Re: Considering the widespread opinion
by
happyatheist
08/02/2007, 11:41 AM #
I didn't actually compare Weight Watchers...Weight Watchers is one of the few that seems to work moderately well.
My experience with scientology does not include any instance of the scientologist being required to disconnect from family, friends or community. My brother is a scientologist, everyone else in the family thinks it's stupid, demeaning and obnoxious and no-one keeps any of that bottled up. (As my other brother says to him - "quit sending me these stupid f*cking pamphlets about quitting drugs and drinking. If you keep doing it, I'll kick you ass, you f*cking idiot.") At no time in his 24 years of being a scientologist has he ever been required to disconnect...and he hasn't. I just got a lovely letter from him (and a pamphlet about the 20 commandments) a few months ago. I also get the occasional chatty letter from his wife and daughter.
However, I would note that it is quite typical of substance abuse programs (and is just beginning to be seen in other self help programs, such as weight loss - some of the newest fat camps are quite militant in their tactics), to recommend that the abuser stay away from the people, places and things that were associated with their substance abuse in order to remove the underlying reasons/triggers for the abuse (e.g. if I want to quit smoking I should stop going places where people smoke and stop hanging out with smokers, even if they are my freinds).
If a new recruit to scientology is getting flack from his friends and relatives for being a scientologist, I can see it being suggested that they remove themselves from that negativity if it is causing undue stress to the recruit, although I have not, personally, been witness to that. In the same way that people go to monasteries or retreats to immerse themselves totally unhindered in something, it may sometimes be useful for scientologists to do the same.
And if the US government can be infiltrated by a bunch of nitwit yahoos like the scientologists then we're all in a heap of trouble. These people aren't big into education, ya know, it's ALL science fiction with them, not fact. Why do you think they have these accidental deaths at their facilities? Because they have no education in human bodily needs and functions. They aren't real bright and are often also lacking in simple common sense. I think the claims of influence and infiltration are widely exagerated in order to make them appear bigger and badder than they are. (Cripes! My brother doesn't even know how to use a computer, and from the sounds of it, neither do any of the other geniuses he works with.)
As for the faith vs. science argument, the scientologist still has to have faith that he/she is infested with thetans before they can agree to the "science" of thetan removal. And, if I recall correctly, the wording in all of their documents is very specifically sorted to sound scientific, but not make any actual scientific claims that would have to be backed up by FDA approval. They keep it all within the same realm as nutritional supplements. Nice and blurry. It looks like it could be a specific claim, but it's not really, not legally. (Of course the papers they make their members sign are completely legally binding, but no-one reads those before they sign on the dotted line.)
But what I was responding to was the initial poster's idea that scientology was really perpetrating a fraud against it's followers. And that may be so, but is that fraud - either spiritually or financially - any bigger, any different from the millions of other frauds perpetrated against needy people of all stripes from smokers to fatties to druggies to uglies to the spiritually disposessed?