body", as Scientologists put it), in January 1986. The manner in which Miscavige climbed through the ranks of Scientology and took over in the late 1980s bears an eerie similarity to the way in which Stalin rose as Lenin's lieutenant and then took over after Lenin had a stroke and died. Hubbard also died of a stroke. Miscavige ousted his presumptive heir, purged his lieutenants and declared all opponents Suppressive Persons (think counter-revolutionaries). Jenna Miscavige was an infant at that point. Born into a family of Scientologists in 1984, she grew up controlled by the cult. She remained in its thrall until a few years ago when she fled from it and made common cause with others who had done so. She now seeks to expose it for what she claims it is: in the words of Cynthia Kisser of the defunct Cult Awareness Network, "the most ruthless, the most classically terroristic, the most litigious and the most lucrative cult" in modern America. I write of the Cult Awareness Network being defunct because in the early 90s a barrage of lawsuits drove it into bankruptcy. David Miscavige's Church of Scientology led the charge. The network's name and assets were then bought by a Scientologist and used to issue a brochure praising Scientology for its "good work". Having produced The Master, thinly fictionalising Hubbard, Hollywood should now make a film of Jenna Miscavige Hill's story, because it is astounding. Again and again, I found myself appalled and fascinated by her first-hand account of the way Scientology entraps and manipulates its adherents. Also, how very difficult they find it to escape the church's coercive machinations and the totalistic belief system it instils in them. Exhibiting remarkable resilience and independence of moral judgment, the 18-year-old Jenna finally rebelled against all she claims to have experienced: mindless and unjust punishment, sleep deprivation, hard labour, isolation from her family, invasive interrogation and denial of the rights to date, marry or reproduce. Only after she had escaped the clutches of Scientology did she learn to associate with people altogether independent of the organisation, whom Scientologists call "Wogs". "Through their eyes," she writes, "I slowly learned how weird my upbringing had been." She gained "an outsider's perspective on the church" and came to see doctrines she had been taught all her life as "nothing but a complete suppression of free thought". She claims her experience was part of a systemic pattern. "To me," she writes, "the church is a dangerous organisation whose beliefs allow it to commit crimes against humanity and violate basic human rights. It remains a mystery to me how, in our current society, this can go unchecked." Once this became clear to her, she declares, "I felt an overwhelming need to do something." That was the origin of this book. But moving and damning as Jenna Miscavige Hill's memoir is, Lawrence Wright's forensic investigation of the cult, Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood and the Prison of Belief, is vastly more informative. He tells from its beginnings the story of the crank Hubbard who, having been a prolific writer of science fiction, decided to declare his fantasies true in the early 50s and founded a "religion". Jenna Miscavige Hill gets only a passing mention in Wright's book. He shows, in ways to which she was oblivious while a member of the organisation, that it was already out of control long before she was born. It should have been hounded out of existence in the 70s, but it has exhibited a disturbing tenacity. Wright shows us how it has fought to survive. In 1971, Paulette Cooper, a student of comparative religion at Harvard and the daughter of Jewish parents who had perished in the Holocaust, published a book called The Scandal of Scientology. According to Wright, Cooper's book attacked the absurd cosmology of Hubbard and quoted refugees from Scientology who testified to having been "financially defrauded and then harassed when they tried to speak out". Wright relates that Cooper received death threats, was stalked, had her phone tapped, was sued 19 times, was defamed and harassed. She was financially ruined, depressed and professionally destroyed. She came close to committing suicide. Paranoid and convinced that governments were out to get him, Hubbard in 1973 created a scheme for infiltrating government agencies, in the US and other countries. He called it Operation Snow White. Evidence of the extent of it was unearthed in 1977, when the FBI raided key Scientology buildings, seizing tens of thousands of documents. They discovered that 5000 Scientology agents had penetrated 136 government institutions across the world as spies for Hubbard. They also found a file labelled Operation Freakout, detailing the plot to destroy the unfortunate and courageous Cooper. Having consolidated his totalitarian grip on Scientology by 1990, David Miscavige launched an all-out campaign to buttress the cult's defences. He engaged the public relations firm Hill & Knowlton to help disseminate his propaganda. He launched a huge campaign against the Cult Awareness Network and against Time magazine, which had published a cover story denouncing Scientology as a "cult of greed and power". Above all, Miscavige went to war with the US Internal Revenue Service and won a stunning and disturbing victory. Hubbard's organisation had lost tax-exempt status in 1967, when declared a commercial enterprise, not a religion. But it still refused to pay taxes and the bill accumulated, Wright tells us, to $US1 billion. Had it been collected, it might have broken Scientology's back. But this didn't happen. Instead, Miscavige launched 200 lawsuits against the IRS in the name of Scientology's subsidiaries and another 2300 in the name of individual Scientologists. He overwhelmed the IRS and it capitulated, settling for a mere $US12.5 million in back taxes and the cessation of hostile litigation. In exchange, it conceded tax-exempt status to all of Scientology's subsidiary organisations. This gave the Church of Scientology financial advantages that Wright describes as perhaps "unique among religions in the United States". Miscavige declared to his core staff, "The future is ours!" Reading these books, I was reminded of the famous experiments by Stanley Milgram a half century ago showing the disturbing extent to which many people will obey those they perceive to be authority figures. What Scientology has done in secrecy for decades is disturbingly comparable with what totalitarian regimes have done on a far larger and more violent scale. Its secret and fortified compound, Gold Base, in California embodies this disturbing character. Its own former head of security, Gary Morehead, told Wright that about 100 people try to "escape" each year. Fortunately, as Jenna Miscavige found, Scientology exists within a wider, freer society in which there are sources of refuge and redress. These two bracing books are proof of that. Read them and join the awareness network. Beyond Belief: My Secret Life Inside Scientology and My Harrowing Escape. By Jenna Miscavige Hill. Harpercollins, $24.95 Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood and the Prison of Belief. By Lawrence Wright. Bantam Press, $60 |
Sunday, March 24, 2013
Scientology's secret core-story legally on the internet
Posted on 5:00 PM by Unknown
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