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Article from the Baltimore City Paper

Pliny Younger

Patron with Honors
http://www.citypaper.com/news/story.asp?id=15543

Serious Business
Anonymous Takes On Scientology (and Doesn't Afraid of Anything)

We're not playing some minor game in Scientology. It isn't cute or something to do for lack of something better. . . . This is a deadly serious activity."

--L. Ron Hubbard, 1965

"The Internet is Serious Business"

--Anonymous


he telephone rings, and a voice on the other end says that Anonymous is in crisis mode.

It's March 13, two days before Anonymous' second protest against the Church of Scientology, and things are starting to get serious. Rumors abound that Scientologists are flying in investigators from church headquarters in Clearwater, Fla., to Washington. Reports have come in that people involved in Anonymous--"anons"--have been followed, and a series of videos have been posted on YouTube purporting to show anons without their masks and listing their real names.

The videos appear alongside a video released by the church, titled "Anonymous Hate Crimes," which calls the group terrorists. Down in Clearwater, the church has applied for a restraining order against planned Anonymous anti-Scientology protests on the Ides of March, but the D.C. permit is secure.

Things seem to be going down pretty much the way ex-Scientologist Arnie Lerma said they would, and paranoia is running high. It's a woman's voice on the phone, but she won't reveal her name, only that the recipient of the call has met her before--she wishes to remain Anonymous.

Welcome to Project Chanology--a battle that pits an anarchic, leaderless group of mostly young and tech-savvy activists organized through online forums and chat rooms against a religion formed in the 1950s whose adherents believe a science-fiction writer laid down the course to world salvation.

Doc says he goes back and forth on whether he considers himself Anonymous. He's taken part in the protests, but he also considers himself an outsider. Like others involved with Anonymous, Doc asks that his real name not be used in this article--partly because of Scientology's reputation for dealing harshly with critics, and partly because, well, if you're going to have an organization based on the principle of anonymity, it wouldn't do to have your real name in print. Anons interviewed for this story say that for the most part they don't even know each other's names. There are no leaders and no spokespeople.

"I'm probably not your typical anon," Doc says, over Mexican food in Hampden. Doc has long, almost white blond hair, and he wears coke-bottle glasses. "I'm an IT professional, I'm a family man--I have four kids, a wife, a house, pets. There's not a lot to my professional life that's particularly interesting, so I spend a lot of time surfing the internet, reading Digg, you know, probably like anybody else. I have a little too much time on my hands [just] to be an intellectual, read a lot of books, that sort of thing. So . . . when Anon put out that announcement on YouTube, I was pretty fascinated by it."

The YouTube announcement came on Jan. 21. Visually, it was just sped-up stock footage of clouds flying past buildings, but it was the computerized voice that made it compelling. It said this:

Hello, Leaders of Scientology. We are Anonymous.

Over the years, we have been watching you. Your campaigns of misinformation; your suppression of dissent; your litigious nature, all of these things have caught our eye. With the leakage of your latest propaganda video into mainstream circulation, the extent of your malign influence over those who have come to trust you as their leaders, has been made clear to us. Anonymous has therefore decided that your organization should be destroyed. For the good of your followers, for the good of mankind, and for our own enjoyment, we shall proceed to expel you from the Internet and systematically dismantle the Church of Scientology in its present form. We recognize you as serious opponents, and do not expect our campaign to be completed in a short time. However, you will not prevail forever against the angry masses of the body politic. Your choice of methods, your hypocrisy, and the general artlessness of your organization have sounded its death knell.

We are Anonymous. We are legion. We do not forgive. We do not forget. Expect us.

As of this writing, the video has been viewed more than 2.5 million times. For some viewers, it was their introduction to Anonymous. Others, like Doc, knew just what it meant.

Anonymous was born on an online image board, devoted mainly to pictures and discussions having to do with anime--Japanese animation. The site, 4chan.org, created in 2003 by an administrator who goes by the name "moot," was based on a Japanese forum whose founder believed that by making users anonymous their arguments would be judged on their own merits. While it is possible to use internet nicknames on 4chan, it is generally frowned upon, so posts listing the author as "Anonymous" are the norm, especially in the site's chaotic "random" forum. Anonymous became the name for the users of the site as a whole--a sort of hive mind of popular opinion.

There are other "chans" and related web sites added and taken down all the time. A humor wiki, Encyclopedia Dramatica, chronicles various internet pranks, raids, and drama, but 4chan remains the most popular. As of this writing, Alexa, a company that tracks web site popularity for advertisers, lists 4chan.org as the 56th most popular web site in the United States. The random forum, or "/b/," is 4chan's most popular area.

/b/ has its own language, much of it complicated and intentionally absurd. Users calling themselves, each other, and pretty much everything else "fag" is one of the less offensive conventions. There are rules set down by the moderators--for /b/ it basically boils down to "no child pornography"--but even this is the subject of jokes. The real guiding principle of the board is that nothing is sacred or off limits, and /b/ will quickly offend anyone capable of being offended. Often, the true meaning of a message is contained in the picture that accompanies it. Lolcats, the inexplicably popular pictures of cats with cutely misspelled captions, started with the weekly 4chan tradition of Caturday. Users recommend hanging out for months before posting anything, or risk ridicule, although they usually put it less delicately than that ("LURK MOAR NEWFAG"). If you don't find anything remotely amusing about posting and reposting versions of the phrase "I think Halo is a pretty cool guy. Eh kills aleins and doesnt afraid of anything," then either /b/ isn't the place for you or you need to lurk moar. In the high school of the internet, /b/ is the kid with a collection of butterfly knives and a locker full of porn.

Sometimes the joke goes too far, as was the case in 2006, when a 22-year-old in Wisconsin posted plans to bomb football stadiums around the United States. The FBI took notice, and the man eventually pleaded guilty to charges of "conveying a terrorist hoax," according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, which quoted an FBI official saying that the "credibility of this was beyond ridiculous." /b/ added another rule, later removed: "Don't mess with football."

But Anonymous is capricious. Last year, when a user in Texas threatened a school bombing the following day, other 4channers used data from the picture he posted to notify the FBI of his whereabouts. The Austin American-Statesman newspaper reported that when officers searched his home, "all the items found appeared to be toys."

A 2006 news special on Fox's Los Angeles affiliate gave Anonymous some notoriety by using staged footage of a van exploding to illustrate the threat posed by the group and calling them "hackers on steroids" and an "internet hate machine," both of which entered Anon's lexicon of in-jokes. In addition to messing with football, Fox accused the group of posting threats on MySpace pages and giving away the end to the new Harry Potter book. A blogger for Wired magazine wrote that "This `news report' is the funniest prank anyone on the board has ever pulled off."

Last year, the Bergen County, N.J., Record reported that Hal Turner, a white supremacist talk radio host, had filed suit against 4chan and other sites after "an anonymous cadre of pranksters"--guess who--raided his show and web site, knocking him offline. A "raid" is the 21st-century version of the prank phone call, but with dozens or even hundreds of pranksters kicking in--tying up the phone lines, faxing black pieces of paper to use up ink, and, above all, flooding web sites with requests until they crash.

A mythology built up around Anonymous--mock-serious slogans and "facts" about the mysterious group of hackers on steroids and their pursuit of "lulz" (see also "kicks").

Anonymous is legion. Anonymous does not forgive. Anonymous does not forget. Anonymous only undertakes Serious Business. Anonymous: because none of us is as cruel as all of us. Anonymous has seen Fight Club too many times. Anonymous is not your personal army. Anonymous delivers. Anonymous' real name is David. Anonymous hates dogs. Anonymous likes Mudkips. Anonymous is in it for the lulz.

Scientology, on the other hand, takes itself very seriously. Faced with the chaos and unfettered discussion of the internet, the church has sought to maintain control over the uncontrollable. From eBay, where sales of E-meters (a primitive lie-detector machine used in Scientology counseling sessions, called "audits") have been canceled, to Google, which receives notices from church lawyers to take down links to offending sites and newsgroups, no infraction escapes notice. A snarky comment in US Weekly magazine earlier this year, about a shiny suit worn by former a Mrs. Tom Cruise, Nicole Kidman ("Bonus: This specially designed suit repels Scientologists"), drew a letter from lawyers for fellow celebrity Scientologist Kirstie Alley demanding that the writer be fired, and that the publication "apologize and commit to a thorough examination of why you have chosen to foster animosity and bias against Scientologists."

The incident that sparked the latest Anonymous protests was just as silly--an internal church video posted on the celeb gossip site Gawker that featured Tom Cruise discussing his religion. Cruise comes off as a wide-eyed true believer, and the incident probably would have been dismissed as quickly as his trampoline act on Oprah Winfrey's couch--mildly amusing but not worth starting a revolution over--if Scientology lawyers hadn't tried to get Gawker to remove the video on the grounds that it violated copyright law, and was meant to be shown by authorized churches "for religious purposes only." Gawker refused to take it down, on the grounds that the video was newsworthy, and posted the church's letter. Somehow, that was the last straw for Anonymous.

On Jan. 15, a 4chan user posted this message:

I think it's time for /b/ to do something big.

People need to understand not to fuck with /b/, and talk about nothing for ten minutes, and expect people to give their money to an organization that makes absolutely no fucking sense.

I'm talking about "hacking" or "taking down" the official Scientology website.

It's time to use our resources to do something we believe is right.

It's time to do something big again, /b/.

Talk amongst one another, find a better place to plan it, and then carry out what can and must be done.

It's time, /b/.

The response was far from unanimous: "Yeah good luck with this fail," wrote one user.

Another: "I disagree, we can do this. We are Anon, and we are interwebs superheroes. Who if not us will take on this abomanation of faith and capitolism? What would JFK say? He would probably say something like `Hey Maralyn, its not gonna blow itself.' But he would probably also want us to do this."

The raid gained popularity--first with the announcement video, then with an "Internet Call to Arms," also released on YouTube. At first, the Anonymous raid against the Church of Scientology followed the usual pattern. According to a statement from Scientology, its churches around the United States have received more than 6,000 "threatening and harassing calls" since Jan 17.

This time, however, Anonymous started to gain members, as people who had nothing to do with 4chan got on board. Anonymous became the latest in-joke to escape the site and run through the internet, taking with it 4chan in-jokes like longcat (who is long), Guy Fawkes masks (from the movie V for Vendetta but also representing a 4chan character called "Epic Fail Guy" because, well, he fails), and rickrolling (tricking someone into watching the video for Rick Astley's "Never Gonna Give You Up," quite possibly the worst song ever recorded).

Judging from the postings to 4chan's /b/ and other chans, a significant number of users were unhappy with the raid and the attention it brought. Some of the other chans have been calling for raids against the protesters and their supporters to sabotage the project. Basically, their internet hate machine has been hijacked, and they want it back. 4chan owner moot, asked to comment for this article, sent an e-mail saying, "That's really something I have no interest in discussing. It's not something I'm involved with or really in a position to comment on."

On Jan. 27, Anonymous changed course. In its campaign against Scientology, Anonymous ran headlong into a group of longtime church critics and ex-members. Basically, Mark Bunker asked them to knock it off.

Bunker, a filmmaker and longtime critic of Scientology, runs the web site XenuTV.com, a clearinghouse for information critical of the church. In a video posted to YouTube, Bunker, bearded and soft-spoken, earnestly addressed the camera in a "Message to Anonymous." He said the group's actions--the phone calls, faxes, and web site attacks--were hurting critics of the church, who have been working for years to document what they see as the abuses of the organization. He urged them to follow a different course--to work peacefully, within the law. To the surprise of everyone concerned, Anonymous listened. The response was posted and reposted around the internet until it became another slogan: "Wise Beard Man is Wise. His words are wise, his face is beard."

Anonymous' first real-life protest, on Feb. 10, drew, by the group's own count, about 8,300 people worldwide. They wore masks to preserve their anonymity, favoring Guy Fawkes masks, but also bandannas, gas masks, and, in D.C., at least one fully costumed Burger King. The videos and raid drew much media attention, from the Los Angeles Times to The Economist. Washington hosted one of the larger groups, around 200 protesters. Local forums, such as AnonymousDC.com, ("Friends of Anonymous, Baltimore"), were set up; Enturbulation.org (the name is a reference to a Scientology term for disorder) acted as as a worldwide coordinating site.

Anonymous is a paranoid group. One of the first anons contacted for this story offered to do a telephone interview but said she would have to get a disposable cell phone first. A week before the March 15 protest, a group of anons agreed to be interviewed after a planning meeting at a coffee shop across from the Washington Church of Scientology, on the condition that they remain anonymous, and with the understanding that they weren't speaking for Anonymous as a whole, only for themselves.

Even if one hadn't been invited, the meeting wouldn't have been hard to find. Like most of what Anonymous does, it was available on web sites for anyone to see, and scanning the half-full coffee shop, it wasn't hard to pick them out. They were young, most seemingly in their early 20s, dressed in different styles, from button-down shirts to a studded leather jacket. After a moment of awkward silence, one of them offers a reporter the closest thing to a password anyone can think of: "Do you like Mudkips?" And then everyone involved agrees to knock off the 4chan memes.

They all give slightly different reasons for becoming involved but all are committed to the cause.

"Anonymous is not an organization," a man from Northern Virginia explains. "If you use the internet, and you use it in a way that free speech is paramount, and you want to use it as a way to see and experience things without being guided by big media, by Madison Avenue, or by special interests, then you could potentially be a member of Anonymous."

A young woman with a pink mohawk interrupts: "I think it's a group of people whose eyes have been opened to how wrong [Scientology] is, and they don't want to sit back and let it continue. They want to do something."

Another anon--a math and physics student--continues: "Also, when you really look at Anonymous, there's Anonymous on every single board, every blog you go to, everywhere. It's for someone who doesn't want to give their name, or their nationality or whatever. It's multinational, multicultural, multidenominational. You have Jewish people, atheists, Mormons, Christians, Hindus, Buddhists, wiccans, Unitarians, whatever, who are all coming together, who are basically the collective mass . . . the collective mass mind of the internet."

Northern Virginia: "Anyone who wants to can be Anonymous and work toward a set of goals. . . . We have this agenda that we all agree on and we all coordinate and act, but all act independently toward it, without any want for recognition. We just want to get something that we feel is important done . . . what Anonymous is doing now--it might dominate your free time, but it's not something that you're changing your life by being a part of it. But you are. If you feel like you can't effect your local election--that maybe you're in one party, and the other party is dominant in your district, so you don't feel like you have a political voice. You're taking your frustration and you're focusing it on this one thing that you feel you can effect. That you can be a part of. That's independent of all that."

Mohawk: "A lot of people will take up causes, and be like, `Look at me! I'm a part of this cause!' But for this it's, `This is wrong, we want to do something. Don't even pay attention to who we are.'"

A woman in a fur hat sitting next to Pink Mohawk joins in: "For me, it's social action. I've been looking for something that I thought would actually make a difference, and this seems like it's already making a difference. We've been getting a lot of feedback from the ex-Scientologist community, and a lot of people who've left the church and been afraid to speak out now see Anonymous as a way to speak out--as a way to tell their story without having to say who they are. So they actually get to talk about their experiences and the abuses they have personally seen and been through." She brings up the web site ExScientologyKids.com ("I was born. I grew up. I escaped."), recently formed by young relatives of high-ranking church members.

Northern Virginia: "Anonymous existed way before the Scientology thing. Anonymous existed before it was called Anonymous. Anonymous is a phenomena. You've got web sites--Wikipedia, 4chan--places where anyone can post and contribute, and everyone has an equal voice."

Mohawk: "It's even on web sites like MSNBC, anywhere you have responding comments to news articles."

Northern Virginia: "This freedom in the internet allowed people to have social conscience that was rapidly evolving."

Another anon interjects: "And it was removed from the fears and the normal social peers that you had, because you were allowed to voice what you really thought."

When it comes to Scientology, Northern Virginia says, "when this whole thing with the leaked videos blew up on YouTube, that was the last straw. Anonymous decided to say `OK, we're going to do this'--and then someone puts out this statement, and a bunch of people say, `Oh--I guess I agree with that.' And then one guy's like, `I'm going to take my money and buy a web site where we can start a wiki.' And then another says, `I'm going to use some money and start a board to organize protests.' Pretty soon, everyone's invested, because everyone has made these sacrifices. And now we're here, and now this is the cause, and it's growing, because people see that there's this entity doing this thing, and they're presenting their case. And people keep getting drawn in."

In an e-mail, Doc describes Anonymous as "the first internet-based superconsciousness." Anonymous is a group, in the sense that a flock of birds is a group. How do you know they're a group? Because they're travelling in the same direction. At any given moment, more birds could join, leave, peel off in another direction entirely. A popular picture of sign-waving Anonymous protesters in their trademark Guy Fawkes masks is captioned: "Oh Fuck, The Internet is here."

At the March 15 protest, an anon in his 30s who says he works in homeland security, compares Anonymous to the War on Terror--you can fight terrorists, but you can't fight an idea. Anonymous, he says, is an idea.

As he says this, he's wearing a suit and surgical mask, standing on a street corner outside the Washington Church of Scientology, while someone reads L. Ron Hubbard's military record over the PA system.

Longtime Scientology critic Arnie Lerma gives a speech, as does Jeanne-Marie Boucher, who was raised in the church. Boucher, 25, blames the church for driving her father to suicide in 2001. Her father, a church staff member in Washington, hanged himself after being denied auditing, the counseling sessions necessary to rise within the church and its belief system. Boucher says her father was despondent after church officials questioned his loyalty--accusing him of having been brainwashed by outside forces. "He killed himself," she says. "He thought that if he died, he could come back in another body, in another life, and receive more Scientology auditing, and continue up the `Bridge to Total Freedom.'"

Boucher attended the Feb. 10 protest as well, just to check it out, and has since joined the Ex Scientology Kids forum. In her March 15 speech, Boucher is nervous and tearful, but defiant, shouting at the church across the street, "What do you have to worry about? What are you afraid of?" At the end of her speech, she turns to the church and says, "I want to thank you very much for breaking my heart."

Across the street, a man in a green eyeless mask says his name is "David." He traveled "many hours" to be here and is staying in a hotel. He puts it this way: "Am I here for the lulz? Oh, fuck yeah. Without /b/, you don't get the spectacle, and without the spectacle, nobody cares. These poor guys, Arnie [Lerma] and Mark Bunker and those guys, they've been doing it for years, but without the spectacle, nobody pays attention. You wouldn't have any fun. That's what /b/'s brought--it's brought some youth, it's brought some energy."

The closest thing "David" will give to personal information is that he's a goon--a member of the forums at the humor site SomethingAwful.com. That's where he first saw information about the raid, and decided to get involved. "The internet has had a problem with Scientology since ARS," David says, referencing alt.religion.scientology, a Usenet bulletin board at the center of the first scuffle between Scientology and 'net users back in the 1990s. "It's sort of the nature of the beast. That's what the internet is--it's free information for anyone who wants it. The two are diametrically opposed."

He waves his arm at the protesters crowding the street corner: "There's just no doubt that this is going to happen."

When David talks about "since ARS," one of the people he's talking about is Arnie Lerma, a former Scientologist who runs the web site Lermanet.com from his home in Arlington, Va. In 1995, Lerma posted church documents to the newsgroup alt.religion.scientology. At the time, the documents were available from a court in California, but they were later sealed. Wired magazine, then only a few years old, called the ensuing lawsuits over copyright infringement "a flame war with real bullets," as the church's "Religious Technology Center" sued Lerma and The Washington Post (to whom he had also given the documents) in a Virginia court.

The documents, containing religious teachings of the church, included the now widely publicized story of Xenu, a galactic emperor who rounded up other aliens, sent them to Earth, and killed them, causing them to inhabit the bodies of humankind. The Xenu story was the basis for a controversial episode of South Park that made fun of the church and celebrity Scientologists Tom Cruise and John Travolta. Scientologists say the story is taken out of context by critics of the religion, and that it forms the merest fraction of the writings of L. Ron Hubbard, Scientology's founder.

The suit against the Post was dismissed--the judge ruled that its use of the documents fell under the "fair use" exemption to copyright law. Lerma was fined $2,500 and ordered not to disseminate the documents again. But Lerma's criticism of Scientology became something of a crusade for the freelance audio engineer. Religious Freedom Watch, a Scientology-linked group, describes Lerma this way on its web site:

Arnaldo (Arnie) Lerma attacks minority religions on the internet, harasses and intimidates parishioners with hate mail, and plans and participates in demonstrations that have been known to become violent. He also runs a private underground channel on the internet where anti-religious extremists gather to spread hatred and plan acts of aggression against the Church of Scientology and its parishioners.

Lerma has a sense of humor about it all, even if it's tough sometimes to know when he's joking. When he returns a reporter's phone call, he apologizes for not doing it sooner, but he had a neo-Nazi rally to attend. He's kidding about that part, but he takes Scientology seriously. "They do say some bad things about me," he says.

Lerma was a Scientologist from 1967, when he was a 17-year-old hippie attracted by the scientific trappings of the religion, until 1976, when he says he was forced to leave. His battle with the church began in earnest in 1994, when the list of web sites on the internet was still short enough to be contained in a guidebook, which is where Lerma came across a newsgroup called alt.religion.scientology.

"I logged onto the newsgroup," Lerma remembers, "and posted a message--`Hi, I'm Arnie Lerma. Anybody remember me?'" He got a response from someone he hadn't seen in 25 years, who introduced him to a group of renegade Scientologists. The newsgroup consisted of about 12 people. "We were just sharing stories," he remembers.

He began posting to the newsgroup, which became a clearinghouse for documents the church didn't want made public. The church contacted internet service providers to have the newsgroup removed from their servers. The more the church sought to tightly control information, the more the online activists believed that information should be disseminated.

Lerma planned to retire from his activism at the end of last year. A bad back and a constantly ringing phone were growing tiresome. He has long believed that Scientology would fall suddenly, "like the Berlin wall." When Anonymous came on the scene, he changed his mind about retirement. This, he thought, could be it: "All of us old-timers were ecstatic. We're just holding on with white knuckles."

Three weeks after Mark Bunker's plea to Anonymous, the first real-life protest was held outside Scientology churches worldwide. The date, Feb. 10, was chosen to coincide with the birthday of Lisa McPherson, a Scientologist whose 1995 death was the subject of a Florida lawsuit; her family and a foundation set up in her name said that the church was responsible for her death by denying her appropriate medical care. Criminal charges against the church were dropped in 2000, according to the St. Petersburg Times, and the lawsuit was settled for an undisclosed amount in 2004.

As one of the anons put it at the D.C. coffee shop, "Scientology is seen at the moment, as far as the internet is concerned, the most egregious infection that's keeping it from being as smoothly operating as it needs to be, so we sort of turn our attention to it. But what's started to happen is that then you see the real effect it's had on real people, beyond the free speech angle. And this is what draws people in and makes them physically appear at a protest on the birthday of a woman who died because of this cult, or organization, or whatever you want to call it."

An Anonymous protest is a surprisingly organized affair. On the morning of March 15, it began at Dupont Circle before a march to the protest site across the street from the church (to the sounds of a rickroll played through boom-box speakers). The rumored private investigators from Florida never materialized--the only evidence that anyone was inside the church were an unsmiling man on the second-floor balcony videotaping the proceedings, and a few Scientologists who occasionally left the church building and made circles through the crowd, cameras in hand, to snap close-up pictures of protesters.

A protester wearing a burlap bag over his head to complement a suit and tie identifies himself as "Question Mark Guy" and echoed a lot of anons when he says their "ultimate goal is the dismantling of the current incarnation of the Church of Scientology, and the church to get their tax-exempt status revoked. The Scientologists can keep practicing their religion in any way, shape, or form they want, as long as they don't break the law when they do it."

Scientology organizations gained their tax exemption in 1993, in an unusual sealed settlement that was later published by The Wall Street Journal. The settlement was the result of a battle between the church and the IRS that lasted almost 30 years, and according to the Journal, the church agreed to pay $12.5 million, drop thousands of harassing lawsuits against the IRS, and set up a "church tax-compliance committee." The IRS canceled taxes it had levied on church leaders and organizations and granted tax-exempt status to all Scientology entities in the United States.

The New York Times reported at the time that private investigators had been hired by the church to dig into the lives of IRS officials, financed IRS whistle-blowers and critics, and set up front groups including a fake news organization to gather information on church critics. As part of "Operation Snow White," as the church dubbed its campaign against the federal government, it found and destroyed government files around the world concerning scientology. In 1977, 11 people went to prison for their part in Operation Snow White, including Sue Hubbard, the wife of church founder L. Ron Hubbard, who was himself an unindicted co-conspirator. The church had declared its enemies "fair game," a term used by Hubbard in a 1965 policy letter. The policy is still cited by critics, although Scientologists say it has long been discontinued.

One of the camera-toting Scientologists at the protests, a man with curly white hair and a bemused smile, declined to comment for this article, pausing long enough to say, "The person you want to talk to is Sue Taylor, inside."

Taylor, the president of the Washington Church of Scientology, is busy but later agrees to a meeting. She suggests a visit to the nearby L. Ron Hubbard house--the first Church of Scientology.

A tour of the L. Ron Hubbard house, on 19th Street near the Dupont Circle Metro station, begins in the front room, where a collection of effects tell the early story of the founder of Scientology. According to the materials, he was born in Tilden, Neb., was made a "blood brother" by a nearby tribe of Blackfoot Indians before he was 6, and became the nation's youngest Eagle Scout at the age of 13, before setting out to wander the earth. According to the book What Is Scientology?, his travels took him from Guam to China before returning to the States to finish high school. During the next three years, according to his official biography, he studied physics at George Washington University, conducted his "first experiment concerning the structure and function of the mind," joined the Marines, became "one of the country's most outstanding pilots," organized a 5,000-mile voyage aboard a four-masted schooner, and performed and wrote for the local radio station. He also found time to edit his college newspaper, write his first published fiction, set flying records, and file reports on unsafe airport conditions. Almost every aspect of Hubbard's official biography is disputed by Scientology critics.

In 1934, he began writing fiction in earnest--pulps, mostly, with occasional breaks during the next 15 years to conduct experiments, according to What Is Scientology? "dealing with the endocrine system. He discovers that, contrary to longstanding beliefs, function monitors structure. With this revolutionary advance, he begins to apply his theories to the field of the mind and thereby improve the conditions of others." After studying criminals as a "Special Police Officer with the Los Angeles Police department," and hospital and mental ward patients in Savannah, Ga., Hubbard settled down to write the book Dianetics, expounding on his theories of mental health. A New York Times review at the time called Dianetics a "a set of fantastic theories without proof," but despite such criticism, it became a best seller. In 1955, Hubbard founded a church based on his beliefs in Washington, which today has branches all over the world.

Later, back in the renovated mansion that now serves as D.C. church headquarters, Taylor and Sylvia Stanard, the D.C. church's director of external affairs, sit down for an interview. Taylor asks that the conversation not be tape recorded. She says she is afraid of misquoting Hubbard, and would prefer that information come straight from his writings and official church statements. Here is what the church has to say about Anonymous:

There is no question that, taken as a whole, the actions over the past few weeks constitute hate crimes and hate speech. Churches of Scientology have been the targets of bomb threats through phone calls; bomb threats have been made in internet chat rooms; 22 Churches of Scientology were targets of phony anthrax mailings; emails sent to Church servers contained hate messages, bomb threats, death threats, threats to burn down the Church and vague threats to destroy the Church; death threats, other threats and communications denigrating the religion and its followers have also been received from Anonymous by fax. In one fax, Anonymous noted that it intended to "desecrate" Scientology's "religious artifacts" as "befits them."

The statement comes with a video--the same one posted by the church on YouTube. It focuses on one threat in particular--posted on Feb. 13--threatening to blow up "Churches of Scientology across the United States and land under the power of the Commonwealth government." Anonymous members have denied any involvement with the threat and asked YouTube to take it down when it was posted. Whether or not it was an official Anonymous action, it illustrated the problems of an amorphous, leaderless group--it could have been anyone.

Stanard has been researching the group, checking out 4chan. Her verdict: "Anti-Semitic, racist, just weird."

Both women say the D.C. church has received phone calls ranging from threatening to just weird. Stanard says she got a phone call the day before from someone who said "he had a puma waiting for me." She isn't sure what to make of that.

"When I was growing up that was a prank," Taylor says. "Things have changed. After 9/11, those things aren't pranks anymore."

"There had to be one person who decided to get pissed off and write this manifesto," Stanard says. But the protests are "mostly kids, blindly following." They get their information from "two or three old-timers like Arnie Lerma," but "the rest are just in it for the game--they're bored."

"Look at the first manifesto," Stanard says. "They say they're going to drive us off the internet. How do you justify that based on taking one video down? Whoever is doing this is inciting hatred. They may not themselves be committing acts of terrorism, but they are inciting others."

"Ninety-nine percent of these guys are just out for a good time," Taylor chimes in. "But what about that one guy who actually does something?"

"That's really important," Stanard agrees. "It's all fun and games, but how are they going to feel if someone actually does something? I think they're all duped, and it's all just fun."

Both Taylor and Stanard say they knew John Boucher, whose daughter Jeanne Marie spoke at the protest.

"I understand her pain," Stanard says. "She lost her father. But it's more complicated than that . . . he had a lot going on. I don't want to get into specifics because it's counseling stuff. We tried to help him, and he didn't make it. It's not one thing--this happened or that happened. He was told he couldn't get counseling because he was physically ill. I completely understand--she's heartbroken. She's elected us the target."

"We're the wrong target," Taylor adds.

Taylor often defers to the book What Is Scientology? and provides a copy. The book characterizes the controversies in the history of Scientology as a battle between "two diametrically opposed forces"--the Scientologists on one side, and on the other a "small clique of medical and psychiatric practitioners, who knew nothing of the human mind, and had not even read Dianetics." Psychiatry is behind other attacks on the church, according to the book, as well as the Food and Drug Administration, the IRS, and the media.

On page 542, which Taylor marks with a blue Post-it, the book notes:

Scientology and Dianetics are technologies that work if applied exactly. If they are altered, the results will not be uniform. For this reason, the writings of the Church are protected by copyright and the words and symbols which represent the technology are protected by trademarks. . . . Some unscrupulous persons have tried, through dishonest conduct, to profit from the technologies of Dianetics and Scientology. . . . By owning the trademarks and copyrights of the religion and enforcing their proper use, the Church can ensure such ill-intentioned acts will never occur.

In other words, no unauthorized Tom Cruise videos.

Taylor says the church has changed since the days of Operation Snow White. The old ways have been abandoned, and she says that change in church policy is something that Lerma has never accepted. Stanard agrees: "He hasn't been in the church for 35 years. When he's talking about the church, it's not the church today."

Likewise the Xenu story, which does not rate a mention in What Is Scientology? "That's straight out of South Park," Taylor says. "It's not part of our beliefs. You can only see it from people like Arnie Lerma."

The Anonymous convention on March 22 didn't go quite the way it had been planned. Originally scheduled to happen in the same Washington hotel where Scientologists were celebrating the birth of L. Ron Hubbard, Anon was banned and its deposit refunded after the hotel got wind of its plans. Exiled to a cavernous building in Crystal City--a weekend ghost town of office buildings across the river in Arlington--more than 100 anons, mostly masked, showed up after a stop to protest outside the Scientology event. Name tags at the registration desk outside the conference room all read hello, my name is david.

A call for suggestions for the next protest (scheduled for April 12) drew a few shouted suggestions--the most popular was "ball pit." A few brave anons took to the microphone to kill time, some eventually succumbing to shouts from the audience to put their shoe on their head. They repaired upstairs to the hotel restaurant for cake, then listened quietly as a Freezoner--a member of a group that practices Scientology outside the official church--spoke about his beliefs and answered questions, and a live internet feed drew around 80 people, who posted comments that scrolled across a large screen in front of the room.

An anon in the corner of the conference room started spinning tunes, beginning with Rick Astley before segueing into Andrew W.K.'s "Party Hard." More anons took the dance floor under the watchful eye of the video camera (one commenter on the scroll: "Holy ! She's having a seizure!!"). The next song was by Enturbulator 009, a Church of the Subgenius band that recorded an album of anti-Scientology hip-hop songs in 2002. It begins,

Scientology is trying to make me silent

By telling other people that I'm violent

They say that I'm a terrorist

I'm really just a satirist

A lyricist enjoying this particular mess.

By the time the song gets to the chorus, Anonymous is singing along: "Fuck 'em if they can't take a joke/ and you can't take a joke so fuck you."

A few days after the convention, one of the anons interviewed for this story e-mailed to say he and others had received a letter, and provided a copy.

It is similar to letters that have reportedly been received all over the country, delivered to the homes of outed anons, and it comes from a Los Angeles law firm retained by the Church of Scientology International. "We are sending you this letter," it reads, "because the Church has reason to believe that you may be directing or leading some or all of the actions of `Anonymous,' and have assisted in its campaign of violence or inciting violence against the Church. . . . Should your organization continue inciting and/or engaging in violent acts against the Church or its members, we are prepared to take any and all steps necessary to protect our client, including referring any individual, including you, to Local, State and Federal authorities."

The recipient, a college freshman, says he isn't changing his plans, but he has retained a lawyer, "just in case." He says he is taking the letter seriously but hasn't committed any illegal acts.

"I'm not worried," he says, "and I'm definitely not stopping."
 

Pliny Younger

Patron with Honors
Likewise the Xenu story, which does not rate a mention in What Is Scientology? "That's straight out of South Park," Taylor says. "It's not part of our beliefs. You can only see it from people like Arnie Lerma."

Christ! Just because both Sue Taylor and Sylvia Stanard haven't done OT3 the material is credited to Arnie?

Taylor says the church has changed since the days of Operation Snow White. The old ways have been abandoned, and she says that change in church policy is something that Lerma has never accepted. Stanard agrees: "He hasn't been in the church for 35 years. When he's talking about the church, it's not the church today."

Both Sue Taylor and Sylvia Stanard were in the GO doing PR at the time of the famous church break ins and consequent trials(late 1970s), now they are in the 'changed' church doing PR in 2008. Hmmm.


more than 100 anons, mostly masked, showed up after a stop to protest outside the Scientology event. Name tags at the registration desk outside the conference room all read hello, my name is david.

LOL these guys are funny!
 

Dulloldfart

Squirrel Extraordinaire
Both Sue Taylor and Sylvia Stanard were in the GO doing PR at the time of the famous church break ins and consequent trials (late 1970s), now they are in the 'changed' church doing PR in 2008. Hmmm.

And 30 years later they still haven't done OT3.

In January 1986 I was in an uncomfortable state of limbo, maybe getting extracted from SH to go to be part of an OSA Int unit being set up to handle the IRS and maybe not. Then LRH popped off, and off I went a couple of days later. For the first few days I worked in an OSA Int press unit dealing with newspaper clippings as I was OT3. I was a filter point for these, sorting them into confidential ones which contained "altered OT3 materials" and non-confidential ones. The usual mention was as now, just a paragraph about 75 million years ago, galactic ruler called Xenu, etc.

Paul
 

Div6

Crusader
Sylvia has done OT III....Sue is at least done through NOTs....

So what does that make them?


LIARS.
 

Dulloldfart

Squirrel Extraordinaire
Sylvia has done OT III....Sue is at least done through NOTs....

So what does that make them?


LIARS.

Ah. Thank you.

Then they need a new line. Wikileaks still has the several hundred pages of original docs online, including OT3 issues in Hubbard's handwriting. The easiest thing to defend is the truth. Duh. Many religions have, shall we say, controversial parts to their more esoteric teachings.

Paul
 

Zinjifar

Silver Meritorious Sponsor
Ah. Thank you.

Then they need a new line. Wikileaks still has the several hundred pages of original docs online, including OT3 issues in Hubbard's handwriting. The easiest thing to defend is the truth. Duh. Many religions have, shall we say, controversial parts to their more esoteric teachings.

Paul

Standard Scientologist Litany:

We didn't do it
You can't prove we did it
Everybody else does it too.
Everybody else does it *worse*
We don't do it anymore
Infiltrators did it
We didn't do it

Zinj
 

Pliny Younger

Patron with Honors
Sylvia has done OT III....Sue is at least done through NOTs....

So what does that make them?


LIARS.

I was not sure of their level of auditing. I had thought that they might have made it up to there, but did not want to speculate. I gave them the benefit of doubt.

These two have been altering the truth for scientology for so long that I don't think they think they are lying, but they are, it's their job. That's what PR means in scientology.

It's shore story central.
 

everfree

Patron Meritorious
Here's what I commented on the article (sorry for the misspell of Stanard):

===

>Likewise the Xenu story, which does not rate a mention in What Is Scientology? "That's straight out of South Park," Taylor says. "It's not part of our beliefs. You can only see it from people like Arnie Lerma."

Yes, it IS part of Scn beliefs, as Mses Taylor and Stannard both well know. The Xenu story is outlined in a secret Scn doctrine called OT III; members will often have paid upwards of $80,000 by the time they reach that level.

Sadly, Scn spokespeople will lie about anything they think might reflect poorly on the church, such as child labor in the "Sea Org" or the practice of disconnection (both the subjects of recent lies by CofS spokesperson Karin Pouw).

But imo, it's not because they want to deceive people to harm them (though involvement in CofS can indeed often be harmful), it's because they don't want any negativity to stop people from partaking in Scientology, which they believe is the only hope for salvation of the entire universe. Keep in mind that to Scnists the truth takes a back seat to PR for "dissemination" purposes and you'll do ok.
 

Good twin

Floater
Here's what I commented on the article (sorry for the misspell of Stanard):

===

>Likewise the Xenu story, which does not rate a mention in What Is Scientology? "That's straight out of South Park," Taylor says. "It's not part of our beliefs. You can only see it from people like Arnie Lerma."

Yes, it IS part of Scn beliefs, as Mses Taylor and Stannard both well know. The Xenu story is outlined in a secret Scn doctrine called OT III; members will often have paid upwards of $80,000 by the time they reach that level.

Sadly, Scn spokespeople will lie about anything they think might reflect poorly on the church, such as child labor in the "Sea Org" or the practice of disconnection (both the subjects of recent lies by CofS spokesperson Karin Pouw).

But imo, it's not because they want to deceive people to harm them (though involvement in CofS can indeed often be harmful), it's because they don't want any negativity to stop people from partaking in Scientology, which they believe is the only hope for salvation of the entire universe. Keep in mind that to Scnists the truth takes a back seat to PR for "dissemination" purposes and you'll do ok.

I absolutely agree. I know these gals and have seen them in action. Sadly, they are only as misguided as I was only a short time ago. They are protecting the church as they truly believe it is the only hope for mankind. They are so trapped they can't see.
The good news is that there are so many of us here that behaved much as they do. That keeps the door open for others to walk through with us. I care about them because I really feel they cared for me. I really do understand why they do what they do. Doesn't make it right, but I've been there. :yes:
 

WrongPlaceRightTime

Patron Meritorious
Awesome response to Baltimore article

On 4/3/2008 12:34:48 PM, bgodly said:

As a Scientologist, I once considered these protests to be the hubris of youth, misdirected by the seedy side of an internet culture. But now I know better.


After reading the information gathered some anti-Scientology sites I now understand why they consider the Church to be an evil tyrannical organization that fleeces it's parishoners. If it weren't for what this little campaign has turned me onto, I would just be another sad commentator on the, I am sorry to say, gullibility of the people of my Church. However, this organization has taken on a much brighter side no matter what is professed by some of those in my Church. I was interested in finding out where some of these kids got their info so I visited the sites including the partyvan site where their "organization" started from.


I must say I was impressed at the profound and thoughtful overtones of the discussion boards. Most were actively calling for peaceful, law abiding behavior at the protests, and they swiftly rejected any ridiculous calls for burning things, overturning cars, etc. In this age where we as Americans are being constantly reminded of how insecure our way of life is in the world. Where we seem to have lost some of the sanctity of personal freedom and the joy of pursuit of our way of life as we see fit, this campaign seems to be exactly what Scientology and our country needs, right now! These individuals know the Church is involved in some nefarious activity, and they have been very active in gathering any evidence of it, which they have promptly given to authorities.


I have seen proof that the Church is fleecing people for profit and run as a pyramid scheme type of business, and I encourage everyone to contact the IRS, your representatives in Congress, and all other authorities and bring them your claims.


Now I clearly understand that what the spokespeople of the Church of Scientology are doing is inciting malice and prejudice. Make no mistake not all in Scientology are the same and some probably just don't know what they are doing. However, they are some pretty nasty characters in there, I have seen it.


It is unfortunate that the leaders of Scientology feed off of our youth to pursue their personal agendas of acquiring wealth and power. Quite despicable really.
 

Free to shine

Shiny & Free
On 4/3/2008 12:34:48 PM, bgodly said:

As a Scientologist, I once considered these protests to be the hubris of youth, misdirected by the seedy side of an internet culture. But now I know better.


After reading the information gathered some anti-Scientology sites I now understand why they consider the Church to be an evil tyrannical organization that fleeces it's parishoners. If it weren't for what this little campaign has turned me onto, I would just be another sad commentator on the, I am sorry to say, gullibility of the people of my Church. However, this organization has taken on a much brighter side no matter what is professed by some of those in my Church. I was interested in finding out where some of these kids got their info so I visited the sites including the partyvan site where their "organization" started from.


I must say I was impressed at the profound and thoughtful overtones of the discussion boards. Most were actively calling for peaceful, law abiding behavior at the protests, and they swiftly rejected any ridiculous calls for burning things, overturning cars, etc. In this age where we as Americans are being constantly reminded of how insecure our way of life is in the world. Where we seem to have lost some of the sanctity of personal freedom and the joy of pursuit of our way of life as we see fit, this campaign seems to be exactly what Scientology and our country needs, right now! These individuals know the Church is involved in some nefarious activity, and they have been very active in gathering any evidence of it, which they have promptly given to authorities.


I have seen proof that the Church is fleecing people for profit and run as a pyramid scheme type of business, and I encourage everyone to contact the IRS, your representatives in Congress, and all other authorities and bring them your claims.


Now I clearly understand that what the spokespeople of the Church of Scientology are doing is inciting malice and prejudice. Make no mistake not all in Scientology are the same and some probably just don't know what they are doing. However, they are some pretty nasty characters in there, I have seen it.


It is unfortunate that the leaders of Scientology feed off of our youth to pursue their personal agendas of acquiring wealth and power. Quite despicable really.

That's terrific - even if only a few people see the different perspective, it has a ripple effect. :clap:
 
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