PBD Podcast - The Truth About Scientology w/ Mike Rinder | PBD Podcast | Ep. 191
Episode Date: October 7, 2022In this intriguing episode, Patrick Bet-David is joined by Mike Rinder & Adam Sosnick to discuss international politics, the religion of scientology and how he came to be one. Michael John Rinder ...is an Australian-American former senior executive of the Church of Scientology International (CSI) and the Sea Organization based in the United States. From 1982 to 2007, Rinder served on the board of directors of CSI and also held the post of executive director of its Office of Special Affairs, overseeing the corporate, legal and public relations matters of Scientology at the international level. . . . Buy Mike Rinder's book A Billion Years: https://amzn.to/3SRlrSO Join the channel to get exclusive access to perks: https://bit.ly/3Q9rSQL Text: PODCAST to 310.340.1132 to get added to the distribution list Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal bestseller Your Next Five Moves (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support
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Did you ever think you would make it
I still I'm so sick it takes sweet the story. I know this life meant for me
Why would you plan on the life when we got that David?
Value payment giving values contagious world on entrepreneurs. We can't no value that hate it I don't run homie look what I become I'll give you the name here in the folks podcast episode number one ninety one. I know we did one last night with Mike Chandler today. It's with a
very special guest Mike Render who if you don't know who he is, today's gonna be
the kind of a show where you're,
it's like a Twilight's on top of a thing.
You're gonna go into some interesting places.
Some stuff that you're gonna say,
there's no way that's possible,
there's no way that's real,
there's no way any human being is capable of tolerating that
for that many years or others.
But, you know, a lot of people are saying this stuff is real
and we're gonna get right into it.
So today Mike Rinders background,
he was a Australian American former senior executive
of the Church of Scientology International CSI.
And a C organization based in United States
from 1982 to 2007, he served on the board
of directors of CSI.
So not just a member, not just a leader, when you're on the board of directors of CSI so not just a member not just a leader when you're on the board
You pretty much know everything on the inside on what's going on pretty much 99% of things that's going on on the inside because that's what and when you're
Part of a company. There's meeting sales people have there's meetings operations has there's meetings compliance has there's meetings
Executive team has and then there's meetings that the board has
that they know everybody's business.
It's very important to understand this.
Everybody's business comes and flows through
the board of directors.
So when you're in the board,
you know everything on the inside.
So this isn't just somebody that's the fact
that that was a regular person.
This is a person that was on the board of directors
for many, many years of CSI
and also held the post executive director of its office of special affairs overseeing the corporate legal and public relations matters of Scientology
at the international level from 2016 to 2019, he co-hosted the any documentary series with Leah Romini, Scientology and the aftermath.
He has explained in 2020, he and Romini reunited to launch
the podcast Scientology Fair Game.
In September 2022, which is last month, he published a memoir
named A Billion Years My Escape from a Life in the Highest
Ranks of Scientology.
With that being said, Mike, thank you so much
for being a guest on the podcast.
Oh, it's welcome.
I'm really happy to be here, Patrick and Adam.
I know that you've done things about Scientology before
and some of my friends have been on this program with you
and I'm really happy to be here
and talk to people who actually have an understanding.
Like, I've been doing a bit of media recently
about the book and most people have no real
clue about the subject.
They're interested, they're fascinated, they don't really understand much about it.
I walk in here and you've got more notes laid out down here.
Like it's sort of intimidating seeing how many notes you've got, like how many printouts
you've gotten, things ready to go go but I'm ready to talk about anything
Well, you know the reason why this is a
Very interesting topic to me is when I had Marquit Leon and you know who Marquit Lee is he was with Ciorga
I think 15 years of yes very different in the mind and and we sat down
It was very interesting right off the bat because when he came in
He's kind of looking at me like why are you agreeing to this interview?
So why is this because you just interviewed you know a
Very very big donor to the Scientology church and I said who you referencing he was talking about Cardone
I was on his own
Yours on mine. He says is this a inside thing? Are you he was so almost like uncomfortable about it and to me
I'm just sitting in an interview
and because I'm trying to push him, I'm trying to challenge him.
I'm not coming from a place of, hey, yeah, oh, these guys are bad.
I'm like, no, I'm trying to learn to see that he's going to say about it.
Because in 2006, I signed a lease in Grenada Hills,
and I opened up an office with another guy named Michael
who was with the Church of Scientology for many, many years.
He was from New Zealand.
And we had a very, very good relationship together.
And we had about 100 agents of his that were Scientologists.
And I work with these guys.
And I got to tell you, my experience with them for what it's worth was absolutely amazing
to work with these folks.
And on their work ethic, we had certain issues at tail end of it,
financial some other issues that happened,
but their work ethic, what they were doing,
how they were coming about the business,
how great of sales people they were,
how they had no problem working until eight o'clock,
10 o'clock at night, they were workers.
And I respected that.
I respected that.
I respected somebody that's a worker.
And later on when I got a chance to get closer, I would go to the church in LA and I would
debate them and I would just, you know, I had an itch to debate every religion at the
time because I was going through my own journey.
And I would go to a church of Scientology and I would say, so tell me who is God.
And they would say, who do you think is God?
I said, don't worry about who I think is God. Who do you think is they would say, who do you think is God? I said, don't worry about who I think is God.
Who do you think is God?
No, who do you think is God?
No, tell me who you think is God.
I'm asking you and it was such a, you know,
they were so trained on how to ask questions
and how to go back and forth.
And so I was enamored by it and then Mark Hedley and then
now we have you here.
So for some folks that don't know,
if you don't mind taking a moment and just give your background
on how you got into church of Scientology and why you left in 2007.
Okay, well I got into it because my parents became involved when I was a child in Australia.
And from about the age of five, I started being really growing up in a Scientology household. And when you're a Scientologist, you believe that the word of Elrun Hubbard, the founder
of Scientology, is really the word of God.
He wrote about or talked about everything, everything from how to wash windows to how to
be eternally spiritually free and happy.
And the idea that Scientologists have is that Hubbard is the source of all valuable information
about everything. And he called his teachings in Scientology technology to give it sort of an aura that it was scientifically based and he claimed and continues to claim.
Scientology continues to claim that if you do exactly what he says exactly the way he says to do it.
way he says to do it. It works 100% of the time.
It is the infallible solution to all problems
confronted by any individual and all of mankind.
And so growing up, my sort of life became,
well, what would Ron do to solve the problem?
What's Ron's answer to this?
And this is a really important thing
to understand about Scientology.
You become so dependent upon what Hubbard says
is the answer, that you lose your perspective
on figuring things out for yourself, because it's easy.
And it's actually, frankly, one of the things that keeps people in Scientology.
It's really easy, while it's enormously difficult in some fashion, it's really easy in some respects to be a Scientologist.
You don't have to think about anything.
There is an answer for you on how to do everything
and how to act and what your reaction should be
and what you should think about things,
everything like that.
Anyway, I'm digressing a bit.
You spend a lot of time with him.
You actually, you know, you spend time with him.
So there's a lot of them on Church of Scientology
that I've never met him, never spent time with them. So there's a lot of them on Church of Scientology that I've never met. I've never spent time with them.
You have.
The vast majority of Scientologists
have never had any interaction whatsoever with Hubbard.
Yes, you're right, I did.
But in any event, I was basically groomed
to be a Scientologist from a very young age
and part of being a good Scientologist from a very young age and part of being a good Scientologist is
that ultimately you join what is called the Sea Organization. And the Sea
Organization is the sort of inner core of Scientology. All of the top hierarchy
of the Scientology Organization are required to be sea augmembers.
And that's what the title of the book is about.
It's called a billion years because a sea aug member
signs a billion year contract committing themselves
to eternity in the service of Scientology.
And sea augmembers live communally and have everything
provided to them by the organization, which,
you know, for some people is also very comforting.
And you know, you don't have to worry about anything.
You've got food, you've got someone to sleep.
It may be shitty food.
May not be a nice place to sleep.
But you've got it. And these days, actually, that's what a big selling point
for Scientology is to get people from Central America
and Eastern Europe to come and join the sea organization
in the United States.
And there was a recent article about it in the New York
magazine about this visa fraud that Scientology's engaged in.
Nevertheless, I became a CEO member shortly after becoming
a CEO member.
I went, as you mentioned, to the ship that Hubbard was operating
on at the time.
This was in 1973 and worked there with him for a couple of years
until we came to Clearwater, Florida, in December of 1975.
And I sort of rose through the ranks of Scientology
to ultimately become the international spokesperson
for Scientology and the head of what's
called the Office of Special Affairs.
And what you read out at the beginning Patrick
about the Office of Special Affairs
is like from the press release that Scientology says.
You know, it's the media and public relations and, you know, dealing with litigate.
And it admitted from that was destroying the enemies of Scientology.
That was a big part of the role of the office of special affairs.
So going back to spending time with Hubbard,
is that the ship out of the way?
The ship right there?
No, that's a new ship.
That's the free winds, which is a different thing.
That the Apollo is more of an old rust bucket.
Can you tap an Apollo, El Ron Hubbard?
El Ron Hubbard, let's see what it looks like.
There we go.
Black and white.
Well, it got painted white afterwards.
That one right there.
That one right there.
Over there on the right, that's it.
Like those, that is the Apollo, the one on the right.
And you spent, you spent two years on that.
Yes.
So now I've read the reason why there was the, he had the ship is because it was not welcome by, you know, he was kicked
out of a lot of different places, they wouldn't let the ship go to many ports, so he had to
go and live there until he got his tax.
There's a lot of stories you hear about that.
What was the reason why he was living on a ship for two years. Because he had originally gone to,
this is a bit of a backstory,
but Habiter had moved to England
and bought this manor house in the south of England
called St. Hill, which was his home
and the headquarters of Scientology internationally.
The British government and press started giving him a hard time.
He went off to Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe, to quote, unquote,
take over the country because he believed that he had been
Cecil Rhodes in a previous lifetime.
And he was going to go back and reclaim his kingdom
and create a Scientology country and new civilizations
springing from South Africa. And then only
last a few months when they threw him out of there too. He returned to England and the
British government was seeking to revoke his visa, or said that they would not renew
his visa. And he went, okay, the only place that's really safe
because the US government was also the FDA
had raided the church in Washington, DC,
and there was all sorts of problems with governments.
He said, okay, I'm going to become what he called Fabian,
meaning I can't really be found.
I'm gonna be anywhere and everywhere. International
waters, there's no government has jurisdiction over international waters. So we could go
to a port, but if there's any problem, we can just sail out to sea and I'll be safe.
Nobody can snatch me. I'm safe. So that is the reason that he originally went on to the Apollo and
Crete. That's where the word sea organization comes from. The start of this
was he took a few people from his home in St. Hill, the most dedicated
Scientologist, took them with him and that though they became like the crew of
the ship and his assistants and messengers and flunkies.
And that began the sea organization, which I then joined in 1973.
That was in 1967 he started it.
So what was unique about his personality?
Like for somebody to say, you know, from washing windows to doing this, and you know, if you got a headache, here's how to get rid of a headache and you hit your, you know, from washing windows to doing this and, you know, if you got a headache,
here's how to get rid of a headache and you hit your, you know, you kind of gradually
go through this and I've, if you're going through this party, you're going, everything had
a system to it on what he wrote about it.
And how many PhDs he had and how many degrees he had and the controversy behind the degrees
that he had.
Well, he didn't have any.
Well, I mean, there's two stories you hear about.
You hear about the amount he has and you hear about he had none.
But the truth is he had none.
He flunked out of George Washington University.
He did not finish.
Okay, you ask about Hubbard.
Hubbard was a larger than life character, a storyteller.
If there is one word I would use to describe Hubbard, larger than life character, a storyteller.
If there is one word I would use to describe Hubbard, it's storyteller.
Bullshitter, that could be another one,
but storyteller is the more sort of appropriate
because his history in life was writing fiction.
He was a fiction writer, a pulp fiction writer.
He developed a skill of presenting
stories to people that are very entertaining. And those stories about are about himself, and
many of them are completely and utterly untrue. And he developed a sort of a persona for himself
as a war hero and a like all these things
that actually are not true.
He then, at the end of the war,
he was in the US Navy.
He had a very indistinguish career in the United States Navy,
despite the fact he subsequently claimed that he was a war hero.
He had purple hearts.
He was injured.
He was a ship captain.
He was this.
He was that like the stories of his exploits in World War II,
you know, should be the subject of a movie, if any of them were true, but they're not.
So he then came upon this thing of
I'm going to
cure myself of the injuries. He claimed he was blinded and crippled at the end of the war. He was neither.
He had ulcers and
he He had ulcers and he developed this thing called dyonetics and
Dynetics he claims is scientifically researched and tested on hundreds of people and this and that
None of that is true
Yes, he dabbled around with people, but
Dynetics is is basically
regression therapy.
It is taking an incident of upset
or emotional strain or physical injury or whatever
and going back and finding the first point
that it began and sort of recounting it.
And Hubbard devised, invented, created this thing that he called the reactive mind.
And that is what Dionetics is about.
And the reactive mind is one of Hubbard's great strokes of genius.
He said that you have a subconscious mind that controls your emotions, makes you sick, gives you physical ailments, and that
it is composed of moments of pain and unconsciousness that are below your level of awareness.
And that current things in the environment will trigger your historical, subconscious thoughts, pains,
and emotions, and that dynamics can solve that.
The beauty of this to present to someone is, look, you may be really fucked up, but it's
not your fault.
It's this thing called a reactive mind, and you don't control it, but we have a way
of getting rid of it. And if you give me some money, I will teach you and audit. That's what it's
called auditing in Scientology and get rid of your reactive mind. Now, someone who has physical illnesses or who is traumatized or who is emotionally unstable
or whatever, telling them that you've got this secret that you have discovered that nobody
else has ever known and that I can cure you of those things.
I mean, Hubbard's claim still sold in the Dynetics book today,
it'll cure cancer, it'll cure Bersitis, you'll throw away your glasses, you won't need a walking
cane anymore, you won't be irrational, you'll be a perfect thinking machine. None of these things
prove to be true at all. Well, okay, here's the trick of this Patrick. There is some placebo effect that
you tell someone I'm going to kill you and then you do stuff and they pay for it. A lot of people
will say, yes, I'm cured. Oh, yes, I can walk again. It's like, so you can't exactly say that nothing ever happens
to anybody. And this is one of the things that's very tricky about this subject is you will
see all sorts of testimony from people telling and saying, oh my God, I was such a nervous wreck
and now I'm not. And oh my God, I had this terrible problem with nausea
or when I woke up in the morning
and I found through dionetics that I was solved now.
And I guess that probably is true.
But that is presented by Scientology now,
or Hobbit then, as if you do it exactly as Hobbit says
it works 100% of the time. That's a little weird to say it works 100% of the time, but that's the same criticism of a lot of
churches, right? Where they'll say, well, you know, this happened and that happened like it was
God. I don't know. Maybe you just were thinking about it. So it's ironic because every church gets
criticized with that part, right? Yes, but going back with Hubbard here,
so I wanna know who inspired him?
The only reason I asked his questions
because when you're saying all these things to him,
I sense an element of CS Lewis
who used to write fiction books
and he started writing near Christianity
in all these other books
and the battle with God that he had
and Oxford University.
So I sense an element of CS Lewis
minus the level of ego that Ron had in you know Oxford University so I sense an element of CS Lewis minus the you know the level of ego that
Iran had I sense an element of great Gatsby where you know the
the stories of what happened and let me tell you in war and all these other things when you know
the book did that inspire him I sense an element of Napoleon Hill when you're talking about
blinded and crippled where Napoleon Hill starts off and talks about how his son was blind and he was able to do this
through the certain mindset and those books were written in the 20s and the 30s, I sense
an element of Joseph Smith with LDS where he finds these six plates and Vermont and comes
down and they go to Chicago eventually, you know the story.
I sense, I sense some of the, I sense a element of Jesus
prophet. I sense some of those things, right?
So my question for you would be, who were his,
like who did he admire?
And I don't even know if anybody ever figured this part out.
Who did he admire and who did he hate?
Gosh, that's such an incredible question.
I have no idea that's true answer. That's a such an incredible question. I have no idea that's the answer.
That's what I want to know. I have no idea. I do know that he was very widely read and
he loved to quote philosophers through the ages and claim great knowledge about the work of Freud or the work or what Socrates had to say or you know that
he claimed to have read the history of civilization you know it's entirety and the rise of fall of the
Roman Empire and its entirety and he claimed an enormous and enormous breadth of knowledge. I'm not so sure that that
that knowledge went very below the surface. I'm not sure that it was so deep. I
think that it was convenient to say I studied Freud or I did this or I did
that. But I will say that I believe one of Hubbard's great talents was taking small pieces from others,
all the way back to Buddha and the Eastern philosophies and pulling little bits and
incorporating them into his stick. And because he did that,
there are elements of dynamics and Scientology
that seem sensible,
seem very normal,
seem very attractive and appealing
because they're these universal truths,
the golden rule,
the golden rule became in Scientology, you know,
an element of the philosophy without calling it the golden rule.
You know, this sort of stuff is found
throughout Scientology.
The thing about Scientology and about Hubbard that is, to me, most compelling,
is the fact that he managed to devise a system which now others copy. Like, I became
very familiar with the whole Keith Rinary, Nexium story because I became friends with the whole Keith Rinary Nexium story because I became friends with the people
that made that film.
And Sarah Edmondson, the woman who was branded in the vowel
is a good personal friend now.
I asked them, Mark Vicente and Sarah,
you know, a lot of this rings the sign,
like it's got Scientology throughout it.
Oh yeah, he studied Elrondub,
but he studied Scientology to learn how to control
and manipulate people and get them to believe something
and put the carrot out in front of them
of what it is that you have looking for the future
that you are going to attain for yourself.
So I believe that Hubbard is the ultimate cult leader, the ultimate guy who figured out
how you can persuade people to do things that are against their best interest and in his best
interest. People do a lot of stuff in Scientology. You know, my book is about my personal experiences
and the crazy insane things that I did
and the willingness to put up with the most outrageous stuff
that happened to me and keep going.
But Scientologists all over the world
mortgage their houses and give away their college funds and do all this stuff that is not in their best interest
Because they believe that
Scientology is in their best interest and that trumps everything. I had I had an agent of mine who
Her and her husband they were making 250 a year between their two jobs French and
When I would do their needs analysis under finances, I would say
How come you guys are so broke
What is what is this money go to is just oh you don't even know what we're doing. I said what are you doing?
We spent 50,000 dollars last year on this course. We spend this much money on this
I said why do you know what we're learning with this you should take this course
I said how much money do you guys spent every year in your
church? The number they were telling me made like it made, and by the way, it's not like
they were making a quarter million dollars because they just started making a quarter
million dollars. He was an engineer. He was a smart guy. So the question then becomes the
following. This is where it gets a little bit confusing. One, who was the, a lot of
times for a person to,
who speaks like that big of themselves
and what they're gonna be doing,
there has to be the first true believer
with credibility that validates them, right?
If you don't have a true believer
with credibility that validates them,
this could be anybody that's talking a big game.
So who was the first person that was a true believer in him that validated his teaching and
dynetics?
Well, there was a, um, an editor that he had had, uh,
John W. Campbell when he was writing science fiction and he was pretty influential in the
publishing circles at the time and he was one of the early
proponents along with this medical doctor called Dr. Winter.
I can't remember his first name and Winter was like the endorser of dyneetics for Hubbard
to begin with.
But shortly thereafter he became like, I'm going to expose what's really going
on here, because this is a bunch of bullshit. But he quickly with dyonetics and through the
publishing of the book, it became like a fad, like in the very, very early days of dyonetics
in the in the 1950s. It was like a fat. And Hubbard would go around
doing lectures. He did this famous lecture in Los Angeles at the Shrine Auditorium, and
he filled the place in 1950 on the basis of the book. And people like, oh my God, this
is the answer to everything. And, you know, there is a story that is told about the claims
that Hubbard made about what a clear is.
And that is the ultimate goal of Dynetics,
to rid yourself of your reactive mind
and you will then become what's known as a clear.
And he made all these claims about clear
is that they would have basically a photographic memory
and have perfect computation
and because all of the reactive mind was removed
so it would just left the perfect analytical mind
and he got up on stage and had someone who supposedly
was clear up there and they couldn't remember
what they had for breakfast
or couldn't remember what color tie he was wearing when he turned around and this
sort of started the maybe there is not maybe this isn't all that people
believe it to be and that began a long history of Hubbard.
This is one of the other things of Dynics and Scientology.
When the claims that he made would prove to be untrue, he would come up with a new
part, a new thing.
Ah, yes.
Well, I've been doing more research and I've discovered now that X, Y, and Z. So we're going to do this now.
We're not doing that anymore. We're doing this now. And there is this
progression of things from
1950 all the way up to the day he died of
here is the new hope
to attain what I've been promising you could attain since day one. And the fact that people
continue to buy that or continue to buy that for years and years and years is one of the other
sort of mysteries of how do you get someone to I mean it, it's like the apocalyptic, the end of the world is coming
on the 17th of July, you know, 1934, and then on the 17th of July, there's no Armageddon,
and on the 18th of July, they're saying, well, we were just getting ourselves prepared.
This was a test. God was testing
us to see effective thing to do though. A lot of people have done that and they've imposed
a lot of fear and control over people. Absolutely. And the fear that you will have an eternity of black hopelessness. Without
Scientology, the not only this planet, but every being in this universe is doomed, doomed
to a dark, black, dwindling spiral of nothingness and turning into a black rock.
And it's like the heaven and hell.
You've got a one hand, ultimate spiritual salvation, freedom and happiness.
And on the other hand, ultimate blackness, darkness and terrible, terrible fate awaiting
you.
And the only difference between the two is the technology of El Run Hubbard, which is
the only thing that can save the blackness and turn it into light.
And that is the story of every religion on planet Earth since day one.
And Scientology is no different in that respect. The difference
with Scientology is it's presented and sold as you can have that pathway to spiritual freedom
and enlightenment in the here and now, because we do things right now with provided you pay
right now with you that give you the the first steps toward accomplishing that ultimate objective and take you all
the way up the Hubbard bridge to total freedom. Can I ask a question about the followers just so I get a
full understanding like you gave the example of the the French couple that worked for you. I believe.
I'm talking about the followers. My question is this, you know, I'll use this as an example
and I'll get to the question. Like for instance, if you're a member of Islam, okay? Do
whatever you want. I don't really care But when you start committing acts of terrorism and killing people now we have a problem
You can be a Scientologist all you want don't care. Give all your money to Elron Harbord and the whole crew
Literally don't care, but when you start committing acts of violence or hurting people on the outside
That's where I have a problem. So two parts. Are there any
or hurting people on the outside, that's where I have a problem. So two parts, are there any examples of them doing things outside of the
organization? Because I know you're very implicit of what they've done inside.
But what is the problem? If somebody says, look, I'm looking for meeting in
purpose in my life and I'm finding it here, I don't care what they, if they want to
give all their money to Scientology, I literally don't care that doesn't affect me.
So I mean, what percentage of the world is Scientology?
0.0001%.
So my question is this, if you want to practice Scientology and you want to believe that Elrond
Harbor designs fiction writer is the next coming of Jesus, have at it, buddy.
What's the problem with that?
There is absolutely no problem with that, Adam. You can, in this country, you can believe anything you want.
And I firmly, firmly support that.
You can't do anything you want.
And that's what you're saying.
You can't believe in this and then say,
it's my belief that made me go out and blow up a bus.
Scientology, let me break this down into two pots
because you have the internal pots.
Scientologists, two Scientologists.
What does it matter if Joe Schmo goes and spends
all his money and goes bankrupt in Scientology?
In the microcosm it matters nothing. In the macro view this is an
organization that is doing this systematically to people and is tax exempt. And your
taxes and your taxes and my taxes and everybody here who lives in the United States, who is paying
taxes, is subsidizing those activities.
The internal abuses that go on to Scientologists, you know, I talk a lot about physical violence
that is being needed out to people in the sea organization. But also the destruction of families
is something that shouldn't be a part
of an organization that is being supported by the government.
Then there is the question of outside the realm
of Scientology.
And I give quite a lot of examples of people in there
who have been harassed and had their lives turned upside down
because they did say something negative about Scientology.
I go into some great detail about this guy, Bob Minton.
I sort of use that as a microcosm of, this is what Scientology does based on the teachings
of El Runhubberd.
Adam, there is no other religion that I am familiar with that has a department that is
their intelligence dirty tricks department and has policies written by the founder of the religion on how you go about destroying someone's life.
Scientology spends a lot of money hiring private investigators, hiring lawyers, creating smear sites,
creating videos to smear people, following them around, harassing their families, simply because they say things
that Scientology doesn't like, that too is subsidized by your tax dollars.
And that is wrong.
And by the way, if you go into that, the part that he's talking about where they spend 25 million dollars to spy on one man
You know who spends 25 million dollars to spy?
Who is the one man? There's a number of these by the way, he's the probably I would probably the most hated man that left
Scientology is my printer here. Here's what you what you need to you may add somebody else on that list
But I would say it's probably you
what you need to, you may add somebody else on that list, but I would say it's probably you.
You have more Leah has got to say.
I hear her now.
I would say, we're like, you know,
do me a favor, go to that clip for some of you guys
that are watching this, you're like, well,
how do we know who he is, cause maybe you don't spend a lot
of time studying Scientology, okay,
which I'm sure you have better things to do,
but if you wanna make that bigger,
so they can see the full screen, this is Mike,
and what year is this, by the way, is this 2006, 2005?
Maybe a little before that.
Okay, so let me show what that clip is.
So watch how you're defending Scientology.
This is Mike Rinder sitting on the board,
international spokesperson.
You're gonna hear a very different Mike in this clip
than the one right here on the podcast.
Go for it, play.
I've known Tom for 15 years. I consider him a friend.
Do you think he's a good spokesperson for Scientology?
I think he's a very good representation of what a Scientologist is. I think he's obviously
successful. He's obviously very happy. He does a lot to help other people.
He lives an ethical life.
But last year, this door was orbiting far from Planet Hollywood into the galaxies of
Scientology.
Many wondered, did he wander off too far?
Does the church ever call Tom Cruise and say, you know what, pull back the reins a little?
No, I don't think anybody in the world calls Tom Cruise and tells him to pull back the reins a little. No, I don't think anybody in the world calls Tom Cruise
and tells him to pull back the reins.
Ha!
But Tom Cruise and other celebrities
do promote Scientology's agenda.
Does the church actively recruit celebrities?
No, no.
The church is open to anybody.
No one specifically told we'd like to get more celebrities
because celebrities sort of up the profile of Scientology
We have a list of celebrities
Absolutely not
Absolutely not
You can pause right there. How do you feel watching this right now? By the way?
How do you think you'll us? I mean I mean I
Look at how to watch it or is it?
I'm so used to it. You'veved this stuff in my face for some time.
Have you seen this one?
I hadn't seen that for a long time.
It's funny.
I saw Hoda at an event that I did with Leah one time for.
Oh, it was like the premiere of the movie she did with JLo.
And we were at the premiere and Hoda walked in.
And she knows Leah pretty well.
And she said, oh, hi, and I'm like,
she said, yeah, I interviewed you. I said, oh, really? Okay, now this, I didn't recall at that time
that I had been interviewed by her. And I say in the beginning of this book, one of the things that worried me about writing
it was the fact that See-Og members are so sleep deprived that you have a sort of a, you
live in a fog.
I look at myself on that clip and I go, oh my god, I look terrible, I look like I haven't slept for a month,
I look like I'm sort of like sleep walking through this interview, dazed.
That is the impression that I get of myself on there.
And it's probably true.
If that was 2006, I probably came out of the hole to go and do that interview.
Like I did, I was in the hole the hole
Yeah, what's every time I
Every time I can you go back to see what he looked like there I
Actually thought you look pretty good there. Yeah, it's interesting that you're take on that is that you didn't feel like you looked good
Oh, you actually look kind of pale, but yeah, I look kind of pale mind. You saying the whole. The whole. The whole is, it was something that was depicted
on the going clear HBO doc.
It was a prison at the International headquarters
of Scientology in Riverside County, California.
And I write a whole chapter about the whole
because it was where the senior echelons of Scientology,
hierarchy were locked up by David Misgavitch,
and basically in a lot of the flies world,
beating confessions out of one another
to, in order to satisfy Misgavitch,
that everybody had somehow confessed to the terrible things that they
were thinking or doing that was making his life difficult.
I was a very unique inmate of the whole, in that when the media would reach out for a spokesperson
to come and talk and they couldn't be persuaded not to do the show at all,
I would be taken out of the hole and escorted to do an interview with the media.
Like someone would fly with me on a plane to New York.
I talk about going on the today show with Katie Curric and lying about the Zeno OT3 story,
this with Hoda is another example of that
of being pulled out, sent off,
and answering questions in the way that it was expected
that would be the correct Scientology answer.
The fact that I say in there that there was never any effort
to get celebrities in Scientology is so absurd.
There is an entire organization in Scientology
called the Celebrity Center,
which is dedicated to attracting and servicing celebrities.
Because Hubbard said very early on,
celebrities are opinion leaders.
They make people see things in a certain way.
If Tom Cruise comes out and says,
I'm a Scientologist and Tom Cruise is the biggest movie star in the world,
then there is a whole lot of people that will go, well, if Tom Cruise is a
Scientologist, may not be so bad.
Maybe all this crap I've heard about it isn't really true.
Maybe it really is helping him.
It may be able to help me.
And Cruise was recognized by David Miscavich as being the single source of the greatest number of new
Scientologists in the history of Scientology.
Now, whether that's true or not is another thing.
There is also a lot of bullshit that goes into these claims that Scientology makes about
anything. told you makes about anything but tom cruise was
perceived by david misscavich as the biggest asset that sign told you had
and by the way none of that is unique it's not like it's a unique thing
politicians
you know hey opera win free indoors pera co-bama you know hey you can you
west indoors donald trump hey
you know uh... d Dwayne Johnson did a video interview with Kamala Harris and Joe Biden. That's been going on for a long time
So the criticism to the church from that perspective. It doesn't really do anything
I don't sit there. I see that as a criticism. I see that as a strategy on what they're doing come big brands
Get Shaq to do. Hey, you know, Mr. General, what is a general, something,
the insurance, the general, they do,
they can accept, is he supposed for a long time?
I'm not, I don't look at that and I look at,
oh, that's deceptive on what they're doing.
That's not my area of concern.
My area of concern is, you know, how people,
okay, so for example, this whole concept
about Scientology, some of the things he's writing about, he's actually positively helped
a lot of people out.
Okay, I've spoken to certain people that said, hey man, I had an alcohol problem and I went
to the Woody Collard, the Lake Arrowhead place, I think it's not an on.
And I'm telling you, I went to rehab. I went to a lot of different places.
Once I went there, my life changed.
You know, okay, cool.
Hey, I read this book.
It really got me to change.
I took these three courses that helped me
out with the way to communicate.
I mean, if you watch the 60 minutes interview
with Tom Cruise, which I'm sure you've seen this,
the 60 minute interview with Tom Cruise,
what's the gentleman's name he's sitting down with?
You know what? No, not Madelow. No, no, this is a interview with Tom Cruise. What's the gentleman's name he's sitting down with? You know what?
No, not Madelow.
No, no, no.
This is an interview he did years ago.
If you can just pull up type in Tom Cruise in 60 minutes.
If you watch the 60 minute clip with Tom Cruise
on that, that's the one right there with Peter.
Yeah, Peter Overton.
If you watch that, it's a clinic, what Tom does to the interviewer.
It's an absolute clinic, what he does to him, to be able to communicate at that level.
I mean, and by the way, he looks like identical way that Ted Kapo interviewed David Miscavige
on how they learn body language communication, rebuttals, putting the pressure more on the other individuals.
Okay, some may say that's learning how to be a great
negotiator, that's learning how to be a great salesperson,
that's learning how to be a great persuader.
So the criticism on that could be, well, you're just envious,
because you can't communicate and persuade as good as they do.
You know, now John Maxwell once said, one of the best things ever, which was very powerful.
He said, be careful when you learn how to persuade, because when you learn how to persuade,
you all of a sudden realize you have a power that you sometimes feel like you're the only
one that knows about the secret.
A lot of people learn how to persuade.
He says, the moment you go into just persuading people for your own benefits, it's no longer persuasion,
it's manipulation.
When you go into the element of,
I know I can get you to do what I want you to do
because I'm gonna win and you're gonna lose.
That's a very temptation that a lot of people
are gonna be tempted to wanna do,
you gotta be careful there.
So there is some good that a lot of people talk about.
The bad that you hear about, like for me,
from Hubbard to Miscavige.
Let's transition into Miscavige, okay.
You had two years around Hubbard,
and you've had more, more, more around Hubbard.
Yeah, total hours around Hubbard.
How many total hours would you say around Hubbard?
Well, I was on the ship with him for two years,
but I didn't interact that much.
I then went and worked directly with him day in, day out, night in, day for training to
be what's called a Commodore's messenger, which was the sort of, the highest status that
you could have in Scientology.
And, you know, I was with him from morning until he went to bed at night and
then sitting outside his room in case he called in the middle of the night.
So that was intense and that was, you know, how long did you...
Two weeks of that sort of.
But then I interacted with him constantly.
I was in Florida.
I was sent back to Florida to be in charge of the organization there in Florida.
He was in California and I would receive these communications from him, you know, daily
virtually.
So I had a lot of interaction with him, but then subsequent to that when he died, David
Mascavitch took over.
I had far more direct personal interaction with David Mascarvich took over, I had far more direct personal interaction with David Mascarvich.
But Patrick, I just want to go back to one thing that you said, which I agree with.
I don't think that there is anything wrong with the concept of having celebrities,
be your recruiters, recruiters or front people or whatever you want to call them.
These days they call them influencers.
Influencers.
But look at that clip.
That I'm defending that.
Go, oh no, we would never do that.
This is how Scientology operates.
There is this idea that certain things have to be, you can't really say that this
is what Scientology does because it's going to be misinterpreted or it's unacceptable
or people won't understand or it'll give a negative spin to what we do, blah, blah,
blah. So a lot of the things in Scientology, you see spokespeople
or press releases or whatever coming up isn't really what's going on. They, they will say,
we're gay friendly. We're absolutely, we do not discriminate against anybody. That's absolutely untrue. Hubbard's writings are very, very homophobic.
And Scientology's believe his writings 100% of the time.
But that's a socially unacceptable position to have.
So Scientology will come out and say,
oh no, we're totally gay friendly.
We love gay people.
Well, anybody is welcome to come in.
And interestingly, that is the genesis
of the article about Paul Haggis,
the Larry Wright wrote in the New Yorker,
which then resulted in the going clear book,
which then resulted in the going clear documentary
on HBO by Alex Gibney,
which sort of opened the floodgates
to Scientology.
Anyway, I'm sorry I didn't really respond to whatever it was that you were asking me to
respond.
But I understand what you're saying with the whole celebrity when you're saying that.
You know, my rebuttal for that would be, you know, that David Miscavige's leadership
style was so walking on excels that you were actually scared on what answer you were gonna give because how you were gonna be
demonized when you went back to have to hear from him. So you didn't play loose you play tight and
I put that on him. I put that on how much fear he imposed on you where you just were
Scared to know anything you say he's gonna judge you on whatever words that came out of your mouth
Which there's a part of that that's mob-esque because in the mob world, you know every word is you know
There's a difference between two words
You could use one word and it has a different meaning to the mob that you use and the different words
So you have to give me exactly what you told that person in the way you told them what was the context at what point
Did you say this at what point did you use that word?
So I see David being that but the reason I'm asking a question about El Ron Hubbard and where I was going with this
It's fair to say you've spent a few thousand hours with El Ron Hubbard. Yes, okay, perfect. So let's set that aside
That's that's you know, you're a disciple you've witnessed so it's not like a person that's
speaking theoretically. You are in the disciple category
and how many people in the world
have spent a few thousand hours
around Elron Hubbard that are living today?
Probably less than a hundred.
Okay, so less than a hundred.
So that's one in a hundred who can speak
with that kind of experience.
Now take Elron Hubbard's because I've seen you say
that Elron Hubbard had a temper as well,
but he was more charismatic, charming,
and a little bit more easier to deal with versus miscavage.
Doesn't have that, his temper is worse.
So, and you've spent how many hours with miscavage?
A million, I don't know.
Okay, so the comparison between the two,
a lot more with David than you have with Elron Hubbard.
Right, that's correct.
What is the different style of leadership with?
Mascavage versus Elron Hubbard.
Mascavage doesn't really have any redeeming qualities
in that he has a very, very aggressive style
and a tendency to violent outbursts that are physical in nature.
I must, people say, oh yes, miscavatures are full.
He is no fool.
He is a very highly intelligent smart guy who says he's a fool. Oh a lot of people on
social media or that they respond to me or you know or people who interview me, they're like, well, you know
He's just crazy. Well crazy like a fox or whatever. He is a super super intelligent guy who is capable of
whatever. He is a super, super intelligent guy who is capable of absorbing enormous amounts of information and analyzing it and figuring out how to use it for his advantage. Perhaps
more so even than Hubbard. David Miscavich is the perfect product of El Run Hubbard. And by that, I mean, he too was raised a Scientologist
for a very young age and had a similar sort of trajectory
in life that I did.
He joined the sea organization as soon as he could
out of high school.
He sort of rose through the ranks.
He went and worked with Hubbard.
He was a protégé of Hubbard even more than
me. He was with him when he was living in California working every day for a year with
him in California. He also has a personality, David Miskavichage that lends itself to these
the being like the perfect disciple of Hubbard
in that Hubbard had a very mean streak to him.
There was a lot of writings in Scientology
about people who disagree with Hubbard
and what is to be done with them.
And, you know, he says, I never forget I'll always even the score.
I never forgive people who have a tax Scientology on me.
I will destroy them.
Adely, if possible, of course, these are his words.
These are his words.
And you, um, if you look at David miscavage, that is the essence
of David miscavage. He has got that pot of Scientology down to a T. And while he can be charming when he wants to be like any sociopath can, I mentioned in my book
that I read this brilliant book by a woman, a professor called Martha Stout called the
sociopath next door, which I recommend to anybody.
And it had a real impact on me because I realized, I realized, look, I thought I was dealing
with a unique person in David Miscavich.
And obviously he is unique.
There's no other David Miscaviches, but there are a lot of other sociopaths and they share
a lot of characteristics.
And I see Miscavich as being a classic sociopath, and taking the bits that
Hubbard gave and using those to become the new Elrond Hubbard of Scientology.
For a long time, you could have said to any Scientologist, well, there
ever be another Elrond Hubbard, and every one of them would say no. And probably all of
them would agree with that statement now. But if you said to them, is David Misgavitch,
the the epitome of Elrond Hubbard carrying forth his legacy that every Scientologist would
agree with you about that.
And every Scientologist today is as afraid of criticizing, questioning, or challenging
the authority or words of David Mascavich as they were El-Run Hubbard.
So now the relationship with Miscavich and you, were you guys about the same age or no?
He's a little bit younger. He's like seven years younger than me.
Was there a running where both of you did somebody else have the as a candidacy to potentially one day run a
Scientology or no were you one of those that was looked at as
Potentially one day running it or you were not at that at that level.
Okay, you know what I'm asking. I know exactly what you're asking.
There was a couple who were the apparent
Is to the Hubbard Empire called Pat and Annie Broca.
And they were with Hubbard. Hubbard went off like Hubbard Empire called Pat and Annie Broker. And they were with Hubbard.
Hubbard went off, like Hubbard was constantly running away
thinking that the FBI was after him
or the IRS was gonna serve him and he had a car
with a bag packed ready to escape.
And he did it a couple of times.
And ultimately he ended up living in a motor home
on a ranch near San Luisia, Bispo in California.
And he was like incognito.
He called himself Jack Farnsworth.
He had long hair.
He was like a reckless.
The only people that were with him when he was there, were Annie Broker, her husband Pat,
and this other guy called Steve Saj Fath.
Annie Broker and Steve Saj Fath were with him.
Pat Broker was the conduit,
go between between Hubbard and the outside world,
and he wasn't actually with Hubbard a lot.
But the natural heirs to the Hubbard kingdom were Pat and Annie. They were
the people that he had chosen to be with him when he took off and they lived with them
in his motorhome for two years or more. And I detail a lot of this in the book because Mascavitch somehow managed to take out Pat and Annie
Broca and deem himself the natural heir to El Runhubbid. And you know, it's a very complicated
story, Patrick, but he, Mascavitch got rid of the brokers. Yeah, what do you mean get rid of or take out?
Okay.
Uh, remove, Pat Broker was threatened with,
I'm going to turn you over to the IRS for criminal prosecution
because you carried briefcases full of hundreds of thousands of dollars of cash
to El Run Hubbard because they couldn't pay, he was in Cognito
so they couldn't use credit
cards. They bought everything with cash, ranches, cars, whatever. And Pat Broca was the guy that did it,
and there was no accounting for it. And so Pat Broca effectively agreed to go off and live his life
never speaking about Scientology again. And he is alive to this day and has never said a word.
His wife died from cancer and his 12 or something.
And he lived in Czech Republic.
And they traced him for 25 years
and he spent 32 grand a month on detectives.
All that's, is this the guy?
Yeah, that's the guy.
That's the one.
But pointing aside Pat and Annie,
who were the natural sort of ones to follow in Hubbard's
footsteps, and I make a big point in the book, Hubbard wrote about everything in his life,
like every single little thing and he'd sent out these things called runs journals,
hi everybody, this is what I'm up to, Here's what's happening. This is what we're doing blah blah blah.
But he never said anything about this is what happens at the end of my life.
There was no written succession plan. There was no written or spoken succession plan. Typically he would have recorded
in his voice
here I am and this is what's you know blah blah blah. And I'm getting to the end of my life.
And I'm going to move off and blah, blah, blah. And this person is going to take over and blah, blah, blah.
None of that. And this story was invented that he had causatively departed his body to continue his
research into the upper levels of spiritual enlightenment. Yeah, that's a, that was a complete bullshit
story to because if Hubbard had been known by Scientologists to have died of a stroke
after having suffered earlier strokes with pancreatitis and babbling almost incoherently at the end of his life, that would
have been a big blow to the idea that, well, my technology will solve all kinds of problems
and your health issues and your mental incapacities, et cetera, et cetera, if Hubbard had ended
up being a very poor physical condition and even mental condition at the end of his life.
So this story was invented that was presented to the Scientology world, and I talk about
that in there too.
But then the scavenge became somewhat obsessed with eradicating anybody who he saw
as a potential replacement for himself. He'd managed to rest control and get himself in a position
where the brokers were no longer a threat. But there were other people who were, people who had
worked more with Elrond Hubbard, who had been around longer,
who had more training in Scientology.
And one by one, he got rid of all of them.
And to some extent, because of my history, and because of the fact that I understood the external world of Scientology,
not just the internal world.
You know, I dealt with all the legal cases, et cetera, et cetera.
I was one of those people.
So me, along with all these other sort of leading names
of Scientology all ended up being put in the hole,
all ended up being removed and disgraced.
And he very calm.
Very calm and it's kind of like to put in perspective.
It's the movie, a gladiator, where Joaquin Phoenix
goes to his dad and Marcus Aurelia says,
I'm gonna announce that Maximus is gonna be the ruler,
the emperor and he's like, how could you do that
and then boom, he kills his dad and that had a hard attack where he died from whatever and, the emperor, and he's like, how could you do that in that boom? He kills us that, and that had a hard attack
where he died from whatever, and then, hey, this guy's this,
and then they arrest Marcus Aurelius,
and that scene of redemption coming back,
where he says, gladiator, show your face,
and he takes us that whole scene.
My name is Maximus, my name is Adam.
Yeah, exactly.
It's father, you know, to-
Father to a murdered son.
Husband to a murdered wife.
And I'm not even a revenge in this day.
And then I just...
That's right.
It's just a, I'm just got the chills right now
just thinking about that.
So it takes me to that.
And it also takes me to what happened with Saddam
when Homeni came in and took over Shah.
He had to get rid of all the generals
that were loyal to the Shah.
Not to him, would broker being one of them
that he had to get rid of them.
But so that's fine.
Great power play to give credit today.
Ace, a general in a military from 700 years ago
may say, good move on what you did to take power over
and you pushed everybody out and you took over, right?
It's just eliminating competition or defeat.
It received competition. No, that's It's just eliminating competition or proceed competition.
No, that's all it is.
Very easy to value.
Yeah, it's definitely Machiavellian, Prince,
but fine, so you do that.
No problem.
You can have different people disappear,
competing all these things.
All of it is dark.
But, I mean, one of the people that's been disappearing
for a long time, that every time somebody brings it up
and Leah Romini brought it up and,
hey, you don't ask about this. Who do you think you
are to ask about? Where is his wife? I mean the last time they're saying what
was the number the last they said 2009 they showed up and in 2012 or
13 2013 is the last time they saw his wife. It's been nine years. Where is his
wife? No one sees his wife anywhere. David miscavages. His wife is missing
for a long time. She's not been seen in over a decade. Yeah. 13, 2013. She has been disappeared.
I mean, I just know in the book of Bible, Enoch was taken by God and there's a couple characters
that were that never died. They were taken, right? I don't know if you understand where I'm going here with this one, where is she?
She is hold up in one of the Scientology facilities
in the San Bernardino Mountains.
Last I knew, that's where she was taken at least
at the outset.
This is a very secret location that Scientology has
and it is the headquarters of a particular organization
in Scientology called the Church of Spiritual Technology, which is an organization that is dedicated
to preserving the writings and words of Elrun Hubbard for eternity, etched onto stainless steel plates
Hubbard for eternity, etched onto stainless steel plates, held in titanium containers filled with argon gas,
covered with gold, space shuttle tile material,
and buried in vaults dug into the ground
across the United States.
But that's the headquarters of it,
and it is a super secure compound.
And she was taken there because she began to question
the choices and sanity of her husband.
And displeased him in whatever fashion,
and I talk about that in the book,
and my
interactions with Shelley and one of the last interactions I had with her when
she had been left at the gold property, which is where the whole was up in
Riverside County. And David was down in Los Angeles. And I had gone to see him
about something and came back. And she wanted to see me right away. And I had gone to see him about something and came back and she wanted to see me right away
And I went to see her and she sort of
Nonsanly asked or tried to nonsanately ask in the conversation
Did you notice if Dave was wearing his gold or his platinum wedding ring and it was like
Shelley
Seriously
You're worried about whether Dave is still wearing a wedding ring?
Oh shit, things are bad.
And she vanished very shortly there.
What year was this?
2005.
And how was she?
How was she as an individual?
A lot of people found her to be, I don't know, cold and sort of nasty.
I had known her since she was 12 years old on the Apollo.
I had a very different relationship with her.
She was always very kind to me.
I talk in the book about Shelley coming to wake me up to tell me that I had to go to clear water
because my childhood died. This is her right here. Yes, that's her
They're not very flattering photographs those photographs by the way, but
she is
And and oddly she looks almost in that big one she looks almost like Mary Sue Hubbard, a very similar look to Mary
Sue Hubbard at her age.
And I was going to make the point, Patrick, that Elrond Hubbard also disappeared his wife.
Mary Sue Hubbard was the head of the Guardians office, which was the predecessor of the Office
of Special Affairs, which I became the head of.
Look at that.
Red head curly hair.
Yeah.
And it was sort of similar facial feet, you know, that thin sort of hair.
Very interesting.
But can you go back to a picture of what David Miscavige looks like?
And correct me if I'm wrong.
He doesn't do interviews at all these days.
He did one.
He did long ago was that 2003 or something.
So he hasn't done an interview in 20 years almost.
Correct.
And that's intentional, obviously.
He does not want to be what?
Seen heard what?
He actually really want to know
where you're going with the wife
because you're saying the similarities
between miscavages wife and Elron Hubbard's wife.
What were similarities?
So she was trying to, and then she also disappeared. Why and Elron Hubbard's wife. What were similarities? So she was trying to, and then she also disappeared.
Why did Elron Hubbard's wife disappear?
Because Elron Hubbard's wife was in charge
of the Gavians office and ended up being prosecuted
along with 10 other senior officials of Scientology
for infiltrating the US government.
And seeking, infiltrating like planning spies and stealing documents, tapping the IRS
conference room and various other things. And she was prosecuted and ended up going to prison.
When she got out of Hubbard believed that Mary Sue and all these people that were in the Guardians office who had been doing exactly
what he laid out to do in his writings about how to deal with the enemies of Scientology had
created a threat to him, a personal threat that he may be dragged into this. He was named as an unindicted co-conspiracy by the
DOJ in that prosecution. He knew they could never pin anything on him because every one of
the people from Mary Sue down said, Oh, I'll run Hubbard didn't know anything about this,
which was bullshit. He did. But he believed that Mary Sue was now a big threat to him and that the government
may be able to get to him through Mary Sue. So she was put in a home, a house that was
in Los Angeles and had a household staff that was provided and reported to David Misgavitch,
and he never saw her again.
And he never even communicated with her again.
There was no written communication even.
It used to be that when they were in separate locations
that they would write letters to one another
and the messengers, which I was talking about,
the people that were with Hubbard on a day-to-day basis,
used to answer those.
And then eventually, he said,
I don't wanna hear from her anymore,
and they didn't even get responded to,
or if they did, he never even saw them.
His own wife was having letters written to her
by her husband, who were actually composed by people like me,
Commodore's Messengers.
Um,
Mascavitch believed that Shelley was a threat to him because for a long, long time, Shelley
had been by Mascavitch's side.
Whenever Mascavitch went anywhere, Shelley was there.
She was the COB, which is what he calls himself the chairman of the board, even though he's
not actually on the board, because he doesn't want to get served through corporate means.
The COB assistant was Shelley, and Shelley was with Dave everywhere.
Shelley was the one that hired the people for Tom Cruise's household
Shelley was the one that would accompany Dave to well
Shelley was there with Dave and two or three other people when Tom married Nicole
IntelliRide
that they were inseparable
Shelley then became convinced that maybe Dave was off the rails, and there are a few other things that came up with, you know, her not carrying out his wishes.
And so he perceived her as a threat, because if there was one person in Scientology that the leading officials like myself, or Norman
Stake, or Geomler serve, or the other people who had prominent positions in Scientology,
if there was one person that people would listen to, in addition to David, it was Shelley.
They trusted her. Absolutely.
And the ones like us, like me,
that had known her for way longer than we'd known Dave,
trusted her perhaps more than Dave.
Simply because you felt she was more real,
she was authentic, she was straight up,
and she would tell you how she feels.
I mean, if you look at those eyes right there,
the liars eyes look very confident, happy,
chill, her eyes, you can tell there is, you know,
uh, just anguish, like,
that's the wife right there.
Yeah, to the left.
You can see there's some way question about David
miscavage, because it's,
is it fair to say that in like the,
to use the Holy Trinity analogy,
it's Elron Hubbard at the top,
and then you have David Miscavige and Tom Cruise,
is that sort of the big three of Scientology?
Yeah, that's exactly right.
Okay, just got that.
That's the big three.
Got it.
I just Googled something, and it's become very apparent,
I want to understand this about David Miscavige.
Napoleon Bonaparte, Napoleon Complex, is five foot six.
David Miscavige, five foot three.
Right.
Okay, so you've spent, I'm just making the comparison right there.
I mean, to be a five foot...
You're gonna go there.
I'm going. I'm here. That's fine.
Adam, you can have a flat tire.
Adam, many. Just saying, like, that's not a big guy.
It's for someone to be Machiavellian and take over
and be ruthless and to be cunning and make all these things happen,
is it because maybe people were like,
ah, he's just a little guy.
He's not going to do anything with his legs.
I don't worry about him.
He's just a little, you can kind of dismiss a guy like that,
but behind closed doors, a guy like that, cunning.
He's, you know, a chip on his shoulder.
We talked about that yesterday.
Is that something that maybe drove him to the top
is saying, listen, people account me out.
I'm, you know, a tiny little guy.
What is that?
Well, people, people speculated that about that a lot.
I don't think I has anything to do with how big he was
physically.
His dad talked quite a lot about what he was like growing up
because he was very small and he was asthmatic and he had difficulty with a lot of things like his dad tells a
sort of famous story about David not being qualified for pop-worn a football
because he didn't weigh enough so he took weights and put them in his pocket so
he could play even though he was an undersized run
And Ron miscavaged yeah that guy his dad who I knew very well and had known I knew Ron miscavaged senior before I knew David I knew Ron miscavaged senior because he was friends with my parents at
Elrond Hubbard's home in St. Hill. And I met him and his wife and David
and his brother and two sisters all well before they were ever,
David was even in the sea organ.
And he's almost on your and and layers side of the things
where he's a defector.
Correct.
The father of David miscavaged,
the leader of Scientology is openly not a Scientologist
defector of Scientology, right?
Yes, unfortunately he passed away recently,
so there's not is anymore, he's a was, but yes, exactly.
And he appeared on the aftermath,
and he had a podcast, which I went on a number of times.
And yes, he's a wonderful guy.
He's also short, that doesn't make him an asshole. He
was, he wasn't an asshole. He is, I don't know that that David miscavages physical
stature has anything to do with that. I think his personality type is what really counts.
I'm gonna ask you a question.
So, yeah.
Is he the type of person where he would watch an interview
like this because he wants to know everything
or is he the type of person that's like,
I don't wanna read anything that says anything negative
about me or anybody that says anything negative
about our church?
What's his personality?
Because there's two different types of leaders.
Right.
Which one is he?
He's the former.
But he wouldn't watch this.
He would have someone watch it and make notes
of every single thing that was said about him.
He didn't give a fuck about the rest of it.
Just what said about him?
I want to see exactly what was said about me.
God.
He's going to hear about the height thing.
I'm sorry.
Yeah, yeah.
Adam, you're in deep trouble.
Sure. I have a bunch of ways. So, so, so, so let me let me let me let me let me let me
continue with this part here. If you can go to that Tampa Bay Times with the
illustration about how much real estate they own and it is the is the what is
division is division to be a country the vision to be its own society
because this is Tampa Bay Times, okay?
I mean, it doesn't get worse
than your own local paper writing about you, right?
And it says, clear takeover,
how Scientology it's downtown clear water footprint
in three years, okay?
So go for it.
This is in three years, not 50 years, three years.
Go for it. Okay, so that years, not 50 years, three years. Go for it.
Okay, so that's one guy go up.
Then it grows into couple right there. They keep buying picking up keep going keep going.
They keep buying up all the real estate keep going.
Keep going. Keep they're buying all that real estate, keep going, keep going,
keep going, timeline, keep going.
That's all that's left in that community.
They've bought pretty much every single piece of land and property
in clear water. So what is the vision? What is his solution to say, I think internationally, we can have momentum because people are starting to figure this out. So let's have a massive
community that we build it here, similar to let's just say certain churches did it in,
you know, in Salt Lake City, or some churches that...
The Vatican, I'm wrong. is that kind of what he is
strategy is what's the vision of the church?
Okay, there's a few answers to this one.
Yes, it is the vision that clear water and Scientology
announced this in 2000.
I think it was to become the first Scientology city on
earth clear water.
And this is pursuant to Hubbard's objective of bringing the governments and society
into complete compliance with the aims and policies of Scientology.
This is what he said. Clear water is the microcosm of a bigger thrust of Scientology under the control of David
Mascavitch. And this goes back also in part to the fact that Scientology is tax
exempt, because you cannot as an exempt organization accumulate liquid wealth
and not spend it on anything. Because the theory of exemption is that you are providing services that the government
would otherwise have to provide.
So you have to provide some sort of a public benefit.
If you're just raking in millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions dollars and
not doing anything with it, you're outside of the scope of what should be an exempt organization.
But if you are purchasing property to provide service to your congregation, the IRS is prohibited
effectively from looking behind any of those transactions and going, well, you don't
really need that building.
You don't really need this one because that would be making, you know, impromissible under
the first amendment encroachment of government into the policies and practices of a religion. So the genius of this is Scientology under Mascarvich has bought hundreds and hundreds
of millions of dollars worth of property.
That remains on the asset sheet of Scientology, so it's not like disappearing anywhere, because ultimately
what reflects according to Hubbard, the success of Scientology is its total assets.
That is the measure of success of Scientology, the total assets, cash, gold, bank accounts, properties, real property, all of that accumulated
is kept track of to the dollar every single week.
And these property assets have become like the new Scientology has become a real estate empire. And clear water is sort of the, as
Scientology shrinks in numbers and influence around the world, which is
certainly happening, and that is happening primarily due to the internet and
the proliferation of media coverage that has now occurred about what really goes on in Scientology, it is consolidating
at its, quote, spiritual headquarters in Clearwater, Florida.
And Tracy McManus, the reporter at the Tampa Bay Times, has been doing a magnificent job
of tracking exactly what's going on because a lot of those properties are being purchased now by
shady LLCs that are really just Scientology fronts or Scientologists who are controlled by
if you're a Scientologist in downtown Clearwater and you buy a property and Scientology David
Miscavich tells you okay sell it to us you're you're selling it. No, no, so by the way, this goes back, again,
let me be the devil's advocate.
Yes.
This takes me to, when Walt Disney wanted to buy all the land
in Orlando, nobody would sell it to him
because they didn't want him to build a theme park.
And he went and bought all the land through other people's LLC.
And then eventually years later,
they found that it was really him that was buying up everything.
And then he built Disney, right?
Now Catholic Church has done this, Mormonism's done this, Muslims have done this.
Business, I can give you companies who have done this.
Certain people don't want a certain individual of power to move into their communities that
don't allow it to happen.
You know, a Jeff Bezos wanted to move into New York and they wanted to buy all this land and AOC
and others didn't want it. They pushed them out. He went elsewhere to somebody. A, a, a Jeff Bezos
isn't Elrond Hubbard. So, or a miscabit. So, I understand what they're doing. That still doesn't
bother me. Now, Tracy, who's writing about all this stuff, who's local, is Tracy feeling safe
to expose all this stuff? How was she
getting away with them, not targeting her, her family going after her hardcore? Because
she probably doesn't have to, doesn't feel like she's in a safe situation if she's constantly
exposing them.
Uh, I would agree with you. She's got courage. And there are a number of people in the
world these days that have the balls to say.
I don't give a shit what your reputation is. I don't care whether you're going to threaten me or
whether you're going to follow me or you're going to steal my garbage or you're going to put up
cameras or you're going to go to my family or whatever. I believe I have an obligation to do the
right thing. And she happens to be one of those people as do you, as did
Megan Shirley when she put me on her show despite the threats while other media, big
media are still cowed by Scientology and the threats that they get and the worry that
the producers are going to be followed home, et cetera, et cetera. The difference between Walt Disney or Amazon or any of these other examples, maybe not
any, maybe the Vatican is a little different, but generally, the assumption is that the organization that is conducting those sort of activities to acquire property
and build something that they want to build or create a distribution warehouse for Amazon
or whatever, that those companies aren't inherently hurting people.
Now everybody could disagree about whether Amazon is good, bad, whether Walt Disney and Disney World
is good or bad. There's obviously things that are bad about everything. But in my view, and certainly
the view of Tracy and a lot of other people, the inherent problem with Scientology is not its simple beliefs about the reactive
mind or zenu or anything. It is the fact that it is an organization that has a dedicated
arm and branch that only works on destroying people they don't like and seeking to destroy people they
don't like and spends tax-free tax exempt money on doing so.
That is what's wrong and that's what has to be ended.
Let me push back again.
Let me push.
Go ahead.
So here's my push back.
So somebody may say, again, the question I'm trying to find out is what do they see themselves at?
Is it a religion? Is it a government? Is it a country? What do they view themselves as because
they may somebody on the inside there may say, what are you talking about? The government's been doing this for
a long this time. A political party just targets on one political side and just goes and
writes them constantly. What is the difference between what the government gets
to do versus what I'm able to do? And if somebody wants to come after us, we're
gonna go after them. The mob did this, the government does this, churches don't
do this, sports teams do it, media company do it, you know, somebody that leaves
one place to states, a talent leaves to another place to go and demonize this
person of how bad of a person they are and hey, keep Tesla spots open in northern California.
If you don't, I'm going to move to Austin, screw you.
I'm moving to Austin.
Let's demonize who Elon Musk is what a bad person he is, what a bad terrible.
This is very normal.
When I tell you normal, I don't mean it's that.
It's healthy.
All I mean is the fact that a lot of other organizations
use these manipulative tactics to do that.
But here's a question.
The question I got is, does miscavage,
does the church of Scientology view them as a country?
Do they view themselves as a church?
Do they view themselves as a,
you know, their own society, a secret society?
How do they really view themselves? Because the way they view themselves
will dictate why they're making the moves that they're making.
They view themselves as a, they view themselves as a bubble,
a world of Scientology that is the only place that has all of the answers and that
everything outside of that world is uninformed or ignorant or evil. And that
ultimately Scientology must take over the rest of society, the rest of the world in order to save it from itself.
And you're going to say, Patrick, yep, that's no different than the fundamentalist, West
Rebaptist people or the this.
And that's true.
It's not.
It's not different than that.
But they pretend that that's not the case.
But the truth of the matter is, Scientology wants to take over
the governments of all the world.
Hubbard said the objective of the Office of Special Affairs
is to bring the governments and societies of the world
into complete compliance with the aims and policies
of Scientology.
They want to be everything. They don't just want to be the city of clear
water or control the city of clear water or they you think they want to be everything like
world wide, but is it? Yes, absolutely. But the membership has been declining though. Membership
isn't growing. What they want and and what they tell themselves they're accomplishing and what reality is is two very different things.
I mean, you will hear Scientologists say, we're changing the world.
We're bringing education to the countries of South America.
We're doing this. We're saving people here, we're saving people there.
And it's the internal bullshit PR
that they have fed propaganda of,
we found a guy in, you know, Zimbabwe who said,
blah, blah, and that gets translated into the internal
pitch that we've got Hubbard Tech in all schools in Zimbabwe and
Scientologists buy that shit. You know who you know where this now takes me to
Where this now takes me to is
Any church, you know auto encourage debate, right?
Any anybody any political any family auto encourage their kids to debate, right? Any body, any political, any family auto-encouraged
their kids to debate, right?
Go debate and find a better argument
than the one I got.
Science is supposed to be debate.
Everything's supposed to be debate, right?
Who's the person two and a half years,
the last two and a half years that has encouraged people
that you can't debate scientists anymore
because it's a fact?
Who's that guy?
What's the guy's, Fauci?
Fauci, right?
So I'm similarity between Fauci and Miss Kavich
on where you were going with the whole, you know,
a high situation.
But Fauci is a guy that is also driven by power
or eventually was my way or the highway.
You don't question science,
therefore you don't question me, right?
But this is America.
That doesn't work.
Americans are ones that like to question
and they want to have the freedom of speech
to say, well, I don't know about this.
And I don't know about that.
And I don't know about this.
And the moment people in America were silenced
if they disagreed, that didn't sit
with a lot of Americans because that's in our DNA.
Now, is the DNA of Scientology
to not question anything and just to follow?
Is that the DNA of a good loyal member
or is a loyal member one that says,
well, what about this and why do we do this
and why does this work out?
Are you not supposed to question anything in Scientology?
Nothing.
Perfect.
Then here's the point.
I got a book here that's called
from Dictatorship to Democracy.
And by Jean Sharp, I don't know if you've read it or not.
I have not.
So would you say, would you say the current model
is a totalitarian dictatorship type of a model?
Absolutely.
Okay, so let me read this to you.
So this is the last topic.
We can have a few other things we can talk about,
but I want to wrap it up on this.
So when it comes down to power,
he explains it in this chapter. He tells a story.
He says, in the feudal state of a Chuan, an old man survived by keeping monkeys in a service.
The people of Chu called him, Zhu Gong, which is monkey master, okay, which, hey, the book,
the movie, the master would Philipsy Moroffman, Amy Adams, Joaquin Phoenix, you know, exactly,
a movie that is very weird movie, very well done. And some people said that movie was towards Al-Ran Hubbard.
A lot of people said that's exactly what it was. Each morning the old man would assemble
the monkeys in this courtyard and order to elves one to lead the others to the mountains to gather
fruits from the bushes and trees. It was the rule that each monkey had to give one tenth of his
collection to the old man. Those who failed to do so would be ruthlessly flogged.
All the monkeys suffered bitterly, but they are not complained.
One day a small monkey asked the other monkey that the old man planned all the fruit trees
and bushes the other said, no, they grew naturally.
The small monkey further asked, can't we take the fruits without the old man's permission?
The others replied, yes, we all can. The small monkey further asked, can't we take the fruits without the old man's permission? The others replied, yes, we all can.
The small monkey continued, then why should we depend on the old man?
Why must we all serve him?
Before the small monkey was able to finish his statement, all the monkeys suddenly became
enlightened and awakened.
On the same night, watching that old man had fall asleep, the monkeys tore down all of the
barricades and the stockade and which they were confined and destroyed the stock gate entirely. They also took the
fruits of the old man, hadn't storage, brought it all to the woods and never returned the
old man finally died of starvation. Some men in the world ruled their people by tricks
and not by righteous principles. Aren't they just like the monkey master? Are they not
aware of the model head head and head-edness?
As soon as people become enlightened,
their tricks no longer work, right?
And it continues to say totalitarian power is power strong,
only if it does not have to be used often.
If totalitarian power must be used at all times
against the entire population,
it is unlikely to remain powerful for too long.
Since totalitarian regimes require more power for dealing with their subjects, then do their
other types of government, such regimes, standing greater need of widespread and dependable
compliance, habits amongst their people. More than that, they have to be able to count
on the active support of at least significant parts of the population in case of need. And then he wraps it up with what Nicola McAvelli said,
which we mentioned up earlier.
He said,
and he argued this in the prints,
which is this is why I don't think his strategy works.
I think he's getting in his own way of having any kind
of a shot of turning this into a real religion that spreads.
Who has the public as a whole life of his enemy can never make himself secure?
The greater his cruelty, the greater his cruelty, the weaker does his regime become.
And I've spoken to a lot of people and I sit there and I've watched this Ted Coppel interview
with him multiple times.
And I know people like that.
And I know people like that in sales,
you know, that have done very, very well for themselves.
I've done very, very well for myself in sales.
If you're able to get the other party to win and you win,
eventually keep doing business together,
eventually everybody wins.
They make money, you make money,
I'm going to talk into this Jewish guy
who had dealerships who's 35 years old,
show me six million dollars of cash,
and I've never seen that kind of money before,
21. I said, how the hell do you have $6 million of cash?
That's crazy.
Says, let me tell you one thing about Jews.
On why most Jews have money?
When one Jew makes money, five Jews make money.
We make money together.
He said, capitalism, if you really want to make a lot of money, as long as
everybody around you makes money and you make money, you're going to be fine.
If you're the only person that makes money and people around you do make money,
you're not going to be fine, right?
His model, when Mark Healey says he's making 50 bucks a month or $32 a month, whatever the number was.
Yep. And he's breaking it out saying over 16 years, he only made whatever the 26,000,
I don't remember what the number he said. This model, if it continues this way, it's just
a matter of time before it falls apart.
Correct.
Correct. Yes, correct. So what would be the of time before it falls apart, doesn't it? Yes, correct.
So what would be the tipping point for it to fall apart?
I think the tipping point that would rapidly make it fall apart would be if the IRS revoked
the exempt status of Scientology, not because of the revenue that it potentially generates, but because of the oversight.
Once you become a religious exempt organization, there is virtually no government oversight
and no transparency to what is happening with the finances.
You don't have to report anything to anybody. If Scientologists who are handing over large amounts of money to
Scientology found out that that money was not actually being spent for the things that they are
being told it is being spent on and instead found out that it was being spent on hiring endless
numbers of private investigators and lawyers to send
threat letters to the media and people to create ugly websites and shoot videos, smear
videos, that would result in a lot.
It's so contradictory to what Scientology tells the people who are giving them their support and money.
It would be the biggest sort of shocking expose that you could have happened in Scientology.
The unhigh authority of Scientology, David Muscavatt, who stands on stage and tells us all that Scientology is helping here and doing this and accomplishing this objective and and all of these things and that that is in fact bullshit
That would be a breaking point for Scientology
Rumors, I know you wrote something about John Travolta, you know
We'll kiss in a male miss, you know, kissing a male, missuring, you
know, whole story about that, you know, and to me, I don't think that's a big deal.
You know, that's like, okay, who cares?
You're in Hollywood, if you're in Hollywood, I've heard a lot of stranger stories then
John Travolta doing that.
But there's stories about, John a year ago, a story came out, I don't know exactly what
the headline was, that Travolta's thinking about stepping away from the church. Okay, that was one. Then over the years, you know,
you've heard stories about how strong Tom Cruise used to be on selling Scientology and
his interviews over the years. I've kind of mellowed out a little bit. He's no longer
that aggressive about recruiting it. Is that because behind closed doors, they're just saying,
hey, don't bring too much attention to it? Or is that because Hollywood agents are saying
it's not helping out your career?
Or is that because they're kind of like,
ah, this was great, it was life changing,
but I'm kind of moving,
I'm no longer gonna be the spokesperson like I once was.
Well, I don't think either of them are offering themselves up
as the spokesperson that they once were,
but I don't think that that isn't an indicator that they
are no longer devoted for Scientologists. I think Tom Cruise got a lot of pressure from movie studios
to, hey, you're supposed to be out there promoting movies, not promoting Scientology. And you know,
I talk about that in the book and his former publicist pet Kingsley and what happened when she was gone and that was her pitch to him. You shouldn't be promoting Scientology.
The movie studios are paying you a lot of money and these junkets that they put on are
to promote the movie, not your damn religion. That's not what people come here for. But
I will say that it has become increasingly difficult for a Tom Cruise or a
John Travolta to promote Scientology because if they are willing to talk
about it, there are a lot of questions that they can't answer that journalists
now know and understand from the exposure that has happened over the last 10 years.
And that makes it a very, very difficult thing for them to do.
And to the point where crews apparently at this point has requires reporters on any movie press junkets that they will not ask him
about Scientology and banned certain people
who have done Scientology exposés in the media
from attending his press junkets.
Still till today?
To today.
And that's why you don't hear him talking about it
and why you hear the merely mouth sort of responses
whenever this is brought up.
Like Elizabeth Moss has done a few interviews and people ask her and she's like, well, you
know, it's helped me.
And you know, this is not a subject that I should really, I'm not here to talk about that.
I'm here to talk about, handmaid stay all. And, you know, the idea of going out and saying,
Rar-Rah, Scientology has made my career
is no longer a viable thing for them to do.
Where's the celebrity center, by the way?
In Los Angeles, in Hollywood.
And, Craig Miller, we constantly reference Tom Cruise.
And whoever he's been married to at the time
You know Katie Holmes and the cold kid man Mimi Rogers. I get it
They're all affiliated with him even Travolta respect. I think you've even said Grant Cardone is a Scientologist
Yep, but how many other major names have joined Scientology in the last decade? None
Zero not not a one the only person who has emerged as a major name in the
last decade is Elizabeth Moss, but she was raised to Scientologist. I'm not even familiar with who that
is, but she's the star of Handmaid's tale. But also I just want to make some another point, Patrick,
about the John Travolta thing. The reason I put that in the book was not because I'm trying to expose John Travolta as being
gay or bisexual or anything.
It's because I'm saying that the reason that he will not come out and publicly say anything
about it is because of Scientology. There is absolutely no stigma these days
to a movie star coming out and saying,
I'm gay or I'm bisexual or I'm this or I'm that.
It's like, it's just irrelevant to the world at large.
But to John Travolta, I say in there,
I think he would rather be coming out and just admitting to his sexuality, whatever that may be.
But because Scientology is so anti-gay, and because they believe that he should be cured of his gainess through auditing, he can't do it.
He can't do it. That's a different point of view of why not coming out with your gay or bisexual.
But the fact that Hollywood is telling Tom, you're here to promote your movies, not Scientology.
Doesn't that kind of say that Hollywood is officially taking president over the
Church of Scientology that he's more loyal to his career than Scientology? More
loyal to the money than Scientology. Yeah, it does. And I think that there has
been a definite shift. I don't see Tom Cruise being a guy that's obsessed with
money. And I know you and I know.
No, let me explain to you why.
I don't.
And I think money's attracted to him.
I don't think he's attracted to money.
I think he's attracted to being the best at what he does.
Since four years old, I got one or to be an actor.
Tom Cruise, it's not like he all of a sudden at 16 years old.
So I'm gonna go be an actor.
Since four years old, I got one or to be an actor.
And then when you you know when you become
Mission impossible when you become top gun days of thunder, you know for the July when you know last samurai when you
When you produce these types of you know move and by the way, I'm missing 50 other great flicks that he's been a part of right
Your the market's gonna pay you, you know,
the market's gonna pay, I don't know how much money
he made on Top Gun.
Rumor has it 200, 300, 300 million.
I don't know the exact number.
He got paid and well deserved
because the movie did over a billion dollars.
But I don't know if it would be money
because at that point of like you said in the clip
where you said, you can't tell Tom Cruise what to do.
I don't think anybody can tell Tom Cruise what to do, right? You, one person can. Except David miscavaged. Well, but I think he's also
lost it because if he's no longer talking about Scientology, and he's talking about movies, because now
David officially also can't tell him what to do. Either David's getting softer or Tom's kind of
becoming a little bit more to say, I'm going to do my career thing. One of the two is taking place.
a little bit more to say, I'm going to do my career thing. One of the tools taken place.
Yeah, well, I'm not there anymore, so I can't, I can't like exactly say, I believe that
Tom Cruise is a very, very strong interest in money.
But I will also say that it's a pretty hard position now for David miscavage to insist that Tom Cruz go out and do interviews about
Scientology. Why?
Because David miscavage won't
The leader of Scientology will not allow himself to be even be put in a position where a reporter may have access to him to
ask him a question off the cuff.
He hides.
He let alone being unwilling to go do 60 minutes
or come and sit here, he would never do that.
How's he gonna tell Tom Cruise that you need to?
How is he gonna tell Tom Cruise that you need to?
Well, he has for many years that he's promoted it, right? How is it going to tell Tom Cruise that you need to?
Well he has for many years that he's promoted it, right?
Because if that, the strategy was to get celebrities.
Is the whole story about David Beckham, you know, football field, all that?
Is that true?
That the Church of Scientology built a football field and said, is that true?
Yes.
Can you do you mind sharing that story?
I wrote about it in the book.
Yeah.
When Tom Cruise became buddies with David Beckham and Victoria and started attending football
games in Madrid and et cetera, et cetera, I can't even remember all the whole story.
Mascabbitch had a football pitch built at the gold base property.
And this was not just, you know, we painted some lines on the grass out on a field and put up a couple
of goals. No, the field was leveled and laid with perfect turf and irrigation and everything.
And a person was assigned full time to care for the soccer field. A sea or remember, nobody played on it. It was there because Tom, who had
come fairly frequently to that property, lived there, taken, taken in services there with
Nicole, Tom had a plan to get David Beckham to come to that property. There were a lot
of people that came and had been brought through the auspices of Tom Cruise
to that gold property to be pitched Scientology.
Ron Howard was one of them.
When he was doing foreign away,
Ron Howard came to the property and was wind and dined
and let's show you around and tell you
how wonderful Scientology is.
That part of the celebrity world of Scientology
is not appealing to the masses,
but using the lines of influence
that those people have to seek
to get other people involved.
Steven Spielberg, I write about that in the book too.
Anyone who, and governments, I mean, Tom Cruise, I flew to London with David Mascavitch and Tom
Cruise to go visit the specially designated representatives of Tony Blair's government to seek to
get tax exempt status for the Church of Scientology in the United
Kingdom.
And that was set up by Tom Cruise contacting Tony Blair.
So these celebrities, the big celebrities, John Travolta went to visit the State Department
to complain about the treatment of Scientology in Germany. These people are used to solve problems
and seek to create more influence for Scientology and invalel itself into important parts of the world.
Last last thing here, can you pull up the club with Tommy Davis? Pull up the clip with Tommy Davis.
The Tommy Davis do what you would do, where you guys both same positions.
Is it similar things you would do?
Yes.
Tommy Davis effectively replace me.
Tommy Davis replaced you.
And when I was put in the hole, he was brought in to be the spokesperson for Scientology.
I want you to see this.
Here's John Sweeney from BBC, trying to talk to John Sweeney and the way John Sweeney reacts is just, I mean, you want you to see this. Here's John Sweeney from BBC trying to talk to John Sweeney
and the way John Sweeney reacts is just,
I mean, you just have to watch this, go for it.
I thought it was gonna prove.
Yeah.
Now watch this.
Play the one I just sent you right now,
the other one.
Play this one now here.
It's very interesting.
And by the way, this angle is not fair
because there's a better one that shows the angle
of Tommy Davis, but I just want you to watch this.
Now, this is John Sweeney losing it.
Press play.
I'm nothing extra non-brain.
And when asked in that case why he kept making the accusation,
Swini's reaction was unexpected to say the least.
No, you should have used that.
You're not listening to me.
You're not listening.
I can be kidding.
All right, it's a you. You are not the last. You're not listening. You
What's what's going on here that the feud between the two because to me it looks like you know
John got under Tommy skin first and then second time around because you don't see who's around There's a bunch of Scientologists around with cameras on this thing. Yeah, I saw you you're there as well
You're standing to his right right this. This is the reporter. Yeah.
This is from BBC and he's right there.
Tommy and him are right there.
I made that video.
Yeah.
This video with that narration, I made that video.
Wow.
I talk about this at some length in the book.
Tommy Davis told David Mascarvich,
I will get Sweeney.
I will cause him to lose it.
And there is a lot that goes on before this particular clip
of taking him through this thing called the industry
of death exhibit about psychiatry and Los Angeles,
which in and of itself is a,
is insane, but
Tommy Davis had spent the entire day up to that point,
needling John Swini, needle, needle, needle, needle, needle, needle,
calling him names, not allowing him to finish his questions.
Like just things that were being done to get him agitated.
And eventually he lost it. being done to get him agitated.
And eventually he lost it.
And that's a pretty infamous thing that happened.
Swini has still not lived it down to this day.
And we made great hay out of that.
But I write in the book about exactly what happened
and how this was carried out and it was being done
specific. Tommy Davis was sending text back and forth to David miscavich while
this was going on saying, you know, I'm doing this. I'm gonna get him. I'm gonna
pull this off. I'm gonna rip him tear him a dozen new assholes. And it's tough to do it doesn't.
Yeah, whatever.
But meanwhile, John Sweeney had been repeatedly asking, we would like to have an interview
with Mr. Mascabbitch.
And the response was always, he's too busy, he doesn't know anything about you, people.
He's like, you know, it's like you asking for an interview with the Pope.
You know, you're not even rising to his level of consciousness.
And while that's happening, there's text messages coming in constantly to Tommy about, this
is what you need to do next.
Here's what you need to do next. Here's what you need to do next. And Tommy made a big mistake and said that he subsequent
to this, there was a sort of a moment of calm
and Sweeney says, you know, Tommy,
I wanna have an interview with David Miscavich
what's happening with that.
And he said, I'll never, you can never have an interview
with Miscavich.
I talk to him every day and you're not going to get an interview. And Tommy
Davis realized what a big fuck up that was to tell John Swini that he talks to him all
the time. And in fact, that night, Tommy Davis took off and drove to Las Vegas and hid
at the wind hotel. He abandoned his position because he knew what was coming.
And that is how I ended up in London. I talk about that in there because John Swini went back
to London. John Travolta was doing the premiere of Wild Hogs at Piccadilly Circus.
Muscavich was scared that John Swini would get into the press junket and ask
John Travolta embarrassing or questions that he couldn't answer.
So I was put on a plane to London to go deal with John Swini and warn John about what was
coming, which is where this incident comes of the masseuse because I happen to be in John's suite at night,
talking to him and whatever.
That's very, very strange to me.
But the one question that gives them
a lot of credibility is if it's such a bad organization,
if it is, then how come IRS hasn't revoked their tax status?
How come the FBI hasn't, if the FBI can raid the Mar-Lago and get access to papers and
stuff like that and they can go to all these, who was the congressman we had on Scott Perry
and they went to his door in August and, hey, hand us
your phone and has all the text messages communication.
If this organization is so bad, how come the government's not worried about them?
Well, they are.
I mean, I, you can't say that the government is not worried about them.
Are they, and have they acted?
There is a big problem that the government has
acting against Scientology or two big problems. One, the money that they have to hire lawyers
that will mean it will drag on forever. And two, the fact that they hide behind the first
amendment. I talk in the book about when we were trying to get exemption from the IRS and the
impact that Waco had on government agencies being willing to go after even fringe kooky,
you know, crazy religious organizations and how badly they got burned and how that had an impact on their willingness to grant
exempt status to Scientology.
And you know, these factors have been used by Scientology very smartly to prevent things
when the FBI was doing an investigation in Los Angeles in 2009, 2010 into human trafficking,
they went and hired the former AUS attorney for the Southern District of California who
had left and went and shmoosed and said, you know, you don't want to get involved in this
sort of case with Scientology.
And every government agency has to make decisions, and particularly law enforcement, has to make
decisions about where do they devote their resources.
Are they going to go after the drug smugglers, or are they going to go after the quote, religion?
Are they going, and a lot of it has to do with what is politically expedient, what's going
to look good in the media, and you talk about Mar-a-Lago
or whatever, those decisions get made with a lot of other factors outside of just, is this
something that justice should be served with or not? There are political, financial, PR, all these agencies have all these factors that go into
this and unfortunate.
I mean, I keep saying every, you know, Lierlife said a hundred times.
When will the government finally act?
10 seconds.
Quick.
Is this a true quote by Elrond Hubbard? He says, you don't get rich writing
science fiction. If you want to get rich, you start a religion. Is that an actual quote?
There is some dispute about it, but I believe that it is. There's always these disputes about
these things. Some person says it is, and some person says it isn't. But you know, it matches,
it matches what happened. Yeah, that's my point. So, fascinating interview. Appreciate you
for coming out. Book right now if you haven't ordered. If you look at Amazon, right now,
it's number one bestseller. The audible version, the hard book, you know, the hard cover.
It's top three in the topic of Scientology. Fourth one is Leah Remini and an even fifth one.
Sixth one is Dynetics.
So all their four books are ahead of Dynetics,
but a billion years, if you haven't ordered it,
if you want to learn more about what's going on
this organization, if you had one point was approached,
and you want to learn more about it,
we're gonna put the link in the description,
as well as in the chat for you guys to go order it. Mike, once again,
thank you for coming out. And for me, I've been around this environment for a while. I judge
people by my experience with them. I've never been on the inside of sat down with you. And
Mark, he'd leave both of you, see organization. He did not move up at the levels that you did.
He was at a different place, but there are too many people
who are on the inside that are coming out sharing similar
stories and it's deeply concerning to the average person
that's not on the inside that says,
hey, you may want to do your own due diligence
before learning about it.
And, you know, question it all.
I think to me, that's the biggest thing with us
in our family and what we do in business is question, question, question. That think to me, that's the biggest thing with us and our family and what we do in business
is question, question, question.
That's how you get to the truth,
but appreciate you for doing that, Ben.
Truly, appreciate you for coming out.
Thank you, thank you.
A pleasure, pleasure.
So Tyler, are we doing anything else this week
or this is it, this is it this week.
We will not be doing anything till next week,
Hank, have a wonderful weekend.
We'll do it again next week.
Take care everybody, bye bye bye bye bye. Thank you.