Wed Jul 16, 2008 8:54 pm by gogogadget
"I wish that critics (and many do) would take the focus off Xenu (um, virgin birth, reptilian conspiracies anyone?) and back onto the fair game, child neglect, violation of child labor laws etc."
I wonder about that... how marginal groups (deservedly so or not) are often forced deeper into marginality (is that a word?) by the irrelevant or insulting outside criticism. This happens partially as a survival technique to identify and connect with one's peers. So, in that way what we might call Scientology culture is a lot like gaming culture, or Hip Hop culture, or Amish culture. It's a response to outside pressures.
Of course, it could also work against the leadership of the Church, too. The folks that live through the absurdities foisted on them by the Church leadership develop their own ways of coping, and develop their own subtle subculture in response.
When an outside critic attempts to engage someone from a community, that critic had better have some sort of reasonable knowledge of what is real for that community. The Xenu stuff is I'm sure is more nuanced than I can possibly understand. It's the little stuff that is more vivid to me, the fact that simple things like the act of going out to buy the papers can be liberating, or the madness and indignity of that nightmarish musical chairs episode. I think it's the universals, the things that all humans can be reasonably expected to be able to relate to, that have more resonance.
The use of fear, humiliation, the predatory retailing of religion, the lies and the venality of the leadership. THAT'S what gets to me. The Thetan story is at its root just a story, and I can take it or leave it. But the con is vicious and inhuman. That's where the fight is.