A Cult Named Sue
Matt Welch | October 19, 2005, 12:45pm
The awful Church of Scientology (which sends my house two or three of the most indecipherable space-monster pamphlets a week, thinking wrongly that some defector named "Larry" still lives here), is threatening a trademark-infringement lawsuit against a New Zealand parody site called www.ScienTOMogy.info, which, as you might imagine, takes the piss out of Tom Cruise's pimping for the clam-hating cult. Buried near the bottom of the L.A. Times story is this bit of news about www.truthaboutscientology.com publisher Kristi Wachter, who successfully fought off similar threats four years ago:
a few weeks ago, [Wachter] said, her Web host was forced to temporarily remove more than 600 pages from her site after Scientology lawyers accused her of copyright infringement under the Digital Millennium Act.
Link via L.A. Observed.
SteveInClearwater | October 19, 2005, 11:25pm | #
As a Recovering Mormon (clean 12+ years), I'll rebut "CS".
There are indeed three levels of Heaven according to LDS doctrine.
But you don't qualify for the highest level (Celestial Kingdom) unless you are Temple-worthy, which means full tither payer for starters.
Other criteria include periodic intensive interviews from local and regional leadership to determine if you are maintaining sexual chastity (sex within marriage only, or complete sexual abstinence if unmarried); drug-free (including tobacco, alcohol and caffeine); and publicly acknowledge without reservation that God's direct conduit to humankind is represented by the church Prophet in Salt Lake along with the (literal) Twelve Apostles and other General Authorities (third tier management).
Side note to above references about sexual chastity - The Celestial Kingdom is not open to unmarried females, regardless of their meeting other qualifications. Further, all marriages (for males or females) must be ordained in a clandestine Temple marriage ceremony which may only be attended by other Temple-worthy LDS.
One of the strongest recruiting hooks of the Mormon church is "Families Are Forever" which teaches that families may spend eternity together.
IF each of them are temple-worthy and faithful per the above requirements and IF any husband-wife combos are both faithful and temple worthy members.
Any non-temple worthy family members will be forever separated from other family members who qualify for the LDS Golden Ticket.
Are Mormons OK people? Yep, for the most part in my experience, as are most of the Scientologists I've met and done business with during my eight years here in Clearwater.
But make no mistake about the doctrines they teach. Caveat emptor.
nmg | October 20, 2005, 12:05pm | #
More crazy mormon beliefs:
native americans are all descended from jews who emigrated to continent in 60BC. Before that, the place was unpopulated.
Some of the jews turned wicked and god cursed them with dark skin. They wiped out the good white jews that were left.
Bigfoot is real, he is Cain, wondering the earth cursed by god
Blacks are cursed with dark skin because they are descended from cain
god lives on a planet which circles a star called kolob.
A vast civilization of millions once flourished in North America. They had steel swords, writing, money, and cultivated grapes and barley and used elephants and horses. They all wiped themselves out before columbus arrived.
Once you go through the temple rituals, you get to wear magic underwear that protects you from evil. You must wear it at all times.
Satan has special power over bodies of water and their missionaries are not allowed to go swimming.
Yes, you get your own planet when you go to heaven, and yes, the males get a harem more or less. It's well-established doctrine that when you get to heaven, the men will be given extra wives.
In my opinion, yes, all religions are kooky. But if you think scientology is extra -wierd compared to more mainstream religions, then mormons are too.