Scientology verses the right to believe what we choose

I was reading some online threads this morning about an actor who is also a Scientologist. There was an article about him and his then new found religion, and then the many comments that followed. I read the words fanatic, lunatic, and some other rather colorful descriptions of this person’s conversion to a belief system that makes sense to them.

I read a book put out by the founder of Scientology a number of years ago, and I have to admit, at the time it did not make a lot of sense and appeared to be a lot of smoke and mirrors. That being said, the belief system was already established, and my opinion of it accounts for little, as it still does.

Perhaps if I reread the book now, I am sure I would have a different viewpoint of Scientology. As I have learned over the years, the world is not always what it seems once you scratch the surface and actually look at what is going on, instead of ‘knowing’ what is going on in the world. Things are quite a bit different when one takes the time to observe what they see rather than simply placing what they think they saw into what they believe to be true.

Back to Scientology, I fail to see why there are so many strong feelings about this belief system? I thought maybe it was the name, Scientology, which I do not think you can find many people who would say Scientology sounds religious. So the word, Scientology does not sound very religious in nature so people could be upset about someone believing in something that does not sound religious. People have attacked other people both verbally and physically over a lot less.

Scientology sounds really foreign, way beyond some of those vague eastern religions. I think those ‘vague’ eastern religions are more tolerated because they have been around for a while, and were not invented within the last fifty years or so. This makes them more established, and possibly more acceptable because someone did not just invent them.

In defense of Scientology itself, a belief system sometimes takes on a life of its own. We grow up and are told what to believe and how to perform whatever rituals come with that belief system. When we grow older and realize there are other ways of perceiving in respect to a belief system other than what we were taught. If we are open to possibility it becomes obvious that most other belief systems have the same end goal in mind that our belief system does. Other belief systems simply they just go about arriving at the same end differently. This usually happens because they come from a culture different from ours and they have a different way of viewing the world.

Then there is the question of the actor himself. We determined a long time ago that people have the right to believe as they deem proper for themselves. That does not mean that someone can only have a belief system that meets within the narrow scope of approval of another person’s idea of what is a proper belief system.

People are free to believe what they want as long as it does no harm to others. If Scientology is a person’s belief system, we have no right, and we should have no public opinion on whether it meets our own standards or not. That is not something we as individuals have the right to decide for other people. As the popular saying goes, or at least as well as I remember it, “I don’t have to agree with your beliefs, but I will defend them to te death.

Share

Grateful for almost instant learning

I was out at a borg book store this week, wandering around looking for a few particular books. I want to become a quasi-expert on a few subjects I have only remotely been a part of, and never really needed to understand too deeply. It is truly a wonder, that between a few hours reading books, and the internet I can become somewhat knowledgeable on almost any subject that I become interested in.

This is an excellent topic to be grateful for today! Having the freedom to be able to go out and obtain a book on almost any subject, and being able to use an internet that is not controlled or stifled if I can not find a book locally.

When I was a child in a small town, our library was pretty limited. I outgrew the small school library fairly soon, and my Mom started taking me to the city to the Carnegie library. I did not know a lot about the Carnegie library, except that Mr. Carnegie was famous for Steel, and he sure was a generous man, building these libraries for kids like me! I went from a small two room library to a library with more than one floor! It was absolutely amazing at the time that there were so many books in the world and I had access to all of them!

If I can not find what I want at an online book seller, then of course there are the vast resources of the internet! Anything we humans can comprehend is being written about and published on the internet in on form or another. I remember being on irc (internet relay chat) a few years ago.

I was chatting with someone from across the world. They were lamenting the quality of television in their country. I asked what type programming they had. American television and programming from their country and adjoining countries cam back the reply. I then asked why they thought that was bad. They told me that their communication network is so controlled and moderated, that many American television programs such as a weeknight comedy is chopped up to the point that sometimes it is impossible to make sense of the show.

That conversation helped me understand what it means to have access to almost unlimited media information. From television, movies, books, music, and radio. It is all there and all I have to do is look for it. For that I am grateful. I am grateful, that I can read, listen, or watch a documentary about any subject I may be interested in, or I can think of.

Consider even this blog entry. Without a lot of fuss, a simple search will likely show many people who disagree with this post, and many who agree with it. The topic will be commented on somewhere, and there may even be a video on it too! What a wonderful thing this is to be grateful for!

Share