Scientology's Revenge - 1999-09-09: Difference between revisions

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<div class="hnews hentry item">[[File:f0.png]] '''<span class="url entry-title">[http://web.archive.org/web/20000903162158/www.newtimesla.com/issues/1999-09-09/feature.html/printable_page Scientology's Revenge]</span>''' <span class="updated">September 9, 1999</span>, <span class="author vcard"><span class="fn">Ron Russell</span>, <span class="org organization-name">New Times Los Angeles</span></span>
<div class="hnews hentry item">[[File:f0.png]] '''<span class="url entry-title">[http://web.archive.org/web/20000903162158/www.newtimesla.com/issues/1999-09-09/feature.html/printable_page Scientology's Revenge]</span>''' <span class="updated">September 9, 1999</span>, <span class="author vcard"><span class="fn">Ron Russell</span>, <span class="org organization-name">New Times Los Angeles</span></span>
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It was an idea whose time had come. That's how [[:Category:Priscilla Coates|Priscilla Coates]] describes the humble beginnings of the [[:Category:Cult Awareness Network|Cult Awareness Network]], founded two decades ago in the wake of the murders and mass suicides in Guyana that claimed the lives of hundreds of the late Jim Jones' followers. The concept was simple enough: set up a nonprofit, national organization to assist the often desperate loved ones of people caught up in the ever-proliferating cult scene. On paper, at least, the group known by the acronym CAN endures. But nearly a quarter-century later, neither Coates, who ran the Los Angeles chapter during the organization's heyday, nor anyone else who once helped nurture the network has anything to do with it. That's because whenever people call CAN's hotline these days, more likely than not someone from the Church of Scientology answers the phone. Instead of warning people about suspected cults, opponents say, the new group promotes them. As one Scientology critic puts it, "It's like Operation Rescue taking over Planned Parenthood."
<span class="entry-content">It was an idea whose time had come. That's how [[:Category:Priscilla Coates|Priscilla Coates]] describes the humble beginnings of the [[:Category:Cult Awareness Network|Cult Awareness Network]], founded two decades ago in the wake of the murders and mass suicides in Guyana that claimed the lives of hundreds of the late Jim Jones' followers. The concept was simple enough: set up a nonprofit, national organization to assist the often desperate loved ones of people caught up in the ever-proliferating cult scene. On paper, at least, the group known by the acronym CAN endures. But nearly a quarter-century later, neither Coates, who ran the Los Angeles chapter during the organization's heyday, nor anyone else who once helped nurture the network has anything to do with it. That's because whenever people call CAN's hotline these days, more likely than not someone from the Church of Scientology answers the phone. Instead of warning people about suspected cults, opponents say, the new group promotes them. As one Scientology critic puts it, "It's like Operation Rescue taking over Planned Parenthood."</span>
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<code><nowiki>{{cite news | first = Ron | last = Russell | title = Scientology's Revenge | url = http://web.archive.org/web/20000903162158/www.newtimesla.com/issues/1999-09-09/feature.html/printable_page | work = New Times Los Angeles | date = 1999-09-09 | accessdate = 2009-12-20 }}</nowiki></code>
<code><nowiki>{{cite news | first = Ron | last = Russell | title = Scientology's Revenge | url = http://web.archive.org/web/20000903162158/www.newtimesla.com/issues/1999-09-09/feature.html/printable_page | work = New Times Los Angeles | date = 1999-09-09 | accessdate = 2009-12-20 }}</nowiki></code>
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[[Category:Cynthia Kisser]]
[[Category:Cynthia Kisser]]
[[Category:Daniel Leipold]]
[[Category:Daniel Leipold]]
[[Category:Ed Lottick]]
[[Category:Edward Lottick]]
[[Category:Foundation for Religious Freedom]]
[[Category:Foundation for Religious Freedom]]
[[Category:Gary Beeny]]
[[Category:Gary Beeny]]

Revision as of 23:01, 1 March 2015

F0.png Scientology's Revenge September 9, 1999, Ron Russell, New Times Los Angeles

It was an idea whose time had come. That's how Priscilla Coates describes the humble beginnings of the Cult Awareness Network, founded two decades ago in the wake of the murders and mass suicides in Guyana that claimed the lives of hundreds of the late Jim Jones' followers. The concept was simple enough: set up a nonprofit, national organization to assist the often desperate loved ones of people caught up in the ever-proliferating cult scene. On paper, at least, the group known by the acronym CAN endures. But nearly a quarter-century later, neither Coates, who ran the Los Angeles chapter during the organization's heyday, nor anyone else who once helped nurture the network has anything to do with it. That's because whenever people call CAN's hotline these days, more likely than not someone from the Church of Scientology answers the phone. Instead of warning people about suspected cults, opponents say, the new group promotes them. As one Scientology critic puts it, "It's like Operation Rescue taking over Planned Parenthood."


{{cite news | first = Ron | last = Russell | title = Scientology's Revenge | url = http://web.archive.org/web/20000903162158/www.newtimesla.com/issues/1999-09-09/feature.html/printable_page | work = New Times Los Angeles | date = 1999-09-09 | accessdate = 2009-12-20 }}