Author Archives: Mark C. Rathbun

Going Clear, Part 7

Going Clear, Part 7 summary: Wright unwilling/unable to judge credibility

Lawrence Wright attempted to use media pressure in 2009 to have the FBI investigate Scientology for “human trafficking.”  Rathbun details how he informed both the FBI (as its most prominent witness) and Wright at the time that what they were calling “human trafficking” was anything but human trafficking and that the FBI would ultimately strike out.  In fact, the investigation went nowhere and no charges were ever brought. Yet Wright in his book argues for sixteen pages how Scientology practices can be characterized as “human trafficking.”  A case of actual malice as defined by the Supreme Court would be hard to imagine. That definition is “publishing slander when one knew or should have known it to be false.”  Wright admitted to Rathbun that he (Wright) was more than a reporter when it came to Scientology, and that at the time of the FBI investigation he was going to use a story on Scientology to nudge or kick the FBI into action by shaming them.  Wright then uses paid “fact” witnesses, whom Rathbun demonstrated to Wright ahead of publication were paid witnesses, to “corroborate” his libel.  Wright literally told Rathbun “I don’t know what you mean by ‘evaluate the credibility of sources’”. 

Going Clear, Part 6

Going Clear, Part 6 summary: Australian Inquiry

Rathbun demonstrates how Wright ignored hard evidence in order to legitimatize what other journalists (none favorable to Scientology) described as a “witch hunt” and “kangaroo court” Inquiry into Scientology by the Australia parliament in the early sixties.  Wright reduces the fact of the Inquiry being instigated by slanderous material from US governments agencies by referring to it as an alleged delusory “belief” on the part of L. Ron Hubbard. Rathbun recounts how he went through a detailed account with Wright proving that the spreading of slanderous by the US government to the Australians was documented fact. 

Going Clear, Part 5 Dishonest Editing

Going Clear, Part 5 summary:

After establishing that 80% of L. Ron Hubbard’s time is accounted for when one reviews the magnitude and content of his thousands of lectures (Going Clear Part 2), Rathbun then examines Wright’s only significant quotation from those lectures. Rathbun demonstrates with the actual transcripts quoted that Wright liberally misquoted, mixed up the sequence of sentences so as to change meaning to smear Hubbard. Rathbun shows how Wright’s quoted passage omitted fully more than half of the text to make the lecture seem disjointed and non-sequitur. Rathbun produces the transcript and demonstrates with highlight pen the violence Wright commits against Hubbard’s words in order to put him in a bad light.  Wright even invents the ”point” that Hubbard was allegedly trying to make.  Rathbun demonstrates that invented point was very evidently NOT the point, the invented non-sequitur that Wright alleges. 

Going Clear, Part 4

Going Clear, Part 4 summary:

Rathbun reveals that Wright intentionally and unjustly ignored the testimony of Fletcher Prouty.  Prouty was more credible than virtually all of Wright’s anti-Scientology sources combined. After all, he was the famous “Mr. X” in Oliver Stone’s movie JFK, Stone acknowledging the historic, heroic and credible whistleblower credentials of Prouty.  Wright specifically discounted Prouty’s critical testimony concerning L. Ron Hubbard’s indisputable naval intelligence career and the fact that clearly the US Navy intentionally altered Mr. Hubbard’s naval records to cover for his intelligence activities.  Rathbun produces receipts to demonstrate Wright’s research of Hubbard’s military records was purely amateur.  He discloses that the entire premise Wright presented as fact that someone ‘misrepresentations’ about Hubbard naval history was a major recruitment tool of Scientology was invented by Wright; not even a single one of his anti-Scientology sources corroborates it. 

Going Clear, Part 3 Wright’s Cultic Practices

Going Clear, Part 3 summary:

Wright accuses Scientology of thought stopping – a form of mind control censorship.  However, “By the time you get 3 or 4 chapters into Going Clear, he is effectively applying that to his readers…By then he has already labelled the founder “delusional, imaginary.”  So, from that point forward there can be no “scientology side” presented, since they are already referred to as “delusional, imaginary.” 

Wright uses a sophistry that is based on the “us vs. them” and thought stopping techniques he has employed.  That is, conclusions and subjective opinions of Scientology haters become logical and any subjective viewpoint from Scientologists becomes illogical.  To do so, Wright ignores any discrediting information about any anti-Scientology source, yet immediately treats a gospel any opinion or subjective slur against Scientology as fact. 

The fact alteration is remarkable in the favor the anti Scientologist.  Rathbun points out the protagonist Paul Haggis said by Wright to have come into Scientology “wanting to be a writer.”  In the movie – which Wright produces and carefully edited – Haggis said “he wanted to be a documentary film maker.”  He tells the writer he wanted to be a writer; he tells the film maker he wanted to be a film maker.  Instead of pointing out the manipulative, dishonest fellow is, Wright lets him have it both ways; because, “hey, who is going fact check and attack on scientology?” 

Going Clear, Part 2; Wright Propaganda tactics

Summary of Going Clear Part 2

Rathbun demonstrates how Lawarence Wright projected his own intentions and desires upon his target L. Ron Hubbard. 

Wright alleged Hubbard was obsessed with “making it in Hollywood.”  Rathbun informed Wright there was zero evidence of that during his 35 years in and around the Church. Yet, the book wound up predicated this false idea.  Rathbun saw instead that “Larry Wright was projecting himself onto Hubbard.  His own psyche…while working on the book, Wright himself was spending a great deal of time trying to get a foothold in Hollywood for himself.”

Wright uses a scrambled time line, full of major omissions and insertion of important falsehoods, in order to create a false narrative of Scientology. 

“80% of L. Ron Hubbard’s time between 1950 and 1966 are accounted for” by the thousands of 60-90 minute lectures he gave and their reference to hours of course instruction and technique refinement they refer to.  “None of that is in the book.”  Instead, “every little bit of scandalous problem area or speed bump or hiccup, piled on one after the other” constitutes the entirety of the narrative.  

Rathbun presages future videos where he will demonstrate Wright’s liberal uses of straight fact invention. The most glaring one is about Hollywood producer Paul Haggis – the fact that his narrative, the backbone of the book, was largely invented. 

Wright uses us vs them mentality as only measure of credibility. If you are against Scientology – regardless of how criminal you might be – you are credible in Wright’s eyes; if you are ‘for’ Scientology – you are discredited in Wright’s judgment.  It is the SOLE measure of credibility throughout the book. 

Going Clear, Part 1

Note:

Mark Rathbun was approached by Lawrence Wright to serve as his source of Scientology expertise for his book Going Clear. Wright considered no one comparable to Rathbun in terms of depth of knowledge and experience with Scientology both within and outside the church.  Rathbun recounts how he spent many days, including two days of interviews at Rathbun’s home, attempting to educate Wright on the subject in a neutral fashion – that is taking the good with the bad. Wright apparently only wanted the bad. Rathbun posted a number of videos analyzing Wright’s work after the fact. Summaries are provided ahead of each video.

Intro video, Part One, summary:

How Lawrence Wright betrayed his ‘fairness’ standard employed in Looming Towers when it came to dealing with L. Ron Hubbard and Scientology.

Instead, Wright slavishly regurgitated the existing Establishment anti Scientology narrative, excluding many facts brought to him that at minimum threw serious doubt upon that narrative.

Rathbun was frustrated because he provided much of the facts undermining the existing mainstream anti-Scientology narrative that Wright systematically excluded.

Rathbun was hounded by Wright’s fact checkers and virtually every one of Rathbun’s corrections to the fact checkers never found their way into the book.

Several propaganda techniques used by Wright included:

  1. Positioned self publicly as wanting to find out how prominent people found Scientology so alluring and stuck with it despite its bad media rap.  That cover was found by Rathbun to be insincere and fraudulent. Wright systematically excluded the plethora of specifics Rathbun provided to answer that question.
  2. On the press circuit Wright took 180 degree different position; that of anti-Scientology advocate, literally lobbying to have its tax exemption revoked and wanting to cancel prominent Scientologists to turn on their religion by Wright’s public shaming.
  3. Rathbun shows how Wright did “bias disclosure” in his only previous book on religion – Saints and Sinners. Yet, if there were ever pre bias disclosure required, it was clear that was case with Scientology. Yet, no such disclosure.

 

Introduction

Information Anarchy Relief

The post-fact era of information anarchy has caused many people to be overwhelmed with useless and misleading information. That is causing us collectively and individually to make more irrational and destructive decisions, e.g. see the posts Has Your Mind Become Infected, When Distraction Becomes Catastrophic, Lulz Rules. Consequently, concentration and focus are becoming increasingly valuable faculties for maintaining a semblance of equanimity and increasing the effectiveness of personal time-management and productivity.

One means of sharpening focus that I have read about recently in the works of Nassim Taleb seems to work, at least on a personal basis it has. That is, training oneself to differentiate ‘noise’ from ‘signal.’  Signal is the message of a communication – the substance of what one is invited to consider. ‘Noise’ is the carrier wave it rides in on often jazzed up to jar your wits, have your emotion override your reason, or is just plain alarming distraction. We most often see ‘noise’ in the form of appeals to emotion rather than to intellect or understanding. Emotion does and should play a role in the weight we give to data. But, when emotion is overemphasized and manipulated to override reason and interject deception, irrationality and worse results.  In the past year in the US we have seen an unprecedented level of appeals to passion, prejudice, and particularly to anger (by both sides of the political spectrum). It has served in lieu of important issue education and understanding to influence decision-making. The noise to message ratio across established media and social media has risen to absurd levels in favor of emotional prejudice over intellect. Practice noticing the distinction between signal and noise and you might find that many ‘messages’ themselves are nothing more than ‘noise’.

More means of recognizing and rationally evaluating message before getting distracted in and unduly influenced by time-consuming and potentially destructive noise is covered in Nobel prize recipient Daniel Kahneman’s book Thinking, Fast and Slow.  One way is to learn to be wary of experts, particularly in the fields of politics and social sciences. Kahneman cites to clinical studies that evaluated the prediction reliability of the most commonly touted experts increasingly populating news and current events shows – those sitting on panels telling us how to view matters. Their long-term prediction success rates are well below 50% accurate when actually studied. In other words your chances of making correct decisions based on raw information – without relying on those ostensibly more qualified to make them for you – are better than if you waste a lot of time listening to those paid to tell you how to think. Taleb goes into this phenomenon in a lot more detail in his books as it pertains to economics and politics.

Kahneman provides more information that can serve as another handy index.  That is, studies have shown that – no matter how counter-intuitive it may seem – often the more absolutism and unyielding certainty an expert asserts or excudes, the less likely his predictions will be accurate.

Another useful noise-detection tool is contained in Kahneman’s book where he covers the ‘availability cascade.’  Here is a short section where he defines the term and describes the pitfall which capitalizes on the human tendency to follow like sheep:

An availability cascade is a self-sustaining chain of events, which may start from media reports or a relatively minor event and lead up to public panic and large-scale government action. On some occasions, a media story about a risk catches the attention of a segment of the public, which becomes aroused and worried. This emotional reaction becomes a story in itself, prompting additional coverage in the media, which in turn produces greater concern and involvement. The cycle is sometimes sped along deliberately by “availability entrepreneurs”, individuals or organizations who work to ensure a continuous flow of worrying news. The danger is increasingly exaggerated as the media compete for attention-grabbing headlines. Scientists and others who try to dampen the increasing fear and revulsion attract little attention, most of it hostile: anyone who claims the danger is overstated is suspected of association with a “heinous cover-up.”  The issue becomes politically important because it is on everyone’s mind, and the response of the political system is guided by the intensity of public sentiment. The availability cascade has now reset priorities. Other risks, and other ways that resources could be applied for the public good, all have faded into the background.

It is not difficult to spot availability entrepreneurs if you apply some of the tips covered above. An increasing percentage of ‘news’ online and on television is reporting on the reactions to ‘news’ and then reactions to reactions, and reactions to reactions to reactions, and having those reactions evaluated by experts, etc.  If one could teach oneself to spot such and to identify availability entrepreneurs, one could be spared a lot of time, anguish and potential grief. And one might even wind up being a little bit smarter and happier.

Lulz Rules

 

How have we come to elevate a crypto fascist to the Chief Executive position of the world’s beacon of freedom and democracy?

A cursory reading of history shows that some form of anarchy precedes tyranny which is seen by the haves as necessary for restoration of some semblance of order (read, cling on to what the haves have in defense of the threat of the have-nots wanting to have what the haves have). Did anyone notice how rapidly the ultimate haves (Goldman Sachs/Exxon Mobil/et al), whom Trump vowed to collar, were invited into (and accepted) Trump’s bunker the second he won our sporting electoral college contest?  Chances are not for long – because far more vital information has intervened, like “trump tweeted a dis’ at Obama in response to his alleged dis’”, and “one Rockette isn’t going to show for the inauguration”, and “Michelle is ‘An Angry Black Woman’ for not praying at the Trump altar”, and “Hillary is steaming mad because Putin’s beef with her attempted intervention in Russian politics caused him to intervene in US politics”, and “Trump has already declared economic success for the common man’s economics because Wall Street speculation is bumping”, and “Trump vehemently asserts transition is a disaster and huuugely successful” (both in the same day), while on the same day America’s two most influential ‘intellectual’ media outlets report a speech on Israel as follows, clearly appealing to emotion in lieu of intellect: “Bibi Netanyahu Makes Trump His Chump” (New York Times) and “Kerry’s Rage Against Israel” (Wall Street Journal).

What form of anarchy preceded elevation of the big daddy who promises to restore ‘law and order’ at any cost (read liberty)?

We have created an information anarchy. In the age of information – where information reigns supreme over any other commodity – that translates into an anarchy in fact. We have created a public information sharing media that carries no penalty for purveying falsehood and deceit, penalizes in-depth and time-consuming investigation and presentation of relevant fact, and rewards appeals to emotion over intellect. Today’s information sharing does little to nothing to increase understanding. It does much to incite and inflame passion, prejudice and bias.

Worried about the arrival of ‘It Couldn’t Happen Here’ (yeah, break the spell for a day and read Sinclair Lewis’ 1935 novel by that title) in America? Fortunately, resignation to accepting realization of Lewis’ prophecy is slightly premature. Unfortunately, the only reason it is premature is that the information anarchy continues to grow exponentially. The beast that created today’s would-be Windrip (novel’s ‘populist’ tyrant) will devour Trump when he inevitably attempts to control the anarchy that created him. (Here’s a wild, ironic guess on how it might unfold: the ultimate self-interested information anarchist who helped sink Clinton out of sight will sink Trump out of sight just as soon as Trump helps him out of his legal bind – or he recognizes he’s in for the Christie-Giuliani treatment).  For the time being, lulz rules.