Mother Teresa: All Saint or All Hype.

Posted in Religion, Social Issues, Unfortunate by admin on August 29, 2011 No Comments yet

In order for us to set the proper context for this post it is important to give a little background on Mother Teresa the so called saint of Calcutta. Then I will discuss why I say  “so called saint”.  Mother Teresa was born Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu (pronounced Agnes Gongsa Boyoku) in Skopje, Macedonia, on August 26, 1910. At the age of eighteen she left  home  and joined the Sisters of Loreto, which is an Irish community of nuns with missions in India. After training for a few months with a convent  in Dublin, she was sent to work in India. Agnes Bojaxhiu took her vows to be  a nun on May 24, 1931. In 1948 she received permission from her superiors to leave the convent school she had taught at since 1931 and devoted herself to working with the poorest of the poor in the slums of Calcutta.  Mother Teresa received permission from the Vatican on October 7 1950 to start her own order, “The Missionaries of Charity”, whose primary task was to love and care for those people that no one else would. In 1965 the Society became an International Religious Family by a decree of Pope Paul VI.

Some of the awards that Mother Teresa received were: The Pope John XXIII Peace Prize (1971) and the Nehru Prize for her promotion of international peace and understanding (1972). She also received the Balzan Prize (1979), the Nobel Peace Prize (1979) and the Templeton and Magsaysay awards.

What most people know about the Missionaries of Charity came from a documentary about her Order from 1969,  the church, and mainstream media that refused any ideas from critics wasn’t worth following. Now on to the unpleasant truth behind the squalid conditions that these poor people suffered in under the care of this Order. I will be discussing accounts from volunteers of the Missionaries of Charity as well as a former sister of the Order including a documentary film maker/reporter both of  whom had seen first hand what life was actually like in these aptly named “homes for the dying”.

First I would like to bring to you a  man named Donal MacIntyre who is an investigative journalist. He went undercover as a volunteer in her “flagship home” in Kolkata, India.  His description as to what he saw is distressing at best. Here is his account of what he saw in this home for disabled boys and girls. “I worked undercover for a week in Mother Teresa’s flagship home for disabled boys and girls to record Mother Teresa’s Legacy, a special report for Five News broadcast earlier this month. I winced at the rough handling by some of the full-time staff and Missionary sisters. I saw children with their mouths gagged open to be given medicine, their hands flaying in distress, visible testimony to the pain they were in. Tiny babies were bound with cloths at feeding time. Rough hands wrenched heads into position for feeding. Some of the children retched and coughed as rushed staff crammed food into their mouths. Boys and girls were abandoned on open toilets for up to 20 minutes at a time. Slumped, untended, some dribbling, some sleeping, they were a pathetic sight. Their treatment was an affront to their dignity, and dangerously unhygienic.” The first time I read this I was absolutely sickened at the thought of children no matter where they live being treated in such an inhumane condition. Now if it were just this account alone I would hold a more skeptical view of the validity of these claims so I did some more digging and found out some other unfortunate tidbits of knowledge.

The following excerpts are from a story in free inquiry magazine called “Mother Teresa’s House of Illusions” by Susan Shields a former sister in the Missionaries of Charity “As a Missionary of Charity, I was assigned to record donations and write the thank-you letters. The money arrived at a frantic rate. The mail carrier often delivered the letters in sacks. We wrote receipts for checks of $50,000 and more on a regular basis. Sometimes a donor would call up and ask if we had received his check, expecting us to remember it readily because it was so large. How could we say that we could not recall it because we had received so many that were even larger?” In that same article she describes an obvious hypocrisy “Our Constitution forbade us to beg for more than we needed, but, when it came to begging, the millions of dollars accumulating in the bank were treated as if they did not exist.” In another part Ms. Shields describes the horribly unsafe and unsanitary practice in Haiti of the sisters reusing hypodermic needles until they were blunt in order to keep the spirit of poverty. When some of the volunteers offered to go and get more needles the sisters refused.  At one point the Missionaries of Charity had around $50 million in the bank, and yet they refused to offer the people that needed real help anything but dull needles and horrible living conditions.

This is absolutely unconscionable especially for those that purport to follow Christ’s teachings yet Mother Teresa seems to be obsessed with the suffering of others with comments like “We see Christ in the broken body, and we touch him and that touch is comes from that deep faith that Christ cannot deceive“, to me that appears to say she needed the decrepit state and suffering of others for her to be closer to Christ. I have a hard time believing this is what Christ meant in Matthew 19:14 when he said “But Jesus said, Suffer little children, and forbid them not, to come unto me: for of such is the kingdom of heaven.”

In conclusion I am sure some fundamentalists out there are going to say I am lying and that I just hate Catholics and want to discredit a great woman. This could not be farther from the truth. I had no opinion on Mother Teresa or the Missionaries of Charity other than what I heard from admirers and the news until I started looking into her and her order and read the first hand accounts corresponded with previous volunteers and saw photos of the conditions that these people lived in unnecessarily. Yet the blissfully uninformed seem to hold people like Agnes and others who walk around with undeserved adulation or sainthood as society looks the other way when it comes to the atrocities that they commit. If you find comfort, security or happiness in the memory and works of Mother Teresa and her order I am not out to change your mind or defame Catholicism in anyway but purely to inform people of the reality behind those society holds as caretakers of virtue.

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Next on the chopping block of reality. Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi

Until Next time: Courage.

Scientology: A Primer

Posted in Religion by admin on July 9, 2011 No Comments yet

Here we are once again. Today I will be discussing probably one of the most dangerous mainstream cults on the planet, Scientology. Many of you may be familiar with some of it’s members – John Travolta, Kirstie Alley or Tom Cruise to name a few, as well as a host of other celebrities. But what is Scientology? In short it is a dangerous cult that uses intimidation, brainwashing and torture to keep its adherents in line and it is also damn expensive. As my motto goes,  “what are accusations without proof?” So let’s start at the beginning.

In 1953 Science Fiction writer, L. Ron Hubbard, along with his wife and a few disciples  opened the first Church of Scientology in the city of Camden, New Jersey.  This “religion” promotes a set of beliefs centered around the mind, body, and spirit that collectively are known as Scientology. This belief system also revolves around the self-help regimen prescribed in Hubbard’s unfortunately successful book, Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health, published in 1950. Dianetics is known within the Scientology world as “Book 1″. However, all of the books, materials and lectures of Hubbard are considered scriptures to the cult. The adherents to Scientology are expected to listen to and read all of the scriptures, but to do so is very expensive because you are expected to purchase from the cult all of the materials. Current estimates put the total global adherents to the Scientology Doctrine at 8,000,000 with more than 6,000 churches and Missions existing in 159 countries in 66 languages.

At the core of the initial teachings it is discovered that each person is a “Thetan” or Soul which is considered to be immortal. This Thetan supposedly lives through past lives and long past the death of its current human incarnation. Unlocking the true power and ability as an immortal Thetan requires engaging in a type of spiritual counseling session called “auditing” which the cult offers in most cases for as little as $150 dollars an hour. According to the doctrine of Scientology this auditing process removes any and all negative influences and psychic barriers. Auditing seems to be nothing more than an information gathering session where the “Minister” or “Minister in training” asks you a specifically worded set of questions about your life. You being a good adherent to your new cult answer all of the questions truthfully which it is said they keep in your file in case you try to leave the cult or discredit it in any way. You and anyone else who speaks out against this cult fall under what they used to call the “fair game policy” in which the Church actively harasses, discredits and destroys the live(s) of the decenter.

But what are these negative influences and psychic barriers that these info gathering sessions are meant to dispel? The answer to this question is something that the unwitting victim of Scientology does not learn for thousands of dollars and hours upon hours of brainwashing, but I shall tell you for free.

Once upon a time (75 million years ago to be more precise) there was an alien galactic ruler named Xenu. Xenu was in charge of all the planets in this part of the galaxy including our own planet Earth, except in those days it was called Teegeeack. Xenu, the alien ruler, had a problem. All of the 76 planets he controlled were overpopulated. Each planet had on average 178 billion people. He wanted to get rid of all of the overpopulation, so he had a plan.

Xenu took over complete control with the help of renegades to defeat the good people and the Loyal Officers. Then with the help of psychiatrists he called in billions of people for income tax inspections where they were instead given injections of alcohol and glycol mixed to paralyze them. Then they were put into space planes that looked exactly like DC8s (except they had rocket motors instead of propellers).

These DC8 space planes then flew to planet Earth where the paralyzed people were stacked around the bases of volcanoes in the hundreds of billions. When they had finished stacking them, H-bombs were lowered into the volcanoes. Xenu then detonated all the H-bombs at the same time and everyone was killed.

The story doesn’t end there though. Since everyone has a soul, (called a “Thetan” in this story) he then had to trick souls into not coming back again. So while the hundreds of billions of souls were being blown around by the nuclear winds, he had special electronic traps that caught all the souls in electronic beams, (the electronic beams were sticky like fly-paper). After he had captured all these souls he had them packed into boxes and taken to a few huge cinemas. There all the souls had to spend days watching special 3D motion pictures that told them what life should be like. In these films they were shown false pictures and told they were God, The Devil and Christ. In the story this process is called “implanting”.

When the films ended and the souls left the cinemas, these souls started to stick together because since they had all seen the same films they thought they were the same people. They clustered in groups of a few thousand. Now because there were only a few living bodies left they stayed as clusters and inhabited these bodies.

As for Xenu, the Loyal Officers finally overthrew him and they locked him away in a mountain on one of the planets. Xenu is kept in by a force-field powered by an eternal battery and he is still alive today. But through the auditing process a person can, for a price remove these body Thetans from themselves and reach a state which the Church calls “clear”. The cost of reaching a proper state of clear can greatly exceed $100.000 USD. Remember this “religion” was started by a science fiction writer.

But, if they are just another, all be it extremely well funded, spaceship religion, who cares? they aren’t hurting anyone. I wouldn’t count on that, considering the founder.  You remember the bad science fiction author L. Ron Hubbard himself is quoted as saying: “Anyone who attacks Scientology is a criminal all you have to do is dig up their crimes to silence them and if you cant dig up any crimes, manufacture them” he also said “never defend: always attack” And this from the people that claim to be the most ethical people on the planet.

A MESSAGE TO THE SCIENTOLOGIST – YOUR FAMILY LOVES AND MISSES YOU

Until Next: Time Courage and a tin foil hat…

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