Is Will Smith Brainwashing Children For Scientology?
Will Smith and wife Jada Pinkett-Smith have fired the director of a private school they own and run in California and replaced her with a woman with ties to Scientology, according to the New York Post.
An article in the LA Times in June said, "Some of its teachers are members of the Church of Scientology, and it will use teaching methods developed by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard."
The former director of the school supposedly quarreled with Smith over the use of Study Tech being used to teach the children. Study Tech was devised by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard.
So they replaced the director, a Ms. Oliver, with Ms. Foster who studied Scientology in 2005 and presumably will not have a problem with Study Tech.
It all points to Smith and his wife being Scientologists. And not just being active Scientologists, but recruiting children to the "religion" in a sly manner, as the Post reports:
"One of Study Tech's harshest critics, Dr. David S. Touretsky of Carnegie Mellon University, said, "Children are inculcated with Scientology jargon and are led to regard L.R. Hubbard as an authority figure. They are laying the groundwork for later bringing people into Scientology."
So what is Study Tech? First, Studytech.org tells us the Study Tech textbooks "are published by Bridge Publications, the in-house publishing arm of the Church of Scientology."
From the Studytech.org website:
"Study Tech is founded on three principles: (1) use pictures and diagrams to illustrate the concepts being taught, (2) break down complex concepts so they can be mastered in a series of simple steps, and (3) always seek definitions for unfamiliar terms. These rules make sense and are harmless enough when phrased in plain English. But the Study Tech books present them in a different manner. The three principles are called "mass", "gradients", and "misunderstoods": terms that were invented or redefined by Hubbard and loaded with significance in the Scientology religion. These concepts are presented in a doctrinaire manner that is also characteristic of Scientology religious instruction. Study Tech actually helps lay the groundwork for introducing Scientology doctrines into secular education."
So Scientologists want to get their "religion" into our schools. An understandable motive for any religion, except this is the 21st century and Scientology is completely batshit-crazy.
Not familiar with Scientology? Xenu.net gives a better description than I ever could:
"The Church of Scientology is a vicious and dangerous cult that masquerades as a religion. Its purpose is to make money. It practices a variety of mind-control techniques on people lured into its midst to gain control over their money and their lives. Its aim is to take from them every penny that they have and can ever borrow and to also enslave them to further its wicked ends.
"It was started in the 1950s by a science fiction writer named L. Ron Hubbard in fulfilment to his declared aim to start a religion to make money. It is an offshoot to a method of psychotherapy he concocted from various sources which he named "Dianetics". Dianetics is a form of regression therapy. It was then further expanded to appear more like a religion in order to enjoy tax benefits. He called it "Scientology"."
So what did Hubbard teach that Tom Cruise, John Travolta, and apparently Will Smith, among other Hollywood notables believe so dearly? The believe there was this bad guy named Xenu who caused all of our problems, although Scientology tries to deny any belief in Xenu because anyone with a brain will instantly call bullshit.
From Wikipedia:
"Xenu was, according to Scientology founder and science fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard, the dictator of the "Galactic Confederacy" who, 75 million years ago, brought billions of his people to Earth in DC-8-like spacecraft, stacked them around volcanoes and killed them using hydrogen bombs. Scientology holds that the essences of these many people remained, and that they form around people in modern times, causing them spiritual harm."
These bad spirits are called Thetans and Scientology, for a fee, will teach you how to get rid of the nasty critters. Although there's a whole other story about how celebrities do not pay a dime while working class stiffs pay hundreds of thousands of dollars - tax exempt - to Scientology to get rid of the invisible bad spirits that do so much damage. That's what Smith's school is laying the groundwork for by teaching Study Tech.
It's complete crap.
Want more proof? Check out the official story of what a Thetan really is:
"According to Scientology, when a person dies — or, in Scientology terms, when a thetan abandons its physical body — they go to a "landing station" on the planet Venus, where the thetan is re-implanted and told lies about its past life and its next life. The Venusians take the thetan, "capsule" it, and send it back to Earth to be dumped into the ocean off the coast of California."
I'm not making this shit up.
So what have we learned today? First we learned that Will Smith has some serious mental problems. And if he's going to insist on pushing his idiotic and harmful beliefs on others I'm not going to watch his movies anymore. I haven't watched a Tom Cruise film in years, or John Travolta, for the same reasons.

2 comments:
Great post and everything that you wrote is on point.
Did you happen to see what your banner ad is, right below your story? Yup, Cult of Scientology at its finest.
Nope, you can't make this shit up. Truth is always stranger than fiction. Always.
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