Fox's Rupert Murdoch Calls Scientology "Evil"

wizard

Time Out
Nov 18, 2011
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Fair enough.

So, I too then wonder what groups are eviler than scientology.

Hopefully we will find out soon.
... well, cdnbear mentioned the government, the bar and the police and i would agree with him that these groups do act in a considerably more evil fashion than the scientology religion ...

... these groups murder, steal, tax, harass, incarcerate, etc. in fact, ask most people and scientology won't even register as a negative group at all. that's why murdoch's comments are so strange -- what does he know that nobody else knows? probably nothing ...
 

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
29,151
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London, Ontario
... well, cdnbear mentioned the government, the bar and the police and i would agree with him that these groups do act in a considerably more evil fashion than the scientology religion ...

Um, that's not exactly what he said.

I bet we see the BC gov't, Lawyers, and the RCMP in that list.

... these groups murder, steal, tax, harass, incarcerate, etc. in fact, ask most people and scientology won't even register as a negative group at all. that's why murdoch's comments are so strange -- what does he know that nobody else knows? probably nothing ...
Setting aside the fact that the most of us don't view these groups in the same fashion that you do, I repeat that the reason he mentioned Scientology in connection with Tom Cruise is that Tom Cruise is a well known Scientologist. It was not some random mention just for the hell of it.
 

Redmonton_Rebel

Electoral Member
May 13, 2012
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Sounds like an insane organization to me;

The New Yorker's Scientology expose: 7 key revelations - The Week

2. Miscavige has led a cutthroat game of musical chairs
David Miscavige, the 50-year-old head of the church, comes across as the "villain of the piece," says Kyle Buchanan at New York. Many defectors allege Miscavige would regularly lose his temper and physically attack those around him — claims the church denies — and Wright recounts the tale of a particularly sadistic Miscavige exercise. Miscavige allegedly gathered almost a hundred church leaders who refused to enforce the church's "aggressive, even violent, discipline," and told them they were going to play a game of musical chairs. Only the last person standing, said Miscavige, would be allowed to stay. The rest would be sent home to their families, from whom they had long been cut off. As Miscavige played Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody," church leaders "fought over the chairs, punching each other and, in one case, ripping a chair apart." The church confirmed that a game of musical chairs had taken place as an administrative exercise — but called claims of violence and coercion "nuts."
 

wizard

Time Out
Nov 18, 2011
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They are?
... hell yeah, man! talk to the folks on the streets, in the coffee shops, see it on the news, in the internet blogs, take a look at the occupy movement, the protests and riots in toronto, vancouver and montreal -- people are fed up and they aren't going to take it anymore ...
 

TenPenny

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 9, 2004
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Location, Location
... hell yeah, man! talk to the folks on the streets, in the coffee shops, see it on the news, in the internet blogs, take a look at the occupy movement, the protests and riots in toronto, vancouver and montreal -- people are fed up and they aren't going to take it anymore ...

You realize that there are lots of 'people' who support the government, too. They aren't rioting or protesting, they're generally working.