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News: IAS plans in Germany

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Martin Hunt

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Aug 24, 1997, 3:00:00 AM8/24/97
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Scoop:

The IAS has plans for Germany. In a recent event, they said they
need to "terminatedly handle" the "situation" in Germany by staging
a mass crusade in Berlin, something like the Portland Crusade.

The cult hopes to attract 25,000 people (I think they're nuts; last
mass demo, all they could manage was 1,500), and will probably bring
in the big guns, Revolting, Cruisecontrol, etc.

The date is set for the day after the IAS Int Day on October 7th:
October 8th, 1997, Berlin, watch out.

They also plan to flood the market with 6,000,000 Freedom Magazines.

(Note: due to noise levels on ars, I plan to insert "News:" into
all header of messages of this sort: documents, reports, transcripts,
etc. It should help poor Rod, if no one else. Kill on From: "martinh@"
and not "News:" in Subject: means you won't miss any informational
postings I make, currently averaging about 1-2 per week over the
long-term - a rate I don't expect to pick up any time soon.)

ttyl,
martin.

--
Cogito, ergo sum. http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Parthenon/1332

"People who would aspire to transform the world should start by
transforming their own life and let it serve as an inspiration for
others. Hubbard wrote best about what he most needed to learn."
- Joe Harrington <joe...@worldnet.att.net>


Lars Baehren

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Aug 25, 1997, 3:00:00 AM8/25/97
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From Tilman's reaction :
> >• They [Germans] are distributing black condoms that
> > read, "No Scientologists."
>
> don't know

The only similar thing I can remember, were the ballons handed out
during the demonstration in Munich (May 3, 1997) with a skull on it (as
used for warning from poison):

http://cips02.physik.uni-bonn.de/~baehren/images/munich23.jpg
http://cips02.physik.uni-bonn.de/~baehren/images/munich18.jpg


--
Lars B"ahren
_______________________________________________________________________
http://ibm.rhrz.uni-bonn.de/~uzs1dc/
http://cips02.physik.uni-bonn.de/~baehren/digest.html

For first time in a long time ... everything was right in my world
... and then I woke up.

Cornelius Krasel

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Aug 26, 1997, 3:00:00 AM8/26/97
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Sister Clara (cl...@holsoft.demon.co.uk) wrote:
> In message <3415a5fb...@news.snafu.de>
> til...@berlin.snafu.de (Tilman Hausherr) wrote:

[quoting some purported IAS source]

> > * They [Germans] are distributing black condoms that
> > read, "No Scientologists."
>
> Are Germans boasting about the lengths of their penises or do they use a very
> small font?

The Journal of Biological Chemistry would for years print parts of the
article in so-called "miniprint". Each time the footnote was: "Miniprint
is easily readable with a standard magnifying glass".

Sorry for being off-topic :-)

--Cornelius.

--
/* Cornelius Krasel, U Wuerzburg, Dept. of Pharmacology, Versbacher Str. 9 */
/* D-97078 Wuerzburg, Germany email: pha...@rzbox.uni-wuerzburg.de SP3 */
/* "Science is the game we play with God to find out what His rules are." */

Warrior

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Aug 27, 1997, 3:00:00 AM8/27/97
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Have you ever wondered why L. Ron Hubbard used the name "Bulgravia"
in his "Simon Bolivar" policy letter?

To informed persons, the "Simon Bolivar" policy letter is known as
HCO PL 12 February 1967 "Admin[istrative] Know-How - The Responsibility
of Leaders". This writing of Hubbard's talks about "power", the respons-
ibilities of leaders, and the duties of those persons who are subordinate
to a person in a position of power. Hubbard defines a "POWER" (caps in
original) to mean "a leader or one who exerts wide primary influence on the
affairs of men". This policy letter is a mandatory study requirement for
those in executive positions in the Scientology cult.

Hubbard talks about Simon Bolivar's errors, saying "Simon Bolivar was
a very strong character. He was one of the richest men in South America.
He had real personal ability given to only a handful on the planet. He was
a military commander without peer in history. Why he would fail and die
an exile to be later deified is thus of great interest. What mistakes did
he make?" Hubbard references the book _The Four Seasons of Manuela_, by
Victor W.von Hagen, a Mayflower Dell paperback published October 1966.

Those familiar with Hubbard's "ethics formulas" for "POWER" (dealing
with holding a position of power) and "POWER CHANGE" (dealing with turning
over a position of power to another leader) know that the above-referenced
policy letter was intended by Hubbard to illustrate and explain key laws
(in Hubbard's view) necessary to the successful wielding of responsibility
and what one must do when he moves off of (leaves) a position of power.
Undoubtably this is a key policy letter in David Miscavige's "hat pack",
since he is the successor to Hubbard's position of authority in Scientology.

There is much I could say about the "Simon Bolivar" policy letter,
especially with regards to its application by the leaders of the cult of
Scientology. But the purpose of this article is not to summarize and
analyze the entire policy letter. The policy letter is one of Hubbard's
longest; it runs almost ten pages in length.

The section I wish to comment upon may be found on page nine of the
issue, where Hubbard states:

"Man is too aberrated to understand at least 7 things about Power:"

Point five states: [my comments in brackets]

"When you move off a point of power, pay all your obligations on the
nail [hush money], empower all your friends completely [give them
responsibilities and authority] and move off with your pockets full of
artillery [weapons cache at Gold?], potential blackmail [Life History
forms and sec-check confessions] on every erstwhile rival, unlimited
funds in your private account [OTC, Lichtenstein, Luxembourg, Kreditbank,
etc] and the addresses of experienced assasssins [scary!] and go live in
Bulgravia and bribe the police [a favorite OSA method, IMO].

When I first read this policy letter, I had an "MU" on the term
"Bulgravia". I looked it up in the dictionary and an encyclopedia but
never found it. That was in 1974 or 1975. I assumed at the time that
Hubbard was using a fictitious name for a country. The thought that
he might have meant "Bulgaria" entered my mind, but no matter. I didn't
consider it important whether it was a real place or not, and apparently
it wasn't, as far as I could determine. Perhaps I should have asked
Mo Budlong, Mary Sue Hubbard or Jane Kember!

Since that point in time over 20 years ago, I have learned exactly
what the reference was all about. As is the case with lots of Hubbard's
policy letters, the "Simon Bolivar" policy is for public consumption.
But there exists MUCH MORE on the subject of "power" and Hubbard's
actual goals, programmes [sic], targets, plans, etc ("Admin Scale" stuff)
as to EXACTLY what Hubbard intended.

It is my studied opinion that Hubbard chose BULGRAVIA out of a VERY
clearly motivated purpose. The area known as BULGRAVIA was seen by
Hubbard to be one easily infiltrated and controlled (my opinion).

BULGRAVIA is another one of Hubbard's acronyms. He LOVED acronyms
(not my opinion). BULGRAVIA means the region consisting of
BULgaria, GReece, Albania and YugoslaVIA.

For some VERY VERY enlightening information on the hidden intelligence
activities of Scientology, go to:

<http://w4u.eexi.gr/~antbos/SCIENTOL.HTM> (main page)

<http://w4u.eexi.gr/~antbos/BULGRAVI.HTM> (Project Bulgravia)

<http://w4u.eexi.gr/~antbos/COSDOCUM.HTM> (many documents on OSA, CMO,
INCOMM, CIA intervention, HCO Justice Manual, Dead-Agenting, PTSness,
Security threats, Infiltration, Media handling, OSA Reports policies,
German OSA, DSAs, OSA Int Confidential Greece ARM Handling Program,
just to name some.

I find the pages to be very informative, since they show Scientology's
HIDDEN agenda. It gives a look at some MORE of the stuff that Scientology
doesn't want you to see.

I hope more people will link to the pages I mention...

Warrior

Tilman Hausherr

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Aug 27, 1997, 3:00:00 AM8/27/97
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In <5u1n8o$8...@drn.zippo.com>, Warrior <war...@electrotex.com> wrote:

>
> BULGRAVIA is another one of Hubbard's acronyms. He LOVED acronyms
>(not my opinion). BULGRAVIA means the region consisting of
>BULgaria, GReece, Albania and YugoslaVIA.

I think Hubbard came up with "Bulgravia" long before Gerhard Haag and
his buddies wrote the acronym. And I think he didn't even mean an
fictious country; he was just too clueless to write "Bulgaria"
correctly. Americans are generally not too good in geography. I remember
some statistic about a significant % not being able to find America on a
"blind" globe. Let's not forget that each time Hubbard "researched"
something, he made basic errors.

--- Tilman Hausherr [KoX, SP4]
til...@berlin.snafu.de http://www.snafu.de/~tilman/#cos

Resistance is futile. You will be enturbulated. Xenu always prevails.

NEW: Disenturbulate your website with "Xenu's Link Sleuth"!
http://www.snafu.de/~tilman/xenulink.html

Bernie

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Aug 27, 1997, 3:00:00 AM8/27/97
to

Steve Jebson <naismith@spam_blocker.sprintmail.com> wrote in
article <34039FD5.C54@spam_blocker.sprintmail.com>:

>I understand the Scientologists are fighting back. At the big rally,
>IAS will be distributing condoms with a life-size portrait of
>Miscavige.

LOL!

Bernie


Ex Mudder

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Aug 27, 1997, 3:00:00 AM8/27/97
to

In article <hkhensonE...@netcom.com>, hkhe...@netcom.com (Keith
Henson) wrote:

>Tilman Hausherr (til...@berlin.snafu.de) wrote:
>
>: Btw, is it true that the unionized customs officers plan to distribute
>: XEMU leaflets in october in all the languages to every person coming?
>
>Rolling On The Floor Laughing My Ass Off!
>
>I would bet scientology will cancel the demonstration rather than let
>large numbers of members see a Xemu leaflet. There is no possible way
>they could control such a situation. Keith Henson

Hmm... I'll be in school on the 8th. Oh well.
I think a nice international counter demonstration would be
appropriate.

Possible slogans:
"Scientology - The cult that starts where Hitler left off"
"Are you a 1.1? Scientology wants you dead"
www.best.com/~dkeith/exterm.htm


Chris Owen

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Aug 28, 1997, 3:00:00 AM8/28/97
to

In article <341d90c1...@news.snafu.de>,

Tilman Hausherr <til...@berlin.snafu.de> wrote:
>In <5u1n8o$8...@drn.zippo.com>, Warrior <war...@electrotex.com> wrote:
>
>>
>> BULGRAVIA is another one of Hubbard's acronyms. He LOVED acronyms
>>(not my opinion). BULGRAVIA means the region consisting of
>>BULgaria, GReece, Albania and YugoslaVIA.
>
>I think Hubbard came up with "Bulgravia" long before Gerhard Haag and
>his buddies wrote the acronym. And I think he didn't even mean an
>fictious country; he was just too clueless to write "Bulgaria"
>correctly. Americans are generally not too good in geography. I remember
>some statistic about a significant % not being able to find America on a
>"blind" globe. Let's not forget that each time Hubbard "researched"
>something, he made basic errors.

I suspect he meant Belgravia. It's a very swanky part of London.

--
| Chris Owen | c...@nvg.unit.no |
|----------------------------------------------------------------------------
| WORLD'S BIGGEST SPECTRUM ARCHIVE -- http://www.nvg.unit.no/sinclair |

Diane Richardson

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Aug 28, 1997, 3:00:00 AM8/28/97
to

On 28 Aug 1997 17:59:25 GMT, c...@romeo-klive.nvg.ntnu.no (Chris Owen)
wrote:

>In article <341d90c1...@news.snafu.de>,
>Tilman Hausherr <til...@berlin.snafu.de> wrote:
>>In <5u1n8o$8...@drn.zippo.com>, Warrior <war...@electrotex.com> wrote:
>>
>>>

>>> BULGRAVIA is another one of Hubbard's acronyms. He LOVED acronyms
>>>(not my opinion). BULGRAVIA means the region consisting of
>>>BULgaria, GReece, Albania and YugoslaVIA.
>>

>>I think Hubbard came up with "Bulgravia" long before Gerhard Haag and
>>his buddies wrote the acronym. And I think he didn't even mean an
>>fictious country; he was just too clueless to write "Bulgaria"
>>correctly. Americans are generally not too good in geography. I remember
>>some statistic about a significant % not being able to find America on a
>>"blind" globe. Let's not forget that each time Hubbard "researched"
>>something, he made basic errors.
>
> I suspect he meant Belgravia. It's a very swanky part of London.

Actually, I think Hubbard picked it up from a 1950s comic strip. I
keep thinking Al Capp -- "Li'l Abner" or "Fearless Fosdyke" -- had
something about a mythological eastern European country. I could be
entirely wrong about this, though.


Diane Richardson
ref...@bway.net

roger gonnet

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Aug 29, 1997, 3:00:00 AM8/29/97
to

Diane Richardson wrote:
>

> >
> > I suspect he meant Belgravia. It's a very swanky part of London.
>
> Actually, I think Hubbard picked it up from a 1950s comic strip. I
> keep thinking Al Capp -- "Li'l Abner" or "Fearless Fosdyke" -- had
> something about a mythological eastern European country. I could be
> entirely wrong about this, though.


Looks as well that he read it from Tintin and Milou. Ther was something
like this in it, in "The Sceptre of Ottokar" That's it's level of
scientific geographical readings and "expert explorer's club member".

Roger
>
> Diane Richardson
> ref...@bway.net

wilco

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Aug 31, 1997, 3:00:00 AM8/31/97
to

mar...@islandnet.com (Martin Hunt) wrote:

>In article <3415a5fb...@news.snafu.de>,
>til...@berlin.snafu.de (Tilman Hausherr) wrote:
>
>> 10,000 IAS members will be flying into Berlin from
>> all over the world on October 6th to protest (on
>> October 7th) Germany's suppression of Scientology.
>
The tried to make a first "mightful demonstration"
in Frankfurt recently 21st of July where they had
already tried to carry in people from all over Europe.
(Including a concert with Isaac Hayes, Chick Corea...).

They say that about 1500 scientologists came and
that they had "media" there. But they only mention
2 or 3 minor US papers.

Following my information they plan the new one
for October 27th in Berlin.
But I don't think they can find 10000 people
to come.

It is not organized by Scientology itself but
by a new front Group:

Mitbuerger unterstuetzen Toleranz
(citizens for tolerance)

with the address:
MUT Frankfurt
Dr. Thomas Roeder
Bruehlbachstr. 9
35578 Wetzlar

wilco


Cornelius Krasel

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Sep 1, 1997, 3:00:00 AM9/1/97
to

wilco (W.B...@solplus.de) wrote:
> mar...@islandnet.com (Martin Hunt) wrote:
>
> >In article <3415a5fb...@news.snafu.de>,
> >til...@berlin.snafu.de (Tilman Hausherr) wrote:
> >
> >> 10,000 IAS members will be flying into Berlin from
> >> all over the world on October 6th to protest (on
> >> October 7th) Germany's suppression of Scientology.
^^^^^^^^^^^

> Following my information they plan the new one
> for October 27th in Berlin.

^^^^^^^^^^^^

> But I don't think they can find 10000 people
> to come.

Not too surprising given the fact that Scn's themselves don't
exactly know when it is going to take place :-)

What I find odd is that both dates are on normal work days. Is it
so easy for a Scientologist to take a day off?

William Barwell

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Sep 1, 1997, 3:00:00 AM9/1/97
to

In article <340680C5...@hol.fr>,

Al Capp had Upper and Lower Slobbovia.
The generally desperate looking Slobbovians were usually depicted as
standing around in waist deep snow.


Pope Charles
SubGenius Pope Of Houston
Slack!


Diane Richardson

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Sep 1, 1997, 3:00:00 AM9/1/97
to

On 1 Sep 1997 15:57:17 -0500, wbar...@Starbase.NeoSoft.COM (William
Barwell) wrote:

Ah, that's right! Thanks for finally posting something useful,
Barwell. I appreciate it.

What about Coyle & Sharpe on WFMU? Did they use Bulgravia before
Hubbard?


Diane Richardson
ref...@bway.net

Tilman Hausherr

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Sep 2, 1997, 3:00:00 AM9/2/97
to

In <34085a9b...@oster.solplus.de>, W.B...@solplus.de (wilco)
wrote:

>Mitbuerger unterstuetzen Toleranz
>(citizens for tolerance)

Wow, they have reactivated that front group!

>with the address:
>MUT Frankfurt
>Dr. Thomas Roeder
>Bruehlbachstr. 9
>35578 Wetzlar

He is one of the editors of "The men behind Hitler" and was also kicked
out of the CDU.

http://hatewatch.freedommag.org/gerwpap/vol2/page08.htm#19

As I have compassion with the scientologists, here some web-based advice
for them.

Here a web site about "fun and leisure" in germany:

http://quijote.lang.usf.edu/~german/spass.htm


Here the national anthem (sing the full anthem at the demo and see what
happens to you!).

http://www.snowcrest.net/rcaguila/dland.htm


A song for David Miscavige:

http://www.snowcrest.net/rcaguila/mannlein.htm


His foto is cute too:

http://www.snowcrest.net/rcaguila/mannlein.gif


A song for scientologists coming by sea:

http://www.snowcrest.net/rcaguila/1seefhrt.htm


A song for editors of Freedom magazine:

http://www.snowcrest.net/rcaguila/freiheit.htm


A song for Mary Sue Hubbard:

http://www.snowcrest.net/rcaguila/1ewitwe.htm


A song before leaving Germany:

http://www.snowcrest.net/rcaguila/mussiden.htm


A song for scientologists demonstrating in a train:

http://www.snowcrest.net/rcaguila/schwbahn.htm


Have fun!

Tilman


Geoffrey Burling

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Sep 3, 1997, 3:00:00 AM9/3/97
to

On 1 Sep 1997 15:57:17 -0500, wbar...@Starbase.NeoSoft.COM (William

Barwell) saith:

>
>In article <340680C5...@hol.fr>,
>roger gonnet <dictio...@hol.fr> wrote:
>>Diane Richardson wrote:
>>>
>>
>>> >
>>> > I suspect he meant Belgravia. It's a very swanky part of London.
>>>
>>> Actually, I think Hubbard picked it up from a 1950s comic strip. I
>>> keep thinking Al Capp -- "Li'l Abner" or "Fearless Fosdyke" -- had
>>> something about a mythological eastern European country. I could be
>>> entirely wrong about this, though.
>>
>>
>>Looks as well that he read it from Tintin and Milou. Ther was something
>>like this in it, in "The Sceptre of Ottokar" That's it's level of
>>scientific geographical readings and "expert explorer's club member".
>>

I don't think that Hubbard had ever heard of either of these 2 strips.
(I've read the Adventures of Tintin many times & enjoyed them, but I
think that they were published too late for Hubbard to see, & I doubt
he had the fortitude or curiousity to read European comics.)


>
> Al Capp had Upper and Lower Slobbovia.
>The generally desperate looking Slobbovians were usually depicted as
>standing around in waist deep snow.
>

Hmmm. Then my suspicions (on reading Mrs Richardson's post) that the
source of this name might lie in another American comic series (e.g.
``Terry and the Pirates" or ``Steve Roper").

]still upset that his grandmother threw out a treasure trove of 1930's
& 1940's comics[
Geoff
Olympic-Class Bore

Return address altered to foil spambots. Drop two words,
& it will reach me.

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