Ex-Scientologist ads are in place in London Underground station after short delay Tony Ortega Apr 24, 2025

Karen#1

Well-known member



We heard today from Alex Barnes-Ross who returned to the Tottenham Court Road station in the London Underground today and sent us these photos.
They show the ads from the Michael J. Rinder Aftermath Foundation that are intended to help Scientologists leave the Church of Scientology, and they have been cleverly located to replace ads put in the station by Scientology itself.
Transport for London had indicated that the new ads would be in place Monday, and when that didn’t happen we wondered if Scientology had managed to spoil things.
But apparently it was simply a delay caused by the Easter holiday, and the ads were put up some time last night.
The London campaign follows the Aftermath Foundation’s success in Los Angeles, where 20 billboards were put in place earlier this month, and have remained up despite protests by the Church of Scientology.






Here again is the statement from the Foundation…
For four weeks, Scientology broadcast their message to the people of London and now The Aftermath Foundation is offering those same people the opportunity to learn about survivors’ stories, too.
The goal of this campaign is to both educate the public about Scientology’s abusive practices and to send a message of hope, that there are people here willing to support anyone wanting to leave and start lives after Scientology.
When leaving, people often find themselves in places of hardship with no family to turn to, no work experience outside of Scientology and lacking the resources they need to land on their feet. The Aftermath Foundation is ready and able to help, and responds to applications for aid from all over the world.
Featured in the adverts are three real people with real-life experiences of abuse inside Scientology in the UK. Mike Rinder, who sadly passed away in January of this year, was once thrown in the lake at Scientology’s Sussex headquarters in winter as punishment - and later escaped from one of their London properties. Claire Headley suffered abuse and neglect as a child growing up at Scientology’s UK headquarters and Alex Barnes-Ross was forcibly held against his will as a teenager at their Church near Blackfriars.
We hope that by sharing their stories, the public will have a greater understanding that this is an abusive organisation with a significant presence in the United Kingdom. We also hope that our message will resonate with those currently stuck inside Scientology who may not be aware they are not alone in their suffering.
Last year, we placed a billboard near Scientology’s international headquarters in Los Angeles and within a matter of hours, they had placed a scissor-lift obscuring its view and filed complaints to get it removed. Although they were successful, our message reached a new audience and we received a drastic increase in calls on our helpline as well as donations and support to fund our charitable work.
We are grateful to Transport for London for allowing us to share our message of hope with the millions of people who use Tottenham Court Road station every week.
The Michael J. Rinder Aftermath Foundation is a charitable organisation established in 2018.
Our purpose is to help those who want to leave Scientology and the Sea Organization, but who lack a system of support that they can rely on while getting on their feet in the outside world.
If you need help leaving Scientology please visit The Michael J. Rinder Aftermath Foundation or call our helpline on 0800 090 3372.
The ads look great, don’t they?
 
London is a medieval city going back hundreds of years.
It was built for horses and carriages not cars,
Therefore the streets that cars are on are dense in traffic, strangled
by the small lanes and one way streets...
Same applies to all the black cabs.
Taxis have to navigate through narrow streets clogged and grid locked.

Therefore most everyone travels by underground.
Its the way Londoners move.
Subways or 'the Tube" is safe. Not like New York.
5 million passenger journey on the subways every 24 hours.
You cannot help but read the Ads.

100s of 1000s will see these ad as they have been placed in the most active
stations of central London.

Image: Empty station because it is 1 am at Heathrow Central ...the very end of the Victoria Line subway.jpeg
 
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