Home arrow Blog
Blog
Coca-Cola's statement re collaboration PDF Print E-mail
From: Coca-Cola Support [mailto:coca-cola.supportatna.ko.com]
Sent:
Monday, February 25, 2008 07:31
To:
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
Subject:
RE: Coca-Cola Web Form

Thank you for contacting The Coca-Cola Company regarding a possible association with the Church of Scientology.

As an enterprise conducting business in more than 200 countries, The Coca-Cola Company respects diverse cultures and beliefs around the world.  However, the Company is not affiliated with any specific religion, including the Church of Scientology.  

In regards to the booklet, “The Way to Happiness,” Coca-Cola Pakistan made a donation to the National Office of The Way to Happiness Pakistan in Karachi, Pakistan.  This small donation was made with the specific understanding that The Way to Happiness was a Non-Government Organization (NGO), with no religious affiliation, providing non-religious support for the local community, including services for the blind.  Coca-Cola Pakistan’s contribution was made with the good faith understanding that the National Office of The Way to Happiness Pakistan provided goods and services -- books, Braille imprints, language translations, etc.—to the needy and handicapped similar to other non-profit organizations active in Pakistan.  In soliciting the contribution, The Way to Happiness Pakistan did not indicate an affiliation with the Church of Scientology.
    
The Coca-Cola Company and Coca-Cola Pakistan will not renew donations for “The Way to Happiness.”

We hope this is helpful.  If you have additional questions or comments to share, please feel free to contact us again.

Gisele
Industry and Consumer Affairs
The Coca-Cola Company

[THREAD ID:1-GL1MHF]

-----Original Message-----

From:  This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
Sent:  2/22/2008 01:13:43 AM
To:  coca-cola.supportatna.ko.com
Subject:  Coca-Cola Web Form

Dear Coca Cola,

In its publication International Scientology News Issue 35 (c) 2007, the Scientology organization claims that it has a "corporate tie-in" with Coca Cola, and is helping to solve your corporation's "Third World image problems" by getting Coca Cola to endorse and put its name and logo on Scientology's "Way to Happiness" books in Pakistan.

"Way to Happiness" is portrayed as a non-religious book, but it is a purely Scientology book, used by the Scientology organization to spread the Scientology religion, including spread it into companies like yours.

http://suppressiveperson.org/spdl/...

Has Coca Cola made any statement about Scientology's claim of collaboration? If so, I would be happy to web it as well.

Sincerely,
Caroline Letkeman

Suppressive Person Defense League

http://www.suppressiveperson.org/spdl/

http://www.carolineletkeman.org/sp/

Scientology's claims of collaboration
 
Collaborator: US Federal Government PDF Print E-mail
 
the Review: Anonymous group asks 'Why are they dead?' PDF Print E-mail
Source: the Review

Anti-Scientology cyber-group posts flyers across university campus

By: Jennifer Heine

Posted: 2/19/08

Flyers stating the Web site Whyaretheydead.net signed by "Anonymous" were hung last week all over the university campus. The Web site is an anti-Scientology Web site listing believers of the faith who have died.

The Church of Scientology refers to Anonymous as "a group of cyber-terrorists who hide their identities behind masks and computer anonymity."

Carol Bedgar, staff assistant for Residence Life, said all flyers must be stamped by Residence Life before they can be hung up around campus. The flyers signed by Anonymous did not get Residence Life approval.

"If it wasn't approved, a resident assistant or hall director or someone who would see them would take them down," Bedgar said.

Members of the anti-Scientology group Anonymous do not openly share their identities. Anonymous declared their hatred towards Scientologists after releasing a YouTube video in July 2007. Feb. 10 was a worldwide day of protest by Anonymous.

Whyaretheydead.net claims the Scientology followers died because of their beliefs.

Susan Taylor, public affairs director for the Church of Scientology in Washington, D.C., stated in an e-mail message that those people listed as dead on Whyaretheydead.net died because of natural causes or accidents.

In a statement from the Church of Scientology, Taylor said Anonymous justifies its actions against Scientologists by saying the Church members do not have free speech rights, but it is Anonymous that suppresses free speech through "illegal assaults on Church Web sites so as to prevent Internet users from obtaining information from the Church."

The Church of Scientology said its members are being harassed through e-mail, telephone calls, faxes and the mailing of suspicious white powder to several Churches.

Mark Ebner, who was the first journalist to write about Scientology by joining the organization undercover, said he has no direct affiliation with Anonymous, but believes its members are well-organized and bring significant amounts of people to the anti-scientology movement.

"[People in Anonymous] are very open-minded when it comes to religion and very vociferous about their opposition to dangerous cults," Ebner said.

In a statement from the Church of Scientology, it is said the "Communist Manifesto" by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels and Adolf Hilter's "Mein Kampf" are Anonymous' guiding literature and "quite obviously, this group is not just anti-Scientology, it is anti-freedom of religion and anti-free speech."

Richard Hanley, professor of philosophy, said he finds Anonymous' tactics unusual, but can understand the logic in its responses to Scientology.

"I guess the anonymous part is kind of weird, but I guess that's in response to Scientology's very aggressive defense of their doctrines and their legal standing," Handley said.

Scientologists keep track of all Web sites mentioning their religion as rumors spread of Anonymous disabling pro-Scientology Web sites, he said.

"If the rumors seeking to disable Scientology Web sites are true, then I disapprove of that," Hanley said.

He said he thinks Scientology is "nonsense" but understands why people are attracted to the religion.

"It's a fairly recent religion and one of the things we know about Scientology is who started it," Hanley said. "That makes it a little bit unusual. But it seems to me it has a lot of the basic features that many religions have."

Ebner said he finds faults in Scientology and said the theology does not have a charitable arm.

"Scientology is designed as not so much as a religion, not anything like a religion, but more as a multi-level marketing scheme," he said. "You have to pay for any 'services' on an escalating scale."

Reverends of Scientology use mind-control techniques on their followers, Ebner said.

"They cut them off from the media, their families," he said. "They have a disconnection policy that is in effect."

Scientology has two aspects that make the doctrine totalitarian - clearing the planet so that followers focus on their analytical mind rather than their reactive mind and wiping out psychiatry and other manifestations of mental health care, Ebner said.

He described Scientology as an organization whose founder, science fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard, was solely concerned with making money.

"It's an evil, criminal mind-control cult with a goal of making money and wiping out psychiatry and what they call degraded beings," Ebner said.
© Copyright 2008 The Review
SPDL Comment:

Gerry Armstrong


posted 2/19/08 @ 4:18 PM EST

Writer Jennifer Heine quotes from a Scientology organization statement attacking "Anonymous" on the freedom of speech and religion issues: "quite obviously, this group is not just anti-Scientology, it is anti-freedom of religion and anti-free speech."

It is Scientology, of course, that virtually everyone, the Scientologists included, knows is suppressive and destructive of the basic rights of free speech and freedom of religion. The best example is the cultists' Scientology v. Armstrong cases, which demonstrate that Scientologists universally are CONTRACTED to suppress and destroy basic human rights.

No "Anonymous" is trying to silence me, or anyone who would act in concert with me. No "Anonymous" seeks to prevent my exercise of my religious liberty. The Scientologists not only seek to prevent me from expressing my God-given religion expressions, but actively seek to punish me and anyone acting in concert with me with jail sentences, fines and unconscionable "liquidated damages" penalties for daring to express our religion expressions.

What the Scientology cultists have done to me alone to fair game me into silence or use the US's courts to suppress me or bankrupt me into silence, is all the reason in the world good people with consciences would need to oppose this cult, expose its hypocrisy and duplicity, and force it to knock off its sociopathic drive to destroy anyone's rights.

Read this material. This is a fraction of the reason Anonymous or anyone has to fight back against Scientology.
http://www.gerryarmstrong.org/50grand/cult/index.html
http://www.gerryarmstrong.org/50grand/legal/index.html
 
Claimed Collaborators: Red Cross PDF Print E-mail

 
EuroNews: Court rules Germany can monitor Scientologists PDF Print E-mail
EuroNews article with online video
13 February 2008

German intelligence services will continue to monitor the Church of Scientology after a court rejected the group's bid to block the surveillance. The tribunal upheld the state's claim that the Church undermined what it called "central constitutional values such as the dignity of mankind and the right to equal treatment".

Scientology has been under observation in Germany since 1997. It had argued that this was unjustified as it is a religious and not a political organisation.

The debate was given an extra twist last month when the group opened new lavish headquarters in Berlin. There were rowdy protests outside the building by opponents of Scientology, who accuse it of brainwashing its members. Scientology's detractors say it chose Berlin because Berlin officials charged with protecting the constitution had decided to stop monitoring the group in 2003.

Hollywood star Tom Cruise plays a lead role in this drama. Scientology's most high profile advocate, he is a deeply contentious figure in Germany. A renowned German historian even compared Cruise to Joseph Goebels, the propaganda minister of the wartime Nazi regime. He made the claim in a Sunday paper after seeing Cruise addressing fellow Scientologists in a video. [...]
See also:
CNN Video: Scientology in Peril CNN's Frederik Pleitgen reports on Germany's move to ban Scientology. Interviews Sect Commissioner Thomas Gandow.
 
German intelligence web sites and publications: 
 
Collaborators: Laguna Beach Police Department, CA PDF Print E-mail

The reason that a Scientologist, as a rule, cannot be trusted in a government or law enforcement position, and probably other professional positions, is that the Scientologists' allegiance is first and foremost to their Scientology seniors.
Read more...
 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next > End >>

Results 61 - 70 of 475