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Do scientologist actually believe that an alien lord believed his galactic federation was over populated so he herded several groups of aliens, froze them, then threw them into hawaiin volcanoes. Then all the soles of the aliens escaped but got captured by sole catchers also biult by the alien lord, then all the soles were brain-washed to believe a false reality then these alien soles finally found bodies to inhabat in early man

2007-02-01 14:25:03 · 12 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

12 answers

Yep, they believe that. It's true. If you want proof, just click here: http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Fishman/Declaration/ot3-summary.html
and here: http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20061124162841AAdJv3F

These beliefs may seem silly and on the surface they are, but Scientology, the organization itself, is NO laughing matter. See for yourself:

• Operation Snow White – Under this program, Scientology operatives committed infiltration, wiretapping, and theft of documents in government offices. This program constituted the single largest infiltration of the United States government in history. Among the 11 prominent Scientologists convicted of this conspiracy was Mary Sue Hubbard, the wife of Scientology’s “prophet”.
http://lisatrust.freewinds.cx/scientology/snow-white/index.html

• Operation Freakout - Their campaign of sabotage and violence against Paulette Cooper, the writer who published her research and findings on several cults, including Scientology. Scientology’s official plan: to frame Paulette, ruin her career and reputation and get her sent either to jail or psychiatric confinement.
See the official plan: http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Krasel/cooper/frk1.html
Free pdf of her book: http://holysmoke.org/cos/books/scandal-of-scientology-cooper.pdf


• Fair Game - the Scientology policy detailing how the organization may confront and handle critics and perceived enemies. Here is a direct quote: "Enemies may be deprived of property or injured by any means by any Scientologist without any discipline of the Scientologist. May be tricked, sued or lied to or destroyed.”
http://www.xenu.net/archive/disk/fairgame.htm
http://www.planetkc.com/sloth/sci/Fair_game_ord.html

• Violent Kidnapping - Lisa McPherson was a Scientologist, was involved in a car accident and resultantly became mentally unstable, was kidnapped by agents of Scientology, held against her will, refused proper psychiatric treatment and was allowed to STARVE TO DEATH.
Video: http://theunfunnytruth.ytmnd.com/
Website: http://www.lisamcpherson.org/

• Tragic Murder - A CBS “48 Hours” special on Jeremy Perkins, the mentally disturbed son of Scientologist parents who refused to put him on the anti-psychotic drugs that would have stabilized him & prevented him from killing his own mother.
Video: http://www.scientomogy.com/jeremy_perkins.php
CBS article: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/10/25/48hours/main2124568.shtml

2007-02-01 14:28:38 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

Here is a factual description of Scientology:
Scientology is an applied religious philosophy. When I say "applied" I mean you actually use it in your life to change or improve existing conditions. It is a very practical religion.
All religions if you learn about them have a basic philosphy, but they also have certain dogma, rituals and observances, and a certain faith or belief is required. There is nothing wrong with this, but Scientology is not that kind of religion. It does not intrude on anyones faiths of beliefs particularly in the area of God , the Supreme Being, or the Infinite. This area is left totally up to the indivdual, which is why you can be a practicing Jew,for example and still use and apply the priniciples of Scientology in your life. It does not conflict. If anything it will enhance your understanding of your chosen religious practice.
You can have no specific religious beliefs and still benefit from using it.
And it is only true for you according to your own observation and experience with it.
It is a non denominational religion . The dictionary definition that applies:
Religion: The spiritual or emotional attitude of one who recognises the existence of superhuman power or powers.

The most basic principle of Scientology is that YOU are your own immortal soul, that this is not a "thing" you HAVE but what YOU actually are.
The whole purpose of Scientology is to increase an individual's understanding and awareness of himself. and lifeAnd thereby his native abilities .
When you do this the sphere and zone of his positive influence increases and moves outward into his life, his family ,his friends, his groups and mankind which he is part of.

How this result is achieved is the "technology" of Scientology, which was developed by L.Ron Hubbard after his extensive research and the discoveries he made, about the human spirit. The basic religious philosophy and knowledge of Scientology is very old, going back 10,000 years at least to the Veda or Vedic Hymns from the East. L. Ron Hubbard researched and made new discoveries about the human spirit. He developed technology from these discoveries to apply to increase spiritual awareness and ability.
He completed his research before his death in 1986 and left all of his results and copyrights
to the Church of Scientology along with most of his considerable personal estate, when he died.

He published a book in 1951 to communicate the basic principles he discovered called: " Scientology The Fundementals of Thought"
There are currently over 10 million Scientologists in more than 163 countries world wide. However we are a new religion, only 53 years old.
The true story of Scientology as a religion goes like this:
1. A philosopher developes a philosophy about life and death.
2. People find it interesting.
3. People find it works.
4. People pass it along to others.
5. It grows.

This is just an overview.
L. Ron Hubbard explained fully the theology and technologies of Scientology in more than 500,000 pages of writings, including dozens of books and over 2,000 tape-recorded public lectures. So it's not possible to fully answer your question on this forum.

As Scientologist (for 36 years) I can honestly say that Scientology is not about belief, in "aliens" or "volcanoes",or anything else actually. I do understand how you may have got that impression. Please realize that the media, TV shows, and bogus collaborative internet websites are not reliable sources for factual information.
If you want to know the facts about something these are not reliable sources.

2007-02-01 14:58:33 · answer #2 · answered by thetaalways 6 · 0 2

Would explain the human race... seriously.

Only believe in what you see to be true. There are catholic, othadox etc scientologists too.

I think there is B/S in every religion but scientology is the only one I have studied in which I lean towards the most. Not sure about the aliens tho...

2007-02-01 14:35:06 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 1 0

http://www.xenu.net/
contains all the information you need.

It's an evil cult designed to make money and nothing else . Its effects on believers are destructive.

Read "the road to xenu" - http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Library/Shelf/xenu/ - an account of a girl who escaped scientology after 12 years!

The cult's core belief - no, I am not kidding here!

"The head of the Galactic Federation (76 planets around larger stars visible from here) (founded 5,000,000 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 implants.

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 I knew 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."

2007-02-01 14:29:51 · answer #4 · answered by eldad9 6 · 1 1

Poor Katie Holmes, she sold her soul to the devil, err aliens when she married Tom Cruise and joined his cult. Saddest part is, little Suri will be brought up to believe this nonsense. I think we need to go witness to them and smack some sense into them.

2007-02-01 14:33:55 · answer #5 · answered by the pink baker 6 · 0 1

Yes it is true. go figure though, Tom Cruise i one of them. Actually i was planning on going to a scientology center and laughing my *** off when they said their beliefs

2007-02-01 14:30:22 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

yup. that's what happens when you believe something made up by a science fiction writer who liked little boys a bit too much.

2007-02-01 14:28:54 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Yeah and you pay them thousands of dollars to learn that information.

2007-02-01 14:35:30 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

There is a GREAT South park on that subject.

2007-02-01 14:31:15 · answer #9 · answered by barefoot_always 5 · 0 2

Yup, in NUTshell

2007-02-01 14:28:43 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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