Karen#1
Well-known member
TONY ORTEGA
Excerpt:
[Alex Gibney and Lawrence Wright at Sundance]
Ten years ago today at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, Alex Gibney and Lawrence Wright premiered their blockbuster documentary, Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief.
Later showing on HBO, the brilliant 2015 documentary delved into the dark underbelly of the Church of Scientology which it has tried to hide from public view for decades. I was awed by the detail and depth of research, the contributors, and the director’s obvious responsibility in bringing these secrets into public view.
Scientology’s wealth grew by members paying for costly training and auditing—Scientology’s words for counseling and therapy. After founder L. Ron Hubbard’s 1986 death, David Miscavige took over managing Scientology. With a declining membership, he turned the Church — which is not a Church — to attracting and recruiting the rich and famous worldwide and receiving massive donations. When Going Clear came out, the Underground Bunker had showed that Scientology’s top three corporations were worth more than $2 billion. Yet this Church, which is not a Church, continues to pay its worker members, who keep church buildings open and clean and cater to the millionaires, a fraction of the minimum wage.
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tonyortega.substack.com
Excerpt:
[Alex Gibney and Lawrence Wright at Sundance]
Ten years ago today at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, Alex Gibney and Lawrence Wright premiered their blockbuster documentary, Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief.
Later showing on HBO, the brilliant 2015 documentary delved into the dark underbelly of the Church of Scientology which it has tried to hide from public view for decades. I was awed by the detail and depth of research, the contributors, and the director’s obvious responsibility in bringing these secrets into public view.
Scientology’s wealth grew by members paying for costly training and auditing—Scientology’s words for counseling and therapy. After founder L. Ron Hubbard’s 1986 death, David Miscavige took over managing Scientology. With a declining membership, he turned the Church — which is not a Church — to attracting and recruiting the rich and famous worldwide and receiving massive donations. When Going Clear came out, the Underground Bunker had showed that Scientology’s top three corporations were worth more than $2 billion. Yet this Church, which is not a Church, continues to pay its worker members, who keep church buildings open and clean and cater to the millionaires, a fraction of the minimum wage.
READ MORE
Ten years ago today: 'Going Clear' exposed Scientology's abuses for a new audience
Ten years ago today at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, Alex Gibney and Lawrence Wright premiered their blockbuster documentary, Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief.








