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UK Teen Cited For Calling Scientology a "Cult"

An anonymous reader writes "A 15-year-old in the UK is facing prosecution for using the word 'cult' to describe the Church of Scientology at an anti-Scientology demonstration in London earlier this month. According to the City of London police at the scene, the teen was violating the Public Order Act, which 'prohibits signs which have representations or words which are threatening, abusive or insulting.' There's a video of the teen receiving the summons from the City of London police at the demonstration (starting about 1 minute in), and now he's asking for advice on how to handle the court case."

995 comments

  1. The first problem is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    naming an act the "Public Order Act."

    The next thing London will do is put up posters saying that you are secure beneath the watchful eyes.

    Perhaps they thought Orwell was writing an instruction manual?

    1. Re:The first problem is by Kligat · · Score: 1
      Oh, I have an idea. They can call them "the London Eyes," which will conjure up fond memories of the giant Ferris wheel they have there when the appropriate imagery is used. That way they can run 'public service' ads once every commercial break.

      Each of them will start with a child riding on the London Eye, and beneath him large explosions rock the city beneath him while a loud, intimidating voice reminds the audience of the consequences of losing the War on Terrorism. The ad raises the question of just how much the privacy proponents are being warped by terrorist propaganda by warping their talking points to look similar.

      The focus zooms into the child's frightened eyes as the first explosion happens, and the child's joyous face where everything changes into rainbows and butterflies when the ad changes to "if you prevent this atrocity from happening by supporting the Terrorism and Radicalization Prevention Act."

      There could also be an "if you don't" part where they show the child carrying an AK-47 and wearing a turban. It ends with the image of the child on the Ferris wheel beneath a rainbow transposed onto another Ferris wheel with the eye in the center, with the first image fading away.

      It ends with "The London Eye is watching out for you." I really don't think anyone that says it resembles Big Brother would stand a chance with the imagery from before, even with the 5 second message at the end.

    2. Re:The first problem is by arivanov · · Score: 5, Informative

      Yep. Though probably you are thinking of the wrong Orwell

      After all the church has spent a considerable amount of money on wooing that particular police department.

      http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2006/nov/22/freedomofinformation.religion

      It is the "All animals are equal, some are more equal than the other" bit of Orwell.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    3. Re:The first problem is by jwisser · · Score: 2, Informative

      I like "Terrorism and Radicalization Prevention Act". It's one letter-switch away from being a TRAP.

    4. Re:The first problem is by WobindWonderdog · · Score: 5, Funny

      I agree. I was totally going to say:

      IT'S A TRPA!

    5. Re:The first problem is by sporkme · · Score: 1

      ^That^ is pretty aggressive. Scientolojerks seem to have a knack for "wooing." I cannot believe that government-bots with actual functioning human brains would even consider this case, let alone issue the original summons, but here it is. WTF^m's, its scientology... cult definition property! Unless... THEY are in on it TOO!11!1 They like the truffles, but can they pony up the ADAM!?!?

    6. Re:The first problem is by Z00L00K · · Score: 5, Insightful
      And I avoid to call them "Church", just "Scientology" is sufficient.

      Calling them "Cult" will also lend them credibility for something they aren't.

      And by the way, isn't "Church" a Christian designation? But Scientology is a completely different thing, and has really not much to do with Christianity.

      And by the way - My opinion is that you should be able to have a religion, or copyright, but never both.

      Anyway - one person's view can be "Religion", another "Cult" and a third it can be "Lifestyle".

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    7. Re:The first problem is by arivanov · · Score: 2

      Anyway - one person's view can be "Religion", another "Cult" and a third it can be "Lifestyle".

      Though shalt not mis-quote Lazarus!

      One man's religion is another man's belly laugh.

      http://atheism.about.com/library/quotes/bl_q_RHeinlein.htm

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    8. Re:The first problem is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In any respectable police force this would have been a subject for internal investigations. In my country, police officers are strictly forbidden to take any form of gifts or services worth more than pennies. A cup of coffee is at the upper end of that scale.

    9. Re:The first problem is by Stellian · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Cult:

      1. a. A religion or religious sect generally considered to be extremist or false, with its followers often living in an unconventional manner under the guidance of an authoritarian, charismatic leader.
            b. The followers of such a religion or sect.

      2. A system or community of religious worship and ritual.

      3. The formal means of expressing religious reverence; religious ceremony and ritual.

      4. A usually nonscientific method or regimen claimed by its originator to have exclusive or exceptional power in curing a particular disease.

      5. a. Obsessive, especially faddish, devotion to or veneration for a person, principle, or thing.
            b. The object of such devotion.

      6. An exclusive group of persons sharing an esoteric, usually artistic or intellectual interest. The Scientologysts themselves always claimed to be 2. & 3. The whole point is that they are not, they are a profit-seeking corporation.
      I think the teen can use meaning 1. without qualifying as "threatening, abusive or insulting". This was, after all, an anti-Scientology demonstration. There's nothing insulting or abusive in calling your religion false, most form of orgnised religion claim that every other religion is wrong.
      Otherwise, it should be illegal to use any kind of signs of religious nature: if I have a poster declaring Cthulhu the only God and savior, that would imply you belief in The Spaghetti Monster as the only God and savior is wrong, thereby insulting or abusive.
    10. Re:The first problem is by vidarh · · Score: 5, Informative
      To nitpick: This was City of London police. City of London != London.

      City of London is just one of 30 boroughs of the city named London. Confusing, I know. To make matters more confusing, City of London have it's police force (the rest of London's policing is done by the Metropolitan Police as pointed out in the article) and City of London has it's own Lord Mayor not to be confused with the Mayor of London.

      City of London is the "original" London, where most of the settlements dating back to Roman times can be found. Now it's mainly a financial centre, and not many people live there.

      Generally City is under tighter control than the rest of London, and it doesn't surprise me that it was City of London police that acted like idiots.

    11. Re:The first problem is by morari · · Score: 4, Funny

      Everyone knows that Cthulhu would simply devour the Flying Spaghetti Monster, god and savior or not!

      --
      "He who can destroy a thing, controls a thing." --Paul Atreides, Dune
    12. Re:The first problem is by Bonobo_Unknown · · Score: 1

      no it's just that english police can't spell "cunt"

      --
      We don't believe in radical loony monotheistic religions from the middle east -- we're Christians.
    13. Re:The first problem is by SenseiLeNoir · · Score: 1

      And I avoid to call them "Church", just "Scientology" is sufficient.

      Calling them "Cult" will also lend them credibility for something they aren't.

      And by the way, isn't "Church" a Christian designation? But Scientology is a completely different thing, and has really not much to do with Christianity. Maybe you should tell that to Saint IGNUcius (aka Richard M. Stallman) and his Church of Emacs :)
      http://www.stallman.org/
      --
      Have a nice day!
    14. Re:The first problem is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Zondervan has the copyright to the Bible.

    15. Re:The first problem is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Scary article. On a side note, it is funny to me though that the professional at the end compares Scientology to the same type of threat at the Masons. His description of "them" as a cult is open to interpretation as to which group he was referencing. Maybe I missed something but when was that last time the "masons" copyrighted their material, presented themselves as a religion, and sued any of the thousands of anti-masonry sites, or even tried to have laws enacted that protect their interests above and beyond other groups?

      Then again as this is /. I'm sure the answer is they don't have to because they already run everything :)

      My point is that it seems like most people don't take Scientology's actions as a real threat if there are profesionals comparing them to a group which is kind of a conspiracy joke.

    16. Re:The first problem is by digitig · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No it doesn't. It may have copyright to a particular translation, but not to all (the KJV is UK Crown Copyright, for instance) and certainly not to the original documents which are public domain (no matter what the religious may say about the Author not being dead).

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    17. Re:The first problem is by oliverthered · · Score: 1

      as in cunt stubble

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    18. Re:The first problem is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Censorship even for the best of motives is always wrong.
                          In the US the truth is a great defense against charges like slander. Perhaps declaring to a judge in England that you simply stated the truth might be a good defense. You need a good lawyer. Perhaps you can turn this problem on its edge and find a way to make some money out of it. You should never be bothered in any way for simply expressing your opinion regardless of whether it offends someone else.

    19. Re:The first problem is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We invented the word you cunt.

    20. Re:The first problem is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Yes, but would he follow up with a side of bread-sticks and salad?

    21. Re:The first problem is by Eg0Death · · Score: 1

      Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn! Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn!

      --
      Why is this thus? What is the reason for this thusness?
    22. Re:The first problem is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A second problem is that cult is not a threatening, abusive or insulting word.
      http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/cult
      1. a particular system of religious worship, esp. with reference to its rites and ceremonies.

      According to the definition of the word, there is nothing negative about it. Which leads to the problem of the police giving meaning and definitions to words with out knowledge of the words or their meanings.

      Based upon this situation, if two african-americans from, say the Watts area near Los Angeles, went to London and one said the the other, What's up nigga! he could be cited for using a word that can honestly be interpreted as insulting or abusive.
      Forget context, the police heard the word, it's insulting, arrest that man!

      I love freedom.

    23. Re:The first problem is by PJ+The+Womble · · Score: 1

      Are you kidding? London has the most surveillance cameras per head and per square foot in the world (and will be using 500,000 CCTV cameras to "police" the 2012 Olympics http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/03/05/olympic_biometric_screening_plan/ ... one for every four spectators!) We've had posters about CCTV on the streets in London for years now. The sad thing is that nobody notices them any more.

      Here in Mr Brown's Brave New World, we have a new law which allows the police to stop and search people on the street without ANY suspicion that they have committed, or are about to commit, any offence whatsoever. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/crime/article3927040.ece

      Mr Brown is also bringing in powers to make it a CRIMINAL offence (i.e. punishable by criminal prosecution and sanctions) to leave school between the ages of 16 and 18 without 'A' Level education (which in the USA would be one step further on than a High School Diploma http://education.answerbox.net/education-search-equivalent-396546332.htm)

      Believe me, in matters Orwellian, we here in the UK lead the world. And that's not even touching on the particularly insidious form of Doublespeak invented by the New Labour party here in the mid-nineties and perfected by Mr Blair's spin doctors Campbell and Mandelson.

    24. Re:The first problem is by Beyond_GoodandEvil · · Score: 1

      There's nothing insulting or abusive in calling your religion false, most form of orgnised religion claim that every other religion is wrong.
      [CaveMan mode]Huh?[/CaveMan mode]. I'm pretty sure if you told any follower of a religion that their religion is false they would be insulted. Now, a better question would be why is this act legislating non-threatening but insulting speech?

      --
      I laughed at the weak who considered themselves good because they lacked claws.
    25. Re:The first problem is by Bloodoflethe · · Score: 1

      Yes, the joke may be ironic or maybe he knows what is going on and using that situation as a supporting argument. You have no idea, AC, because you don't watch what he watches or see what he sees. Personally, I thought he was alluding to how the government might use propaganda for the Wrong Method to handle things, which would include the situation you so aptly noted.

      --
      "Little is much when little you need."
    26. Re:The first problem is by Hasmanean · · Score: 1

      IIRC even the Queen needs to ask the Lord Mayor's permission before she enters the city of London. She only used to do so once a year, for some special occasion.

      --
      Hasan
    27. Re:The first problem is by AnotherUsername · · Score: 1

      Perhaps they thought Orwell was writing an instruction manual? Wasn't he?
      --
      I don't like Linux. This doesn't make me a troll.
    28. Re:The first problem is by Jester998 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Anyway - one person's view can be "Religion", another "Cult" and a third it can be "Lifestyle".
      Cult: A small, unpopular religion.
      Religion: A large, popular cult.

    29. Re:The first problem is by Deadstick · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Cult: A small, unpopular religion.

      Religion: A large, popular cult.

      rj

    30. Re:The first problem is by coyote_oww · · Score: 1
      Completely off-topic now, but TRPA mean Tahoe Regional Planning Authority around here, and they tell people where, what, when and how they can build on private land, cut down trees, etc, etc, in the Lake Tahoe basin.

      Lot of people swing back and forth depending on whether the TRPA is telling them what to do or someone else. If they're talking to you, it's Big Brother. If they're talking to someone else, they're Protecting the Environment.

    31. Re:The first problem is by ramon_omar · · Score: 1

      Why not? It worked for Cheney, Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz so far. I can't think of better company.

    32. Re:The first problem is by Theoboley · · Score: 0

      Never would've happened across the pond. Thank you amendment number 1.

      --
      Stupidity only gets you so far, then you've gotta try
    33. Re:The first problem is by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      "Perhaps they thought Orwell was writing an instruction manual?"

      People thought Machiavelli was writhing an instruction manual, too.

      In a sense, they both were.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    34. Re:The first problem is by ORBAT · · Score: 2, Funny

      Core dumped: stack overflow.

    35. Re:The first problem is by WGFCrafty · · Score: 1

      Have you not read the "Slashdot Order Act?"

      Please discontinue committing thread-crime.

    36. Re:The first problem is by mikael · · Score: 1

      "... We apologise for the inconvenience, but a metaphysical dichotomy has forced this unit to overload and shut down ..."

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    37. Re:The first problem is by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      British people are crazy.

    38. Re:The first problem is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Psychoanalysis (Sigmund Freud, et.al.) had long ago recognized
      the significance of the anal character.

      British society perhaps possesses the greatest amount of anality
      of any society on earth -- and the US, being largely a British
      derivation, is not far behind.

      Of course, such a comment would also qualify under the "Public
      Order Act." Luckily Sigmund Freud is dead and psychoanalysis
      is no longer mainstream.

    39. Re:The first problem is by jmorris42 · · Score: 1

      "Perhaps they thought Orwell was writing an instruction manual?"

      No, Orwell was writing a warning.

      > People thought Machiavelli was writhing an instruction manual, too.

      I take it you haven't actually read _The Prince_ or you wouldn't write something that silly. No sane person can doubt that he was writing very explicit advice on the siezing and maintaining of a crown and exhorting a specific candidate to do exactly that. And doing so for almost purely patrotic reasons. Which just goes to show that patriotism isn't always a pure and noble thing. Although given the circumstances in which he wrote the book I wouldn't be willing to totally condemn him either, his argument that only a strong and ruthless ruler could save the day had merit.

      Very interesting book though.... almost every word he wrote is both totally True and totally Evil. Although perhaps Evil isn't the best word, perhaps Amoral would be a better description.

      --
      Democrat delenda est
    40. Re:The first problem is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps they thought Orwell was writing an instruction manual?

      Well, obviously it isn't a cookbook.
    41. Re:The first problem is by Reziac · · Score: 1

      "My opinion is that you should be able to have a religion, or copyright, but never both."

      That's an interesting insight. And at first it sounds good, but when I think about it... maybe not. Should religion be required to be "open source"?? some religions (not just cults) rely on the concept of "mysteries" and would be, uh, fundamentally damaged by their mysteries being opened to all.

      As a related issue, should the concept of "Freedom of religion" have an inverse, in that religions cannot be free to reject anyone? (I don't think so; that would be much like the Boy Scouts not being able to reject someone from membership.)

      Back to what you said... I'm wondering where you draw the line, tho -- copyrights on material BY a religious organisation? BY individuals about or from within that religion?

      So... while I like the idea, it opens cans of worms hitherto not dreamed of, and could be worse than the existing situation. OTOH, that any organisation claiming tax-exempt status *as* a "religion" may hold copyrights but is NOT be allowed to use copyright as a weapon (ie. may not prosecute anyone for infringement) -- I'd go along with that, since it would allow FULL and open examination of their beliefs in the full light of public day, without fear of reprisal. (And yes, there'd be acrimonious and negative statements made; so what? Why should religion be exempt from receiving "bad reviews", well-founded or not?)

      Disclaimer: I'm somewhere between agnostic and atheist, and I don't *care* about others' religious beliefs so long as they don't impinge on ME.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    42. Re:The first problem is by gzunk · · Score: 1

      Strangely enough, the City of London is not one of the 32 London boroughs.

    43. Re:The first problem is by spacefiddle · · Score: 1

      Maybe you've heard of the PATRIOT act...

      I see an opportunity here to nail down that problematic "insulting." Threatening or abusive, okay, we could argue that back and forth... but can you get a summons for calling someone a git? Can you say their hair is bad? Can this be differentiated from saying "I THINK your hair is bad!"?

      IANAL nor do i play one on TV:

      Hopefully, in court, the teen's barrister can lay out something like

      1) It's been asserted that calling Scientology a cult is insulting
      2) Past precedent in libel/slander laws say it ain't if it can be proven true
      3) A cult has characteristics A, B, and C
      4) Scientology has characteristics A, B, and C
      5) No insult was made.

      Furthermore, we establish legal precedent that Scientology fits the definition of Cult.

      While you may not be able to stop your lawmakers from passing stupid, ambiguous laws, you can still succeed by working at the definition level, right? That's how it usually goes, innit?

      Will this work? What are the holes?

    44. Re:The first problem is by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      And this is why we need tail-recursion optimization!

    45. Re:The first problem is by Eli+Gottlieb · · Score: 1

      See my signature.

      For posterity, since I will someday change the signature:

      "Cthulhu for President 2008: Vote for the lesser evil!"

    46. Re:The first problem is by toriver · · Score: 1

      "A religion is a cult with political influence".

      I guess we can call them "an American tax dodging and international scam artist collective" or somesuch.

    47. Re:The first problem is by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      It's been obvious for years that Orwell wasn't a novelist or commentator but a prophet.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    48. Re:The first problem is by lab16 · · Score: 1

      It is said that the all-mighty FSM's Holy Noodles are never ending, so He can therefore not be devoured by anyone or anything. So no, there is no way for Cthulhu would be able to devour the FSM.

    49. Re:The first problem is by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 1

      I call them the "Scam of Scientology". However, having said that, I think Anonymous is on very shaky ground. Their stated purpose is to 'destroy' scientology (something i've read in numerous reports on Anonymous with quotes from people claiming to be part of it). The problem with this is that nearly all religions have, at one time or another, been considered "cults" by the majority around them. That includes christianity, budism, Muslinism, etc.. Lutherans were once a "cult".

      Once we start getting a group of people persecuting others for their beliefs (no matter how stupid or moronic they may be) then you're not much better than many of the tyrants in history that have done so. Granted, Anonymous isn't doing physical harm to anyone (yet, who knows..) but these things can easily get out of control and mob mentality can do all kinds of horrific things.

      I say, if you want to fight against the scamming of scientology, great.. but it's VERY bad to go after peoples beliefs.

    50. Re:The first problem is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or, you know, just use Erlang.

    51. Re:The first problem is by morari · · Score: 1

      Cthulhu does not adhere to your feeble ideals of Euclidean space.

      --
      "He who can destroy a thing, controls a thing." --Paul Atreides, Dune
    52. Re:The first problem is by et764 · · Score: 1

      And by the way, isn't "Church" a Christian designation?

      Off topic, but I felt like sharing anyway. The word church originally comes from a Greek word, ekklesia. Ekklesia basically just meant a group of people. In the Bible, it usually gets translated church, but in at least one occasion the same word refers to an angry mob. In today's language, church is normally associated with Christianity, and especially if it's capitalized, but at least in my mind it doesn't necessarily have to even be religious.

    53. Re:The first problem is by Bonobo_Unknown · · Score: 1

      You're nicked, you fucking cult...

      Regards, P.C. Stubble.

      --
      We don't believe in radical loony monotheistic religions from the middle east -- we're Christians.
  2. Once again by Ekhymosis · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Once again, what would seem a basic 'right' is being brutally oppressed by an organization under the cloak of 'religion'. I wonder just how much longer this will continue? Until we are all 'clears' or cleared out of our money from the lawsuits?

    --
    Fighting over religion is like seeing whose imaginary friend is best.
    1. Re:Once again by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, when an organsation's income through its usual venues start to dry up, they turn for the courts to milk unwilling and/or casual bystanders.

      For reference, see SCO, RIAA...

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    2. Re:Once again by loose_change · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The bottom line here is that the UK has nothing equivalent to US First Amendment protections. Freedom of speech is not considered a basic right in the UK legal system.

    3. Re:Once again by aristolochene · · Score: 5, Informative

      Apart from Articles 10 and 11 of European Convention on Human Rights? Part of Human Rights Act.

      Try and remember that first section of US constitution is based on English Bill or Rights (1689) and Scottish Claim of Right, which itself carries on a tradition of defining the limits of state power and citizens rights dating back to Magna Carta (which predates Columbus by 200 years).

      Worth thinking about every time americans get all misty eyed about their own history.

      That's not to say the UK is a perfect democracy, but neither is the US.

      --
      echo $SIGNATURE
    4. Re:Once again by Chrisq · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes, I would certainly bring up the Human Rights act in any court case.

    5. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually, scientology spends quite a bit of money in the courtsystem fighting cases they cannot win. This will put a burden on whoever they sue this time, whilst having a chilling effect on other critics.

    6. Re:Once again by Hal_Porter · · Score: 5, Interesting

      In addition to the Human Rights Act, Britain has subtle legal system which is full of checks and balances.

      E.g. post the "Behead those who insult Islam" demonstration there was much hostile media coverage.

      http://www.speroforum.com/site/article.asp?idarticle=6403

      The government responded to this by advising the police and CPS to use existing legal powers to stop people inciting violence at demonstrations. They also decided to amend the Public Order Act 1986.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racial_and_Religious_Hatred_Act_2006

      Now in this case, under section 5 of the Public Order Act 1986, it seems like the original act was too strict.

      However, this guy has to go in front of a jury. A jury is likely to be more sympathetic to him than the "Behead those who insult Islam" types. You can think of the British system pre Human Rights Act as follows

      1) Bad things happen like the Sloan Square demonstration.
      2) The Media covers them and whips up a firestorm of panic
      3) The government gets legal advice as to whether existing legal powers are enough to stop Bad Things happening again.
      4) They introduce new legislation and/or brief the police/CPS to use their powers more aggressively. The police arrest people and the CPS decides whether there is a case for them to answer in court.
      5) New legislation might cause false positives like this case where harmless people are prosectuted
      6) Hopefully the government will advise the police/CPS not to do this in future and possibly amend legislation
      7) The people prosecuted should be found not guilty because the jury is briefed, or maybe the judge will throw the case out. Or maybe they will get busted in which case the media will stir up a firestorm and force the government to legislate.

      It's kind of funky but the system does have checks an balances. Of course the Human Rights Act allows people prosecuted in step 7 to appeal to the EU Court of Human Rights or judges to strike down legislation which breaks the HRA. Which is not really a good thing if you believe in the concept of "parliamentary sovereignty", but there you are.

      And before Americans sneer that this is adhoc, you're right. But this system has led to a stable society where individual freedoms have either increased or stayed constant for hundreds of years, far longer than the US system has existed.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    7. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh please, if everyone who said something bad about GWB was arrested, they would have to turn half the country into prison.

      I know bashing the US is cool and makes you feel like a big boy, but find one of the valid reasons instead of making something up next time.

    8. Re:Once again by dbIII · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I really do not think they fit any definition of religeon apart from their own. Misrepresenting the IRS giving them charitable status as being government acceptance of them as a religeon is one of the confidence tricks.

      They are a financial pyramid scheme and a fairly nasty cult as well. IMHO people should not be prosecuted for warning others about Scientologists. We have a really bizzare situation where a heavy handed approach is applied against Islam which has a tiny minority of dangerous criminals and have a hands off approach to Scientology which has the behaviour of being a criminal orginisation to the core (and is not a religeon in the first place).

    9. Re:Once again by Sir_Lewk · · Score: 1

      You are horrible at sarcasm.

      --
      "linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
    10. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, Scientology has always done that, i.e. not just after running out of money from other sources. (I'm pretty sure they still make loads off their own members.) It's a self defence mechanism, it means no one wants to stand up against them because they will be sued back, and hard.

    11. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Scientology isn't a religion. It's a cult.

    12. Re:Once again by Ortega-Starfire · · Score: 5, Insightful

      >I couldn't say that about George W Bush without being arrested.

      Yes you can. If we could not, 80% of the country would be in prison right now.

      --
      ---- Liquid was a patriot ----
    13. Re:Once again by davmoo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Sorry, wrong answer, but thanks for playing.

      I can stand on a public street corner and say "George W. Bush sucks big hairy donkey dicks!" all I want, and the government can't do a damned thing about it that would stand up in court. The only thing one can't do here, as far as insulting government officials goes, is make a direct threat against the life of the President (or other federal official).

      --
      I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
    14. Re:Once again by Anspen · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Remind me what "Free Speech Zones" are again? And how many people have been arrested for having anti-Bush/war T-shirts or placards during rallies and refusing to leave?

      No, they generally weren't convincted of anything, but I'd hardly call being arrested and spending time in jail "a right to free speech.

      Ultimately the existence of constitutional protection is only as strong as the enforcement mechanism.

    15. Re:Once again by icebike · · Score: 4, Informative

      Oh, right, Article 10 and 11.

      Really worked for this guy, right?

      > Try and remember that first section of US
      > constitution is based on English Bill or Rights

      Nope. Sorry. Not even close.

      The first section (Article 1) of the constitution deals with the structure of government.

      Refresher course on line here: http://www.usconstitution.net/const.html

      In fact, ratification of the Constitution was in doubt due to the observation of the people that there were no protections of individual rights in the document. Promises of amendments to correct this issue were finally agreed to by states in order to get the constitution passed.

      Only then were people's rights enshrined in in the first 10 amendments, the most important of which and the least observed being Amendment 10:

      "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."

      In fact, that single amendment would have sufficed and we would be better off with just that single amendment. Too many people believe the constitution enumerates our rights. This is totally backward. The constitution Limits Government. Something sadly lacking in Britain.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    16. Re:Once again by ushering05401 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "I can stand on a public street corner and say "George W. Bush sucks big hairy donkey dicks!" all I want..."

      Uh, no you can't. There are still obscenity laws, and they are enforced when complaints are made, especially if minors are within earshot.

      I knew a guy who was charged for shouting an obscene comment to a buddy while they were kayaking near a swimming area. The Christian youth group that was having an outing on the shore apparently called the police who were waiting when my friend came ashore. He ended up with ten hours of community service or some such nonsense, probably because the church members showed up at the court en masse as some sort of statement.

    17. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      C'mon, take off your cloak of anonimity and say that ... I dare you!

    18. Re:Once again by JustOK · · Score: 1

      Only if you're in a "free-speech zone"

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    19. Re:Once again by Capsaicin · · Score: 1, Insightful

      However, this guy has to go in front of a jury.

      If it gets that far. IANAUKL, but I would assume you have some sort of commital proceedings prior to a jury trial? Looking at the text of the legisation (though admittedly without any familiarity with relevant curial authority) this case looks so completely without merit that no prosecutor could ethically proceed and no magistrate would allow it to proceed. Methinks justice would best be served by publically horsewhipping (at least verbally) the arresting officer.

      --
      Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
    20. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure I could call George Bush whatever I like without being arrested. Don't exaggerate, you self righteous "noxious prick".

    21. Re:Once again by wharlie · · Score: 1

      "George W Bush is a noxious prick".
      There I said it.

      Waiting to be arrested.
      Waiting.
      Waiting.

      Nock nock.

      Run!!!!

    22. Re:Once again by aristolochene · · Score: 5, Informative

      the set of amendments to the constitution which form the bill of rights in the US closely match - and indeed were derived from the English/Scottish bills/claims of right from 1689. This is, I'm afraid, fact - phrases like "cruel and unusual punishment" come from English bill of rights. The UK doesn't have a single written constitution (for complex historical reasons), but there are plenty of documents (for example Margna Carta) which were developed in the UK and limit state power. It's absurd to suggest that the UK does not have systems in place to limit the power of the state. The US system of politics /government didn't develop in a vacuum. Many of the ideas of the US constitution were based on UK law (hardly a surprise) and modified to suit the particular ideology/politics/beliefs of early US politicians. It's probably fair to say that some aspects of the US model have been a success, and some less so. it is easy to pick holes in both US and UK systems of government, and neither represents a perfect democracy, but it is difficult to argue that they don't both share a common root.

      --
      echo $SIGNATURE
    23. Re:Once again by Hal_Porter · · Score: 4, Insightful

      However, this guy has to go in front of a jury.


      If it gets that far. IANAUKL, but I would assume you have some sort of commital proceedings prior to a jury trial? Looking at the text of the legisation (though admittedly without any familiarity with relevant curial authority) this case looks so completely without merit that no prosecutor could ethically proceed and no magistrate would allow it to proceed. Methinks justice would best be served by publically horsewhipping (at least verbally) the arresting officer.

      That really is a classic piece of slashdot bullshit. You're not a UK lawyer but you use a lot of legal terminology to make it sound like you know what you're talking about.

      This guy has been arrested. He's 'facing prosecution'. I think that means he has been arrested but the Crown Prosecution Service is considering whether to prosecute him. He was arrested under this -

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harassment%2C_Alarm_or_Distress#Provisions_of_the_law
      The Public Order Act 1986, Section 5 states:
      (1) A person is guilty of an offence if he:
      (a) uses threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour, or disorderly behaviour, or
      (b) displays any writing, sign or other visible representation which is threatening, abusive or insulting,
      within the hearing or sight of a person likely to be caused harassment, alarm or distress thereby.


      What makes you so sure the case is without legal merit, other than (like you) me you sympathize with the protestors and dislike Scientology and thus don't want it to have merit?
      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    24. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah yes, but you can't say the same thing about the queen, can you?

    25. Re:Once again by digitig · · Score: 1

      6) Hopefully the government will advise the police/CPS not to do this in future Which the police will ignore, protesting that they are independent of the legislature, and will continue to follow their own agenda.

      and possibly amend legislation And admit that they were wrong, and appear soft on crime? The press would never allow it!
      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    26. Re:Once again by salesgeek · · Score: 5, Informative

      In the UK, I can say "Gordon Brown is a noxious prick" without any legal repercussions.If I was in the US, I couldn't say that about George W Bush without being arrested.



      I've lived in the US my whole life. Saying that any politician is a prick, fruad, cheat, liar, bastard, @#$#head or worse is constitutionally protected political speech. People can, and do voice their opinion on our leaders with bumper stickers, rants on national television, signs, t-shirts and more. Bush is more often the target than not. We have the absolute right to criticize our politicians. We have no thought police, despite peoples best attempts to imagine them!

      What we are struggling with here is the right to peacefully assemble to voice these opinions where, say George Bush is going to give a speech at a graduation. The haters want to disrupt the event (which would fall out of bounds of our right to *peacefully* assemble), and Bush just wants to deliver his speech (and believe me, he doesn't want distractions).
      --
      -- $G
    27. Re:Once again by Rogerborg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Try standing next to Brian Haw and saying that about Gordo. Actually, try saying it in any public place. Plod can and will bag you under section 5 for doing anything that they don't like, including doing nothing. Perhaps you meant "prosecuted" or "convicted" rather than "arrested".

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    28. Re:Once again by dintech · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Oh please, if everyone who said something bad about GWB was arrested, they would have to turn half the country into prison.
      Now that's irony.
    29. Re:Once again by Nuskrad · · Score: 5, Informative

      The Human Rights Act is flimsy at best though. The First Amendment to the US Constitution doesn't include a list of exceptions longer than the amendment itself, whereas the HRA states that freedom of expression may be curtailed "in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary". The fact it includes 'morals', which are entirely subjective, demonstrates just how flimsy it is.

    30. Re:Once again by vidarh · · Score: 4, Interesting
      What makes him (and me) so sure it's without legal merit is that even if a judge were to consider calling Scientology a cult, despite the fact that they've been called so by the judiciary in the UK before, "insulting", restricting him from putting it on a sign is almost certainly inconsistent with the Human Rights Act, and British judges have a history of not being afraid to strike down bad legislation (and if they don't, the European Court of Justice seems to have striking down bad UK laws as something of a hobby, to the point where parliament sometimes seem to find it acceptable to vote for bad laws to satisfy their electorate safe in the knowledge they'll never pass a legal test).

      And GP is right that this can be brought before a magistrate prior to, or instead of, a jury trial.

    31. Re:Once again by vidarh · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Which the police will ignore, protesting that they are independent of the legislature, and will continue to follow their own agenda.

      If they do, they open themselves to investigations resulting in disciplinary action and/or lawsuits for harassment. The government may not do much, but the judiciary in the UK really, really hate it when anyone ignore their opinion on the matter.

      And admit that they were wrong, and appear soft on crime? The press would never allow it!

      Which is why they'll probably leave it to the courts to sort out the mess and interpret the law in a way that makes this go away and/or strike it down based on human rights legislation, after which the politicians can whine about "activist judges" or "Europe" like they usually do when pretending to be offended the court didn't care for their tripe.

    32. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once again, what would seem a basic 'right' is being brutally oppressed by an organization under the cloak of 'religion'. I wonder just how much longer this will continue? Until we are all 'clears' or cleared out of our money from the lawsuits? Sure, freedom of speech is a basic right in the United States...but not most other places in the world.
    33. Re:Once again by Sobrique · · Score: 1

      At least, the bits of it that the UK government hasn't opted out of. We don't like to mention those.

    34. Re:Once again by jeremyp · · Score: 4, Funny

      This is off topic. We are talking about cults here. So would you be arrested for obscenity for shouting "George Bush is a cult"? Or would you be arrested for poor spelling?

      --
      All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
    35. Re:Once again by digitig · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Which the police will ignore, protesting that they are independent of the legislature, and will continue to follow their own agenda.


      If they do, they open themselves to investigations resulting in disciplinary action and/or lawsuits for harassment.

      Not if they're operating within the law -- or, at least, the investigations will clear them. There have been plenty of cases lately of the police ignoring what parliament says about the intent of legislation, and continuing to apply the letter of the law when they want to. The judiciary are also pretty much tied by the letter of the law, too. Anyway, the way the politics is going in the UK at the moment, the standoff is between the judiciary and the government, not between the judiciary and the police.

      Even if the police are found to be in the wrong, they never seem to get more than a slap on the wrist -- http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2006/12/358276.html, for example, doesn't indicate any penalty for the police other than court costs (does anybody know if the police did get anything more than a telling off for this?).

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    36. Re:Once again by moxley · · Score: 1

      Obviously you haven't been to the US lately;

      Because, apparently nowdays the only thing we have the right to is "safety."

    37. Re:Once again by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      Except we haven't opted out of any. MPs have proposed opting out of parts, but have not done so ... yet.

    38. Re:Once again by Tony+Hoyle · · Score: 1

      If the kid has any sense he'll ask for a jury trial.

      1. A jury trial can establish case law, and stop this happening again.
      2. When the scientologists inevitably lose horribly, they'll have to pay all the costs (loser pays is a cool system to have in cases like this).

    39. Re:Once again by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      There's no problem in doing that, you just have to fill in a form. Indeed, this is the biggest weakness in the system as we can just clog up the system by submitting lots of forms (do ten 10minute protests on the same day, and that's 10 forms the police have to process; get 10 people to do the same thing...) more here

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    40. Re:Once again by wezeldog · · Score: 1

      ...in the UK legal system I think the parent was referring to how much the UK legal system seems to be biased towards the prosecution in libel cases: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libel_tourism.

      Probably didn't help to express it the way they did. Or they are an ass. Either way.

    41. Re:Once again by j0nb0y · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A jury trial can establish case law, and stop this happening again.

      No, actually, it can't. To have case law, you have to have a judicial decision. Juries don't write judicial decisions. You could possibly get a judicial decision from pre-trial or post-trial motions, but those would be completely independent from any jury decision.

      There's so much misinformation on /. about precedent.

      The other common one I see *all the time* is when people point to a settlement agreement and say that it sets a precedent. Again, for settlements, there is no judicial decision, so there is no legally binding precedent. Period.

      --
      If you had super powers, would you use them for good, or for awesome?
    42. Re:Once again by moosesocks · · Score: 1

      Yes, but Supreme Court rulings in the US do have the power to reinterpret the constitution in cases where it is vague or nonspecific.

      In the US, the First ammendment may also be suspended under similar circumstances to those described above, and the Supreme Court have ruled that there are quite a few areas where it "doesn't really apply"

      At the very least, you know what you're getting with the Human Rights Act just by reading the thing. Attempting to comprehensively understand the US constitution today requires a law degree.

      --
      -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
    43. Re:Once again by PJ+The+Womble · · Score: 1

      Perhaps they'll ask the Cubans if they can open up another "naval base"?

    44. Re:Once again by Atriqus · · Score: 1

      A random passer-by told Dick Cheney to go fuck himself on CNN. If you can get away with that, then you can pretty much say whatever you want about Bush.

      --
      Hey, look! It's Bono's brother.
    45. Re:Once again by rezalas · · Score: 1

      WTF are you talking about? We call him mentally retarded ON THE NATIONAL NEWS. Seriously, if "not" insulting GW is the only reason you can come up with your argument fails horridly.i

    46. Re:Once again by sm62704 · · Score: 1
      In the UK, I can say "Gordon Brown is a noxious prick" without any legal repercussions. If I was in the US, I couldn't say that about George W Bush without being arrested.

      To quote my journal from yesterday (to which my seemingly most avid reader responded "tltr"):

      IMPEACH THE OIL BARON. Then try him for treason, find him guilty, put him in front of a firing squad and shoot the son of a bitch. And his vice Baron, too.

      And then charge his family for the bullets like they do in China.!
      I'd say that's a bit more harsh than "George Bush is a noxious Prick." (and he is indeed a noxious prick). I'm calling him a traitor to his country and calling for a legal jury to execute him for that crime.

      Lets see if they put this geezer who has gone 56 years without going in front of a judge except for traffic violations, divorce, and bankrupcy in jail. I don't think they will.
      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    47. Re:Once again by corbettw · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Further proof to support your point: the US Declaration of Independence sites as one the grievances against George III that he tried to deny the colonists their rights as "Englishmen". So obviously those rights must have been previously recognized in England, for the colonists to have assumed they had them.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    48. Re:Once again by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      BS like this gets persued all the time. Sometimes a particular person in the
      machine has a particular "axe to grind", or perhaps there is some sort of
      "no tolerance policy" that's of relevance, or perhaps someone is a jerk and
      a control freak.

      A beaurocracy is just a slightly more organized version of the rioting mob.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    49. Re:Once again by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Not exactly. The bullying litigant can point to the settlements and try to
      use that as indication of some sort of "industry standard" should the given
      issue ever go to a jury. Although it is true that settlements aren't part of
      the case law.

      Frequently, they aren't even allowed to be public knownledge.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    50. Re:Once again by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Calling Scientology a cult is giving it too much credit.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    51. Re:Once again by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      They are generally arrested for disobeying a lawful order from an officer. That's not exactly the same thing, is it?

      The policeman isn't saying "you are forbidden to say that", only "please go say that somewhere else", which is generally a reasonable request.

      There have been abuses of power, to be sure (e.g. May Day in LA), but in general this behavior has little to do with oppressing people and everything to do with keeping things from going too far for the public good.

    52. Re:Once again by nomadic · · Score: 1



      And that is exactly where the UK and the US differ in basic philosophy. The main goal should not be a "stable society." Freedom is the highest good, not stability or security, and your admittedly adhoc system's main flaw is the inclusion of "Hopefully the government will advise the police/CPS not to do this" and "A jury is likely to be more sympathetic to him." A little bit too much uncertainty there, and individual freedoms are meant to apply to all individuals, not just most, and not just those who are sympathetic to juries.

    53. Re:Once again by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      In the UK, I can say "Gordon Brown is a noxious prick" without any legal repercussions. If I was in the US, I couldn't say that about George W Bush without being arrested.

      To quote my journal from yesterday (to which my seemingly most avid reader responded "tltr"):

      IMPEACH THE OIL BARON. Then try him for treason, find him guilty, put him in front of a firing squad and shoot the son of a bitch. And his vice Baron, too.

      And then charge his family for the bullets like they do in China.!
      I'd say that's a bit more harsh than "George Bush is a noxious Prick." (and he is indeed a noxious prick). I'm calling him a traitor to his country and calling for a legal jury to execute him for that crime.

      Lets see if they put this geezer who has gone 56 years without going in front of a judge except for traffic violations, divorce, and bankrupcy in jail. I don't think they will. You do realise that

      1) What you wrote is close to incitement
      2) In the US the Secret Service have been known to track people down for doing that on the Internet

      Come on it's not hard

      1) "George Bush sucks, was wrong to invade Iraq, is a Pedofile, a Nazi and a Furry and a traitor".

      Constitutionally protected speech.

      2) "George Bush should be shot".

      Not constitutionally protected speech. Expect the Party Van.

      It's a sign of a degraded and tribal approach to politics that you are unable to criticise the policies of the Bush administration without stepping over the incitement line by calling for Bush to be killed.

      I'm sure once President Obama or Clinton is in office you'll complain that the other tribe keep crossing the line in their attacks too.
      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    54. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what a bizarre idea that "you can't be in $publicPlace if you want to say that" constitutes a 'lawful order' and that disobeying it should expose a person to arrest. (It's a pretty bizarre idea that a police officer should have the power, on his own authority, to issue 'lawful orders' which are binding on the public anyway.)

    55. Re:Once again by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      People were arrested.. for wearing anti-bush T-shirts.. in the fenced-off protest area.. of the Democratic National Convention?

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    56. Re:Once again by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      If I was in the US, I couldn't say that about George W Bush without being arrested.

      How odd. I say words to that effect daily, and haven't been arrested yet. And to add emphasis, I say much the same about Hillary, Obama, and McCain....

      I read editorials that can be summarized that way almost daily. And yet the same editorialists are writing more or less the same thing the next week (perhaps from their prison cells?).

      I think you are confusing an NYPD decision to limit potential riots near the Republican Convention with some sort of law applying anywhere or anytime other than that particular place and time.

      I should also point out that there were similar decisions to limit riots near the Democratic Conventions over the last decades. Perhaps as a result of the major riots at the Democratic Convention in '68.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    57. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apart from Articles 10 and 11 of European Convention on Human Rights? Part of Human Rights Act.

      Try to remember that first section of US constitution is based on English Bill or Rights (1689) and Scottish Claim of Right, which itself carries on a tradition of defining the limits of state power and citizens rights dating back to Magna Carta (which predates Columbus by 200 years).

      Worth thinking about every time americans get all misty eyed about their own history.

      That's not to say the UK is a perfect democracy, but neither is the US.


      -Grammar Nazi-

      Sorry. I'm not trying to be a dick.

      Try and remember : Try what? And remember what?

      Try to remember : Ahhhh!!

      -/Grammar Nazi-
    58. Re:Once again by Derblet · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of a great joke I heard from Jack Dee (someone texted it to him on his show).

      "I thought I saw your name on a loaf of bread the other day, but when I looked closer it said 'Thick Cut'"

    59. Re:Once again by kabocox · · Score: 1

      And before Americans sneer that this is adhoc, you're right. But this system has led to a stable society where individual freedoms have either increased or stayed constant for hundreds of years, far longer than the US system has existed.

      Hey, I always thought it was a good thing for the British that North America, Australia, and other places where around for you to dump the people that didn't fit into your little utopia. If Britain was really such a great place that protected individual freedoms then Canada, the US, Australia, and India would be united as part of a British common wealth. Didn't all those places what and get independence ASAP?

    60. Re:Once again by mrogers · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but when the feedback loop involves "the media covers them and whips up a firestorm of panic" and "hopefully the government will advise the police/CPS not to do this in future", I think the phrase "checks and balances" is a little too complimentary. As you alluded to in your remark about sympathetic juries, such a system only protects people who express popular views. The point of free speech laws is to protect those who express unpopular views. Real, codified checks and balances, like those in the US, are designed to resist the kind of media manipulation and executive interference you described - the courts have to uphold the First Amendment, no matter how unpopular the views being expressed, and in theory it's impossible for the legislative or executive branches to influence them.

    61. Re:Once again by xelah · · Score: 1

      If the kid has any sense he'll ask for a jury trial. No, he won't opt for a jury trial because the offence is summary only and jury trial is not available. I don't know how it works in juvenile courts, but if he were charged as an adult he'd go before a magistrate - either a district judge (a professional lawyer) sitting alone or three lay magistrates (part-time volunteer non-lawyer judges with a professional legal adviser). It's a very minor offence in the scheme of things; it's the kind of thing large numbers of rowdy drunks get charged with on Saturday nights when they don't shut up when the nice policemen says so.

    62. Re:Once again by spazimodo · · Score: 1
      Even worse than that, their libel laws are ridiculous: "Rich people and bad laws mean tough times for free speech"

      "The growing use of English courts by foreign litigants is arousing increasing concern among free-speech campaigners such as Chris Walker of Freedom House, an American lobby group. He terms it "manna from heaven for deeply illiberal and fantastically wealthy ex-Soviet oligarchs and Middle-Eastern oil tycoons. Everyone knows the potency of the English laws and everyone takes it into account, at an incalculable cost to free speech.""
      --

      Fsck the millennium, we want it now.
      Millennium Crisis Line: 0890 900 2000 [calls cost 50p/min]
    63. Re:Once again by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      However, this guy has to go in front of a jury. A jury is likely to be more sympathetic to him than the "Behead those who insult Islam" types... It's kind of funky but the system does have checks an balances.

      The problem is when you're dealing with a powerful, non-government organization that can undermine those checks and balances. So maybe this kid is let go. That's still not a win for free speech because in the process of being fined, his identity was made known to the church of scientology who have a formal program of harassment of anyone who speaks out against them. This means the kid will likely find himself the subject of slander and other attacks, including ones from outside the UK's legal authority. As a result, many other people will be discouraged from making use of their freedom of speech in the future.

      Basically, this is an example of why the "chilling effect" argument in the US was so critical to creating effective freedom of speech laws and precedents. Not that the US is perfect in this regard, but on a federal level they recognized that being forcibly identified to the authorities themselves was enough to hinder freedom of speech in unacceptable ways. Freedom of speech needs the right to anonymous free speech and anonymous access to that speech in order to be an effective protection for the democratic process. This is a concept that seems to be missing in the UK and losing ground in the US as well.

    64. Re:Once again by Bogtha · · Score: 1

      The First Amendment to the US Constitution doesn't include a list of exceptions longer than the amendment itself

      In fact it does. You are absolutely correct in saying that the First Amendment as written doesn't include a list of exceptions, but the First Amendment as implemented by the justice system includes a hell of a long list of exceptions. Shouting fire in a crowded theatre. Slander. Libel. Copyright infringement. Free speech zones. There are all sorts of ways in which the act of speaking or the act of publishing can get you into trouble, and even though the First Amendment as written is absolute, you won't be able to find a judge that implements it to the letter of the law.

      Much better, I say, to have the full law written down in black and white where everybody can see it, rather than subjecting the grey areas to the whims of judges and keeping the people guessing. People talk about this being "Orwellian", but I think people are too preoccupied with Nineteen Eighty-Four and forget about Animal Farm.

      Not that the HRA does this very well of course, but the fact that it includes exceptions isn't a bad thing, it's that those exceptions are vague and very subjective that are the real problem.

      --
      Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
    65. Re:Once again by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 3, Insightful

      2) "George Bush should be shot". Not constitutionally protected speech. Expect the Party Van.

      Actually, you're mistaken. For speech not to be protected it has to advocate criminal violence, not just state an opinion about it. For example, writing that "G. Bush deserves to be shot" is legal, whereas writing "I want you to all go shoot G. Bush" is not legal (at least in most context). You'll also note, in the previous poster's blog, he claimed G. Bush should be impeached, convicted of treason, and shot. That is not illegal violence any more than saying a convicted murderer in Texas should be executed.

      It's a sign of a degraded and tribal approach to politics that you are unable to criticise the policies of the Bush administration without stepping over the incitement line by calling for Bush to be killed.

      I disagree. It is a perfectly valid opinion to think Bush is both a traitor and should be convicted and punished with death. I'd like to see a lot more politicians convicted as traitors and executed, particularly when they sell out the American people by taking lobbying dollars from foreign governments. I think it would be a step in the right direction for cleaning up or dreadfully corrupt political system.

      I'm sure once President Obama or Clinton is in office you'll complain that the other tribe keep crossing the line in their attacks too.

      You're assuming an awful lot. Not everyone blindly buys into the democrat vs. republican nonsense.

    66. Re:Once again by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "If Britain was really such a great place that protected individual freedoms then Canada, the US, Australia, and India would be united as part of a British common wealth"

      All three are members of The Commonwealth of Nations, which is headed by Queen Elizabeth II.

      The British Monarchy are heads of state in both Australia and Canada, and the Queen has a defined constitutional role which is usually carried out in practice by an appointed Governor-General (who also performs many of their ceremonial duties when none of the Royal Family are present).

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    67. Re:Once again by russotto · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You're right - we actually have pretty extensive protection for free speech in the UK, with far less restriction than in the US. In the UK, I can say "Gordon Brown is a noxious prick" without any legal repercussions. If I was in the US, I couldn't say that about George W Bush without being arrested.


      ROTFL. If calling Bush a prick was really an arrestable offense, US prisons wouldn't have room for all the minor drug offenders. The only way you'll get arrested for calling Bush a "noxious prick" is if the arresting officer is pissed off that you used a word (noxious) he didn't understand.
    68. Re:Once again by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      I disagree. It is a perfectly valid opinion to think Bush is both a traitor and should be convicted and punished with death. I'd like to see a lot more politicians convicted as traitors and executed, particularly when they sell out the American people by taking lobbying dollars from foreign governments. I think it would be a step in the right direction for cleaning up or dreadfully corrupt political system.

      Yeah, executing politicians as traitors does so much good for most countries that tried it. Maybe you're keeping just on the safe side of 'incitement to illegal violence' line but you are clearly hostile to the current constitutional system in which politicians are not generally executed by kangaroo courts on trumped up treason charges.

      Maybe you're the real traitor in that you advocate overthrowing that system and killing your political opponents. Don't be too surprised if the Secret Service are checking up on you if you say stuff like this - certainly they would be in the UK.
      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    69. Re:Once again by Pantero+Blanco · · Score: 1

      You're right - we actually have pretty extensive protection for free speech in the UK, with far less restriction than in the US. In the UK, I can say "Gordon Brown is a noxious prick" without any legal repercussions. If I was in the US, I couldn't say that about George W Bush without being arrested.
      ...What? Did you miss the hundreds of protesters outside GWB's ranch in Crawford doing just that, not to mention the millions of other people who say it almost daily?

      At least in the US I can still criticize religions other than Christianity without being arrested and accused of "inciting hatred" (not violence, but "hatred"). Sure, you can get harrassed in court in either nation by someone you offend, but at least you can't be criminally tried here (yet).

      If you really want to test whether your country's citizens have freedom of speech, publicly say something along the lines of "I think the official estimate of deaths during the Holocaust is an exaggeration."
    70. Re:Once again by brkello · · Score: 1

      You really have no idea what you are talking about, do you? Most Americans I know say things much worse than what you wrote and no one is arrested. I know it is popular to bash the US on Slashdot but come on. You are just clueless.

      --
      Support a great indie game: http://www.abaddon360.com
    71. Re:Once again by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "They are generally arrested for disobeying a lawful order from an officer. That's not exactly the same thing, is it?"

      It's precisely the same thing. If you actually read the article in the link, the events were as follows:

      1) The protesters show up in front of the Scientology HQ in London.

      2) Scientologists complain to the police about the protesters' use of certain terms including, but not restricted to "cult", which they claim are threatening and insulting.

      3) The police ask protesters who have placards with the terms they've received complaints about to remove them.

      4) When this doesn't happen, the officers on the scene check with more senior police before reading parts of the public order act to this teenager, and strongly advising him to remove the sign.

      5) He refuses, and then plays smart-arse with the police.

      6) They confiscate the placard and hand him a summons.

      It's perfectly clear that he wouldn't have gotten in trouble if he'd been carrying the same placard elsewhere, and that the police gave him two distinct opportunities to remove it before citing him. Furthermore, and in contrast with such cases in the US, he was not arrested, imprisoned, or in any way removed, but was left to continue demonstrating without the placard.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    72. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The First Amendment to the US Constitution doesn't include a list of exceptions longer than the amendment itself
      How exactly is it better that the long list of exceptions aren't listed?
    73. Re:Once again by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "Even worse than that, their libel laws are ridiculous: "Rich people and bad laws mean tough times for free speech""

      That's a bunch of Americans moaning about the fact that unlike in America, British law doesn't let them get away with publishing lies about people. Those who make accusations without being able to back them up with some evidence can be successfully sued, but the article severely misrepresents the ability of British civil law to affect those who are outside its jurisdiction, and completely fails to mention the fact that there have been a number of high profile cases where the plaintiff lost after whoever was accused of libel produced evidence to support what they'd written.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    74. Re:Once again by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Excuse me for the psychological response, but do you literally believe what you've just typed? Specifically:

      In the UK, I can say "Gordon Brown is a noxious prick" without any legal repercussions. If I was in the US, I couldn't say that about George W Bush without being arrested.

      Do you honestly and truly believe that?

      Have you ever seen a TV show made in the US? They make fun of Bush all the time, saying a lot worse things than "noxious prick." Pick any random late-night show, especially if they have one of those blow-hard Hollywood celebs as a guest (like Tim Robbins) and see what they call Bush on it. And that's aired to millions of people on a daily basis!

      If you truly believe that posting you just made, you have to be delusional. Or extremely ignorant of the US. If it were illegal to say "George Bush is a noxious prick" the entire population of San Francisco would be in prison or court.

    75. Re:Once again by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Yeah, executing politicians as traitors does so much good for most countries that tried it.

      Whereas not executing traitors who happen to be politicians has done so much good for others? They pass virtually the same, unconstitutional laws again and again with no repercussions. They intentionally lie to the people with no repercussions. Hundreds of thousands die as a result, and still nothing. Seems to be working great, huh?

      Maybe you're keeping just on the safe side of 'incitement to illegal violence' line but you are clearly hostile to the current constitutional system in which politicians are not generally executed by kangaroo courts on trumped up treason charges.

      Who said anything about kangaroo courts or trumped up charges? Only you. Both I and the previous poster merely submitted our opinion that Bush is a traitor and that the courts should prosecute him for that using the established process of impeachment for sitting politicians.

      Your assertions otherwise are empty and inflammatory.

      Maybe you're the real traitor in that you advocate overthrowing that system and killing your political opponents.

      I see. Perhaps you'd be so good as to quote where I advocated overthrowing the "system" or where I stated anyone was my political opponent. Gee, I just mentioned applying the existing laws, including capital punishment for treason, which are already part of the system.

      Don't be too surprised if the Secret Service are checking up on you if you say stuff like this - certainly they would be in the UK.

      Yeah, and that you bring it up is exactly why the US courts ruled that government monitoring was an infringement of free speech due to the "chilling effect" it had on people attempting to express themselves or access said speech.

    76. Re:Once again by Liselle · · Score: 1
      Since you didn't post the text for the benefit of us ignorant Americans, I googled it:

      Article 10 Â- Freedom of expression
      1 Everyone has the right to freedom of expression. This right shall include
      freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and
      ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers.
      This article shall not prevent States from requiring the licensing of
      broadcasting, television or cinema enterprises.
      2 The exercise of these freedoms, since it carries with it duties and
      responsibilities, may be subject to such formalities, conditions,
      restrictions or penalties as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a
      democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial
      integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the
      protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or
      rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in
      confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the
      judiciary.
      Article 11 Â- Freedom of assembly and association
      1 Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and to freedom
      of association with others, including the right to form and to join trade
      unions for the protection of his interests.
      2 No restrictions shall be placed on the exercise of these rights other than
      such as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic
      society in the interests of national security or public safety, for the
      prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals or
      for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others. This article shall
      not prevent the imposition of lawful restrictions on the exercise of these
      rights by members of the armed forces, of the police or of the
      administration of the State.
      --
      Auto-reply to ACs: "Truly, you have a dizzying intellect."
    77. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try and remember that first section of US constitution is based on English Bill or Rights (1689) and Scottish Claim of Right, which itself carries on a tradition of defining the limits of state power and citizens rights dating back to Magna Carta (which predates Columbus by 200 years).

      Worth thinking about every time americans get all misty eyed about their own history. Yes, and humans were originally monkeys, too. Evolution manifests itself in many ways.
    78. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By the way, the (b) part enables persecution of a person who expresses their religious belief and racial, cultural or political background in public since religion, culture, race and politics cause alarm and distress in a part of British population.

    79. Re:Once again by RexRhino · · Score: 1

      You're right - we actually have pretty extensive protection for free speech in the UK, with far less restriction than in the US. In the UK, I can say "Gordon Brown is a noxious prick" without any legal repercussions. If I was in the US, I couldn't say that about George W Bush without being arrested. You realize that not only do people say things like "G. W. Bush is a noxious prick" constantly, there are thousands of people who have openly advocated assassinating him without any legal repercussions.

      In most circles in the U.S., you would face more disapproval and hostility for openly supporting the president (any president), than you would for criticizing him.

      Short of actually calling in a bomb threat to the White House, there is no criticism of the president that can get you arrested.

      I know it is popular to mindlessly bash the U.S., but it would help if you had even the vaguest clue what you are talking about.

    80. Re:Once again by ahabswhale · · Score: 1

      Yes, and before britains get all misty eyed about their history, they should remember that the Cyrus Cylinder was the world's first charter of human rights and came over 1000 years before the Magna Carta and that the Magna Carta's protections weren't really for the common man but for the upper classes and most of its protections were repealed by 1969.

      --
      Are agnostics skeptical of unicorns too?
    81. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... Profit?

    82. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      brutally oppressed by an organization ... called government.

      Remember who holds the keys to oppression. It ain't religious groups. It's the organization holding the special "right" to employ coercion (meaning physical force or threat thereof) as their means.

      The cult of scientology would be powerless without government.

      Now I ask you again, who's conducting oppression here, A) the wacko religious cult, or B) government? Don't lose sight of reality.

    83. Re:Once again by icebike · · Score: 1

      None of this is embodied in "the first section of the US constitution".

      Your post (grandparent of this post) was just wrong on the facts with regard to the structure of the constitution which suggested a great deal of misconceptions about the document.

      The US Bill of Rights (called a Bill: because it was introduced as an act of congress to amend the constitution) was an afterthought, demanded by the people and the states as a condition of ratifying the constitution, in large part due to the ineffectiveness of the so called English Bill of Rights 1689.

      That document was as much concerned with succession to the throne as it was the rights of the people, and the rights of parliament were really its main focus.

      In any event much of was moot before the US constitution was drafted.

      Further, there are very few rights in either document that are directly related to specific elements in the opposite document: Basically just three (right to bear arms, trial by jury, and cruel and unusual punishment).

      There is no right in the English Bill of Rights to free speech/press, privacy, and certainly nothing that comes close to the scope and audacity of the 9th and 10th amendments to the constitution.

      The US constitution was also influenced by French history, law, and government. Yet you claim a British heritage exclusively.

      --
      Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
    84. Re:Once again by corsec67 · · Score: 1

      For speech not to be protected it has to advocate criminal violence, not just state an opinion about it.


      And where is that exception in the first amendment?

      If you can insert "little changes" into the amendment without actually amending it, then it can be changed to say anything.
      --
      If I have nothing to hide, don't search me
    85. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      '.. but you are clearly hostile to the current constitutional system in which politicians are not generally executed by kangaroo courts on trumped up treason charges...'

      Well, Saddam was treated this way by the current American constitutional system. They invaded his country, set up an illegal court composed of his enemies, and charged him with suppressing a revolution by using weapons which the Americans had provided him with.

    86. Re:Once again by Darby · · Score: 1

      I'd say that's a bit more harsh than "George Bush is a noxious Prick."

      No, calling for him to be put to death merely means that you are a good citizen, who values the rule of law and reveres his country's hallowed institutions and founding principles. There is nothing harsh or in any way negative about that.

      Calling him a "noxious prick" could be seen as rude, even though true as well, so there is some potential for you to be viewed negatively by a decent person for that, yet no possibility of a decent person viewing you at all negatively for the other.

      So it's harsher to call him a noxious prick. He knew what the laws were when he chose to violate them so he's clearly stated that he knows he deserves execution as well.

    87. Re:Once again by tgrigsby · · Score: 1

      The Public Order Act 1986, Section 5 states:
      (1) A person is guilty of an offence if he:
      (a) uses threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour, or disorderly behaviour, or
      (b) displays any writing, sign or other visible representation which is threatening, abusive or insulting,
      within the hearing or sight of a person likely to be caused harassment, alarm or distress thereby.


      Oh, well, that clears things right up. So, from my perspective, and contingently responding as well to another post higher up:

      UK law sucks.
      US First Amendment rocks.

      There, fixed that for you.

      Okay, seriously, unless I say something that is directly threatening, incites violence, causes a panic in a dangerous context, or is libelous or slanderous, I can say pretty much whatever I want. And if a picture isn't deemed obscene or prurient, threatening, etc., I can display whatever graphic I want. I can call the president godawful names (and often do). I could print those insults on a billboard next to a busy highway (oh, wouldn't I love to) and I can accompany it with interesting graphics (let your imagination run amok).

      And I can call the "church" of Scientology a cult to my heart's desire, and they can't do one damned thing about it. In fact, I think I'll go pay for an ad in my local paper saying exactly that. Full page. I'll get it printed on tee shirts and sell them on eBay.

      Cults like Scientology have too much power and protections as it is. With all due respect, why can't the UK parliament pass laws allowing people to express their opinions about such things publicly?

      --
      *** *** You're just jealous 'cause the voices talk to me... ***
    88. Re:Once again by Darby · · Score: 1

      Maybe you're keeping just on the safe side of 'incitement to illegal violence' line but you are clearly hostile to the current constitutional system in which politicians are not generally executed by kangaroo courts on trumped up treason charges.

      Wow, dude, you are so wrong in so many ways it's amazing.
      In the first place, how is it even rational to state that he's hostile to the current constitutional system when all he's advocating is actually following that same system.

      Then you spout some nonsense about kangaroo courts when the OP was obviously referring to Congress. You know, the people given the responsibility to press such charges in that same constitution you claim that the OP is hostile towards?

      The level of ignorance about the system you're calling others hostile towards that you demonstrate is truly amazing, in a freak show kind of way.


      Maybe you're the real traitor in that you advocate overthrowing that system and killing your political opponents.


      He's advocating working within the system using the methods laid out by that system to address issues of this nature.

      Personally *I* think he's a bit naive if he thinks it's actually possible to still work within the system. I advocate open season on the President, his cabinet, Congress with the exception of Russ Feingold, Ron Paul, and possibly the freshman class, and half of the Supreme Court, but that's just me.

    89. Re:Once again by Anonymous+Cowpat · · Score: 1

      5) He refuses, and then plays smart-arse with the police. He stood up for himself in a rational, eloquent and non-violent way. I always remember being told that assertiveness was a good thing.

      It's perfectly clear that he wouldn't have gotten in trouble if he'd been carrying the same placard elsewhere So he can criticise people, but only in specific areas, defined as 'where the people he wants to criticise aren't'?

      There's no point in the powers of the police being limited if a person would have no recourse when they fold, having been incorrectly advised by the police that the extend of the police' powers is greater than it really is. It's crappy, but now that he's been adversely affected by this, (rather than voluntarily removing the sign), he can hopefully sue them into oblivion.
      You have no rights if you stop what you're doing whenever an officer gives you an 'opportunity' to stop, without exposing themselves to any risk by doing so.
      --
      FGD 135
    90. Re:Once again by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      I advocate open season on the President, his cabinet, Congress with the exception of Russ Feingold, Ron Paul, and possibly the freshman class, and half of the Supreme Court, but that's just me. v&!

      Enjoy your chat with the Secret Service!

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    91. Re:Once again by assassinator42 · · Score: 1

      I think this video applies here.

    92. Re:Once again by Darby · · Score: 1


      Enjoy your chat with the Secret Service!


      The price of patriotism.

    93. Re:Once again by davmoo · · Score: 1

      I see someone else has already called "bullshit" (heh!) on your "knowing" this guy, so I'll skip that part.

      Besides that one, every other case like this that I am aware of that involved so-called "obscenity laws" ended with either an outright dropping of the charges when local officials realized how stupid they looked, or were overturned on appeal.

      --
      I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
    94. Re:Once again by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Hmm, so posting bullshit anoymously on the internet is patriotism.

      Maybe you should join the 101st Fighting Keyboardists

      http://www.imao.us/archives/005314.html

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    95. Re:Once again by Capsaicin · · Score: 1

      That really is a classic piece of slashdot bullshit.

      I'm relieved that it's "classic."

      You're not a UK lawyer ...

      Freely admitted.

      ...but you use a lot of legal terminology

      I do?

      ...to make it sound like you know what you're talking about.

      I did make an explicit disclaimer, to the effect that I do not.

      What makes you so sure the case is without legal merit, other than (like you) me you sympathize with the protestors and dislike Scientology and thus don't want it to have merit?

      I wasn't sure, I was outraged!!! [HINT: when I'm sure I write like this:This will never get that far ... IAAL so FU ... this case is completely without merit.] In any case, I've had second thoughts. :)

      Also what motivated me was not a dislike for Scientology (which I have), nor sympathy for the protestors (which I'm not too sure about), but the disgust any lawyer should feel when they see a provision of this nature applied in such triffling circumstances (though of course I wasn't present at the demo, perhaps it truly was alarming and distressing.)

      The reason I thought the case "look[ed] like" it lacks merit was twofold. Firstly I couldn't see how the sign could cause "harrassment, alarm or distress," bearing in mind that this is a criminal matter and consequently the terms of statute ought to be read strictly and in a defendant's favour. 'Distress' cannot simply mean annoyance. It must mean serious distress that is more in the nature of 'alarm' or 'harrassment.' Are members of the CoS really likely to be distressed by seeing a sign telling them what they hear in the media every day? Pissed off yes, but distressed to the point where say, the needle on their E-meter starts thrashing about? A fortiori if I should be applying a reasonable person test.

      Secondly I had made the mistake of reading not much more of the Act than you quote here. Consequently I was labouring under the misapprehension that the Crown would have to show his intent to cause "harassment, alarm or distress," -- when, of course it is clear that the accused was motivated by nothing but a desire to warn and protect the public of, what in his honest opinion, are the highly dangerous practices engaged in by the CoS ... Ahem. I have since discovered that pursusant to s6(4) he need only "aware that [his words or behaviour, or the writing, sign or other visible representation] may be threatening, abusive or insulting" to satisfy the mental element, which alters the complexion of the case entirely and not in the accused's favour. Moreover, I've read a pertient case Norwood v DPP [2003] EWHC 1564 (Admin) which again will provide our friend with little comfort. In his favour there remains the reasonableness defence.

      So I must concede that my calling for the horsewhipping of the arresting officer was a little premature. On the other hand you are wrong in assuming this will come before a jury, as this offence can be dealt with summarily.

      --
      Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
    96. Re:Once again by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "He stood up for himself in a rational, eloquent and non-violent way. I always remember being told that assertiveness was a good thing."

      What you define as defending himself may well be seen by the police as smart-mouthing them. Similarly, what you term "assertiveness" might look like belligerence by them. Neither of us was there, and we haven't heard any testimony from neutral witnesses, so it's impossible for us to know which side was acting the arsehole (if indeed either of them were).

      "There's no point in the powers of the police being limited if a person would have no recourse when they fold, having been incorrectly advised by the police that the extend of the police' powers is greater than it really is."

      Citing somebody for what they think is a breech of one or more laws is well within police powers, as is the confiscation of property that they deem to be a contributing factor.

      "It's crappy, but now that he's been adversely affected by this, (rather than voluntarily removing the sign), he can hopefully sue them into oblivion."

      He can't (successfully) sue them for anything, because (1) they were responding to a complaint, and (2) there's no way to prove that they had any way of knowing whether "cult" was an appropriate description of Scientology, or as the complaining Scientologists said, an insult. The police aren't expected to be infallible interpreters of the law or experts on everything it covers, so unless there's a way of demonstrating that they weren't acting in good faith at the time, there's no case for them to answer.

      "You have no rights if you stop what you're doing whenever an officer gives you an 'opportunity' to stop, without exposing themselves to any risk by doing so."

      You also have no right not to be cited by the police when they have a good faith reason to _suspect_ you of having broken one or more laws. The DPP are the ones who get to say whether any laws were actually broken, and the courts decide whether you were culpable of the breach, and if so, what punishment to mete out.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    97. Re:Once again by Peil · · Score: 1

      FYI - Magna Catra was a set of restrictive demands placed upon he crown by the barons/nobility in response to the excesses of King John - Arbitrary detention without means of a trial and such like.

      It was an English document and has no bearing on Scots Law.

      Oh yeah, and it was repealed by the Pope soon after it was signed...

    98. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A jury trial can establish case law, and stop this happening again.

      No, actually, it can't. To have case law, you have to have a judicial decision. Juries don't write judicial decisions. You could possibly get a judicial decision from pre-trial or post-trial motions, but those would be completely independent from any jury decision.

      You are 90% correct. However just any written judgment won't do. A court is only bound by the decisions of a superior court, therefor you will need a judgment from a "superior court of record" to have any binding precedent. Though a superior court can of course quote the decision of a lower court with approval.


      For the benefit of the poster above you, nothing a jury decides could ever contribute to case law (at least not in the UK and in related legal systems), for the very simple reason the juries decide issues of fact while judges decide issues of law (unless the judge sits without a jury in which case the judge decides upon fact as well). And anyway this is a summary offence.

    99. Re:Once again by j0nb0y · · Score: 1

      There is a difference between case law and binding precedent. Courts can look at case law even from other jurisdictions as persuasive (ie not binding) authority. This is very common in the United States; I'm not sure how common it is in the UK.

      Courts are also bound by their own previous decisions, not just those from higher courts. Previous decisions can be overruled, but it should be a rare event when a court overrules its own previous decision. stare decisis, and all that.

      --
      If you had super powers, would you use them for good, or for awesome?
    100. Re:Once again by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      You're assuming an awful lot. Not everyone blindly buys into the democrat vs. republican nonsense

      Your "insightful" moderation was well deserved. Most folks DON'T buy into the DvR nonsense. I'm obviously not typical (we nerds as a group aren't anyway and I'm probably even wierder than most of my fellow nerds) but my Presidential voting record in the 20th century was pretty much split between Ds and Rs.

      This century sees me splitting my votes between the Gs and the Ls, as the Ds and Rs have both been purchased outright by the foreign corporate interests (e.g., the American arm of BP, Sony, etc. "contributing" to both major party candidates).

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    101. Re:Once again by trmcdougle · · Score: 1

      IANAL but as I understand it (in a common law jurisdiction like the UK and most former colonies) it is the COURTS decision, not the JUDGES decision that forms the precedence, the judge is mainly the mouthpiece. One of the reasons for having a jury is that the normal opinion of society SHOULD adjust the law. This however mainly applies to the unwritten parts of the law rather than the written (statute) parts.

    102. Re:Once again by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      For speech not to be protected it has to advocate criminal violence, not just state an opinion about it. And where is that exception in the first amendment?

      I wasn't talking about what is constitutional, just what is enacted in our current laws, but I actually do believe such a law to be constitutional in the US. In order to explain why, I'll present a very exaggerated example, just so you can get the concept. Suppose I build a voice activated robot that disintegrates guns. If I were to say "robot destroy" it would disintegrate your firearm. Can it be illegal for me to say that command since there is no explicit exception in the bill of rights? Can it be legal for me to say that command since it would violate your second amendment right?

      Basically what we're coming down to is conflicting civil rights. People have the inherent right to free speech, but they also have the inherent right to life and liberty. When those come into conflict laws are supposed to mitigate that conflict (and theoretically those should be about the only laws, constitutionally). To make the analogy more practical and even closer to what we're discussing, if a Mafia Don is caught on tape ordering his goons to go shoot you, should he be immune to prosecution because all he did was exercise his free speech? If a hit man invents a voice activated killbot does that mean he can kill all he wants since the constitution forbids creating a law that would make his action illegal?

      To advocate criminal violence is the same in principal as both the examples I listed, differing only in degree. The courts have, so far, ruled that specifically inciting people to criminal violence against others compromises the rights of those others to live more than it compromises the rights of the person speaking. The old phrase is "your right to swing your fist ends at my nose."

      If you can insert "little changes" into the amendment without actually amending it, then it can be changed to say anything.

      These aren't changes to the bill of rights, but rather laws mitigating conflicting rights granted by it. If you want a more detailed explanation just search the Web for "yelling fire in a theater" which is the classic example used for explaining this concept in law classes.

    103. Re:Once again by corsec67 · · Score: 1

      That you for your well-written explanation.

      There are 2 separate issues here. I agree that it could be argued that some kinds of speech should legitimately be restricted, but any restriction on speech should be a hard thing to accomplish.

      But, I don't see how those restrictions can be reconciled with the first amendment, as it is currently written. "Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech" seems to be pretty unambiguous to me.

      All I am saying is that if people want to limit rights, they should have to change the constitutional amendments, not have a judge insert "meaning" into the amendments, like has been done for almost all of them.

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, don't search me
    104. Re:Once again by instarx · · Score: 1

      Try and remember that first section of US constitution is based on English Bill or Rights (1689) and Scottish Claim of Right, which itself carries on a tradition of defining the limits of state power and citizens rights dating back to Magna Carta (which predates Columbus by 200 years).

      Worth thinking about every time americans get all misty eyed about their own history.

      That's not to say the UK is a perfect democracy, but neither is the US. However, the US was the first country to declare that these rights were not "granted" but "inherent". That may seem subtle, but it means that no government can take them away. Since England and Scotland had kings who granted their subject's these rights they could theoretically take them away. The US Bill of Rights was a huge advancement in human rights because ir "recognized" rights and did not grant them as previous documents had done.

      Also, no one in the US could ever be charged with a crime of carrying a sign that merely insulted someone or called them a cult (public obscenity excluded, but obscenity isn't an issue with what is being said, just how it is said). Here they may herd you off to a "freedom zone" for carrying an offensive political sign, but they won't charge you with a crime.

      I'm not an "America right, no matter what" kind of person, but in the area of preserving public free speech we have clearly done a better job than the Brits.

    105. Re:Once again by Anonymous+Cowpat · · Score: 1
      I didn't say "defending" I said "standing up for".

      Smart-mouthing, a police officer, or other person, is not a crime.

      Whether it looks like belligerance to them is irrelevant.

      Citing somebody for what they think is a breech of one or more laws is well within police powers, as is the confiscation of property that they deem to be a contributing factor. I didn't say that his right to not be cited was being breached. Here's an example.
      • You're holding a sign up which you have a right to hold up
      • You don't have a specific judgement already in your hands detailing your right to hold the sign up (because this is a common law jurisdiction)
      • A police officer tells you that you may be in breach of the Public Order Act and advises you to take the sign down
      • You take the sign down

      Congratulations, your right to hold that sign up means nothing, because the sign is now down, and because the police officer was never actually forced to put their money where their mouth was with their advice, they won't be held responsible, even though the sign you wanted to hold up is no longer up as a direct result of their threat.

      as is the confiscation of property that they deem to be a contributing factor. And if a court decides that it wasn't? You seem to be proposing giving police summary power to take people's property with no oversight.

      (1) they were responding to a complaint, and (2) there's no way to prove that they had any way of knowing whether "cult" was an appropriate description of Scientology, or as the complaining Scientologists said, an insult (1) And if I complain that you annoy me and some officer arrests you for annoying me, even though that's not a crime, it's still ok, because they were responding to a complaint?
      (2) Why does what they were able to know have to do with it? They had incomplete information, they chose to take action upon that information anyway. If it's later found that the situation was different to that on which they were assuming that it was (especially given that it wasn't a 99% insulting, 1% not situation) why should they NOT be held responsible? They could havce taken his name & adress and left him with the sign, and then been called a bunch of morons by the CPS later.

      You also have no right not to be cited by the police when they have a good faith reason to _suspect_ you of having broken one or more laws. The DPP are the ones who get to say whether any laws were actually broken, and the courts decide whether you were culpable of the breach, and if so, what punishment to mete out. Punishment has already been meted out - his sign has been taken. Why should you NOT have the right to not have your property confiscated if you weren't doing anything illegal?
      Here's a re-hash of the example:
      • You're holding up a sign which you have a right to hold up
      • You don't have a specific judgement already in your hands detailing your right to hold the sign up (because this is a common law jurisdiction)
      • A police officer tells you that you may be in breach of the Public Order Act and advises you to take the sign down
      • You keep the sign up
      • The sign is confiscated
      • You have no subsequent recourse against the officer personally, or the police force

      How much is the right to hold that sign up worth to you now?
      --
      FGD 135
    106. Re:Once again by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      That you for your well-written explanation.

      No problem. I hope it was useful to you.

      But, I don't see how those restrictions can be reconciled with the first amendment, as it is currently written. "Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech" seems to be pretty unambiguous to me.

      I see where you're coming from, but I just don't think it is a practical way to interpret the constitution. It is no more clear than "the right of the People to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." Obviously if someone exercises one right and at the same time deprives another of a different right it needs to be resolved justly. We either have to reconcile any discrepancy or the document fails. Maybe they should have included "save in that it protects a different right enumerated here" but that would have weakened the document and missed the purpose that all rights are supposed to belong to the people inherently unless specified otherwise. It also misses, that for the most part, mitigating conflict between citizens and states is supposed to be the only types of laws that are constitutional (sans a few specific exceptions).

      All I am saying is that if people want to limit rights, they should have to change the constitutional amendments..

      Then all the rights in the bill of rights need to be changed... something I sure don't want our current crop of politicians doing. (Note this is an appeal to consequences and not a logical argument as to why the constitution does not need to be amended.)

      ...not have a judge insert "meaning" into the amendments, like has been done for almost all of them.

      Actually it is the legislature that writes laws that may or may not be constitutional, it is the judges that rule if they conflict with the constitution. This has been going on from the very beginning of our constitution with libel and slander laws on the books and enforced both before and after the bill of rights was written and without those who wrote the bill of rights seeing a conflict. Judges also look for indirect attacks, like where the government monitoring everything everyone reads is an indirect attack on freedom of speech (since speech is no good if no one can hear you).

      In this case the judges simply ruled that the law was constitutional because it was mitigating two protected rights from different individuals, protected by different parts of the constitution. Certainly you would not favor a system where it was legal for a mafia don to order you killed nor would you prefer the bill of rights was "amended" by our politicians to "fix" this problem? I agree the constitution is very poorly interpreted by politcos these days and that is a real problem, but it is important to understand where they're ignoring the constitution out of convenience and where they're resolving valid conflicts within it's bounds

    107. Re:Once again by Darby · · Score: 1

      Your statement indicated your belief (facetious or otherwise) that my actions would lead armed thugs to show up at my door for questioning or worse.

      It's not anonymous when members of the government can demand the info illegally and not get shot in the head.
      It's not bullshit either, or why would I even have to worry about the armed thugs sent to defend traitors in the first place?

      My attitude is absolutely patriotism in its purest form. The fact that I haven't acted on it just means you'd be correct if you questioned the rather large separation between my money and my mouth.

      However, according to you, even though all I've done is talk, I still have to fear the Gestapo kicking in my door.

      If that happens, then it's pretty clear how necessary my statements *and the fulfillment of them* is to the possibility of a free America in the future.

    108. Re:Once again by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      And that's different from the RIAA tactics (especially when someone dares to counterclaim) in what way? Put your victim under pressure, keep him in the court 'til he can't afford it anymore, try to win by default... did I forget something?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    109. Re:Once again by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "Smart-mouthing, a police officer, or other person, is not a crime."

      I neither said nor implied that it was, so this is a completely redundant statement. Note also that a video of him talking to a policewoman didn't indicate that he was behaving unreasonably (although it doesn't show any subsequent interactions, so it's impossible to know what happened afterwards).

      "Whether it looks like belligerance to them is irrelevant."

      You are very naive indeed if you think that (a) behaviour does not affect the way others will react, or (b) that the police cannot cite a person for not cooperating with them (being belligerent is one way of not cooperating).

      "You're holding a sign up which you have a right to hold up"

      You're holding up a sign which you _think_ you have the right to hold up _in that particular place. Thinking you have a right is not the same as having a right.

      "You don't have a specific judgement already in your hands detailing your right to hold the sign up (because this is a common law jurisdiction)"

      Being in a common law jurisdiction doesn't mean you have the right to do things you don't know are prohibited, it gives you the right to do things that aren't prohibited. One is not the same as the other.

      "A police officer tells you that you may be in breach of the Public Order Act and advises you to take the sign down"

      Because the police at that time don't think you have a right to display it in that particular place. It's therefore up to the CPS, and if necessary, the courts, to decide whether you actually have that right, not you or the police.

      "You take the sign down.

      Congratulations, your right to hold that sign up means nothing, because the sign is now down"

      Or perhaps it's because they managed to make a convincing argument about the illegality of the sign.

      "and because the police officer was never actually forced to put their money where their mouth was with their advice, they won't be held responsible"

      They won't be held responsible one way or the other unless they used unreasonable force or can be shown to not have had a good faith belief at the time that the sign _may have been_ unlawful.

      "even though the sign you wanted to hold up is no longer up as a direct result of their threat."

      He did not claim that the police threatened him. They politely asked him to take the sign down twice, had told him why they thought he should take it down, and when he refused, they cited him and took it away.

      "And if a court decides that it wasn't?"

      You get your property back.

      "You seem to be proposing giving police summary power to take people's property with no oversight."

      This is a complete straw man, because I proposed nothing, and neither suggested nor implied that there is no oversight, or should be no oversight. If you can't answer my points without using obvious lies, then there's no point in continuing this debate.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    110. Re:Once again by Anonymous+Cowpat · · Score: 1

      I think we can agree that the police should only be hassling persons breaking the law. If you support the police being allowed to hassle people for smart-mouthing them, then you support smart-mouthing the police being against the law.

      I'd like to know what charge you think that not co-operating with the police would be prosecuted under. Obstructing != not helping.

      "You're holding up a sign which you _think_ you have the right to hold up _in that particular place. Thinking you have a right is not the same as having a right."
      Whether I have that right can be determined from facts which do exist at the time (i.e. the situation, the wording of the sign, and the law as written at the time) - that the determination based upon those facts is made at a later date doesn't mean that the determination is not valid at the time.

      Being in a common law jurisdiction means that you can't get a judgement before you do something that says that the something is specifically legal - you must do it and get the judgement later, but that doesn't mean that what you did doesn't become legal until the judgement is made. If you could, it would put the kibosh on this kind of thing from the start.

      "It's therefore up to the CPS, and if necessary, the courts, to decide whether you actually have that right, not you or the police."
      So why, exactly, do you think that's it's ok for the police to make that decision and take action against a person if they don't think that they have such a right, and face no repercussions if a court subsequently decides that the person did have that right?

      "He did not claim that the police threatened him."
      They threatened him with legal action and taking the sign away, the latter they actually did.

      "They politely asked him to take the sign down twice, had told him why they thought he should take it down, and when he refused, they cited him and took it away."
      They, in a threatening manner, asked him to take the sign down, although the question of whether he had the right to hold that sign up was still unanswered, and when he refused they took it away, thus partially silencing his protest. They could have taken his details and left him with the sign. If he had the right to hold the sign up then the CPS would have told them to go away and the matter would be closed, and if not the CPS could have prosecuted. Instead they did irreparable damage to his right to free speech based on little more than a hunch, which turned out to be wrong.

      So you get your property back (which is good). You still don't break even - your protest lost some of its potency, and nobody has been held responsible for that.

      Like retroactive wiretap warrants. You put the tap on because you think you have the necessary cause to do it. You apply for a warrant - if the warrant is granted then everything is hunky-dorey - if the warrant is denied then you're up for a compensation claim and possible criminal charges, you don't get to just have everyone forget about it so long as you take the tap off as soon as the warrant is denied.

      If you want to describe my last characterisation of your position as a straw man, here's another:
      You seem the be fully behind the idea that everyone's freedoms should exist solely at the whim of any police officer to not take them away (at least until they get to a court), and that in the intervening time any person who's freedom is taken away should be happy to suck that up.

      This may be a minor, isolated incident, but the potential for abuse is scary:

      Say you like wearing T-shirts with perfectly innocuous messages on them, but every day the same police officer comes up to you, tells you that they believe that the wording on your shirt breaches the public order act and takes it away. You'll get your shirt back in a week or so, but in the mean time, you have to spend every day of every week without a shirt on. As far as I can tell you'd be happy with this situation existing so long as you get your shirts back eventually, nevermind the inconvenienc

      --
      FGD 135
    111. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a difference between case law and binding precedent.

      If you want to be perfectly pendantic about it, yes! But not case law which will "stop this happening again." In any case, were you not decrying the lack of understanding of 'precedent' on /. ? :)

      Courts can look at case law even from other jurisdictions as persuasive (ie not binding) authority. This is very common in the United States; I'm not sure how common it is in the UK.

      As I said, a higher court can "quote with approval," similarly for decisions of the same or higher courts where certain things were merely said in obiter. Citing the decisions of superiour courts from other jurisdicitons is common in C'th countries (esp. in the higher courts), though the British seem to me less willing to consult other jurisdicitons (outside relevant Euro law that is), in contradistinction say to the Australian or Canadian Courts. You don't even need case law for this, as particularly well respected text books are often cited, and let's not forget the humble dictionary!

      Courts are also bound by their own previous decisions, not just those from higher courts. Previous decisions can be overruled, but it should be a rare event when a court overrules its own previous decision. stare decisis, and all that.

      With unanimous decisions being harder theoretically to overturn. Outside unanimous decisions, in the highest courts the justices seem less and less to adhere to this, with some justices famously pursuing their own theory over a nubmer of cases. A judge like Dawson J, (in the Australian HC through the 80s and 90s), who changed his mind on some extremely contentious issues from one case to the next on the basis that he was in the minority in the previous case, is a rarity in these days of politicised supreme courts. Oh, and a Magistrates court, not being a court of record, is not bound by its own decisions at all. If I recall correctly from reading C19th judgments in the English House of Lords (for the benefit of Americans- this is not the entire House, but the Law Lords in the House sitting as a kind of Supreme Court), there was a time when the overturning of a previous decision by the House was not on at all, there being some historic case where the Law Lords first overturned a previous HoL decision ... but my memory is a little vague on this.

      In any case, I trust that by now, any non-lawyers who have bothered to follow this conversation will have a somewhat more more sophisticated view of 'precedent.' ;)

    112. Re:Once again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IANAL but as I understand it (in a common law jurisdiction like the UK and most former colonies) it is the COURTS decision, not the JUDGES decision that forms the precedence

      IAAL and as a matter of practice this distinction is meaningless.

      What "the courts" say, are the words the individual judges write. Where we are lucky (because it reduces the required reading) the judges, or most of the judges, in the majority will write a single judgment. However judges often deliver individual judgements which, while agreeing on the outcome, will differ in subtle and what eventually turn out to be significant ways. From the court's (ie. the current or future justices') point of view this is not necessarily a bad thing, as it allows for more lee-way in formulating decisions. If you want to do well at law school, take this advice: it is not sufficient to know what "the court" said, you must be able to distinguish between the arguments put by individual judges.

    113. Re:Once again by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "I think we can agree that the police should only be hassling persons breaking the law."

      I certainly agree with this.

      "If you support the police being allowed to hassle people for smart-mouthing them, then you support smart-mouthing the police being against the law."

      A straw man again, because I didn't say I support the police hassling people over anything, but that attitude _is a factor_ in all human interactions, _including_ those with the police, who are humans, not robots in uniform.

      "I'd like to know what charge you think that not co-operating with the police would be prosecuted under."

      The Police Act 1996 gives the them the power to arrest those they consider to be obstructing or resisting them (resisting does not need to be a physical act, and is IMO defined far too broadly). One notable form of obstruction is wearing things that are designed to conceal one's identity (e.g. masks), which the police can both tell you to remove, and confiscate. Refusal to comply is the same under the law as refusing to give one's name and address, or giving a false name and address, i.e. an offence that can lead to arrest and up to one month in prison and / or a fine.

      "Whether I have that right can be determined from facts which do exist at the time (i.e. the situation, the wording of the sign, and the law as written at the time) - that the determination based upon those facts is made at a later date doesn't mean that the determination is not valid at the time."

      The police are not barristers or judges, so they aren't expected to determine whether a person is actually guilty of an offence, but whether they _suspect_ them to have committed one within the limits of their training, which is notable for its absence of spending several years studying for a law degree. Of course, you're free to demand a police force that does have the level of legal training you seem to think they should have, but it'll incur a massive tax hike, because they'll expect to be paid rather more than lawyers who sit in offices instead of standing in the rain being pelted with missiles and spat on.

      "Being in a common law jurisdiction means that you can't get a judgement before you do something that says that the something is specifically legal - you must do it and get the judgement later, but that doesn't mean that what you did doesn't become legal until the judgement is made. If you could, it would put the kibosh on this kind of thing from the start."

      It sounds to me like you'd prefer a system like that of some European countries where anything that you don't have specific permission to do illegal.

      "So why, exactly, do you think that's it's ok for the police to make that decision and take action against a person if they don't think that they have such a right, and face no repercussions if a court subsequently decides that the person did have that right?"

      A straw man again, because I haven't said that I think it's OK for the police to do anything.

      "They, in a threatening manner, asked him to take the sign down"

      There is absolutely no evidence to suggest that their manner was threatening. Advising somebody that their actions may have legal consequences isn't a threat, because lawyers tell their clients the same thing all the time, but most people don't classify that as a threat.

      " although the question of whether he had the right to hold that sign up was still unanswered"

      If you'd bothered to check up on what actually happened instead of inventing things to support your views, you'd know that the police at the scene consulted a superior officer before taking any action, so as far as they were concerned, the question had indeed been answered.

      "When he refused they took it away, thus partially silencing his protest. They could have taken his details and left him with the sign."

      If they'd left him with the sign, the CPS would have said that they'd failed to gather pertinent evidence if they'd decided to prosecute, and they'd have failed in their dut

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    114. Re:Once again by Anonymous+Cowpat · · Score: 1

      I don't think this discussion is going to go anywhere if you think that we're arguing about the current state of the law, and I think we're arguing about what the law should be.

      And to think it started over a discussion about whether this protester brought the whole incident on himself, and my nit-picking a post that I otherwise agreed with...

      --
      FGD 135
    115. Re:Once again by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "I don't think this discussion is going to go anywhere if you think that we're arguing about the current state of the law, and I think we're arguing about what the law should be."

      Unfortunately, as New Labour's meddling with ancient checks and balances that have worked for centuries, rafts of knee-jerk laws, and badly planned changes to police powers have shown, there are so many repercussions to even minor law changes that it's often better to leave things as they are in precedent-based common law systems, even when they have more than a few warts.

      Consider for example your idea about letting people sue the police for every error in judgement. This would result in every person who was cautioned, ticketed, cited, arrested, or charged suing them, which would not only tie up the courts for decades, but also force the police to spend hours or days consulting with legal experts before doing anything, or alternatively, require every officer to have extensive "malpractice" insurance that the public would have to pay for.

      The above is precisely what happened in the US with emergency room doctors, whose need to make snap life-or-death decisions with a consequently higher probability of being wrong led to so many malpractice suits from patients or their families that malpractice insurance premiums skyrocketed to the point where many hospitals were forced to close their emergency rooms entirely because they were far too expensive to run.

      "my nit-picking a post that I otherwise agreed with"

      A Slashdot without nit-picking, hair splitting, and arguing at crossed purposes would cease to be Slashdot!

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
  3. Whats the difference? by Merls+the+Sneaky · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Whats the difference between religions and cults? As far as I can tell they really are the same thing.

    1. Re:Whats the difference? by Soporific · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The number of people following them is all.

      ~S

    2. Re:Whats the difference? by nacturation · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The difference is this: a cult is an unpopular religion whereas religion is a popular cult.

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    3. Re:Whats the difference? by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

      Whats the difference between religions and cults? As far as I can tell they really are the same thing. Perhaps Robert J. Lifton can explain to you the difference between a church and a cult.
    4. Re:Whats the difference? by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A cult turns into a religion once nobody is alive anymore that knows the founder. It makes it easier to deify the guy who thought it's neat to be god.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    5. Re:Whats the difference? by cynicsreport · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Whats the difference between religions and cults? As far as I can tell they really are the same thing.

      A religious cult, to the best of my understanding, shows the following features:
      1) Is widely accepted to be a cult by those not involved. [like Scientology]
      2) Is secretive regarding the beliefs of its members. [like Scientology]
      3) Is secretive regarding the hierarchical organization of its members. [like Scientology]

      To me, #3 is most concerning, and the best way to be labeled as a religious cult. Notice that almost all 'mainstream' religions are not guilty of #3 (e.g., the Catholic buck stops at the Pope), and rarely guilty of #2 (e.g., Muslims can point to the Koran), and also rarely guilty of #1.
      --
      - Demosthenes
      cynicsreport.com
    6. Re:Whats the difference? by iNaya · · Score: 3, Funny

      Well, as I worship the flying spaghetti monster, I consider anything else to be a cult. The Christian cult, the Atheist cult, the Agnostic cult, Hindu's, Buddhists. Damn cults. I have to do battle every day.

      --
      The Unicode standard is over 20 years old. Why does Slashdot not support it?
    7. Re:Whats the difference? by Tablizer · · Score: 3, Funny

      Whats the difference between religions and cults? As far as I can tell they really are the same thing.

      If you have any of the following, you are a cult:

      * Funny underwear
      * Funny hat/cap worn in open
      * Weird spiritual machines
      * Don't allow your kids to go to "secular" doctors even if dying

      (Oh wait, I think Emacs zealots qualify :-)

    8. Re:Whats the difference? by zakezuke · · Score: 2, Informative

      Whats the difference between religions and cults? As far as I can tell they really are the same thing. Cult = Small unpopular religion
      Religion = Large Popular cult.

      Cult is a root in cultivate, where all religions were at one point cults. However in popular use cults tend to benefit a majority of people, where religious are institutions whose goal is to benefit society. I'm not saying that their methods always benefit society, but that's the ideal. Also cults tend to be secretive. For example, you ask a Christian their beliefs, they'll tell you they believe in a guy who walked on water, healed the sick, turned water into wine, and rose from the dead. You ask a cult their beliefs and practices and they won't answer you.

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kSS178Q-4eo

      You'll note that Tommy Davis never answered what Scientology beliefs in, only the "benefits". He also lied about OT3 involving Xenu.

      Also they are not mutually exclusive. One can have a religion which is a cult.

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
    9. Re:Whats the difference? by TheDeivix · · Score: 1

      Also religions seem to use more subtle and slow methods for brain washing, cults generally try to get more dramatic results quicker.

    10. Re:Whats the difference? by Zombie+Ryushu · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I agree wholeheartedly. Christianity, and especially Islam would be seen as completely psychotic if they were not several thousand years of tradition surrounding these religions, and countless reforms to make them remain relevant in our technologically advanced world. Christianity has changed especially in its nature drastically over the last century alone. It just seems normal to us.

      That doesn't make it any less a cult. Its still hurting us collectively.

      You should watch this video on Youtube.

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HVuw1wEuaAQ

      And there are a series of videos on Youtube by a guy called Thunderf00t that is very intelligent about this topic.

    11. Re:Whats the difference? by freedumb2000 · · Score: 1

      Here is an informative description of a cult that I tend to agree with: http://www.rickross.com/faq.html

    12. Re:Whats the difference? by dotgain · · Score: 3, Informative
      Speaking as a man who had a pretty hefty dose of having to learn about Cult Mind Control while I did my damndest to save my wife from the Jehovah's Witnesses, I would say this this is pretty accurate, but would add:

      4) Works to create tension and mistrust between the new-guy and his unbelieving / skeptical family and friends. [like Scientology]
      5) Often attempts to exhaust the person physically during the induction, 2AM knocks on the door etc. to defeat their mental defences

    13. Re:Whats the difference? by blind+biker · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think this characteristic:

      4) In order to easier manipulate them, it will try to weaken the members by severing their ties with their families and friends.

      is extremely important, for the devastating consequences it has.

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    14. Re:Whats the difference? by terrymr · · Score: 1

      Cults tend to deal in mind control to retain their members. Religions are largely voluntary.

    15. Re:Whats the difference? by chartreuse · · Score: 4, Informative

      Christianity, and especially Islam would be seen as completely psychotic if they were not several thousand years of tradition surrounding these religions, and countless reforms to make them remain relevant in our technologically advanced world. "Several" thousand years would seem to overstate the matter. Muhammad was born around 570, and we apparently date the Gregorian calendar beginning with some guy in year 0 or something, around 2008 years ago.

      A world-spanning religion based on ancient Egyptian religion, now that would be millennia.
    16. Re:Whats the difference? by metrometro · · Score: 1

      Fine example of tautology in the wild:

      A religious cult... shows the following features: 1) Is widely accepted to be a cult by those not involved. [like Scientology]

      Simplified: A cult is what we think is a cult.

    17. Re:Whats the difference? by mcsporran · · Score: 1

      Whats the difference between religions and cults? As far as I can tell they really are the same thing. Easy, religion is a subset of cult, so all religions are cults.
      How do you know if you group, movement, faith is a cult ?
      Easy again, if you group bans you from discussing or accessing information you might wish too, you are in a cult.
      --
      This is NOT a signature.
    18. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No kidding. There are about 4,200 different religions on this planet. And they are all wrong--except one!

      Every religious person will agree!

      Based on this logic, how can you not come to worship His Noodly Appendages (which I know to be the only real religion)? It must be those damn ninjas! Perhaps its time we put a jihad on their asses! Down with those landlubbers! Down with the heretics! And down with all unbelievers, especially the atheists!

    19. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would define religion as a open belief system, and a cult as a closed one. Cults actively seek new members, religions simply let them come rather then trap them in some way.

      Sure, catholicism aint a real religion, its a cross between one and a cult (thus your definition, giving its the most powerful 'religion' in the world).

      Very fine line between the two in any case.

    20. Re:Whats the difference? by nsayer · · Score: 4, Informative

      1. There is no year 0. The year before year 1 was 1 BC.

      2. They didn't know it was year 1 at the time. That whole thing was worked out many, many years later. It turns out that the guy that worked it out was wrong. The best guess is that the fellow you're talking about was born in 4 BC, but given the state of record keeping at the time (particularly given that fellow's official status at the time of his life and death), that has to be taken with a "Lot's wife" sized grain of salt.

    21. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If a life devoid of religion is normal, then why do a great *minority* of people hold that view? If thinking pops the bubble of delusion, then why to so many deep philosophical thinkers believe that there is something outside of the physical universe that created it? Why would you believe the physical universe could have an uncaused cause?

    22. Re:Whats the difference? by Workaphobia · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Which is why even censoring hate speech is dangerous to our freedom of expression. A group should not become immune to certain criticism simply because it gets itself listed as a religious institution, and if this means the mainstream religions have to put up with more crap from ignoramouses, so be it.

      --
      Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
    23. Re:Whats the difference? by J_Omega · · Score: 0, Redundant

      A cult is a small, unpopular religion.
      A religion is a large, popular cult.

      (credit for the above goes to someone else.)

    24. Re:Whats the difference? by Omega+Hacker · · Score: 3, Insightful

      A fundamental difference I see between a cult and a true religion is that members of a cult are not "allowed" to leave. A Christian might decide he no longer is one, but his Christian friends will not (generally) shun him, refuse to associate with him, actively try to harm him, or just plain hold him prisoner somewhere. A cult on the other hand fundamentally is a game of mind control, and some people are too strong to be controlled, either right up front (as in a child growing up) or as a result of new information or other change. Cults can only maintain their internal consistency if people who learn otherwise are treated as "sick" or a "traitor", and dealt with accordingly.

      Situations like this case are a direct side-effect of the fact that cults cannot take any kind of scrutiny or disagreement, even from outside their ranks. Scientology is really good at silencing any kind of debate.

      At the risk of being wildly un-PC, a short list of religions that fit this description would include not only Scientology, but Mormonism and Islam. All three of these fundamentally disallow their members from choosing not to be members, up to and including outright murder. Islam in the US may be more "tolerant", but that's only (IMO) a side-effect of being forced to work within a western set of laws. In the Middle East, a convert away from Islam tends not to live very long, unless they immigrate away as fast as they can, thereby losing their entire family, etc. As well, an ex-Mormon in Salt Lake City is going to have a very hard time buying anything, anywhere.

      (disclaimer: I'm Baptist, and mostly on the Democrat side of things with Libertarian leanings)

      --
      GStreamer - The only way to stream!
    25. Re:Whats the difference? by bradkittenbrink · · Score: 2, Insightful
      A good set of criteria, I would add the following:
      4) Exerts coercive pressure or threats on its members concerning any of
      1. their association with non-members
      2. discussion of facts about the organization
      3. their leaving the organization./li[like Scientology]
    26. Re:Whats the difference? by osviews.com · · Score: 1

      One is based on false information and the other is not. The fact that you disagree with both doesn't make all of them a cult.

    27. Re:Whats the difference? by nsayer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      A fundamental difference I see between a cult and a true religion is that members of a cult are not "allowed" to leave. So Islam is a cult, then?



    28. Re:Whats the difference? by tsa · · Score: 1

      Can't this guy Thunderfoot just put a text file on the web somewhere? I hate those videos in which people show text and read them aloud. I read much faster than they speak.

      --

      -- Cheers!

    29. Re:Whats the difference? by SilentBob0727 · · Score: 1

      There are about 4,200 different religions on this planet. And FSM has about 4,200 noodly appendages. Coincidence?

      Oh wait. Yes. Yes it is, actually. Never mind.
      --
      Life would be easier if I had the source code.
    30. Re:Whats the difference? by Merusdraconis · · Score: 1

      Cults deliberately try to isolate you from people who tell you that it's a really bad idea. Religions, in general, do not. Even the small ones - people will look at you strangely, but you won't be encouraged to stay away from the SPs.

    31. Re:Whats the difference? by portentum · · Score: 0

      That's what they want you to think.

    32. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whats the difference between religions and cults? As far as I can tell they really are the same thing.


      A religious cult, to the best of my understanding, shows the following features:

      1) Is widely accepted to be a cult by those not involved.
      (this goes back to the definition of a cult - an unpopular religion or set of beliefs)

      2) Is secretive regarding the beliefs of its members.
      Scientology is not secretive in it's beliefs - they use the legal system to remove any published, copyrighted works - but the works are published and copyrighted - hardly secret. It's in fact the beliefs of Scientology that critics point to when calling it a cult.

      3) Is secretive regarding the hierarchical organization of its members.
      Scientology published it's hierarchical organization in maps - it's members take courses that show exactly what the hierarchy is and how it works, and who is in what position - hardly secretive. Again, just the fact that they have a hierarchical organization (and possibly the fact that they walk around in uniforms) is more fodder for critics calling them a cult.

    33. Re:Whats the difference? by ThePromenader · · Score: 1

      A cult is simply a lesser-popular religion; and/or one more recent than that/those already adopted by the majority.

      In structure they are essentially the same - both are political entities.

      A shaman is a religion without politics, but once he begins organising a following following a unique doctrine, it becomes a religion - cult, if you will, while the number of followers remains small - and a full-fledged religion (in every sense of the term) should the doctrine become the status quo.

      'Cult' is religion with an added reference to popularity.

      --

      No, no sig. Really.

      ThePromenader
    34. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just as a side note ... neither Christianity nor Islam have "thousands of years" of tradition.

      Islam was "founded" around 632 AD

      Christianity was "founded" less than 2000 years ago (wouldn't it need to be over 2000 years to qualify for 'thousands'?)

    35. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some of the differences are the mind control techniques used by the cult. Forced separation of a person from their normal support group (friends, family). Sleep deprivation or the withholding of other physiological needs. Forced Tithing (or exorbitant fees)Secret Information or Rites (Us against Them.)

    36. Re:Whats the difference? by Omega+Hacker · · Score: 1

      So Islam is a cult, then?

      That's kinda where I was going, yes...

      The first rule of a controlling society/religion/cult is "anyone who isn't explicitly one of us, is explicitly not one of us, therefore Bad, and must be dealt with accordingly".

      Unfortunately, I see US "patriotism" leaning the same direction ;-(

      --
      GStreamer - The only way to stream!
    37. Re:Whats the difference? by Shuntros · · Score: 5, Funny

      A religion is a large, popular cult.

      A cult is a small, unpopular religion.

      Is everyone clear now?

    38. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wow comments on Christianity from a guy named zombie and a bunch of youtube videos to back him up. Do you have any sound financial plan for my retirement? How about removing my apnedix? Do you have a van I could buy some used stereo equipment from?

    39. Re:Whats the difference? by kms_one · · Score: 1

      A cult believes in crazy things like miracles, immaculate conceptions, talking animals and firey plants, and invisible men of great power.

    40. Re:Whats the difference? by ToastBusters · · Score: 1
      Simply put, you can leave a religion without fear of retaliation from the religious organization. Sure, you may go to hell, or whatever other dry threat they'll try to throw at you, but in the end it's your choice whether you want to stay or leave.

      With a cult, leaving is out of the question. You will be harassed, intimidated, threatened, and in some cases killed. Cults also tend to attack their opponents, often brutally.

      So there are christian cults out there, the FLDS seems to fit the bill because many of the women within that religion are trapped; whereas the mainstream Mormons (LDS) are not a cult since they teach that ultimately, you have your agency, and it's your right to use it as you please; and whatever consequences for doing so will come from God.

      Most Baptist sects are also religions rather than cults (most, not all) because while they teach that you will go straight to hell and are damned if you leaveâ" they generally will not force you into staying.

      Islam blurs the line, because it is very cult-like in some parts of the world but more like a religion in others; but the point is that it doesn't matter what bullshit the group teaches. They could teach that the world was created by a giant deity that resembles a flying spaghetti monster and they would still be a religion. But as soon as they make it difficult or even impossible to leave the group safely, then it crosses the line and becomes a cult, even if nothing else is changed.

    41. Re:Whats the difference? by ThePromenader · · Score: 1

      You know, come to think of it, it's not the word 'cult' on the sign that was most offensive - as the word has many inoffensive meanings ('following', eg) - it was the word 'dangerous'.

      These guys are thinking themselves the most intelligent of us all?

      --

      No, no sig. Really.

      ThePromenader
    42. Re:Whats the difference? by Rockoon · · Score: 5, Funny

      It makes it easier to deify the guy who thought it's neat to be god. I'm pretty sure that it IS neat to be a god.
      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    43. Re:Whats the difference? by Ocker3 · · Score: 1

      Whereas most main-stream religions are quite happy for you to encourage your entire family and everyone you know to join up.

    44. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      1. There is no year 0. The year before year 1 was 1 BC.
      Not according to Microsoft OOXML, and that's ISO approved so you know that means quality ;)
    45. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps Robert J. Lifton can explain to you the difference between a church and a cult. Must... obey... Lifton...
    46. Re:Whats the difference? by adona1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But Christianity also takes a large chunk of Judaism to make the Old Testament, which does go back several thousand years.

      --
      Between the falling angel and the rising ape
    47. Re:Whats the difference? by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 4, Funny

      Just don't say that on the streets in London. :)

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    48. Re:Whats the difference? by WobindWonderdog · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Better comments from a guy named Zombie than Anonymous Coward.

      I mean, he's not unreasonable, he's not going to eat your eyes.

    49. Re:Whats the difference? by nsayer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The "us vs. them" mentality you describe is, indeed, a regrettable one, but it transcends the definition of "cult." By your rule, lots and lots of things are "cults" - German national socialism, Soviet communism... it even underlies racism. I think it's too broad for the context of deciding whether to label something a "religion" or a "cult."

    50. Re:Whats the difference? by ubernostrum · · Score: 4, Informative

      Well, definitions vary wildly. In the course of my (philosophy) degree, I did quite a bit of study into religion, and generally speaking the following are considered good indicators of a "cult", though there is no single universal set of definitive criteria.

      So, in general, a "cult":

      • Typically follows one or more highly charismatic leaders, whose word is taken to be unquestionable.
      • Clearly divides the world into "us" and "them".
      • Believes that the world outside the "us" group is fundamentally bad/evil.
      • As a result, believes that interaction with the outside world is dangerous to members of the "us" group and is to be avoided when possible, or carefully supervised.
      • As a result, tends to form more or less isolated enclaves to minimize contact with outsiders, or mediate such contact through trusted group members in positions of authority.
      • As a result, believes that untrained persons interacting with the outside world are tainted and need to be carefully reassimilated to the group.
      • Typically holds beliefs radically different from what is considered mainstream or acceptable for the immediately-surrounding society.
      • As a result of the above, typically experiences a high degree of tension with the outside world, which can create a feedback loop (above tendencies lead to tension, which aggravates above tendencies, which leads to more tension...).

      Of course, many groups show one or more of these tendencies, but aren't widely considered (and really shouldn't be considered) "cults". And some groups that are "cults" show none of these tendencies. And this status can evolve over time; for example, many early Protestant movements were, by these criteria, "cults" at the time of their founding, but -- as Protestantism gained wider acceptance -- became closer to the mainstream and so lost many of the above tendencies.

    51. Re:Whats the difference? by Zombie+Ryushu · · Score: 1

      Probably because nobody knows everything. Religion is all about self importance.

    52. Re:Whats the difference? by IntelliTubbie · · Score: 4, Insightful

      4) In order to easier manipulate them, it will try to weaken the members by severing their ties with their families and friends. If anyone comes to me and does not hate his father and mother, his wife and children, his brothers and sisters--yes, even his own life--he cannot be my disciple. Luke 14:26

      If your very own brother, or your son or daughter, or the wife you love, or your closest friend secretly entices you, saying, "Let us go and worship other gods" [...] do not yield to him or listen to him. Show him no pity. Do not spare him or shield him. You must certainly put him to death. Your hand must be the first in putting him to death, and then the hands of all the people. Stone him to death, because he tried to turn you away from the LORD your God ... Deuteronomy 13:6-10
      --

      Power corrupts. PowerPoint corrupts absolutely.

    53. Re:Whats the difference? by Danny+Rathjens · · Score: 5, Insightful
      It's all about the numbers:
      • religion. >= x believers
      • cult. < x and >= 2 believers
      • nutcase. 1 believer
      • mythology. 0 believers (but was >x at some point)
      • fantasy or science fiction. 0 believers (if rises above 0, see above)
      x is obviously subjective.
    54. Re:Whats the difference? by jotok · · Score: 1

      No, it's not--it's one metric out of several that you can use to determine if something is a cult.

      Remember that the purpose is not to "label" something as a cult and THEN say it's bad. The purpose is to identify bad traits themselves.

      Perhaps an analogy would be with alcoholism--you don't have a checklist to see if you or someone you know is an alcoholic, and only when you have enough totted up do you act--you see someone drinking before work, you call them on it.

    55. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Well if you need a creator then you'll also need a creator's creator, and a creator's creator's creator, etc. The only way out from that logical dependency is to declare that god doesn't need to be created, and so you choose a point and say that's when it's ok to be the start, but why couldn't that point be the universe?

      But the more important point is that atheists aren't advocating the universe or a god as the start -- they are advocating that we shouldn't make that assumption. We shouldn't treat that as fact until we have evidence. Your assumption about god has no evidence... you call god what is unknown. Many brilliant people have made this assumption before. If you were raised in another country under a different religion you would, I assume, feel as close to that other religion as you do your current one. The unknown is part of human knowledge and we once attributed god to the workings of the human body, then we discovered it was pumping blood and organs. It used to be that complex physics was deemed too difficult, and so we called the unknown god again. The lesson here is that the unknown is a poor excuse for an answer, and that by calling the unknown god we're making an unnecessary assumption.

      I'm reminded of that famous chat between Laplace and Napoleon (Laplace of course was an astronomer who wrote books on the subject),

      Laplace went in state to beg Napoleon to accept a copy of his work, and the following account of the interview is well authenticated, and so characteristic of all the parties concerned that I quote it in full. Someone had told Napoleon that the book contained no mention of the name of God; Napoleon, who was fond of putting embarrassing questions, received it with the remark, 'M. Laplace, they tell me you have written this large book on the system of the universe, and have never even mentioned its Creator.' Laplace, who, though the most supple of politicians, was as stiff as a martyr on every point of his philosophy, drew himself up and answered bluntly, 'Je n'avais pas besoin de cette hypothèse-là.' [I did not need to make such an assumption.]
      As for your first point -- about popularity of religion in general. Well, the flat earth showed that people can be wrong en masse. If you think about what's true or not you'll see that popularity doesn't really affect that.

      Many people can be wrong, but I hope that in the future that many people will be right :)

    56. Re:Whats the difference? by bm_luethke · · Score: 1

      It depends - by their classic definitions they are synonyms. There was not a negative connotation in either one. In modern times cults carry a negative connotation there are generally two schools of though.

      First is some modern organized religions use the term to mean "non-mainstream" and/or "unorthodox". In this case it would mostly be the number of people who follow that religion. In this case a "cult" may or may not be negative. This is fairly rare but you will see - especially in some more orthodox religion that try and maintain "tradition".

      The second, and the one you mean, is where Cults are religions that are negative. There are borderline cases, however they generally have a few things that are true about them (but don't have to follow all of them but will need several of them). The main thing that classifies them as "cults" is that they are secretive and normally exclusive. They may, and generally do, maintain some level of appearance of inclusiveness but they do not practice it. Many times they have an individual that drives and controls them. Even worse is when they tend to be financially motivated. There are more differences, however one can easily find them with google if they were not just asking a rhetorical question meant as a jab at people who are religious.

      The thing that is confusing you is that all cults are religions, however not all religions are cults. As such there is no difference between a religion and a cult as a cult *is* a religion.

      Think of it this way - what is the difference between a computer and a PC? Nothing - obviously a PC is a computer but a computer isn't necessarily a PC.

      --
      ------- Sorry about the spelling, I suffer from two problems. Dyslexia makes it difficult to spell well, lazy makes it
    57. Re:Whats the difference? by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Because most religions are self-propagating, its believers will try to convert other people. Also Religion produces a sense of a big daddy watching over you and bad things not being your fault because the devil did it or your god wanted it that way. People like that which is why they are now trying to make the government do that job for them.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    58. Re:Whats the difference? by lawnbird · · Score: 1
      Usually a cult follows a still-living or recently deceased charismatic leader. A religion is a cult that survives for a couple generations. For instance early Christianity and more recently Mormonism started off as cults, each centered around a single historical figure. These both grew up so to speak and now carry the 'mature' religion baggage of doctrine and dogma and Tradition. Hence they are religions.

      Also people you don't like are in cults.

    59. Re:Whats the difference? by Gerzel · · Score: 4, Informative

      Wasn't voluntary when I was a kid.

    60. Re:Whats the difference? by Omega+Hacker · · Score: 1

      I didn't say it was the only defining factor, but one of several.

      --
      GStreamer - The only way to stream!
    61. Re:Whats the difference? by Wyrmy · · Score: 0

      I think you just defined the Catholic Church by the way...

      --
      Every act of conscious learning requires the willingness to suffer an injury to one's self-esteem.-Thomas Szasz
    62. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah because Jesus, Mohammed and Moses were all about the ego. >sic

    63. Re:Whats the difference? by jasonjacks0n · · Score: 1

      Whats the difference between religions and cults?

      You already got a ton of good answers, but I'd add this rule: whatever else is true, if there is anyone alive who knew the founder and/or recalls the founding, it's a cult.

      By that measure, Scientology is still a cult, and will be for another couple of decades; whereas Mormonism, which was undoubtedly a cult ~150-200 years ago, is now a religion.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank.
    64. Re:Whats the difference? by Dasher42 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      A fundamental difference I see between a cult and a true religion is that members of a cult are not "allowed" to leave. A Christian might decide he no longer is one, but his Christian friends will not (generally) shun him, refuse to associate with him, actively try to harm him, or just plain hold him prisoner somewhere.

      Having been subjected to an exorcism and been hit with versus like:

      "For it is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, and have tasted the good word of God, and the powers of the world to come, if they shall fall away, to renew then again unto repentance; seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and put him to an open shame." ...I assure you there are some extremely cultish groups within the bounds of christianity that do shun friends and family who don't believe as they do.

      Cultishness is cultishness, no matter what label, and it's ugly.

    65. Re:Whats the difference? by Trogre · · Score: 1

      I often wonder why other evil organisations such as the freemasons aren't ragged on as much. Perhaps it's because they have ~700 years of history they are somewhat accepted as part of society, thus failing your rule #1?

      From what goings on I've seen though, these guys deserve every bit as much exposure as Scientology is getting.

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    66. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well if you need a creator then you'll also need a creator's creator, and a creator's creator's creator, etc. The only way out from that logical dependency is to declare that god doesn't need to be created, and so you choose a point and say that's when it's ok to be the start, but why couldn't that point be the universe? Lame argument. Because we know the physical universe has certain properties and laws. A creator sits outside of creation, and in the case of the universe, outside of time. Don't confuse creation with the creator.

      The evidence for a creator is, logically, creation.
    67. Re:Whats the difference? by Urkki · · Score: 1, Troll

      Its still hurting us collectively. If there were no "Abrahamic" religions in the so called Western World, what do you think we would have instead? Would be be better of or worse of? IOW, are these religions hurting us or helping us collectively?

      I sure hope you don't live under the delusion that people would simply not have religious-type beliefs in absense of current religions... Without religion-type beliefs, there would be no human society. And there's no religious-type belief that can't be turned into hate and attrocities. I'd say religion isn't hurting us any more than, say, oxygen is. But then again, oxygen really does hurt us a lot, essentially burning our bodies from inside, until the body is too degraded to be able to repair itself...
    68. Re:Whats the difference? by Poorcku · · Score: 1

      And the money; don't forget about the money. I don't remember having to sell my house just to be in the Catholic Church.

      --
      I take my children to see Madonna(..), but I never for once ever thought I was in the same business.Chris Rea.
    69. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      not quite

      Merriam-Webster:

      Main Entry: cult
      Pronunciation: \klt\
      Function: noun
      Usage: often attributive
      Etymology: French & Latin; French culte, from Latin cultus care, adoration, from colere to cultivate -- more at wheel
      Date: 1617
      1: formal religious veneration : worship
      2: a system of religious beliefs and ritual; also : its body of adherents
      3: a religion regarded as unorthodox or spurious; also : its body of adherents
      4: a system for the cure of disease based on dogma set forth by its promulgator
      5 a: great devotion to a person, idea, object, movement, or work (as a film or book); especially : such devotion regarded as a literary or intellectual fad b: the object of such devotion c: a usually small group of people characterized by such devotion

    70. Re:Whats the difference? by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      Technically, a cult is a religious "fork". Christianity is a "cult" of Judaism; Protestantism is a "cult" of Catholicism. Naturally, the dominant religion had a negative perspective on new cults. Over time, this negative connotation has remained, while the technical definition has been lost.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    71. Re:Whats the difference? by Urkki · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Simplified: A cult is what we think is a cult. Or would be, if there weren't those other criteria... But there are, so just labeling something a cult does not make it a cult.
    72. Re:Whats the difference? by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      I think any reasonable definition of cult should include Nazism and Communism. Certainly the Communism of Mao or Stalin or Kim Il Sung had very cult like overtones. Maybe by the time of Brezhnev it was less religious. But you could say the same thing about Catholicism once it fused with the state. And lots of Nazi imagery shows Hitler as a messianic figure.

      In fact I think it's pretty rich that Communists claimed to be non religious and opposed to religion. The guy that wrote "Prophet of Doom", a hostile biography of Muhammad called Nazism and Islam "religiotics", a mix of religion and politics. On the other hand, some religions like Buddhism are not at all cult like - they have sayings like "the higher Buddha is not Buddha". In japan Buddhist temples had Hindu deities in them. So Buddhism is less of cult than National Socialism or Maoist Communist, even though Buddhist claim to religious and Maoists claim to be atheists.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    73. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      must... worship... Rockoon...
      must... worship... Rockoon...
      etc...

      Crap. Point taken.

    74. Re:Whats the difference? by pthisis · · Score: 1

      Well if you need a creator then you'll also need a creator's creator, and a creator's creator's creator, etc.


      Very clever, but it's turtles all the way down. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turtles_all_the_way_down
      --
      rage, rage against the dying of the light
    75. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it's not--it's one metric out of several that you can use to determine if something is a cult. Remember that the purpose is not to "label" something as a cult and THEN say it's bad. The purpose is to identify bad traits themselves. Perhaps an analogy would be with alcoholism--you don't have a checklist to see if you or someone you know is an alcoholic, and only when you have enough totted up do you act--you see someone drinking before work, you call them on it. Yeah, actually I do have a checklist. I am on it.
    76. Re:Whats the difference? by chikanamakalaka · · Score: 1

      Funny underwear? Where do I sign up?

    77. Re:Whats the difference? by Eivind · · Score: 1

      A "person belief" is something that one person believes.

      A "sect" is something that a small group of people believe.

      A "cult" is something that a medium group of people believe.

      A "religion" is something that a large group of people believe.

    78. Re:Whats the difference? by Eivind · · Score: 1

      True if you analyze the -actual- content of the core teachings.

      But in practice, these don't really matter to many people. My guess, is, for example, that the ritualistic cannibalism in Christianity is of importance to a miniscule portion of christians, and even less of them take it at face value.

      What matters more is actual behaviour internally and externally. To which degree these groups do harm. In *practice* most people who call themselves "christian" live pretty average lives and I doubt they on the average do much more harm than people who are say nonreligious.

      Scientology is demonstrably much more harmful.

      So while I agree that it's kinda pointless to argue what is more absurd, DC9-alike spaceships and xenoghosts being responsible for most of the worlds problems, or flesh-eating blood-drinking zombie-jews being the only path to salvation -- it doesn't follow that all religions are equally harmful.

      They're all absurd. But they're not all equally harmful.

    79. Re:Whats the difference? by Adambomb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Thats the thing many people like to forget, middle-east born religions are all about code reuse.

      Islam extends Christianity extends Judaism extends Zoroastrianism

      Then theres the fork of what some would call the Edge Christianity such as jehovas witnesses, mormons, etc.

      but somehow they all see themselves as "us", and the others as "them".

      --
      Ice Cream has no bones.
    80. Re:Whats the difference? by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 4, Interesting

      No, a man called Steve Hassan wrote some good guidelines for the destructive behavior of cults, at http://www.freedomofmind.com/resourcecenter/faq/. One key is the control over thoughts on members, insisting that they not only behave but that they think in certain ways. Scientology has this one down pat with their lie-detectors and 'auditing'. Another key factor is the pyramid scheme: Each level reports only to the upper levels, all data is centralized in thehands of a few, and any attempt to question leaders or shift dogma is met with harsh controls and even destruction of the questioning person.

      Take a look at factnet.org for some history of this cult, and take a look at Susan Meister's case and her book, 'Scandal of Scientology', or hte old Time magazine article. They claim they shut down the internal security group that harassed Susan, but they seem to have simply transferred the leading personnel to other groups, and some of them are still active. This includes Kendrick Moxon, the attorney who successfully destroyed Cult Awareness Network.

    81. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Again, logically, how would what we know about the physical universe translate into that theory? How do you prove the theory? How does knowledge of the physical world translate into something that is defined as totally set apart from the universe (the definition of a holy god). Why would a god set apart from creation follow physical laws?

    82. Re:Whats the difference? by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      It's a good question. Perhaps a lot less monotheism would be a good idea? Done well, polytheism encourages courtesy to other gods, and priests acknowledging that their way is not the only way to happiness and may not be right for all people. It can match people to gods, and vice versa, at its best. Perhaps we could have even avoided this concept of the 'divine right of kings', and kept the idea that kings are selected because they're good at it, not because God somehow endowed their bloodlines with the right to rule?

      We'd still have local conflicts, but perhaps we could do without the War of the Roses, the Crusades, the Holocaust, the rape of Africa andn the Americas fulfilling the white man's burden, etc?

    83. Re:Whats the difference? by mqduck · · Score: 1

      I looked up dictionary definitions and was surprised to not find my definition anywhere in them. Anyway, I believe that I understand the more original definition of the word. If not, throw a shrubbery at me.

      A cult is an organization that is centered around the worship of one individual. In polytheistic times, this meant a group that worshiped one god. Monotheistic religions could therefore be defined as "cults" but the term really loses its meaning by doing this.

      Modern cults then, if the term is used ""correctly"" [double double quotes used for emphasis] are groups that are centered around the worship of the teachings of their leader. The FLDS church, for instance, could reasonably be called a cult because its really all about fallowing the correct interpretation of the gospel as clarified by Warren Jeffs.

      I could go on. But what is Scientology, then? Is it the cult of L. Ron Hubbard? If you call yourself a Christian who believes that Christ was not God but a prophet (there have been some who believed this), are you suddenly a cultist? I'll end with those questions.

      --
      Property is theft.
    84. Re:Whats the difference? by knutkracker · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Of course, many groups show one or more of these tendencies Indeed...
      • Typically follows one or more highly charismatic politicians, whose word is taken to be unquestionable.
      • Clearly divides the world into "US" and "terrorists".
      • Believes that the world outside the "US" group is fundamentally bad/evil.
      • As a result, believes that interaction with liberals/foreigners/muslims is dangerous to members of the "US" group and is to be avoided when possible, or carefully supervised.
      • As a result, tends to form more or less isolated enclaves to minimize contact with outsiders, or mediate such contact through trusted group members in positions of military authority.
      • As a result, believes that untrained persons interacting with the outside world are unpatriotic and need to be carefully reassimilated to the group.
      • Typically holds beliefs radically different from what is considered mainstream or acceptable for the immediately-surrounding global society.
      • As a result of the above, typically experiences a high degree of political conflict with the outside world, which can create a feedback loop (above tendencies lead to political conflict, which aggravates above tendencies, which leads to military action...).
    85. Re:Whats the difference? by Malevolent+Tester · · Score: 1

      Because the pagan Romans weren't imperialistic and aggressive at all. Nor the Diadochii, or the Aztecs, the Japanese or the Mongols, right? I'm sure you'd never have found religion being used to prop up the rule of the Caesars or Pharaohs, would you?

      On topic, IANAL, but IIRC the test for most public order offenses is that a "reasonable person" would find it abusive, threatening or insulting.

      --
      If you haven't made a developer cry, you've wasted a day.
    86. Re:Whats the difference? by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      I agree that arguing about dogma gets pretty silly pretty fast.

      But to claim that Scientology is *more* harmful is misleading. Tell that to the victims of the Crusades, the citizens of Iraq right now, the Jews of the Inquisition and the Holocaust, those slaughtered by colonits bringing Christianity to their un-civilized countries, etc.

      Christianity has gotten better, but it stall has a lot to make up for.

    87. Re:Whats the difference? by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      Good point. But as the cradle of civilization, I rather thought the idea of a state religion propagated from the Golden Crescent outwards, leaving the political ramifications in their wake. I could be mistaken on this.

    88. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      4) A cult tries to limit a members interaction with non-cult members (family, friends, everyone/thing else) - whereas a church doesn't have this insecurity

    89. Re:Whats the difference? by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
      ritualistic cannibalism in Christianity consists of eating bread and drinking wine. In today's English, what Jesus said approximates to "I gave my body and blood (died) so you can share bread and wine together, so every time you get together to eat bread, and drink wine, remember that!" along the same lines as a Victorian Yorkshire miner saying to the family over Sunday dinner "I sweated blood and risked my life for you to have this dinner on the table, and never you forget it!".

      Unlike many churches, Jesus had a sense of humour, and a major part of his message was that "the law" (like most everything else) should not be taken to seriously, too far, or get bogged down in applying the letter without regard for the big picture. And the big picture includes the fact that we have very little understanding of life, suffering and death, even after he tried to show us the truth.

      OTOH, L Ron Hubbard was set as coursework at Cambridge University, "Invent a Religion, and convert people to it". He invented Scientology. AFAICR, he did not return to life after death, even as a zombie.

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    90. Re:Whats the difference? by Nazlfrag · · Score: 1

      Ask a 15 year old.

    91. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is a common argument scientologist make, to somehow equate themselves with established religions and that argument usually gets parroted by bitter atheists.

      Any religion will provide its literature and information for free. I can get a koran or bible delivered to you tomorrow.

      If I send you any literature from the cult of scientology, they were sue me for copyright infringement.

      I could go on, but the real issue would just be more lost. Anonymous does not have a problem with the beliefs of the scientologist, the problem is how scientology abuses its members and its enemies.

    92. Re:Whats the difference? by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      Church of Latter Day Saints, they have amusing undergarments.

      No one can tell about Emacs zealots, because no one dares lift their beard to check. Especially on the women.

      [ This is what I get for hitting Esc-x-insult-emacs ]

    93. Re:Whats the difference? by weetabeex · · Score: 0

      So, where does the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster fits?

    94. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember how christianity is supposed to have begun?
      A dude in modern day Israel picked up 12 other dudes and severed them from their families. Then he started putting ideas in their head.
      While I'm absolutely sure that things didn't happen as described in the gospels, you can't deny that they are the foundations and the principles upon which christianity was built. And these origins describe the strategy of taking people away from their families and putting stuff into their head as an act of god.

    95. Re:Whats the difference? by Macthorpe · · Score: 1

      I mean, he's not unreasonable, he's not going to eat your eyes. I really hope I'm not the only one who got that.
      --
      "It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
    96. Re:Whats the difference? by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      Explanation.

      Alternatively, I think you'll find that almost no Christian in the world believes that those two verses are literally applicable.

      I mean, there is the whole "love thy neighbor as thyself" thing in the entire Bible (from Leviticus of the Old Testament to the Gospels and beyond of the New Testament) to counteract any specious hatred speech.

      Also, a note: You may think a lot of what Christians believe is silly, but to expect any sort of Slashdot debate on verses in the text to reveal how foolish the religion is is folly, in my opinion. People have been trying to take down the religion for 2000 years. That doesn't make the religion valid, but it does make it nigh bulletproof in (d)eBates.

    97. Re:Whats the difference? by aproposofwhat · · Score: 1

      Wrong - it goes back at most to around 600BC, and is all myths and propaganda.

      --
      One swallow does not a fellatrix make
    98. Re:Whats the difference? by jacquesm · · Score: 1

      thank you Danny, that really made my day... what a gem.

    99. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      4.) Profits

    100. Re:Whats the difference? by EasyTarget · · Score: 1

      This is undoubtedly one of the most insightful things I have ever read, not just on /. but anywhere!
      Thankyou.

      --
      "Oops, I always forget the purpose of competition is to divide people into winners and losers." - Hobbes
    101. Re:Whats the difference? by moonbender · · Score: 1

      ritualistic cannibalism in Christianity consists of eating bread and drinking wine.

      Yep, and wars were fought over the question whether this bread and wine is really Jesuses body or not. Comparing it to a miner saying "I sweated blood..." trivializes it. I mean, obviously it's not cannibalism since it's obviously not Jesuses body, but the Catholic church says it is and takes this stuff really seriously.

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    102. Re:Whats the difference? by Saint+Fnordius · · Score: 1

      Off the top of me head, I think one of the other mystic movements of the time would have won out in the end. My money would have been on the Orphic cults, though the Isis fans were also pretty popular. They were superficially similar to early Christianity, and cross-pollination between them and Christianity occurred up to and through Constantine's elevating Christianity to the winner's slot.

      Of course, it would have been more interesting if Buddhism had been brought back from India by Alexander...

    103. Re:Whats the difference? by ben0207 · · Score: 1

      We're at an impasse here, maybe we should compromise.

      --
      cmd-q.co.uk - some sort of stupid fucking internet bullshit
    104. Re:Whats the difference? by Saint+Fnordius · · Score: 1

      Well, considering the number of fringe cults within Christianity, I would note that your statement almost commits a No True Scotsman* fallacy.

      Instead, I would state that Christianity is a supergroup of religions, with many subgroups within it. For example. Jehova's Witnesses are Christian, and they really do believe that.

      *("No Scotsman would buy that." "But MacDirmid bought one last week." "Well, MacDirmid's not a true Scotsman!")

    105. Re:Whats the difference? by bestinshow · · Score: 1

      A religion will have its core beliefs open to all, you don't need to pay to find out about them, you don't need to sign away any freedoms to be a member.

      Both incorporate brainwashing to some extent. A cult will exist to benefit financially/sexually its leaders, a religion to further itself.

      I just wish Scientology wasn't called that, because it smears the good name of Science. It should be called "Cruiseology" or "Hubbardism".

    106. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Luke 14:26 Jesus said, "If anyone comes to me and does not hate his father and mother, his wife and children, his brothers and sisters-yes, even his own life-he cannot be my disciple."

      So it seems as though even Christianity started off as a cult.

    107. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's shitty and meaningless quasi-'philosophy'.

      "Clearly divides the world into "us" and "them"."
      - A staple of a large number of religions. And a large number of political ideologies. And a large number of sexual preference patterns. And a large number of nationalist movements. Chavez does. Is Venezuela a cult?

      "As a result, tends to form more or less isolated enclaves to minimize contact with outsiders, or mediate such contact through trusted group members in positions of authority."
      - Partially a function of numerical size as well. Is the Mormon Church a cult? Their enclave was certainly at one point isolated, but has grown simply by numbers. What if every person within a country belongs to a certain cult? How isolated can you make it? It is well recognised that you may find e.g. "Christian enclaves" in middle eastern countries - does Christianity then represent a cult?

      "Typically holds beliefs radically different from what is considered mainstream or acceptable for the immediately-surrounding society. As a result of the above, typically experiences a high degree of tension with the outside world, which can create a feedback loop (above tendencies lead to tension, which aggravates above tendencies, which leads to more tension...)."

      - These may be combined into one, because they are in practice the same thing. This is useless for any form of _absolute_ delination of whether a group may be called a cult, it is just an extremely simplistic _relative_ measure that can be restated as "a group is a cult if its members don't have many friends" or "a group is a cult if it's very different from the people around it", or "a group is a cult if people consider it to be a cult". This is just a neat assertion of the fascetious 'a cult is an unpopular religion' statement in the above 40 posts. Also contains a problematic feedback loop statement - high tension is required, but tension is also self-reaffirming, so whether something is a cult or not may simply be down to a question of where it by random chance is on the feedback loop sample.

      "Of course, many groups show one or more of these tendencies, but aren't widely considered (and really shouldn't be considered) "cults". "

      And finally the ultimate absolution of all responsibility - if the above criteria for defining a cult happens to classify something as a cult that people would feel sore about, then they don't really need to apply (and shouldn't apply). This is naturally linked to the fact that 'cult' is seen as a derogatory term, and nobody wants to feel that something they are attached to is described in derogatory ways.

      If philosophy is viewed by some as an area of mental inquiry that should include a critical assessment of current standards and stances, then the above list is third-rate, because it's overall simply a restatement and justification that something is a cult if the majority would call it a cult (i.e. the majority deciding that something has negative quality X _is_ the true determinant of whether it has negative quality X) - with an escape clause at the end, to absolutely minimise the chances that it offends someone and lands it "philosopher" in trouble.

    108. Re:Whats the difference? by digitig · · Score: 1

      1. There is no year 0. The year before year 1 was 1 BC. In historical calendars there is no year 0. In astronomical calendars there is. Why do you assume that the calendar you use is the only one that there is?

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    109. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      public class JehovahsWitness extends Christian implements Virus

    110. Re:Whats the difference? by Eivind · · Score: 1

      When I say "christianity" I offcourse mean what is CURRENTLY commonly called christianity as practiced by many churches who call themselves christian TODAY. What Jesus actually said any actually did is irrelevant to that. Relevant is what these *claim* that he said and did -- inshort, what christianity actually is today, not what is was 2000 years ago.

      Jesus, by the way, also did not return to life after death as a zombie. That's the *absurd* part. You're correct that Hubbard doesn't claim this *particular* impossibility. My point was, they all claim a LARGE number of completly absurd things, neither belief can reasonably claim to be more "rational" than the other.

    111. Re:Whats the difference? by Eivind · · Score: 1

      I argue that scientology TODAY is more harmful for each member (and surroundings) than christianity TODAY is.

      I agree that christianity (and all other religions) have fluctuated trough the decades and centuries, in some periods causing great harm, in others less.

      It's also kinda obvious that a religion with a billion followes will cumulatively cause more damage than a cult with a couple of thousand adherents, I meant harmful as in for each member (and surroundings), I guess I should've specified that.

    112. Re:Whats the difference? by Jesus_666 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Is everyone clear now?
      No, but if you take this $20.000 course I can help you become clear. ;)
      --
      USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
    113. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They should re-code Scientology in Zoroaster++. Doing so would enhance its cross compatability.

    114. Re:Whats the difference? by DMoylan · · Score: 5, Funny

      best described by emo phillips

      I was walking across a bridge one day, and I saw a man standing on the edge, about to jump off. So I ran over and said "Stop! don't do it!" "Why shouldn't I?" he said. I said, "Well, there's so much to live for!" He said, "Like what?" I said, "Well...are you religious or atheist?" He said, "Religious." I said, "Me too! Are you christian or buddhist?" He said, "Christian." I said, "Me too! Are you catholic or protestant?" He said, "Protestant." I said, "Me too! Are you episcopalian or baptist?" He said, "Baptist!" I said,"Wow! Me too! Are you baptist church of god or baptist church of the lord?" He said, "Baptist church of god!" I said, "Me too! Are you original baptist church of god, or are you reformed baptist church of god?" He said,"Reformed Baptist church of god!" I said, "Me too! Are you reformed baptist church of god, reformation of 1879, or reformed baptist church of god, reformation of 1915?" He said, "Reformed baptist church of god, reformation of 1915!" I said, "Die, heretic scum", and pushed him off. -- Emo Phillips

    115. Re:Whats the difference? by I+don't+want+to+spen · · Score: 1

      Especially if you nail someone to it!

      --
      Don't go to a brothel if you want to buy broth
    116. Re:Whats the difference? by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      But Christianity also takes a large chunk of Judaism to make the Old Testament, which does go back several thousand years. Wasn't christianity marketed as judaism for dummies at the time ?
      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    117. Re:Whats the difference? by PC+and+Sony+Fanboy · · Score: 1

      Then theres the fork of what some would call the Edge Christianity such as jehovas witnesses, mormons, etc. Christiandom is separated into 2 branches - catholic (who believe that the line of authority given by jesus was never broken, and they have the mandate of heaven to have a church...

      And Protestant, who protest the catholic church and believe that the authority to govern a church was lost, and therefor anyone can start a church (since no one has the right to start a church, everyone has equal rights...)

      Anyone professing that Christ is the Savior of the world is christian, so I really don't get your definition of 'edge' christianity - is it simply 'Unpopular but fast growing religions with people who actually practice their religion (However annoying it might be)'?

      because really... JWs, Born Agains and Mormons are the only people I know who have a religion and actually practice it. Catholicism seems to be synonymous with 'My grandparents were practicing, but I've never attended mass... ever'
    118. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Number five I find most disturbing:

      5) Indoctrinate a belief at a young age that all its members need in the world is provided by an invisible man.

    119. Re:Whats the difference? by The+Evil+Couch · · Score: 1

      Actually, Sikhs have specific underwear as part of their core beliefs. If all you want out of a religion is underpants, they can hook you up.

    120. Re:Whats the difference? by PC+and+Sony+Fanboy · · Score: 1

      wasn't islam marketed as christianity for dummies at the time too?

      I mean, judaism was a bunch of rules. Then Christ showed up and said 'Boom! Lookat That! We can get rid of all that complex stuff and just be good!'

      Then, Mohammad shows up and says 'Ain't no body playin' nice no-mo... we needs ta get ourself some rules!' and ... suddenly there were rules again.

      Sounds a lot like anyone who was religious simply couldn't follow their own rules, and so we kept having reformers show up and making new ones.

      OH WAIT... it is still happening today...

    121. Re:Whats the difference? by SlashWombat · · Score: 1

      Surely 2AM knocks on the the door equates to 2:01 bloody noses. (Thats noses, not Moses)

      Really, the police involved should be dragged across hot, burning coals. Scientology is viewed as a cult by rational people. If this is NOT thrown out of court, with appropriate admonishment of the relevent authorities, the people should revolt, and tear the court down brick by brick.

      Political correctness seems to have gone to far. One wonders about the sanity of those supposedly in charge of protecting our freedoms. Perhaps lithium tablets should be made mandatory for anyone associated with government policies. (Just to be on the safe side!)

    122. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mormons consider themselves protestant, as the church was formed in response to divine revolation rather than a protest against the catholic church, or a protestant church. There's also the orthodox branches which wouldn't consider themselves protestant either I imagine.

    123. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It makes it easier to deify the guy who thought it's neat to be god.
      I'm pretty sure that it IS neat to be a god.

      guess we'll diefy you in a couple of generations then
    124. Re:Whats the difference? by PC+and+Sony+Fanboy · · Score: 1

      You're also an ignorant baptist... since when can't mormons leave their religion? Scientology shuns the people who leave it, islam kills those who quit islam... mormons ... send cookies?

    125. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mormons (LDS, actually) don't consider themselves protestant, they believe that Jesus restored authority directly to them. So they don't say Catholicism is wrong, we're going to fix it, they say Catholicism is partly right, but jesus told us what they're missing. Protestants take the catholic church and try to fix it. LDS started over.

    126. Re:Whats the difference? by dfenstrate · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The devil can quote scripture for his purpose.

      That doesn't mean that any particular quote means a damn thing.

      The utility of the bible depends largely on the maturity of it's reader. If you're some juvenile just looking for a 'gotcha' quote, then you're really not going to get anything out of it.

      --
      Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
    127. Re:Whats the difference? by Dorkmaster+Flek · · Score: 1

      Who the hell modded this funny? It's insightful.

      --
      I like to think of online DRM as something akin to a college -- you pay for lessons until you learn something.
    128. Re:Whats the difference? by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


      Anthropology and History are two areas where it's always been difficult to set up controlled experiments. But I think I could make a passable argument that the Romans were better (from the point of view of the invaded) than they would have been if they were monotheists. The Romans had an active policy of finding parallels between local gods and their own gods. They were actually very tolerant of other religion (if not of those who used religious talk to incite rebellion). It's hard not to think that this would have been different if they were monotheists, resulting in much more oppression and bloodshed.

      I can't comment on the Japanese, Aztecs and Mongols as I don't know enough about their historical religions.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    129. Re:Whats the difference? by xalorous · · Score: 1

      Religions are cults by definition, but the connotation of the word cult is extremely negative.

      So, those elrons should be flattered to be grouped with Islam, Judaism, Catholicism, and Protestant Christianity.

      Half their freakin employees must be lawyers. They seem to sue everyone.

      --
      TANSTAAFL GIGO Acronyms to live by!
    130. Re:Whats the difference? by dfenstrate · · Score: 1

      Yes.

      --
      Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
    131. Re:Whats the difference? by JasterBobaMereel · · Score: 1

      Don't say it loudly and publicly (or write it on a placard) in London .. or anywhere else... it would get you arrested in most countries ...

      --
      Puteulanus fenestra mortis
    132. Re:Whats the difference? by PJ+The+Womble · · Score: 1

      I am Inspector Knacker of the City of London Constabulary. And you, me old china plate, are nicked!

      You do not have to say anything, but it may hurt your defence if you fail to say anything which you later rely on in court.

      Do you understand the caution?

      (As they are obliged to say here)

    133. Re:Whats the difference? by robot_love · · Score: 1

      That ability to pick and choose is handy, isn't it?

      It allows Christians, on the one hand, to claim that anything barbaric isn't relevant and should be ignored and, on the other hand, to whip up righteous wrath upon any who fall afoul of whichever verse the Christian feels particularly strong about. You cannot have it both ways. Either it is the infallible word of God and every last word is the truth and must be obeyed, or the whole thing is open to question and therefore not the infallible word of God and can/should be ignored.

      Your note at the end is very correct. Christians believe what they believe because they believe it. You cannot argue anyone out of their religion because at the end of the day they'll just hit you with the ultimate argument killer: "I have faith." When they opened their hearts, they closed their minds.

      --
      .there is enough of everything for everyone.
    134. Re:Whats the difference? by howlingmadhowie · · Score: 1

      even the oldest parts of the bible were written somewhere around 1200-1000 bc. these are things like the psalms. genesis itself consists of at least three sources dated between 900 and 500 bc.

    135. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Intelligent? No.
      Amusing? Yes.

      Factual errors, logic errors, crazy asumptions, silly arguments to say the least, that video is a great example of how one shouldnt try to prove hiw own point.

    136. Re:Whats the difference? by Hasmanean · · Score: 1

      A religion is to a cult what a government is to a gang. It's a difference in scale, but more subtly gangs and cults do pretty crude things to coerce their members to stay in line. Governments and religions are generally benign for the majority of their citizens, most of the time. The latter can and do degenerate into the former.

      Gangs/cults use the instincts for group dynamics which are present inside our brains, and can be seen on shows like Meerkats. They are almost identical to human instincts. Using our instincts is the simplest, most omnipresent and ultimately reliable form of social organization--but it is also the crudest. This is why cults and gangs are only useful in small groups...their methods could never work on a larger scale. They were meant to be used among small tribes of hunter-gatherers on the savannah, of sizes of about 100-200 people only. Governments/religions are just about one step above them, in some ways. They operate on group sizes a lot bigger.

      Imagine trying to explain the difference between using the BIOS to do hardware access, vs. the Operating System.

      Gangs/cults are the BIOS of human society, always present, never used--except by idiotic and unsure programmers. The OS is still a work in progress....the choices are "Unix" aka Judaism (nice OS, but quirky and lacks a proper UI), "Windows" aka Christianity (nice interface, but the innards are messy and partly inherited from the Roman paganism) and "Linux" aka Islam (very conciously similar to unix, since they both have the same Semitic roots, but less proprietary and a lot more open, and it has a decent interface, though it has it's schisms with Ali ibn Abu Talib http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ali being it's Richard Stallman.)

      --
      Hasan
    137. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A fundamental difference I see between a cult and a true religion is that members of a cult are not "allowed" to leave. So Islam is a cult, then?



      At the risk of being wildly un-PC, a short list of religions that fit this description would include not only Scientology, but Mormonism and Islam. He mentioned that already...RTFC!

    138. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "A cult is a religion with no political power." -- Thomas Wolfe

      Looks like Scientology just moved off the cult peg.

    139. Re:Whats the difference? by Malevolent+Tester · · Score: 1

      IIRC, the Sassanids were monotheistic and fairly good with tolerance, post Constantine attacks on Christians aside. IMO, the issue here isn't how many gods you believe in, but whether those gods tell you that you have a duty to spread their worship.

      --
      If you haven't made a developer cry, you've wasted a day.
    140. Re:Whats the difference? by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      As others have said, cult/religion usually has to do with the number of followers.

      Scientology, however is neither. It is a *SCAM*.

      Name one other religion/cult that requires you to pay to read their 'holy' documents.

      It's a SCAM folks. Please don't try to give it any religious legitimacy by calling it a cult.

    141. Re:Whats the difference? by Kgosi+Makwati · · Score: 1

      Someone once put it like this:
      Cult: Unpopular religion
      Religion: popular cult

    142. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might mean "cunt".

    143. Re:Whats the difference? by PJ+The+Womble · · Score: 1

      class TAbrahamicReligionClass {
      public:
      virtual TDeity SingleOmniscientDeity() = 0;
      virtual TWrath SinSanction(TBehaviour) = 0;
      virtual TParadiseOrEternalTorment LifeEndDestination(TPerson) = 0;
      };

    144. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cults tend to have happy endings?

    145. Re:Whats the difference? by The_reformant · · Score: 1

      Hail Eris!

      I can see the fnords

      --
      I have discovered a truly remarkable sig which this post is too small to contain.
    146. Re:Whats the difference? by Colonel+Korn · · Score: 1

      And there are a series of videos on Youtube by a guy called Thunderf00t that is very intelligent about this topic. If you look to Youtube for intelligence, your standards will degrade.

      The problem with Scientology isn't their belief system. They're entitled to it. The problem is the massive persecution of anyone who leaves or criticizes the church (up to and including sanctioned murder), and the way they brainwash members into giving up all their money, friends and family. I have a relative who joined a sect of a more widely popular religion who was brainwashed into giving up friends and family, and I condemn that sect on the same basis.
      --
      "I zero-index my hamsters" - Willtor (147206)
    147. Re:Whats the difference? by wile_e_wonka · · Score: 1

      I think that's what the parent meant to say. Or so the language implies. He just hit the "Submit" button without first hitting the "Preview" button.

    148. Re:Whats the difference? by AnotherUsername · · Score: 1

      A world-spanning religion based on ancient Egyptian religion, now that would be millennia. So, worshipping someone born on Dec. 25, who was born of a virgin, had twelve close friends who followed him when he began his ministry around age 30, one of whom betrayed him, and who was crucified, died, and was reborn about three days later would fit the criteria?
      Because that's Horus, son of Isis.
      Not that any current religions have anything to do with that...
      --
      I don't like Linux. This doesn't make me a troll.
    149. Re:Whats the difference? by AGMW · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Because most religions are self-propagating

      There is a theory that religion gained a foothold in the human mind due to a side effect of something useful, and evolution did the rest.

      The idea is that it is a useful trait for small children to believe, without question, things their parents, and other adults, tell them. This has all sorts of useful safety aspects (don't go near the edge - water/cliff), and obviously helps the young to learn other aspects of life far more quickly than the other method, and its inherent dangers (ie - trial and error!).

      So if a parent, or other adult, tells a kid that the Tooth Fairy will replace their old teeth with money, or that Father Christmas/Santa Clause will leave them presents if they are good they will, and do, believe it is so. Similarly, if your parents are religious you are likely to have been brought up to believe in the same religion as them. The difference is that when you get a bit older they let go of the Tooth Fairy and Father Christmas, but continue to reinforce the idea of their particular brand of religion!

      Interestingly, the same predisposition to believing adults is often what paedophiles use to groom kids. So, perhaps if we changed the name of "Sunday School" to "Religious Grooming" it might be more obvious what is going on!

      --
      Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
      handmadehands.co.uk
    150. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you say Christianity is psychotic? You give no evidence of that or even of Christianity changing drastically over the last century. The Bible has stayed the same. There are near complete manuscripts of it from 1600 years ago.

    151. Re:Whats the difference? by AnotherUsername · · Score: 1

      Catholicism seems to be synonymous with 'My grandparents were practicing, but I've never attended mass... ever' It is also synonymous with It's Lent, so I can't eat fish on Fridays. Wait, today is Friday? But I already ordered a cheeseburger! Oh well, Jesus understands.
      --
      I don't like Linux. This doesn't make me a troll.
    152. Re:Whats the difference? by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 1

      Well if you need a creator then you'll also need a creator's creator, and a creator's creator's creator, etc. Not so. No matter your explanation for our existence, at some point, you assume that something always existed. If you choose to believe in a creator, then the creator always existed. If you choose to believe in the big bang, and subsequent evolution, then the universe itself always existed. Either way, you have to assume the eternal existence of something.
      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    153. Re:Whats the difference? by corbettw · · Score: 1

      Islam extends Christianity extends Judaism extends Zoroastrianism Judaism actually existed before Zoroastrianism, or were at least contemporaneous (Moses lived in approximately 13th century BCE, Zoroaster as late as 11th century BCE up to 6th century BCE). However, the former integrated some ideas from the latter during the Jews' captivity in Babylon. Specifically, much of the apocalyptic imagery and the concept of demons were taken for Zoroastrianism.

      But that's nothing new, religions always share concepts with each other. Within another century or so, if there isn't one already, there'll be a breakaway sect of Scientology who will preach that L. Ron was the sixth in the line of Islamic prophets.
      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    154. Re:Whats the difference? by n9hmg · · Score: 1

      What branch of the church of the FSM? Not Greeley reformed, I hope. I work diagonal across the cube wall from one of those infidels.

    155. Re:Whats the difference? by Dusty00 · · Score: 1

      First off, I'm pretty close to an Atheist, but the video to which you linked just assassinated your own credibility. While I agree that religion in may cases is very harmful you're not going to change anyone's mind by saying "Gather 'round Christians and let me tell you why you're a delusional crackpot...."

    156. Re:Whats the difference? by Atriqus · · Score: 1

      In a way; it was marketed to the slave class which were generally uneducated people. The biggest draw was that it claimed anyone with any amount of wealth was to be punished in the afterlife. (The concept of hell wasn't created until much later, just that they would be punished in some way.)

      But by the time it made it's way into the Roman Senate and translated into latin, the translation of the requirement to be poor was liberally interpreted as a requirement to be poor in spirit.

      --
      Hey, look! It's Bono's brother.
    157. Re:Whats the difference? by scotbotmosh · · Score: 1

      I would recommend you check out this link as well to see the other side of the story. Unlike Thunderf00t this guy actually gives you historical facts and verifiable references to his research instead of just calling you "delusional" or making a blanket statement like "there is absolutely no evidence". This video does more than just make "claims" it provides evidence you can inspect for yourself. I would also find it interesting if you could list exactly how Christianity has changed over the last 100 years, did Christians stop believing in Jesus, stop believing in heaven, stop feeding the poor, and housing the homeless? Exactly what reforms have there been to keep up with the technologically changing world? I will note that because the Bible was written 2000 years ago (un-arguably a time with different technology) that some careful thinking and reflection on what the Bible says may need to be done when bio-ethical questions arise. One thing that hasn't changed in that 2000 years however is human relationships, human actions toward one another, and the condition of the human heart, and those things are well documented in historical Christianity ...some details from your point of view would be appreciated to back up your claim. http://www.leestrobel.com/videoserver/video.php?clip=strobelT1064 ______________________________ Let the flaming begin.

    158. Re:Whats the difference? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Odd that your Funny mods outnumber your Insightful mods. It's strange that anyone gave you a Funny at all. That post contains some good sig material.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    159. Re:Whats the difference? by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      ritualistic cannibalism in Christianity consists of eating bread and drinking wine. In today's English, what Jesus said approximates to "I gave my body and blood (died) so you can share bread and wine together, so every time you get together to eat bread, and drink wine, remember that!" Untrue, at least for some sects.

    160. Re:Whats the difference? by porcupine8 · · Score: 1
      One of the things that makes scientology a cult is the fact that you have to pay exorbitant amounts of money (tens of thousands of dollars) just to gain access to the full religious texts, let alone achieve their definition of "salvation."

      Compare to any other major world religion - how much does a bible or a quran cost? And yes, churches want you to donate money and some even require tithing, but giving your 10% does not entitle you to any special super-sekkrit Ultra Writings of Christ or anything that is required for salvation. Their full religious texts are easily available for anyone to read through to make an informed decision about whether or not they believe in that religion. With scientology, you aren't even allowed to know fully what it is you're joining until you've paid out in a big way.

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    161. Re:Whats the difference? by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      Number five I find most disturbing:

      5) Indoctrinate a belief at a young age that all its members need in the world is provided by an invisible man. ~\o Incredible how you can... see right through me! o/~
    162. Re:Whats the difference? by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      But the problem to us heathens is that religious texts like the bible are supposed to be infallible morality from God. And the fact that you can dig up stuff which is nasty or silly or both kind of exposes that as bullshit to us.

      In fact given that religious texts come from revelation, and most religions believe in the devil, how can you tell whether the bible was a revelation from God or from the Devil?

      Now I don't believe in either all the good parts and the bad parts were written by people. But they were written a long time ago when morality was more primitive. E.g. slavery, rape and genocide were regarded as OK by most ambitious people back then. So as a source of morality religious texts are not a good choice.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    163. Re:Whats the difference? by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      I probably wanted the GGP poster to say it explicitly before he sawed his head off. Wouldn't want to kill the wrong person for blasphemy.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    164. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'Children, obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right. "Honor your father and mother", which is the first commandment with a promise, "that it may go well with you and that you may enjoy long life on the earth."' Ephesians 6:1-3

      Interesting how this verse contradicts those above. It's almost like ripping verses out of context voids their meaning.

    165. Re:Whats the difference? by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      3 and most importantly: All three religions share the same foundation, a book that Christians know as "the Old Testament" which is, in fact, several thousand years old.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    166. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No that would be Stargate SG1 but dosnt that have a cult following too? - OOOPS!

    167. Re:Whats the difference? by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      We zombies don't eat eyes, you ignorant clod!

      We eat BRAINS!

      Now get it straight, tastybrains.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    168. Re:Whats the difference? by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      but somehow they all see themselves as "us", and the others as "them".

      says the emacs-using vi-hater! ;)

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    169. Re:Whats the difference? by LoverOfJoy · · Score: 1

      Scientology has a number of breakaway "sects" such as Landmark Education, Impact Trainings, etc. I don't think any of them claim Ron was islamic, though.

    170. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "That doesn't make it any less a cult. Its still hurting us collectively."

      Sweeping unsupported statements are AWESOME!

    171. Re:Whats the difference? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      I just said the same thing in the definition of religion vs. cult post. I have a feeling the latest moderation abuse tactic might be shifting from rampant overuse and abuse of the "Overrated" mod (it shouldn't be possible to use it until a post has been modded up IMO) to modding insightful posts as funny. However this tactic doesn't ensure a clean getaway in metamoderation like the previous tactic, and it's not as effective (posts are still highly visible, even with the thresholds turned up). I expect it will die off quickly.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    172. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lame argument. Because we know the physical universe has certain properties and laws. A creator sits outside of creation, and in the case of the universe, outside of time. Don't confuse creation with the creator. The evidence for a creator is, logically, creation.
      Exactly -- and you're declaring that the cause of the universe must be a creator, as opposed to an unintended universe or a universe that just happened due to physics happening outside our universe. You don't have any reason to think either way but you've made a decision -- an assumption. There were many choices, many reasons, many guesses, and you chose one without any evidence.

      There are many choices you'll have in your life. It's ok for things to be unknown. It's ok not to jump to conclusions. There are many different ideas about abortion, war, homosexuality, races, sex, gender, working on Sundays, and so on. If you feel it's ok to reinvent everything in your religion based on new evidence then you get to live a more moral life. If however you do not feel at liberty to choose because of what you think the creator wants then you will lead a life without being able to be as kind to others as you could be.

      The unknown is an acceptable thing, and we should not jump to conclusions when facing it. We certainly shouldn't allow immoral acts because of an assumption when we have a better moral compass.

    173. Re:Whats the difference? by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


      You might be right. I understand that the muslim rule of Jerusalem before it was retaken in the Crusades was very tolerant of different relgions. And muslims on the whole are very tolerant of the other abrahamic religions themselves (though Atheism usually goes down like a lead balloon). There's a popular theory at the moment that polytheism is inherently more tolerant than monotheism and it's easy to accept because it seems to make sense... But as said, it's very hard to do controlled experiments with societies. It may well be related to how powerful the religion is in the political life of the aggressor society. For example, the Romans had their religions, and they wielded influence with the people, but I don't think they were a major political force in and of themselves. Similarly, the mongols may have been polytheistic, but I don't think there was a powerful, united religious body influencing them. But in the Crusades for example, there was a powerful religious class that was politically active. Tying religious intolerance to its position in society makes sense as in order to maintain its position in society it must ensure it counters rivals in that sphere in any external or internal groups. That's probably a better indicator than monotheistic or polythestic.

      Thanks for posting your comment. I think you might have just prompted some insight

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    174. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not so. No matter your explanation for our existence, at some point, you assume that something always existed. If you choose to believe in a creator, then the creator always existed. If you choose to believe in the big bang, and subsequent evolution, then the universe itself always existed. Either way, you have to assume the eternal existence of something.
      Isn't that exactly what I've said? There are many choices and belief means that we don't actually have any evidence that would prefer one answer over any other. Your assumption is that one of those answers is true. Please, read the next sentence of my previous post to see that I was saying exactly this.

      Rather than this I am saying that you shouldn't make this assumption. You should learn to be ok with the unknown. It's ok not to know things, and it's ok to decide that you don't know why the universe is here or how it started.

      In the face of this unknown then please feel at liberty to decide for yourself based on looking around your society your views on abortion, war, homosexuality, races, sex, gender, working on Sundays, etc. In the face of this unknown it's ok to consider whether (for example) going to a church on Sundays is as good as spending time at a soup kitchen for the homeless, etc., or to watch sport or sleep in if you're a weary and tired mammalian species who spent too much time partying last night. Consider yourself a mammal held by gravity on a rock spinning around the sun and how there's no evidence of anything more, and that more is only unknown.

      Rather than choosing to believe in a particular `first cause` of the universe instead I suggest that you get comfortable with the unknown and how that allows you to live a life under your own moral compass.

    175. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Steve Hassan writing is extremely helpful for understanding mind control. To bad having a public protest only adds fuel to the fire and create a more urgent need for CoS to try and "save the rest of the world"

    176. Re:Whats the difference? by Dripdry · · Score: 1

      Hm. Sounds like my crazy, controlling ex-girlfriend.

      --
      -
    177. Re:Whats the difference? by wiredlogic · · Score: 1

      There are more than two branches of Christianity. The Copts, Assyrians, Nestorians, Eastern rite, and others all have significant differences in their interpretation of Christian doctrine. There is much more variance within Christianity than what is experienced by those living in the Western bubble.

      --
      I am becoming gerund, destroyer of verbs.
    178. Re:Whats the difference? by azzuth · · Score: 1

      What happens if x is negative?

    179. Re:Whats the difference? by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      4) In order to easier manipulate them, it will try to weaken the members by severing their ties with their families and friends.
      If anyone comes to me and does not hate his father and mother, his wife and children, his brothers and sisters--yes, even his own life--he cannot be my disciple. Luke 14:26

      If your very own brother, or your son or daughter, or the wife you love, or your closest friend secretly entices you, saying, "Let us go and worship other gods" [...] do not yield to him or listen to him. Show him no pity. Do not spare him or shield him. You must certainly put him to death. Your hand must be the first in putting him to death, and then the hands of all the people. Stone him to death, because he tried to turn you away from the LORD your God ... Deuteronomy 13:6-10
      Just for clarification (I was thinking of these references too):

      The first one is said by Jesus to the crowds that were following him after he had just finished a parable about the hypocrisy of the Jewish religious leaders; the next two verses state:

      And anyone who does not carry his cross and follow me cannot be my disciple. "Suppose one of you wants to build a tower. Will he not first sit down and estimate the cost to see if he has enough money to complete it?"

      It is generally interpreted as a section instructing people to be responsible for their own actions and not to do things just because others tell them to.

      The second reference is from the fifth of the Jewish Mosaic books, in which Moses is telling the people of Israel the instructions of God to do with religious practices.

      In the previous section, Moses instructs the Israelites to kill all the peoples who lived in the land they were about to invade and who worshiped those other gods; he is now expanding on that and explaining that this applies not only to foreigners, but to their closest friends and relatives as well.

      This isn't really about ostracizing people; it is about genocide and deicide. Still not nice, but unfortunately it doesn't prove your point. The hallmark of almost all major religions is that they have had a time in their history of using extreme force to wipe out the opposition.
    180. Re:Whats the difference? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      You mean, like the Koran?

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    181. Re:Whats the difference? by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "Christiandom is separated into 2 branches - catholic (who believe that the line of authority given by jesus was never broken, and they have the mandate of heaven to have a church..."

      Fine so far.

      "And Protestant, who protest the catholic church and believe that the authority to govern a church was lost"

      But you went off the rails here, because there are some very notable Christian movements that aren't Catholic, but significantly predate the Protestant movement, e.g. the Eastern Orthodox Church, whose roots are of similar antiquity to Catholicism.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    182. Re:Whats the difference? by digitrev · · Score: 1

      You're not alone. GP made my day.

      --
      Cynical Idealist
    183. Re:Whats the difference? by pthisis · · Score: 1

      Again, logically, how would what we know...


      There's no logic to it. That was sort of the point.
      --
      rage, rage against the dying of the light
    184. Re:Whats the difference? by dfenstrate · · Score: 1

      But the problem to us heathens is that religious texts like the bible are supposed to be infallible morality from God.

      Well, there's your first problem. You don't know what you're talking about. There are certainly some religious folks that believe that. I generally don't care to be around them.

      In fact given that religious texts come from revelation, and most religions believe in the devil, how can you tell whether the bible was a revelation from God or from the Devil?

      Your second problems is you don't expect anything from anyone. I expect a reader, who wants to get the most out of any text, to be a thinking adult with a strong moral code. You want life answers soley from a book, even a book such as the bible?

      They aren't there, at least not all of them. It's a guide.

      As I said before, the utility of the bible depends on the maturity of the reader. You don't seem to think that anyone reading the bible would have any intelligence or maturity, so you fall well short of grasping any sort of proper lessons from the bible.

      --
      Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
    185. Re:Whats the difference? by digitrev · · Score: 1

      I'm a Catholic (not a good one, but a Catholic nonetheless), and even I know that the church's teachings have changed. Look into the various counsels (Vatican II for example), the changes made to the Catechism, etc...

      The Catholic Church is not a static entity.

      --
      Cynical Idealist
    186. Re:Whats the difference? by lartful_dodger · · Score: 1

      Well that's clearly the problem - not religion per se, but religion in the service of the state.

      Religion is not necessarily about slaughter or at least domination in the name of your god or gods, but statehood is without doubt the business of domination.

      Legend has it that early Christians flatly refused to partake in violence. That was the nature of their religion. Once pressed into official service the character of the religion changed to the violent beast we see today.

      I suspect similar results would be acsertained for any other religion used as a tool of state.

      --
      The face of 'evil' is always the face of total need
    187. Re:Whats the difference? by dfenstrate · · Score: 1

      Oh, I bet you think you're clever, don't you?

      I'm going to ask you to be a mature, rational adult and evaluate nations sprung from a Judeo-Christian heritage, and compare then against nations with an Islamic heritage.

      Where would you rather live?

      It's no secret that rubbish can fly for quite some time under the banner of religion. The discerning question then becomes "What is the result of practicing the belief system, as compared to demonstrated alternatives?"

      --
      Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
    188. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Whats the difference between religions and cults?"

      cult (n): A small, unpopular religion.
      religion (n): a large, popular cult.

    189. Re:Whats the difference? by PC+and+Sony+Fanboy · · Score: 1

      whose roots are of similar antiquity to Catholicism ... yes, the roots are the same. But when did they separate? and for what? A difference of opinions? YES! .. on who should be pope. I'd say that one group protested against the other's interpretation of some weird part of the religion. And that makes them protestant, in the true sense of the word (not in the martin-luther/john calvin/take your pick of reformers strain of protestant)
    190. Re:Whats the difference? by IntelliTubbie · · Score: 1

      The devil can quote scripture for his purpose.
      That doesn't mean that any particular quote means a damn thing.
      The utility of the bible depends largely on the maturity of it's reader. Not to get into a flame war here, but this argument leads to even more serious objections. If scripture is just a mirror, reflecting the preexisting morality of its reader, then what use is the scripture? That is, if you require an intrinsic sense of morality to interpret the Bible, why not just cut out the middleman and use this intrinsic sense to determine right and wrong? (This is a classic argument against the claim that atheism leads to immorality.)

      Cheers,
      IT
      --

      Power corrupts. PowerPoint corrupts absolutely.

    191. Re:Whats the difference? by nsayer · · Score: 1

      I don't suppose that it's the only calendar, smart-ass, but when you're discussing Anno Domini (which is implied by the references to Jesus' birth), or CE (if you insist), the other calendars are out of context.

    192. Re:Whats the difference? by digitig · · Score: 1

      The astronomical calendar is perfectly well in context, as it uses the same origin and still uses AD and BC (or CE and BCE). Check out Dershowitz and Reingold's "Calendrical Calculations".

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    193. Re:Whats the difference? by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "The Romans had an active policy of finding parallels between local gods and their own gods."

      Because that was a good way of convincing conquered people to follow the Roman state religion. They did the same thing when they became a Christian empire for precisely the same reasons.

      "They were actually very tolerant of other religion"

      As long as the followers of other religions also followed the Roman state religion, and the other religion wasn't one that venerated Dionysisus or one of various other gods they didn't approve of (the usual penalty for worshipping a prohibited god or being a member of a prohibited cult was death, specially if one happened to be a woman).

      "It's hard not to think that this would have been different if they were monotheists, resulting in much more oppression and bloodshed."

      It's likely that Romans would have been exactly the same irrespective of what religion they had, because their religions were products of Rome rather than Rome being a product of its religions (even the ones they borrowed from others ended up being Romanised, including Christianity).

      Would the Carthaginians, whose religion involved throwing living babies and small children into burning pits, have been better or worse if they'd been monotheists? The answer is that they'd be the same irrespective of whether they were sacrificing those children to a member of a pantheon of gods or a single all powerful one, i.e. a civilisation that, like the Romans and so many who came before and after them, had the ability to combine the finest aspects of the human spirit with horrific acts of depravity and cruelty.

      We tend to rather conveniently forget that the works of Aristotle, Pythagoras, and Plato were written by people whose luxurious and contemplative lives were made possible by thousands of slaves who led short, brutal, and miserable ones, just as we forget that the brave Spartans who stood against the might of Persia at Thermopile had enslaved an entire Greek people who were worked under extremely brutal conditions and were used as living combat practice dummies by their warrior overlords.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    194. Re:Whats the difference? by kutuz_off · · Score: 1

      Christiandom is separated into 2 branches - catholic ...And Protestant I was expecting Catholic (really meaning all western churches) vs Eastern Orthodox dichotomy.
    195. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's all about the numbers

      No, I think there's another difference, too. Cults have secret dogmas, the disclosure of which they believe will harm themselves. The Cult of Scientology did not want the OT III stuff to get out. Religions, on the other hand, treat their dogmas as something that will benefit them if it gets out and spread.

      Scientologist: "Um .. Xenu did it." [looks around, embarrassed, hoping no one was listening]

      Christian: "Jesus did it." [looks happy, and then a little disappointed when you say, "WTF?"] "Here, let me give you this pamphlet which explains everything."

      And that's probably why I respect one a lot more than the other.

    196. Re:Whats the difference? by corbettw · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure Landmark Education came from est, not Scientology. They use a lot of bogus group training sessions, but no emeters and such.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landmark_Education#History

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    197. Re:Whats the difference? by Shuntros · · Score: 1

      Not odd at all. Not everyone has a talent for insight.

      Whether I get modded up or down is of little consequence. I only comment once in a blue moon (it's a bugger, all this "having a life" business). If some find my comments funny, good for them. If they don't, I won't loose any sleep over it. PS. Feel free to mod me insightful.

    198. Re:Whats the difference? by popmaker · · Score: 1

      You should watch this video on Youtube. Yes, if you are three years old! Seriously, I don't need anyone to tell me about these things with "bubbles". And I hate being talked down to.
    199. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My dad's a bishop, and I'm an athiest. I can buy all kinds of crap. (in fact Sunday is a great day to do it, because the stores are empty) Nobody cares. And Salt Lake City is more than 50% Non-Mormon. Try again. I dislike Mormonism more than most, but lets get our facts strait.

    200. Re:Whats the difference? by josh61980 · · Score: 1

      Tax exempt status.

    201. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As I said before, the utility of the bible depends on the maturity of the reader. You don't seem to think that anyone reading the bible would have any intelligence or maturity, so you fall well short of grasping any sort of proper lessons from the bible.

      I agree. There are some passages in the bible which are clearly immoral. With maturity I weigh each verse and context on its own merit as opposed to blindly believing that it's all good. There are some exceptionally profound verses in the bible, and some exceptionally horrendous ones. Maturity is the ability to discern the good in the bad in the bible and realizing that it's not the infallible words of a divine being.

    202. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Also, a note: You may think a lot of what Christians believe is silly, but to expect any sort of Slashdot debate on verses in the text to reveal how foolish the religion is is folly, in my opinion. People have been trying to take down the religion for 2000 years. That doesn't make the religion valid, but it does make it nigh bulletproof in (d)eBates.


      It's a testament to the genius of the unfallisifiable and the word twisting to rationalize the cognitive dissonence sane people experience when reality continually defeats the text.

    203. Re:Whats the difference? by LoverOfJoy · · Score: 1
      Changes were made, sure. But my understanding was that the founder of EST, Erhard was trained in scientology early on and then used some of the concepts in his trainings later on.

      Bartley (Erhard's first biographer) characterized Scientology as one of the "major steps" in the development of Erhard's "independent training", stating that "Werner encouraged his whole staff to take the Scientology communication course, and hired Peter Monk to help train them."[1] Pressman reports that: "all est consultants had received extensive training in the Scientology practice of confessional auditing sessions."[35] According to Stark and Bainbridge's The Future of Religion, Erhard hired two Scientologists to specifically adapt Scientology practices for his own usage.[36] Simon Evans describes Erhard as a "Scientology renegade".[37]
      wikipedia
    204. Re:Whats the difference? by chartreuse · · Score: 1

      that has to be taken with a "Lot's wife" sized grain of salt. ...As was my comment. (On purpose.) Everybody knows it was actually Horus, son of Isis. Or so I hear.
    205. Re:Whats the difference? by Eco-Mono · · Score: 1

      Difference is "important" details on Jesus's rank/nature that are significantly divergent between Mormonism and most other Christian sects. (I can't speak for Jehovah's Witnesses.)

      As for Catholicism, you'd be surprised how many people take it seriously, even today. I know a 20-something who prays the Divine Office regularly, for instance.

      --
      (rot13) rpbzbab@tznvy.pbz
    206. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These are the 8 criteria that are commonly accepted as defining a destructive cult:

      "1. ENVIRONMENT CONTROL. Limitation of many/all forms of communication with those outside the group. Books, magazines, letters and visits with friends and family are taboo. "Come out and be separate!"

      2. MYSTICAL MANIPULATION. The potential convert to the group becomes convinced of the higher purpose and special calling of the group through a profound encounter/experience, for example, through an alleged miracle or prophetic word of those in the group.

      3. DEMAND FOR PURITY. An explicit goal of the group is to bring about some kind of change, whether it be on a global, social, or personal level. "Perfection is possible if one stays with the group and is committed."

      4. CULT OF CONFESSION. The unhealthy practice of self disclosure to members in the group. Often in the context of a public gathering in the group, admitting past sins and imperfections, even doubts about the group and critical thoughts about the integrity of the leaders.

      5. SACRED SCIENCE. The group's perspective is absolutely true and completely adequate to explain EVERYTHING. The doctrine is not subject to amendments or question. ABSOLUTE conformity to the doctrine is required.

      6. LOADED LANGUAGE. A new vocabulary emerges within the context of the group. Group members "think" within the very abstract and narrow parameters of the group's doctrine. The terminology sufficiently stops members from thinking critically by reinforcing a "black and white" mentality. Loaded terms and clich_s prejudice thinking.

      7. DOCTRINE OVER PERSON. Pre-group experience and group experience are narrowly and decisively interpreted through the absolute doctrine, even when experience contradicts the doctrine.

      8. DISPENSING OF EXISTENCE. Salvation is possible only in the group. Those who leave the group are doomed."

      Source: http://www.caic.org.au/general/cultcrit.htm

      The largest organizations that fit these criteria in my mind are Scientology, Mormons, and Jehovah's Witnesses. There are also many others. In general a cult practices mind control on its members by controlling the information that its members receive to protect the taught world-view of its members. This could be about the organization's history or anything else deemed threatening to the organization's divine status.

    207. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also, this amazing short film illustrates a lot of the mind control techniques that can be employed, even as far as diet control...

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mnNSe5XYp6E

    208. Re:Whats the difference? by Acer500 · · Score: 1

      But the problem to us heathens is that religious texts like the bible are supposed to be infallible morality from God.

      (snip) Your second problems is you don't expect anything from anyone. I expect a reader, who wants to get the most out of any text, to be a thinking adult with a strong moral code. You want life answers soley from a book, even a book such as the bible?

      They aren't there, at least not all of them. It's a guide.
      Nice. Now go and explain that to the other 99% of the Bible readers (those that probably don't read Slashdot). Starting with some idiotic Protestant churches my sister was involved with, the Pare de Sufrir cult here in Uruguay, and all those Catholics that believe that pope Benedict somehow has a direct line to God.
      --
      There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.
    209. Re:Whats the difference? by Acer500 · · Score: 1

      Wasn't voluntary when I was a kid. Heh. I had to read the Bible in its entirety for mandatory Catechism classes - Old Testament included. Tends to make a lot of Atheists/Agnostics :)
      --
      There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.
    210. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      jesus's rank/nature aren't that divergent between mormons and a lot of protestant christian groups.
      The one big difference between mormons and most other christians is that they believe god, jesus and the holy spirit to be separate entities, rather than one big 'god' being. He's the son of god, and god is his father...
      Jehovah's witnesses on the other hand believe that jesus was just another prophet. the same way the muslims believe jesus was important... but not really.

    211. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha ha ha, oh wow, I totally saw what you did there! You made it sound like republicans are cult members! That is some brilliant social commentary my friend!

    212. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you know what is hurting us collectively much more than any religion? Intolerance, like the kind you are advocating. Let people believe what they want as long as it doesn't crossover and harm the rights of others. Atheists are just as bad as anyone in this respect.

      Update: :) the captcha for my reply was "manure"

    213. Re:Whats the difference? by dfenstrate · · Score: 1

      Nice. Now go and explain that to the other 99% of the Bible readers (those that probably don't read Slashdot). Starting with some idiotic Protestant churches my sister was involved with, the Pare de Sufrir cult here in Uruguay, and all those Catholics that believe that pope Benedict somehow has a direct line to God.

      Oh, you want guarantees? You want promises? You want perfection? You want hard and fast rules? You want uniformity?

      You get none of those. Further, you may well have convinced yourself of the vast sophistication of being an athiest, which would, without warrant, elevate your opinion of yourself and lower your opinion of any sort of believer. Including your sister.

      --
      Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
    214. Re:Whats the difference? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Apparently, you think you have a monopoly on clever.

      The period does make a difference.

      Now? Europe, US.

      In the 8th century? Baghdad would have been better than anywhere in Europe. Moorish Spain was much nicer, too.

      In the future? Beats me. US is on a downward spiral, and there is the question whether Dubai's approach can be a model for the rest of the Arabic peninsula.

      But I doubt that is what you were getting at with your loaded question. Nor is it the only thing wrong with your question.

      The discerning question is "What is the potential for dickery in a religion, and does one religion have a monopoly on it?"

      If you want to see something, you will. Real cleverness is to see what is.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    215. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nicely said!

      I couldn't agree more.

    216. Re:Whats the difference? by Acer500 · · Score: 1

      Nice. Now go and explain that to the other 99% of the Bible readers (those that probably don't read Slashdot). Starting with some idiotic Protestant churches my sister was involved with, the Pare de Sufrir cult here in Uruguay, and all those Catholics that believe that pope Benedict somehow has a direct line to God.
      Oh, you want guarantees? You want promises? You want perfection? You want hard and fast rules? You want uniformity?

      You get none of those. Sorry, I think I didn't get this. I'm not being sarcastic, it might be a language problem (native Spanish speaker here).

      Further, you may well have convinced yourself of the vast sophistication of being an athiest, which would, without warrant, elevate your opinion of yourself and lower your opinion of any sort of believer. Including your sister. I consider myself an agnostic. I don't rule out the existence of a god. It does elevate my opinion of myself slightly :P but I tend to be tolerant of most religions. I don't think the monotheist "God" portrayed in the Bible, who meddles in the affairs of men so, to be very likely. I do appreciate most of the Christian moral code my catechism teachers wanted to teach us, but I think you can take that without having to be religious

      On my sister, I think she's well intentioned but way too gullible - her church convinced her to donate a laptop to a Canadian family that's way better off than she is, and to pay and go for a "mission" to Croatia which from what she showed me was way better off than our native Uruguay, not to mention she donates 10% of her meager salary to her church.

      In exchange she gets a sense of satisfaction, thinking better of herself (you think I might feel myself superior? You haven't met her :P ), and belonging to a group which has been very important and supportive to her (and I can appreciate that, I think they're good people in general). They do have some VERY odd beliefs though :(
      --
      There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.
    217. Re:Whats the difference? by yuri82 · · Score: 1

      Wow. Really interesting point of view. Some NLP theories. I was wondering along those lines lately, as I have been planning on reproducing. What artifact will I use to raise the offspring? The truth? The toothfairy? Still wondering what it will be.

      --
      Who is this Karma guy and why is he bad ??
    218. Re:Whats the difference? by WobindWonderdog · · Score: 1

      *watches as SS-SM62704 and SS-Point silently sail majestically past each other in the night*

      That's what I said =P

    219. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Christianity, and especially Islam would be seen as completely psychotic if they were not several thousand years of tradition surrounding these religions

      Yeah, "love thy neighbor" is really psychotic, you dumb fuck.

    220. Re:Whats the difference? by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      Your reasoning is good. It's important to remember that what are now major religions have engaged in the sins of cults, and are not automatically innocent.

      The isolation of cults, and the trust in a single charismatic leader, can let crimes by that leader and his chief followers fester and become a matter of policy. That's exactly what happened to Scientology, with their Guardian's Office and bomb threates forged by Mrs. Hubbard and her cronies, and that's what continues with their fraudulent claims of guiding people through past lives and scraping the souls of space aliens off of you with auditing and the 'e-meter' detecting them. It's hypnotism and plain old exorcism, with a pseudo-scientific label on it.

    221. Re:Whats the difference? by seebs · · Score: 1

      If you use the term "cult" that broadly, there's no reason to complain about anyone using it.

      In modern usage, the word "cult" connotes, not merely a religious belief system, or one that it is now fashionable to claim is "harmful", but a belief system which manifests very specific kinds of harm.

      While I won't dispute that some Christian groups are cults, most don't seem to be. They don't insist on complete separation from non-members, they don't engage in brainwashing (not just persuasion, but actual modern brainwashing techniques), they don't put people in forced labor camps...

      Scientology kidnaps peoples' children and puts them in labor camps to make their parents behave. That's if you get away with having kids; pregnant women in the Sea Org are subjected to harassment and threatened with expulsion -- with no job, no place to live, and no contacts, far from home -- if they do not abort.

      Christians can be jerks sometimes. It's not the same.

      --
      My blog: http://www.seebs.net/log/ --- My iPhone/iPad app: http://www.seebs.net/seebsfrac/
    222. Re:Whats the difference? by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "But when did they separate?"

      The Catholic Church separated from the Orthodox Church in 1054 following a series of increasing irreconcilable schisms.

      "A difference of opinions? YES! .. on who should be pope."

      They have a large number of theological, doctrinal, linguistic, and political differences that were far more profound than concerns about popes (which the Orthodox Christianity doesn't have anyway -- they consider Jesus Christ to be the head of their church).

      "I'd say that one group protested against the other's interpretation of some weird part of the religion. "

      It's irrelevant what you say, because you obviously have no idea of their history. What historians call either the East-West Schism or the Great Schism was a two-sided dispute the culminated in each simultaneously excommunicating certain members of the other church.

      "And that makes them protestant, in the true sense of the word"

      The Orthodox Church was the original Christian Church, and it was Rome that split away from them rather than the other way around, so to fit your definition, you'd have to claim that the Catholic Church was Protestant.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    223. Re:Whats the difference? by Schmorgluck · · Score: 1

      The freemasons have no pretense of being a religious organisation. Not any obedience I've heard of anyway. Now the problem is that they partially match cynicsreport's second criterion, and definitely match the third. This is due to their history. When freemasonry appeared in the eighteenth century (so no, not 700 years ago, far from it), it was a philosophical society that discussed political matters, in areas where this was considered possibly offensive. They have suffered some kinds of persecution at that time, particularly from religious authorities.
      Nowadays, though, the habit of secrecy is largely baseless. I think its survival is at least partially due to a childish excitement for the whole "secret society" stuff (which kid never played with that?). In a modern, secular society, I feel it hurts freemasonry rather than serves it. For example, by perpetuating defiance, by giving the least honorable members opportunities to cover fishy stuff, which in turn, when uncovered, reinforces said defiance.

      --
      There's nothing like $HOME
    224. Re:Whats the difference? by PC+and+Sony+Fanboy · · Score: 1

      no matter what it comes down to, there are 2 options.
      1 - The church that jesus created and led is still on the earth, and only one church is still practicing the way jesus wanted (either catholic or not), or
      2 - there are no churches that have the mandate of heaven to lead the people.

      Although, the church of the FSM might have it right after all...

    225. Re:Whats the difference? by corbettw · · Score: 1

      Interesting stuff, I did not know that. Thanks!

      For what it's worth, I attended the Landmark Forum in Austin several years ago, and found it to be mostly New-Agey gobbledygook. There were some interesting things about it (like the Zen koans they used to explain how people let their preconceived notions cloud their judgment), but for the most part it was harmless stuff. That said, the people who were devotees of it were all just a little bit "off", though I could never quite put my finger on how exactly. Now that you've pointed out the connection to Scientology, their behavior makes more sense to me.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    226. Re:Whats the difference? by Capt.+Cautious · · Score: 1

      A religion focuses on the "Divine" source by whatever name, not an individual. A "Cult" is characterized by the "worship" of a Charismatic individual. The Jones Cult is a fair example. The principal difference is the focus of the Worship. Another example would be the religion of the Wicca, it's focus is the worship of the Old Gods and Goddesses of Nature. So when you have an Individual as the center of "Worship/Control" you have a cult. Wikipedia has a clearer but similar definition. See www.wikipedia.org. Captain V. Cautious

    227. Re:Whats the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      That is the modern definition of a cult, taking the term to be pejorative and describing an unhealthy religious/spiritual group. The classical/historical use of the term is to describe any specific set of religious/spiritual practices and inlcudes all 'orthodox' religions as well as sects, splinters, splitters, and nutters. E.g. the cults of Osiris, Isis, and Mithras were all mainstream Roman cults.

      This dual-usage is what allows the pigs to charge the defendant on the modern usage, but also, as noted above, gives the defendant the get-out of claiming usage of the classical meaning.

      As Anthony Boyd (242971) says below, another definition of cult is a religious practice with secrets not allowed to all worshippers. Which covers scientology.

      Typical philosophy: failing to learn the lessons of the past.

  4. This could be just what we needed by rastoboy29 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The boy will surely be let off, but not before the whole world hears--and SEES--the story.  All that will do is draw attention to the protest.

    I predict: Score 1 for the good guys.

    The only way this could be worse for Scientology is if the boy turns up dead anytime soon.

    1. Re:This could be just what we needed by TheSpoom · · Score: 4, Informative

      If anyone's interested in knowing about the "Church" and its abuses, Anonymous, or the protests in general, Anonymous has a great page on Why We Protest.

      --
      It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
      - E. Debs
    2. Re:This could be just what we needed by blind+biker · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Last time when someone critical of Scientology turned up dead, police was happy to believe he committed suicide, even though he had given no prior signs (nor had any reason to) kill himself.

      You know that Scientology has infiltrated the police in the US in some cities?

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    3. Re:This could be just what we needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Much like Christianity has dominated the police in nearly all US cities?

    4. Re:This could be just what we needed by blind+biker · · Score: 1, Redundant

      That's a straw man argument (i.e. designed to derail the conversation), because Catholics, Anglicans, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists (you have members of all those religions in the police in the US) are not members of a cult that also resembles a criminal organization. However, the great majority of Slashdot patrons are way more sophisticated than that and will see through your puny attempt.

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    5. Re:This could be just what we needed by Trogre · · Score: 1

      No. Not even a little bit.

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    6. Re:This could be just what we needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Time Magazine cover story: Scientology - the cult of greed
      http://www.time.com/time/covers/0,16641,1101910506,00.html?internalid=AC

    7. Re:This could be just what we needed by youthoftoday · · Score: 0

      The difference between the US and the UK is that we (in the UK) have a free press.

      --
      -1 not first post
    8. Re:This could be just what we needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Orlando! This was in the news again recently. The Orlando Police Department were intimidating the members of Anonymous and as usual received a letter of thanks from the "Church" for their support.

      Scientologists thanking Orlando Police
      Intimidating protesters
      Video of harassment

    9. Re:This could be just what we needed by nstlgc · · Score: 1

      I am saddened by Shawn's death as much as any other person should be, but I feel obliged to point out that Shawn had a troubled personality, and even people from the Old Guard who knew him personally don't seem to be too surprised about the suicide. I think this is suspicious as much as you do but I think the only way to get justice done is to make sure you've got everything right.

      --
      I'm Rocco. I'm the +5 Funny man.
    10. Re:This could be just what we needed by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      Much like Christianity has dominated the police in nearly all US cities?

      Christianity forbids carrying weapons, so anyone you see in uniform in the US is NOT a Christian, even if he thinks he is a Christian and attends a Christian church weekly.

      Matthew 5:39- "But I say unto you, That ye resist not evil: but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also."

      You can't do this and fulfill your duty as a police officer. It's damned hard to do even if you're not a cop.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    11. Re:This could be just what we needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know that Scientology has infiltrated the police in the US in some cities? You know that they infiltrated the U.S. government during the 70's?
    12. Re:This could be just what we needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anonymous is an adjective, not a proper noun.

    13. Re:This could be just what we needed by TheSpoom · · Score: 1

      Anonymous referring to the group is a noun.

      --
      It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
      - E. Debs
    14. Re:This could be just what we needed by Calledor · · Score: 1

      The difference between the US and the UK is that we (in the UK) have a free press. You say this on the internet. The fucking worldwideweb. Fuck you troll, try HARDER.
  5. I've got an idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Let's protest a "cult" by all wearing strange masks and chanting the same mantras over and over!

  6. HAR HAR HAR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ill do you one better! They are a cult of bat shit r-tards!

  7. But... by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    what happens if a real cult actually comes along (if it's not already)? If Hitler was cloned and tried to take over again, you'd go to jail for pointing it out and shouting "Warning, Hitler 2!"

    1. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what happens if a real cult actually comes along (if it's not already)? If Hitler was cloned and tried to take over again, you'd go to jail for pointing it out and shouting "Warning, Hitler 2!" I'd argue that Scientology is a real cult.
    2. Re:But... by hedwards · · Score: 1

      So there can be only one?

    3. Re:But... by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Yup, Godwin's Law is now actually a law.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    4. Re:But... by WedgeTalon · · Score: 1

      A rock? Hmmm.... oh! You mean that Solid Enhanced Interrogation Tool over there. The one that's used in the Enhanced Interrogation Technique titled "Bashing Over the Head With the Solid Enhanced Interrogation Tool".

      Well, calling it a rock sure makes it SOUND boring (and not very useful as an interrogation tool).

    5. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what do you think bush is .. churchill 2 .. germany and hitler were opposed not because of who they were but what they did .. america and bush are germany and hitler 2 .. do you think that 10 to 20 million germans that let hitler and the nazis do what they did .. were any different than the average american .. that how it happens .. study stanley milgram work on the subject of submission to authority ..

      http://www.stanleymilgram.com/

    6. Re:But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People are just selfish. Thousands dying of genocide in Darfur? Who cares. Thousands dying of government negligence in Burma? Too bad. A few thousand Americans die at the hands of a few nut-jobs? Let's go destroy Iraq!

  8. Not censorship by trainsnpep · · Score: 0

    Why the heck is this tagged censorship? There's a law against insulting signs. Would this still be tagged censorship if it were the Conservative Party instead of Scientology?

    Don't get me wrong, I'm not defending Scientology. I'm just saying, be fair.

    --
    --<Mike>--
    1. Re:Not censorship by Crypto+Gnome · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Why the heck is this tagged censorship? There's a law against insulting signs. So you're of the opinion that declaring something illegal is not ever under any circumstances a form of censorship?
      --
      Visit CryptoGnome in his home.
    2. Re:Not censorship by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      What is insulting about it? I may not call some self proclaimed church a cult? Where is the insult?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    3. Re:Not censorship by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Exhibit A:

      Why the heck is this tagged censorship?

      Exhibit B:

      There's a law against insulting signs.

      ...?

    4. Re:Not censorship by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1

      Would this still be tagged censorship if it were the Conservative Party instead of Scientology?
      And why shouldn't it be so?
    5. Re:Not censorship by terrymr · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There isn't a law against insulting signs as such - the public order act is one of those vague laws allowing an officer to ticket you for something likely to cause a disturbance ... it seems to me that the sign shouldn't be enough and probably won't be when this gets brought before a judge.

      If you think it's a funny law, try explaining the concept of a jaywalking ticket to a Brit :-)

    6. Re:Not censorship by Muhammar · · Score: 1

      ...and its a perfectly awful piece of law. As you can always find somebody who will find arbitrary sign insulting.

      There are laws protecting monarchs and presidents from being insulted. Predicatbly these laws are mostly used to persecute the oppositon or silence criticism in media. When the potentate makes ass of himself you get in trouble writing about it.

      There are laws protecting people from hate speach - and these laws got used against a French author who dared to proclaim in public interview, when asked about Bible and Koran, that Koran is a lousy piece of literature and revulsive for him to read (he got aquitted in court only because Muhahamad is a historic person and he was criticising the literary style not the religion, etc.)

      --
      I doubt that we will ever figure out - and I suspect that even if we did figure out we couldn't do much about it
    7. Re:Not censorship by kanweg · · Score: 1

      Every church is self proclaimed.

      Bert

    8. Re:Not censorship by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why the heck is this tagged censorship? There's a law against insulting signs.

      Because a law against "insulting" signs IS censorship, just as a law against "insulting" books or "insulting" speech would be.

      Would this still be tagged censorship if it were the Conservative Party instead of Scientology?

      Yes. Of course it would. It saddens me that you have to even ask this.

      You have the right to stand on the corner with a sign saying "X is Y!" for any values of X and Y. Any values at all. (Dictatorial governments may, of course, not recognize that right; it exists nonetheless.)

      "Scientology is a cult". "The Conservative Party is a cult." "The City of London police are a bunch of mindless jerks." "The Flying Spaghetti Monster is better than Jesus." "Tom Swiss is a dweeb."

      Anyone who attempts to forcibly stop you from saying any of these things is engaging in censorship.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    9. Re:Not censorship by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      What's questionable is whether it was an insult or a fact. It's probably possible to prove that scientology is indeed a dangerous cult.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    10. Re:Not censorship by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Was that last case brought to court in Britain or France?

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    11. Re:Not censorship by aproposofwhat · · Score: 1
      That David Cameron's a right posh cult.

      Sorry, spelling's bad this morning :P

      --
      One swallow does not a fellatrix make
    12. Re:Not censorship by EasyTarget · · Score: 1

      Would this still be tagged censorship if it were the Conservative Party instead of Scientology?

      You must be new round here..

      The answer to your question is: Yes, it would.

      --
      "Oops, I always forget the purpose of competition is to divide people into winners and losers." - Hobbes
    13. Re:Not censorship by EasyTarget · · Score: 1

      If you've ever listened to the Rick Mayal, Adrian Edmonton, Nigel Planer 'Bad News' faux spinal-tap album.. they have a hysterical discussion about this.

      'That Maggie thatcher, she's a cult, in fact the whole Tory party are a bunch of cults... and the more left wing of them are wet cults!'

      I nearly swallowed my toke I was laughing so hard (this was in the late 80's).

      --
      "Oops, I always forget the purpose of competition is to divide people into winners and losers." - Hobbes
    14. Re:Not censorship by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative


        That only computes to a Scientologist.

    15. Re:Not censorship by Asic+Eng · · Score: 1
      Every church is self proclaimed.

      Yes, but many churches are also accepted by mainstream society to be churches while others others are considered to be nothing more than commercial ventures looking for a way to avoid taxation. Scientology has exactly that problem e.g. in Germany - the German state does not accept them to be a religious organization, hence no tax benefits. So calling Scientology a "self proclaimed church" seems valid to me - while they call themselves that, many people disagree. That's quite different from disagreeing with their teachings: many people disagree with catholicism, buddhism or protestantism, too - however they would agree that these are churches.

      Hypothetically, if Microsoft were to declare themselves a church - most people wouldn't be prepared to accept that label either. Words have meanings, and someone calling themselves something doesn't mean others have to consider it an appropriate description. If only a minority agrees the label fits, then "self proclaimed" is just what it is.

    16. Re:Not censorship by Asic+Eng · · Score: 1
      You have the right to stand on the corner with a sign saying "X is Y!"

      As much as I like the sentiment - in which jurisdiction do you have the right to do that for X="My neighbour Mr Smith" and Y="a thief/murderer/rapist"? In any country I know of, there are libel and slander laws which pose limits on free speech. Usually there are exceptions for people who are in the public view (e.g. politicians or movie stars) so you are often free to insult them, but in general that's not the case.

    17. Re:Not censorship by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      As much as I like the sentiment - in which jurisdiction do you have the right to do that for X="My neighbour Mr Smith" and Y="a thief/murderer/rapist"? In any country I know of, there are libel and slander laws which pose limits on free speech. Usually there are exceptions for people who are in the public view (e.g. politicians or movie stars) so you are often free to insult them, but in general that's not the case.

      Ethically, the right to free expression ends when it infringes upon the rights of another person. Traditionally, slander and libel were considered such when they damaged the other person (such as causing problems getting a job or anything else provable). I think this is important to mention because most people don't understand the difference between a law that restricts freedom and a law that mediates conflicting freedoms between different people. As for people in the public view, laws are both more and less strict depending upon the damages. For example, lying about a politician in such a way that they lose an election is a greater crime in most jurisdictions, whereas lying about a regular person may well cost them nothing and cause no damages.

      Not all restrictions on free expression are censorship. For example, a law against yelling "fire" in a crowder theater (classic example) simply weighs the right of the theater patrons to live without injury over another person's right to speak in an inaccurate way. Your right to swing your fist ends at my nose. So I agree with your sentiment. I just wanted to clarify the reasoning so it can be applied to the general case, not just to slander and libel.

    18. Re:Not censorship by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      in which jurisdiction do you have the right to do that for X="My neighbour Mr Smith" and Y="a thief/murderer/rapist"? In any country I know of, there are libel and slander laws which pose limits on free speech.

      It's a point, but libel and slander laws are civil restrictions, a different sort of beast. They don't place prior restraint on speech, they make me responsible for certain consequences of such speech.

      If I walk around with a sign saying "My neighbor Mr Smith is a thief/murderer/rapist", Smith doesn't get to have me arrested. He can sue me; if and only if he proves that the charges are false and caused him harm, he can get compensation. Mere "insult" does not make for slander or libel. (At least in the U.S. I understand that the U.K. has insane libel laws.)

      He can't, as the Cult of Scientology did here, send the cops over to take away my sign and bust me.

      This leaves open the question of whether libel and slander laws are a violation of free speech. If I own a major newspaper and deliberately publish false information to harm my neighbor,he or she probably doesn't have a major newspaper to respond, so maybe there's justification for placing restrictions on me - or rather, on my ownership.

      But if I'm just holding up a sign, my neighbor can put up his own signs saying "My neighbor is delusional; see www.SmithIsNotACrook.com", and we can equally make our cases. I'm not sure there's any need or use for the government to become involved. At least, not at this point - if it progresses to harassment, with me following him or her around, bothering their friends and co-workers by sticking my sign in their faces, then that's a real crime.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    19. Re:Not censorship by Asic+Eng · · Score: 1
      Didn't have a chance to respond earlier, in case you are reading replies to old posts:

      They don't place prior restraint on speech, they make me responsible for certain consequences of such speech.

      Not an invalid point of view, but I'm not sure if it's useful. Once you go with that line of reasoning you have the right to commit murder in the US (you just are responsible for the consequences) and a citizen of Burma has freedom of speech, too. There are things you can do, and the government has no lawful power to stop you - those are rights. If doing something can get you sued or arrested - then the right to do it, is not available to you (regardless whether it should or should not be).

      Smith doesn't get to have me arrested. He can sue me; if and only if he proves that the charges are false and caused him harm, he can get compensation.

      Sorry, but you'll find the burden of proof doesn't work that way, in this kind of cases. (Makes sense to an extent, too: you may somehow be able that you didn't murder a specific person, but you'll find it's impossible to prove that you never murdered anyone.)

      He can't, as the Cult of Scientology did here, send the cops over to take away my sign and bust me.

      Please don't try that... You'll find that all sorts of other laws will pop up and interfere with your sign...

      I'm not sure there's any need or use for the government to become involved.

      Be that as it may: the US has long since decided that the government is involved there.

      if it progresses to harassment

      I'm sure that Scientology will take the view that it does. Not that I agree with them, but they'll likely argue that.

      This leaves open the question of whether libel and slander laws are a violation of free speech.

      Does it? It clearly places restrictions on free However libel and slander laws predate freedom of speech, so the case can certainly be made that the first amendment was never meant to not have these restrictions. Unfortunately that also means that there are restrictions to the freedom of speech right, but nowhere does it specify what those are and where the boundary between a legal and illegal restrictions would be. As a result it has been left to the courts to define them. These days you even have an FCC with the authority to fine people for using swear words, and there are obscenity laws on the books, too. (BTW: the first amendment protection for freedom of the press is also absolute. Well, in theory, in practice - unsurprisingly - it's not.)

    20. Re:Not censorship by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      Once you go with that line of reasoning you have the right to commit murder in the US (you just are responsible for the consequences) and a citizen of Burma has freedom of speech, too.

      A citizen of Burma does have the right of free speech. As I said upthread: Dictatorial governments may, of course, not recognize that right; it exists nonetheless. This is the notion of "natural rights" on which our theory of government is based.

      If by "right" we mean "right recognized by the government", then the concept is useless - abolitionists in the 1800s couldn't have argued that persons of African decent had a right to be free.

      A citizen of Burma - or of the U.K. or U.S. - has a right to free speech, though that right is not fully recognized by the governments in question.

      To your other point: speech is unlike murder, in that every act of murder is a violation of someone's rights, whereas few acts of speech or other expression are. And you can't tell generally tell if an expression is a violation of someone's rights until it occurs. If you catch someone about to commit a murder, you can and should stop them by any means necessary; if you catch someone about to commit an act of speech, if you attempt to stop them by force you're committing assault.

      Be that as it may: the US has long since decided that the government is involved there.

      The fact that the U.S. Government - or any government - has decided that it is involved in something, does not in any way indicate that it has a legitimate authority to be involved in that thing, or that people don't have a right to do it.

      However libel and slander laws predate freedom of speech, so the case can certainly be made that the first amendment was never meant to not have these restrictions.

      Freedom of speech is a natural right. It predates law - as soon as the first hominid grunted, he had freedom of speech. Amendment I did not create it, only promised to recogize it. (A promise the government broke only seven years later with the Sedition Act.)

      These days you even have an FCC with the authority to fine people for using swear words, and there are obscenity laws on the books, too.

      Neither of which are ethically - or Constitutionally - justified.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
  9. Slashdot? by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    How long before Slashdot is banned in UK? I may call you a mad pizza-eating hermit nerd with no girlfriend. That's at least as offensive as "cult".

    1. Re:Slashdot? by Tuoqui · · Score: 1

      Sure you can because its the truth. Even though it may or may not be offensive.

      --
      09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
      +2 Troll is Slashdot's way of saying groupthink is confused
    2. Re:Slashdot? by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      I am a mad pizza-eating hermit nerd with no girlfriend, you insensitive clod! Haven't you seen my journals?

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
  10. That was Version 2.0 of The Sign by Crypto+Gnome · · Score: 5, Funny

    UK Teen Cited For Calling Scientology a "Cult" You should have seen the original version of The Sign - there was a N but no L.

    I think he was quite well-spoken, really.
    --
    Visit CryptoGnome in his home.
    1. Re:That was Version 2.0 of The Sign by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      Ha Ha,
      If He had been quick when the police had told him he couldn't use the word "cult" he could have said "OK I'll change it" and added two pen-strokes.

  11. Oh, Great. by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 5, Interesting
    From TFA:

    "The City of London police came under fire two years ago when it emerged that more than 20 officers, ranging from constable to chief superintendent, had accepted gifts worth thousands of pounds from the Church of Scientology."
    That's comforting. I wonder how many American cops, politicians, etc. the cult has on its payroll? Might as well disband the FBI and enlist Scientology as our intelligence service -- they seem to be much more effective at getting away with domestic espionage and dirty tricks.
    1. Re:Oh, Great. by TheSpoom · · Score: 5, Informative

      I tried to post this a month and a half ago on Slashdot but it was rejected: Atlanta police arrest a peaceful protester at the March 15th worldwide protest. Note the numerous police decked out in full riot gear, even though Anonymous had posed no threat to them or Scientology, and was very clear that this was a peaceful protest.

      They then started issuing tickets to any cars that honked as they drove by. Second half of that video I linked, I shit you not.

      From what I've read they were much better at the April and May protests, but it does show that the police's allegiances in some areas shift like crazy.

      --
      It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
      - E. Debs
    2. Re:Oh, Great. by Concerned+Onlooker · · Score: 4, Informative
      Much more effective than you can imagine. Check out this fascinating article about conspiracies that actually happened. One of the entries is about Scientology's fairly successful effort at stealing back documents that made them look bad. From the government.

      From the article:

      Anyway, somewhere around 5,000 of Scientology's crack commandos wiretapped and burglarized various agencies. They stole hundreds of documents, mainly from the IRS. No critic was spared, and in the end, 136 organizations, agencies and foreign embassies were infiltrated.
      --
      http://www.rootstrikers.org/
    3. Re:Oh, Great. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Note the numerous police decked out in full riot gear, even though Anonymous had posed no threat to them or Scientology, and was very clear that this was a peaceful protest.
      Yes, no large group of people has ever gone from peaceful to riotous. It's hard to judge the video without context of local laws and requirements.
    4. Re:Oh, Great. by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Well, the riot gear was applicable as protests have a tendency to turn violent even if that was not intended. Even protests by known peaceful groups can need riot police because opponents of the protest could turn violent.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    5. Re:Oh, Great. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I tried to post this a month and a half ago on Slashdot but it was rejected: Atlanta police arrest a peaceful protester at the March 15th worldwide protest [youtube.com]. Oh no, you realize what this means? "They"'ve infiltrated the ranks of Slashdotters.
    6. Re:Oh, Great. by dbIII · · Score: 1

      As soon as computers are involved law enforcement seems to often take almost military levels of response (eg. the international paramilitary raid to arrest the unarmed teenager DVD Jon in quiet Scandinaivan Suburbia). I don't think the full riot gear had annything to do with Scientology but was just the usual innappropriate response to some possible "anarchists cookbook" reader.

    7. Re:Oh, Great. by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      Absolutely. Couldn't possibly just be because we find this shit boring.. or that the cops just don't want to be there wasting their time policing people who don't even understand the purpose of protest. Nah.. it must be because of 'infaltration'!

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    8. Re:Oh, Great. by Britz · · Score: 2, Insightful

      They realized which police to bribe and infiltrate in order to get those results. And they did. That shift is no accident.

    9. Re:Oh, Great. by PJ+The+Womble · · Score: 1

      The City Of London Police have a rather chequered history generally regarding allegations of corruption within their midst: in the 1970s, Operation Countryman was launched to investigate allegations of widespread corruption in their ranks.

      After six years, and at a cost of over GBP 4 million, Operation Countryman presented its findings to the Home Office and the Commissioner. Parts of the report were leaked to the public, and it was revealed that over 400 police officers lost their jobs during or after the Countryman investigation. Comfortingly, though, despite Countryman's recommendation that over 300 officers should face criminal charges, no officer was ever charged with a criminal offence as a result of the investigation.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Countryman

    10. Re:Oh, Great. by TheSpoom · · Score: 1

      Hey, I wasn't saying it necessarily should have gone through; I'm all for the new Firehose thing determining what's good and what's not. I just thought it was interesting and relevant to the discussion.

      --
      It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
      - E. Debs
  12. Would it be dangerous... by Dr.+Cody · · Score: 1, Funny

    ...to say David Miscavige raped me?

    Would it be even more dangerous to say that he needed a small stepladder to do it?

    1. Re:Would it be dangerous... by Stormwatch · · Score: 3, Funny

      That's utter nonsense. David Miscavige could never do that. Everyone knows he only gets an erection when he kills a puppy.

    2. Re:Would it be dangerous... by Dr.+Cody · · Score: 1

      I'd repressed that part, you insensitive clod!

  13. Challenge the law in the European Court by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ..of Human Rights.. I'm pretty sure the law is in violation of Articles 10 and/or 11 of the European Convention on Human Rights..

    This court actually works and has authority to rule in these cases. Might have to exhaust the legal avenues in the UK first though.

    --
    It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
    Be yourself no matter what they say
    1. Re:Challenge the law in the European Court by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think there is an other Euro-Legal side to this. Scientology is in Germany an Illegal, banned organization. Does the London Police want to insult the legal standing of a fellow European nation?

    2. Re:Challenge the law in the European Court by Tuoqui · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately I dont think England is a signatory to the European Union treaties. Therefore the European Court probably doesnt have jurisdiction and cant enforce anything on England.

      --
      09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
      +2 Troll is Slashdot's way of saying groupthink is confused
    3. Re:Challenge the law in the European Court by DF5JT · · Score: 1

      "Unfortunately I dont think England is a signatory to the European Union treaties. "

      Rubbish.

    4. Re:Challenge the law in the European Court by howlingmadhowie · · Score: 1

      yes england is. the united kingdom was one of the founding members of the european council. the european convention on human rights is the highest law in england, just as it is in all member states.

    5. Re:Challenge the law in the European Court by sydneyfong · · Score: 1

      IANAL.

      My opinion is that the law is not in violation, and the enforcement is. Most places have laws that are coded vaguely that basically says if you do anything to cause disruption of public order we could arrest you. I could be wrong though, the ECHR seems rather progressive.

      A judicial review of the police's actions might be the theoretically most appropriate action, but would be fscking expensive.

      The practical solution would be simply as mentioned in the replies in the forum -- take it to the press. It'd be much more useful than an obscure court judgment which nobody but lawyers read anyway.

      --
      Don't quote me on this.
    6. Re:Challenge the law in the European Court by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The ECHR doesn't work as well as one might hope, unfortunately - read up on the Spanner case, for instance.

      As one of the defendants himself writes:

      In view of the pre-hearing briefing the result was not unexpected, however we were very upset at the unanimous decision. "Her Majesty's Government" having suffered several 'Gay related' Human Rights defeats prior to our hearing were, we heard later, due a WIN. We cannot of course confirm or deny this scandalous suggestion of behind the scenes interference with the legal process. We just note the observation. It's all politics really.
    7. Re:Challenge the law in the European Court by RexRhino · · Score: 1

      Sorry, it is institutions like the European Court of Human Rights and the philosophy that inspired it that caused the problem in the first place.

      The Scientologists are claiming that their human rights are being violated by "hate speech" against their religion. It is a well established principle in Europe that negative statements regarding a religion is "hate", and the right not to be exposed to "hate" overrides any right to freedom of speech.

      The European Court on Human Rights would most definitely support throwing someone in prison for calling Islam a cult in front of a Mosque, so why should they treat Scientology any different?

  14. Easy win - bring a dictionary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bring a dictionary and throw it on the judge's desk. Tell him to look up the word "cult" and he'll come to the conclusion that this 15 year old was quite simply correct. 'nuff said.

    The British need to get their heads out of their arses already.

    1. Re:Easy win - bring a dictionary by Crypto+Gnome · · Score: 5, Interesting

      For authoritative British usage, the Compact Oxford English Dictionary of Current English definitions of "cult" and "sect" are: cult
      1. a system of religious worship directed towards a particular figure or object.
      2. a small religious group regarded as strange or as imposing excessive control over members.
      3. something popular or fashionable among a particular section of society.
      Wave that dictionary page in front of the judge and "I Rest My Case". All of those three descriptives apply specifically and directly to Scientology.

      Now if the Judge/prosecution want to base an arrest on "when you say that scientology is a cult, you mean it as an insult" it is near-impossible to prove intent in a court of law. (at least, until they work our how to read my mind from a distance in a scientifically verifiable manner)

      Anyhow, any defence lawyer would simply declare this "law" irrelevant and illegal - how can it possibly be legal to declare that writing a statement of fact on a sign and waving it around in public is illegal.
      --
      Visit CryptoGnome in his home.
    2. Re:Easy win - bring a dictionary by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You haven't been outside recently, have you? The saying about better having a fast horse when you plan to speak the truth has never been more current than today.

      At least if the truth is somehow uncomfortable.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    3. Re:Easy win - bring a dictionary by dotgain · · Score: 1
      Yes, but the law's not against being incorrect, but being insulting.

      You're thinking of defamation, where being provably factual (or possibly other things in certain cases) is a defence.

    4. Re:Easy win - bring a dictionary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. a system of religious worship directed towards a particular figure or object.
      2. a small religious group regarded as strange or as imposing excessive control over members.
      3. something popular or fashionable among a particular section of society.

      1 & 2 are the spot-on definitions of a religious cult, with the prime factor being that of following a person or other idol.

      Early Christians (the 12 apostles) would have been classified as cultists... up to the point of Jesus' resurrection which established His divinity. At that point, Christians were no longer following a man, but God incarnate.

      As an interesting note, this accepted definition would therefore include Catholicism as a cult, with the Pope being God's proxy on earth, and his interpretations and instructions accepted as divine.

    5. Re:Easy win - bring a dictionary by amorsen · · Score: 1

      Wave that dictionary page in front of the judge and "I Rest My Case". All of those three descriptives apply specifically and directly to Scientology. I don't know much about British law, but I do know that there exists at least one country where truth isn't necessarily a defense.
      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    6. Re:Easy win - bring a dictionary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The full Oxford English Dictionary has the following under their definition of scientology:

      "There was Lord Soper grudgingly admitting that Scientology was entitled to be called a religion even if it was the worst one he had come across."
      1973 Daily Tel. 31 Oct. 14/4

    7. Re:Easy win - bring a dictionary by slim · · Score: 1

      Wave that dictionary page in front of the judge and "I Rest My Case". But the accusation is not that the word "cult" is inaccurate, but that it is "insulting".

      The word "cult" is certainly pejorative. I'm not sure it should be promoted to "insulting".

    8. Re:Easy win - bring a dictionary by pjt33 · · Score: 2, Informative

      No need for a dictionary. I've RTFA (before it was posted on /., so I have an excuse), and the kid cited a case in which a judge called Scientology a cult. I've no doubt he'll cite it again if this comes to trial.

    9. Re:Easy win - bring a dictionary by bcmm · · Score: 1

      I'm playing devil's advocate here. I believe the kid is in the right.

      But just because the word's being used in a way which is consistent with its dictionary definition doesn't mean it isn't hate speech. You can probably find "nigger" in a dictionary.

      --
      # cat /dev/mem | strings | grep -i llama
      Damn, my RAM is full of llamas.
    10. Re:Easy win - bring a dictionary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IAMA[British]L, but you are trying to apply the libel "truth" defense to a different law. Who knows if truth is a defense under the Public Order Act?

      I also doubt if the standard to determine insulting is the "intent" of the sign, its more likely something along the lines if a reasonable bystander would interpret the sign as insulting.

      Remember, the Brits don't have a first amendment. This very well could be illegal and enforceable under that system. To play devils advocate for that system, (Although I've also been socialized by the american system not to agree with it), the kid could have put what it is specifically about Scientiology that he felt was wrong, rather than using a term probably generally considered insulting. ("# a small religious group regarded as strange or as imposing excessive control over members)

    11. Re:Easy win - bring a dictionary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A nigger in a dictionary? I'm not sure they make niggers that small.

    12. Re:Easy win - bring a dictionary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "how can it possibly be legal to declare that writing a statement of fact on a sign and waving it around in public is illegal."

      This is the UK, where if you murder someone, the judge will send a note home to your parents. If you try to defend yourself from a murderer, you'll get many years in jail.

      Why does it surprise you that you'd be thrown in jail for telling the truth about some organization?

    13. Re:Easy win - bring a dictionary by RealGrouchy · · Score: 1

      I fail to see how a protester claiming Fur or Abortion as murder is any less "abusive and insulting" to the receiving party.

      This seems to be a revival of the McLibel case, albeit in criminal law as opposed to civil law.

      - RG>

      --
      Hey pal, this isn't a pleasantforest, so don't waste my time with pleasantries!
  15. Thats right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you want to bash religions that aren't popular go to a fundamentalist Muslim country where it's allowed. What's he thinking doing such things in the West.

    1. Re:Thats right by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Just spread the word that Scientologists believe Allah is a pig-fucker.

    2. Re:Thats right by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Now here's a plan. Scientologist and religious fundies trying to destroy each other...

      Don't you love win-win situations?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    3. Re:Thats right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't that true? Maybe that's why he didn't like to eat pork....

    4. Re:Thats right by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 4, Funny
      Islamofascists have guns, suicide bombers, countries and billions of dollars.

      Scientologists have copies of the movie Battlefield Earth.

      My money's on the Thetan-freaks...

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    5. Re:Thats right by jcr · · Score: 1

      Scientologists believe Allah is a pig-fucker.

      WTF? The Scientologits claim that Allah is one of them?

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    6. Re:Thats right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      L. Ron Hubbard (scientology founder) wrote that Jesus was a pedophile in the OT8 documents, is that close enough?

    7. Re:Thats right by pjt33 · · Score: 1

      Probably. Jesus is a highly respected prophet in Islam.

    8. Re:Thats right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We got your money, but we could use a bit more of it. How much did you have left in your savings account again?

    9. Re:Thats right by sapphire+wyvern · · Score: 2, Funny

      I agree. Watching Battlefield Earth is liable to make the suicide bombers go off early.

    10. Re:Thats right by digitrev · · Score: 1

      What if you give them the rifftrax version?

      --
      Cynical Idealist
    11. Re:Thats right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      My money's on the Thetan-freaks...

      Why would they name themselves after a Greek letter? Or is it the other way around...? *shudder*
    12. Re:Thats right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Scientologists believe Allah is a pig-fucker.

      WTF? The Scientologits claim that Allah is one of them?

      Hey, people who fuck pigs have feelings too! Will both of you knock it off with the derogatory comments? :)

    13. Re:Thats right by jcr · · Score: 1

      Ok, fair enough. There is such a thing as being too harsh on the pig-fuckers.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    14. Re:Thats right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Problem is OT 8 was re-issued pretty fast after they realised it might offend Christians. Offend more, that is, than the idea in OT 3 that all religions are engrams or implants placed there by the evil alien psychiatrist Xenu.

  16. Easy defense... by Tablizer · · Score: 2, Funny

    "I meant 'colt' your honor. Scientologists are as cute as pony."

    1. Re:Easy defense... by Samah · · Score: 1

      Honestly, his best option is to use the Mel Gibson Defense.
      "I'm sorry your honor, I'm an alcoholic."

      --
      Homonyms are fun!
      You're driving your car, but they're riding their bikes there.
  17. 1st amendment by Robert1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Gotta love it! It is disheartening that it seems every European country, and Canada too, seems to have some kind of idiotic anti-speech law(s).

    The scientology thing just serves to unmask this rather gigantic lapse in liberty. I think a better question than whether the kid is guilty or not is why you Brits have such laws. Further why aren't you outraged that such laws exist and why you aren't actively trying to overturn them? This isn't a flame but a serious question, since when the slightest bit of censorship rears its head in America we tend to jump all over it - as evidenced by the Youtube article still on the frontpage.

    1. Re:1st amendment by Tablizer · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Gotta love it! It is disheartening that it seems every European country, and Canada too, seems to have some kind of idiotic anti-speech law(s). The scientology thing just serves to unmask this rather gigantic lapse in liberty.

      Whenever I get down thinking of waterboarding, wars, wiretapping, and habeas corpus suspension going on with the US; these kinds of things remind me that every country has its own stupid shit. And hopefully Americans will fix waterboarding etc. soon.

    2. Re:1st amendment by Robert1 · · Score: 1

      I just really wanted a response to my question, but I guess its easier to throw it back at me.

      To address your statement, yes there is a large outcry against torture both from the public level and at the highest governmental levels as well as active attempts to forbid its use.

      So I ask again, is there a similar outcry in the UK over restriction of free-speech?

    3. Re:1st amendment by hedwards · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And hopefully Americans will fix waterboarding etc. soon. Quite so, in the future we won't get caught.
    4. Re:1st amendment by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Seriously, I wonder why in a lot of cases people wonder whether someone is guilty of breaking some law or not, rather than questioning the law in question itself. That's not limited to the UK, that's a worldwide phenomenon.

      We get more and more laws cutting down our freedoms. Often unnecessarily. And when someone breaks such a senseless law, the musing starts, did he break it, did he not, does it apply... instead of asking why the heck that law exists in the first place.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    5. Re:1st amendment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So I ask again, is there a similar outcry in the UK over restriction of free-speech?
      Not after last night, when our glorious leader had the destructive infidels arres..

      CARRIER LOST
    6. Re:1st amendment by Wellington+Grey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      why you Brits have such laws. Further why aren't you outraged that such laws exist and why you aren't actively trying to overturn them? This isn't a flame but a serious question,


      My understanding is most of these kinds of laws exist because of the Nazis. The thought process goes: "The Nazis said bad things about a group of people, so if we make it illegal to say bad things we won't have Nazis again." That's for the old laws, the newer ones that are made are usually done under the cloak of encouraging multi-multiculturalism.

      -Grey
    7. Re:1st amendment by ciryon · · Score: 1

      It's pretty much the same all over Europe. You Americans should (really) consider yourself lucky to at least have some degree of Freedom of Speech.

    8. Re:1st amendment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What an incredibly naive understanding you have. England may have some troubles, but certainly not "every European country".

    9. Re:1st amendment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You know, I first heard about our anti-hate crime laws (I'm Canadian), in my last year of University. I was arguing with a professor about why neo-nazi games should be allowed to exist (the topic was a game that had you manage a concentration camp I believe)

      I of course argued that speech should be free, and it would be a violation of those moron's right to free speech.

      His response was rather simple, and silenced me. To this day, I'm still not sure if I agree or not. In some cases, infringing upon one person's right to free speech is creating freedom to enjoy life for another, which is another freedom granted by our bill of rights. (I think the exact terminology is something akin to the right to enjoy your property)... but the point was well taken.

      I would agree that someone has the right to not be constantly harassed. And that is what the law strives to protect. And I have to agree that giving up a small part of one freedom in exchange for a much bigger freedom, might not be such a bad idea.

    10. Re:1st amendment by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      His response was rather simple, and silenced me. To this day, I'm still not sure if I agree or not. In some cases, infringing upon one person's right to free speech is creating freedom to enjoy life for another, which is another freedom granted by our bill of rights. (I think the exact terminology is something akin to the right to enjoy your property)... but the point was well taken.
      No offense, but his point is nonsense. If I publish a book claming that Islamic Extremism is a threat to Canada, I can get hauled in front of a judge for it. Your professor would have to dance a merry jig in order to explain how the publication of a book seriously impedes another person's "freedom to enjoy life", and I don't consider people disagreeing or even getting offended at each other to be good enough reasons to ignore freedom of speech.

      I would agree that there are certain cases were harassment and free speech do collide (the paparazzi, and the Westboro Baptists are two great examples where I agree that the people are being obnoxious enough to impede on other people's liberties), I think hate speech laws in general are a horrendous blow to civil liberties, as we can now arrest people for saying things we don't like -- like a teen saying Scientology is a cult, or writing a book disagreeing with Islamic Extremism.

    11. Re:1st amendment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right. Here in the UK it is ridiculously easy to sue for slander and defamation. So much so that there are many cases of people reported on in the media in a manner they don't like, sueing in UK if there is even a tenuous link to the country.

      http://www.economist.co.uk/world/international/displaystory.cfm?story_id=11333006

      Yes it is a massive problem. Yes there is an active campaign to do something about it. No flame taken :)

    12. Re:1st amendment by Marcion · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you hit the nail on the head.

      What to do about the 23 million pound so-called Church of Scientology that has been erected in London using foreign money?

      Well since scientologists believe in Aliens, we should consider Ripley's advice:

      "I say we take off and nuke the entire site from orbit"

    13. Re:1st amendment by dabadab · · Score: 1

      But, the thing is, AFAIK the Wiemar Republic also had similar anti-hate-speech laws. And we all know how much good did it.

      --
      Real life is overrated.
    14. Re:1st amendment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this was pushed through after protests by muslim extremists. they burned the british flag and called for al qaeda to bomb us. basically, the tabloids picked up on this and whipped up a frenzy for the government to ban this. the side effect was a law that can be used against people protesting against religions and even governments (look up the labour MP that was arrested for heckling tony bliar under terror laws). unfortunately the masses are content to let this slide because it makes them feel safe when they go to bed at night.

    15. Re:1st amendment by vidarh · · Score: 1
      No there isn't, because there is no restriction of free-speech to speak of. You get cases like this where idiot overzealous police officers thinks they have a right to restrict things, but most of the time it doesn't get to court (and the Crown Prosecution Service tells the fuckwits to not waste their time like that in the future) and when it does they usually either lose right away or end up with one or more court instances making it clear in no uncertain terms that they're either interpreting the laws wrong or that the law itself can't be upheld based on human rights legislation. Worst case, it goes to the European courts and the British government gets told off again and some MP will whine about how "Europe" is being bad to them.

      Generally I don't think people here really care all that much, because they know the checks and balances in place makes it exceedingly hard for the government to pass truly invasive laws - British courts don't in general like parliament dicking around with peoples freedoms, and they're not shy about using their independence to stick it to the government when they feel it's appropriate.

    16. Re:1st amendment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your post has violated my freedom to enjoy life. Please remove it.
      .
      .
      .
      Actually your post hasn't offended me in the slightest, but even if it had, you should still be allowed to say what you want. Do you see how ridiculous that professor's argument was?

    17. Re:1st amendment by Kijori · · Score: 1

      Gotta love it! It is disheartening that it seems every European country, and Canada too, seems to have some kind of idiotic anti-speech law(s).

      The scientology thing just serves to unmask this rather gigantic lapse in liberty. I think a better question than whether the kid is guilty or not is why you Brits have such laws. Further why aren't you outraged that such laws exist and why you aren't actively trying to overturn them? This isn't a flame but a serious question, since when the slightest bit of censorship rears its head in America we tend to jump all over it - as evidenced by the Youtube article still on the frontpage. As another user has pointed out, the British justice system doesn't work in the same way as the US system and you can't just compare the laws. We don't have a written constitution - our rights are (mostly) made up of those laid down in statute, those from the European Union and those in common law. This last section is the most important to note for this case; it's unlikely that precedent will back up the arrest of a boy for calling Scientology a cult, and based on the right to free speech the Judge will almost certainly direct the jury to acquit. And that's if it even gets that far - it's far more likely that the CPS will simply recognise that there is no chance of a prosecution succeeding and choose not to go ahead.

      Laws against "hate speech" do not exist to target genuine "speech" however offensive it is - we have our fair share of unashamedly racist people and politicians whose right to air their views is supported. Hate speech laws simply recognise that not everything you can say should be protected speech. Harassment should not be, bullying should not be and neither should inciting violence or hatred - which are the uses targeted by hate speech law.

      Obviously there's a delicate balance to be struck here, and you'll probably never hit the ideal. It isn't an attempt at censoring genuine dissent or protest though, and I'm confident that this arrest won't stand. Police officers are people too, and they make mistakes. This is just a mistake made by a couple of officers.
    18. Re:1st amendment by PJ+The+Womble · · Score: 1

      I agree with you that this makes a mockery of freedom of speech in this country, and is a powerful argument for a written UK Bill Of Rights to sit alongside the European Human Rights Act, something which has long been campaigned for here.

      However, there are limited circumstances where I can see that signs or words should fall within the sanction of the criminal law: "Incitement to kill or otherwise physically harm an individual or a group" and "incitement to racial hatred" being the two most promininent.

    19. Re:1st amendment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man, better get your mob together, I hear there is a tv show in America were they replaced curse words by an annoying beep !!!!!

    20. Re:1st amendment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You just don't get it man. Just because we're both English speaking with shared origins, doesn't mean we're the same race. Yeah, we care about free speech, but we handle abuses of it in a totally different way to you. Like, for example, we might post about it on Slashdot.

    21. Re:1st amendment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In America it would have been "hate speech" or "slander", both of which are illegal.

      We hafe free speech alright, until we offend someone.

    22. Re:1st amendment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, perhaps you're forgetting about hate speech legislation? CP stings? The FCC??? The US media is highly controlled, just less obviously.

  18. What he needs is... by YahoKa · · Score: 4, Funny

    Not legal advice, not a lawyer, but an audit.

    1. Re:What he needs is... by gd23ka · · Score: 1

      Yes! He needs an audit all right! We'll give him the "Joburg"!

      The http://www.solitarytrees.net/racism/joburg.htm Johannesburg Security Check audit is a procedure by which all overts ("crimethink" as the wogs call it) of a Potential Trouble Source (PTS) can be detected. Once such an individual has been found out the nearest terminal to contact is an Ethics Officer (EO) who will body route that individual straight to the nearest Rehabilitation Project Force (RPF) unit (Scientology's penal company).

      Don't know what I'm talking about? Join our cult!

      Correction! I meant join our "Church".

  19. the more scientology struggles... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the more corrupt and desperate it will appear.

  20. Definition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uh, since the definition of cult includes all organized religions, I don't really see the problem.

    cult (kÅlt) pronunciation
    n. ...
          2. A system or community of religious worship and ritual. ...

    1. Re:Definition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice work, using an out of context quote. Can I have a go?

      idiot (plural idiots)

      1. (pejorative) A common term for a person...

      Hey, you're a person (assuming of course, you're not a literal troll but just a figurative one)! You must also be an idiot!

  21. I don't get it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Scientology is a cult...

  22. move to germany by MoFoQ · · Score: 1

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7133867.stm

    Ironically, BBC (UK) mentions "cult-type" when mentioning some of scientology's activities.

    either way, Germany doesn't recognize CoS as a religion....rather a cult.

    1. Re:move to germany by Crypto+Gnome · · Score: 1

      Ironically, BBC (UK) mentions "cult-type" when mentioning some of scientology's activities. Someone needs to educate the british lawmakers. If it quacks like a duck I can guarantee you it's not a kitten.
      --
      Visit CryptoGnome in his home.
    2. Re:move to germany by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      same in france

    3. Re:move to germany by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Informative

      Germany even put them under surveillance by the "Verfassungsschutz". Usually, something like this is reserved for groups that threaten the state's integrity, safety or the state itself.

      So calling the CoS a "cult" seems rather tame by comparison.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    4. Re:move to germany by Oktober+Sunset · · Score: 1

      Are you sure?

    5. Re:move to germany by Saint+Fnordius · · Score: 1

      Germany does not consider the Church of Scientology a church, but a for-profit organisation and thus denies them the tax status of churches.

      Instead, they are considered a scam operation out to fleece clients using faith as a cover. Also they are under observation as a constitutional threat, since one of the church's stated beliefs is to subvert/overthrow the government.

      You can believe in Scientology all you want, but to Germany the Church of Scientology just a corporation. It's the organisation that is restricted, not the religion.

    6. Re:move to germany by JoeInnes · · Score: 1

      Surely the kid can get around it like this? Ask European courts to make a judgement on whether Scientology is a cult or a religion, because I'm pretty damn sure the Germans aren't backing down.

    7. Re:move to germany by neuromanc3r · · Score: 1

      You are obviously vastly overrating the meaning of being under their surveillance. I mean, several political parties are under their surveillance, even one that is in the federal parliament...

    8. Re:move to germany by seebs · · Score: 1

      Not just usually. In this case, too. The CoS's policy of attempting to obtain absolute control is, in fact, a threat to the state's integrity, or the state itself.

      As L. Ron Hubbard put it:

      "Some day, people will say this is illegal. Make sure that by then, the orgs decide what is legal."

      (Paraphrased from memory. "Orgs" is their jargon for Scientology institutions, especially individual "missions".)

      --
      My blog: http://www.seebs.net/log/ --- My iPhone/iPad app: http://www.seebs.net/seebsfrac/
    9. Re:move to germany by Doug+Neal · · Score: 1

      The BBC haven't been afraid of using the c-word. Panorama did an investigation into CoS, and got hours of interview footage which they ended up not being able to use - all because the journalist doing the interview said the phrase "some say that Scientology is a cult" during one of his questions. If you can get hold of a copy of the program, it's well worth a look - search for "panorama scientology" on any of the torrent sites.

    10. Re:move to germany by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Not trying to start a political argument, but some parties currently in the federal parlament of Germany (or at least, some of the actions of their supporters) are indeed quite questionable, to the point where it might be not such a bad idea to have an eye on them.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  23. If shoe fits... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Scientology is a cult created by a second-rate sci-fi author on a bet. El-Ron can suck my sweaty ballsack.

    The kid should move to Germany, they recognize $cientology as the dangerous cult it is.

    1. Re:If shoe fits... by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Scientology is a cult created by a second-rate sci-fi author on a bet. El-Ron can suck my sweaty ballsack.

      The kid should move to Germany, they recognize $cientology as the dangerous cult it is. Doesn't anyone feel a bit uncomfortable about the German State deciding which religions are dangerous cults?

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    2. Re:If shoe fits... by nawcom · · Score: 1

      Scientology is a cult created by a second-rate sci-fi author on a bet. El-Ron can suck my sweaty ballsack. heh, a little off topic, but I just want to say that I always chuckle a little when I read a comment that requests someone to suck their sweaty ballsack, and as a result got marked "Insightful". ;)
    3. Re:If shoe fits... by amorsen · · Score: 1

      Doesn't anyone feel a bit uncomfortable about the German State deciding which religions are dangerous cults? Germany is one of the few places where I'd expect a correct decision to be made.
      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    4. Re:If shoe fits... by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Yeah because the German state has never, ever persecuted any religious groups.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    5. Re:If shoe fits... by Saint+Fnordius · · Score: 1

      Germany does not forbid Scientology per se, but it does deny the Church of Scientology church status. It isn't even considered a non-profit organisation, but a for-profit corporation. It also considers the CoS a potential threat to the constitution, and has it under observation to detect subversive and/or criminal activities.

      Otherwise, most here in Germany consider it a for-profit scam.

  24. Jooos by TummyX · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    If only he had insulted the Jooooos instead. That we instead of being prosecuted he could of been gifted a job at the BBC.

  25. in other news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting


    I'm speechless. Just contrast the 'cult'-sign to those signs, also held on a demonstration in London:

    http://img.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2006/08/muslim220806_600x400.jpg

    I wonder how they will explain the inaction on behalf of police and justice in the latter case.

    1. Re:in other news by Hal_Porter · · Score: 3, Informative

      Those people were prosecuted

      http://www.westernresistance.com/blog/archives/003342.html
      In all, only four people were brought to face charges on Friday June 26 as a result of the Sloane Square demonstration. These included Mizanur Rahman, as well as 26-year old Umran Javed of Birmingham, who denied one charge of soliciting to murder American or Danish nationals and one charge of using threatening words or behaviour likely to stir up racial hatred. 31 year old Abdul Rahman Saleem (aka Abu Yahya) denied one count of using words likely to stir up racial hatred. 23 year old Abdul Muhid was charged with two counts of soliciting murder to those who insulted Islam.

      All those charged except Abdul Muhid were granted bail. Muhid, who had tried to flee the country on May 4 with Anjem Choudary, was denied bail and was kept in custody in Winchester Prison.

      Muhid, Abdul Rahman Saleem (aka Abu Yahya) and Umran Javed are still awaiting their trials.


      Actually the incitement to religious hatred law that this guy got busted under was partly inspired by that demonstration.

      It's silly really. Incitement should be illegal and that's it. Then the "Behead those who insult Islam" types would get arrested and this guy wouldn't. Which seems fair enough to me.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    2. Re:in other news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you, and the moderator who thought you were interesting, are unaware that the case you cite is the one responsible for the change in law that allows this case to be brought.

  26. But... by TheDeivix · · Score: 1

    If we called a rock some other name would that rock be any different?

  27. I don't understand by Auckerman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Can someone explain to me how this works. Someone can be summoned because they express a non-violent opinion about a group, yet religious groups who advocate the violent over throw of the government and the establishment of a theocracy falls under protected speech. From this side of the pond, Britain clearly needs to get it's priorities straight before the movie "Brazil" because a reality.

    He may have been better off advocating the death of all Scientologists because the FSM needs their blood to build the greatest pirate ship of all time.

    --

    Burn Hollywood Burn
    1. Re:I don't understand by terrymr · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It's a ticket, cops love to write tickets ... here in the USA a group of local kids were arrested, shackled and prosecuted for carrying signs in a public park in protest of police brutality - there's irony for you. The cops even recorded themselves on video joking about taking off their badges and starting a fight.

    2. Re:I don't understand by Entropius · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The question is, did the kids record video?

      The local Anonymous have cameras out the ass. There is one person with a Canon 40D semi-pro DSLR, a guy with a 714mm superzoom setup that can resolve 2mm at 100 yards, people with polarizers to shoot through windows, several video cameras, a bunch of point-and-shoots, and camera phones.

      If the cops or the Scientologists try to pull anything, it will be documented and, if necessary, spread to the media and the internet within minutes.

      It sounds like if even one of the kids had gotten video of the cops, they could've gotten some of them fired at the very least.

    3. Re:I don't understand by terrymr · · Score: 1

      Nobody got fired ... all but one of the arrestees took deferred prosecution ... the charges against the one holdout were dismissed when the taking off their badges discussion was turned over (a year late) to the defense. Nobody's been fired, the police chief is backing her men publicly at this point.

    4. Re:I don't understand by gowen · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's not even a ticket.
      It's a warning about the possibility of getting a ticket.

      A ticket would be a written "Notice of Intended Prosecution", which would have to be followed up with a summons. And although the kid says he's got a summons, he clearly hasn't as he doesn't know his court date. A summons tells you when and where you must appear appear to answer a charge -- hence the name.

      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    5. Re:I don't understand by Auckerman · · Score: 1

      I make no claim that the United States is some form of utopia when it comes to how police power is used. The fact of the matter is, any officer giving a ticket to someone in the US for having a sign that labels a group a cult would have that ticket immediately thrown out of the court. You're not going to find a judge in the US that would enforce that law, if it even existed. It seems that Europeans have adapted a policy of banning "hate speech" while at the same time allowing minority groups to commit sedition for the purposes of establishing a theocracy. They do a lot of things right, don't get me wrong, but it's really a case of having broken priorities.

      --

      Burn Hollywood Burn
    6. Re:I don't understand by gallondr00nk · · Score: 1

      Because calling the C of Scientology a cult is libellous, while calling for the death of western society isn't. Luckily for the 15 year old arrested, the definition of 'cult' is so subjective and ambiguous that he'll have no problem getting away without being charged.

    7. Re:I don't understand by Auckerman · · Score: 1

      Sedition is illegal where I'm from and a very much prosecutable offense, especially in a time of war. Where as libel is merely a civil matter and typically only applies to willful falsehoods not personal opinion.

      LIke I said, Britain has it's priorities backwards.

      --

      Burn Hollywood Burn
    8. Re:I don't understand by jrumney · · Score: 1

      The video shows him receiving a warning. It also shows him quoting a court case where the judge called Scientology a cult, and stating that he will not be removing his sign, just before it cuts away to another scene. His story is that the officer continued to charge him with the offence after he refused to remove his sign, so although he may not have received his court summons yet, the video does not seem to tell the whole story.

    9. Re:I don't understand by jrumney · · Score: 1

      You're not going to find a judge in the US that would enforce that law, if it even existed.

      I doubt you'll find one in the UK either, and I have no doubt that US police officers make similarly bad judgements in such situations.

    10. Re:I don't understand by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      Someone can be summoned because they express a non-violent opinion about a group, yet religious groups who advocate the violent over throw of the government and the establishment of a theocracy falls under protected speech.

      I think the clue is in what you said, if you look hard enough...

    11. Re:I don't understand by Indefinite,+Ephemera · · Score: 1

      Based on my quick and wholly NAL reading of Sect. 5, it seems to be more about context. The Scientologists' building was nearby, and the law forbids 'insulting' writing which might cause people nearby 'distress'. http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts1986/pdf/ukpga_19860064_en.pdf

    12. Re:I don't understand by terrymr · · Score: 1

      He'd have been arrested in the US ... obstruction of justice ... for failing to obey a direct order given by a police officer - even though the original order was itself unlawful.

    13. Re:I don't understand by gowen · · Score: 1

      He hasn't got a court date, which means he hasn't had a summons.
      He claims the summons is on the video, and yet the video doesn't even contain a caution (and anyway, you get to choose whether to receive a caution -- if you refuse, you usually get arrested and charged).

      None of these things happened.

      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
  28. Marijuana Kudzu! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Why hasn't someone crossed Marijuana with Kudzu yet?

    Come together ... right now!

    "All governments are liars and murderers" - Bill Hicks

  29. fair enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think this is fair enough. Same as if people parraded signs that insighted hate against Catholics or Protestents. "Cult" is a derogatory, fear and hate inspireing term to use against any religion. There's no reason to give established religions any advantage or respect over newer ones.

  30. Move out of the UK by BigAssRat · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Obviously they are headed entirely too much in the wrong direction. I wish I could say you should move to the U.S., but I am not sure we are not headed down that path as well...at least here you can call Christians anything you want with impunity. We just cant say bad about Muslims or the "Church of Global Warming" or Environmentalism. Not sure about the Scientologists, they may not be a protected class yet.

  31. Open source governance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is why we need open source governance.

    If you help get the Metagovernment established, then it will be up to the people to decide how the people are governed. Weird concept, I know.

    1. Re:Open source governance by somersault · · Score: 5, Funny

      Weird concept, I know. Yeah, keep your cult-ish ideas to yourself!
      --
      which is totally what she said
    2. Re:Open source governance by ThePromenader · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not weird at all, actually. That's actually what a democracy is supposed to be.

      --

      No, no sig. Really.

      ThePromenader
    3. Re:Open source governance by Xeirxes · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Pretty hard to pull off though. How can you accurately represent EVERYONE?

    4. Re:Open source governance by pmbasehore · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, keep your cult-ish ideas to yourself!
      Cult? Cult! I take offense to that, you insensitive clod!

      Prepare for your court summons!
      --
      $> man woman $> Segmentation fault. (Core dumped)
    5. Re:Open source governance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By giving everyone control. (Though there's have to be some sort of ostracism for that to work out well. That, or dividing the smaller nations; Democracy just doesn't scale very well.)

    6. Re:Open source governance by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      How can you accurately represent EVERYONE?

      I'm not sure how Britain's government works so I'll reference the US government here. In the US, before a bill becomes Federal law (and most if not all states are the same way, I know Illinois is) a bill must get a majority vote in both houses of Congress and then not be vetoed by the President.

      After the President signs the bill, it would go on a referendum to be voted on once a year. Citizens could vote "yes" or "no" on any bill. No bill signed by the President would become law unless there were more "yes" votes than "no" votes by the people.

      We have a ten year limit on Presidential terms, I think the same should apply to Representatives, Senators, and laws as well.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    7. Re:Open source governance by deathlyslow · · Score: 1

      You have got to be referring to your Governor. The president is limited to 2 CONSECUTIVE terms in office, not 10 years. Also there are no Federal referendums. Can you clarify your statements?

      --
      Don't blame me for redundant posts. I can't type very fast. Hence the user ID.
    8. Re:Open source governance by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      I actually think he might be right, in that, IIRC, if a president takes office without being elected (as a result of an assassination or impeachment, e.g.), I think it counts as one of his terms if his predecessor was less than 2 years into his term, leaving 2 years into the 4 year term.

      2 year "inherited" + 2*(4 year term) = 10 years.

      of course, he could be mistaken and I could be dead wrong. :)

    9. Re:Open source governance by coyote_oww · · Score: 5, Informative
      No, POTUS is limited to 10 years, technically. You can be elected twice and do two years of someone else's term.

      http://www.law.cornell.edu/constitution/constitution.amendmentxxii.html

    10. Re:Open source governance by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Best cut out that sort of talk, lad, or you'll end up in irons.

      Wot wot, chip chip, cheerio!

    11. Re:Open source governance by DrgnDancer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't honestly know that I want the people to decide how the people are governed in a broad sort of way. In general, people as groups tend to panic. Things like the Constitution and UK Common Law may be fragile protection, but they are protection. If you'd actually asked them, I wouldn't be surprised to find out that a majority of Americans would have favored an even more knee jerk reaction to 9/11 than actually occurred.

      Besides, I'm not sure how it would help in this case. Even if "the people" were making the laws there would still be a need for enforcement therefore still something resembling police. This, so far, is not a case of "government overreaching", but rather "police overreaching". The police are part of the government, but ultimately they are individuals. It becomes a case of "government overreaching" if and only if the young man is prosecuted and found guilty. I wouldn't be half surprised if the the Crown Prosecutors drop this like a hot potato.

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    12. Re:Open source governance by deathlyslow · · Score: 1

      I stand corrected thanks for the clarification and citation. I'd mod you up but you know.

      --
      Don't blame me for redundant posts. I can't type very fast. Hence the user ID.
    13. Re:Open source governance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh no, you haven't deluded yourself into thinking that Metagovernment has any chance of success any time in the near/moderate future, have you?

    14. Re:Open source governance by Malevolyn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      cult (noun)
      1. a particular system of religious worship, esp. with reference to its rites and ceremonies. Wait, so why was this kid cited? Some kind of "fact-based slandering" laws no one knows about or something?
      --
      Your ad here.
    15. Re:Open source governance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No thanks, man. Next thing you know we'll have two San Francisco's because the hippies can't agree on whether to outlaw suv's or all gas driven cars.

    16. Re:Open source governance by MrMonroe · · Score: 1

      Rats. Theres no mod "- nonsensical pipe dream of an ideologue."

      The most basic definition of a government is an entity that controls a state. The most basic definition of a state is an entity that places a monopoly on the use of force over a particular territory. Governments are not "opt-in," they are not built on consensus. This project is obviously talking about the abolishment of the State; can anyone here seriously imagine a community of people larger than one person willing to come to consensus on matters such as welfare or forest policy for more than a few days? If you want to talk about anarchy, go for it, but don't shroud it in terms like "metagovernment." (Doesn't make sense, by the way, would literally mean "governing or government about government")

      And honestly, a world "governed" by /. posters scares me almost as much as Orwell's does.

    17. Re:Open source governance by paeanblack · · Score: 4, Funny

      If you want to get really technical, one could serve as POTUS indefinitely by continuing to be elected to the office of Vice President and bumping off the latest President-elect before inauguration day.

      It's not a very practical loophole...voters might get suspicious after this happened a few times.

    18. Re:Open source governance by Mister+Whirly · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Because that is how Scientology works - say something they don't like, and they will harass you with everything they can, quasi-legally. It is their entire strategy for defending themselves - attack their attackers.

      --
      "But this one goes to 11!"
    19. Re:Open source governance by LandDolphin · · Score: 1

      Fulseman?

      I do enjoy reading ridiculous logic like this.

      /serious, I do

      --
      Spelling and Grammar errors have been added to this post for your enjoyment
    20. Re:Open source governance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      localities fine tuning all the laws will yield confusion. But, I could breathe in A-town, why can't I breathe in B-town?

    21. Re:Open source governance by Richard+Steiner · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Pretty hard to pull off though. How can you accurately represent EVERYONE?


      And do you really want to? Is mob rule really something you want?

      --
      Mainframe/UNIX Bit Twiddler and long time Windows/Linux Hobbyist.
      The Theorem Theorem: If If, Then Then.
    22. Re:Open source governance by masterzora · · Score: 1

      Because there's a difference between denotation and connotation.

      --
      Remember, open source is free as in speech, not free as in bear.
    23. Re:Open source governance by PachmanP · · Score: 2, Funny

      Not to troll too much, but incidentally there is a reason Obama does not want Clinton as VP...

      --
      You're thinking small. Why miniaturize the laser, when we could instead enlarge the sharks? -John Searle
    24. Re:Open source governance by PachmanP · · Score: 1

      Stupid /. not showing who is replying to what right... This was in response to paeanblack's comment...

      --
      You're thinking small. Why miniaturize the laser, when we could instead enlarge the sharks? -John Searle
    25. Re:Open source governance by the+phantom · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You seriously want the people to vote on every single bill that is signed into law? Nothing would ever get done. The entire budget would be spent on elections. And no one has time to read through every bill that goes before congress and understand it. That is why congressmen have huge staffs -- to help them wade through the legislation that they have to deal with. I'm sorry, but your system is completely impractical.

    26. Re:Open source governance by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "If you want to get really technical, one could serve as POTUS indefinitely by continuing to be elected to the office of Vice President and bumping off the latest President-elect before inauguration day.

      It's not a very practical loophole...voters might get suspicious after this happened a few times."

      Hmm...that explains it all now!!

      That's why Bill has stayed with Hillary and supported her after leaving the White House. He just sees it as another way to get to be President!! :-)

      Slick Willy indeed....

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    27. Re:Open source governance by cayenne8 · · Score: 1, Interesting
      "You seriously want the people to vote on every single bill that is signed into law? Nothing would ever get done."

      You talk like this is a bad thing? I find I'm happiest with the federal govt. when they are in gridlock.

      "And no one has time to read through every bill that goes before congress and understand it. That is why congressmen have huge staffs -- to help them wade through the legislation that they have to deal with."

      Hmm..don't you see something wrong with this picture? It sounds like they are writing the legislation incorrectly!! It should be humanly readable......even by a normal non-lawyer person...since that is the person that is going to be governed by this law. He should be able to understand it.

      It would help if each law had to be single and simple....and unbundled from other non-related laws!

      Throwing shit laws together that are too long and hard to understand is JUST how we got stuck with that POS the Patriot Act.....apparently NO ONE read it before voting on it.

      I think we definitely legislation reform....change the rules to make it simpler and we do away with crap like this.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    28. Re:Open source governance by JimFive · · Score: 1

      No you can't, because to be VP you have to be eligible to be president so once you've served more than 6 years as president you are not eligible to be VP.
      --
      JimFive

      --
      Please stop using the word theory when you mean hypothesis.
    29. Re:Open source governance by spazdor · · Score: 1

      off topic, but re: your sig.

      John Searle makes my blood boil. I hope he gets locked in a Chinese Room one day.

      --
      DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
    30. Re:Open source governance by h3llfish · · Score: 1

      I'm not an advocate of open source government. I really haven't thought enough about the issue to have an opinion. But, I think you're misrepresenting the concept. The post that you replied to didn't say people needed to vote on "every" bill. It said "any" bill. That's a huge difference. It's not like we have 100 percent of the population voting now.

      The chief advantage that I see of this proposed form of governance is that ideas would judged based on merit, similar to the way that the /. moderating system works. The good ideas would bubble up to the top, in theory. That's a stark contrast to the way things work now, where money is the only form of merit.

      The problem that I see with it is that like any other system, it could be "gamed". Interests with large amounts of money could simply pay advocates under the table. In a sense, it's almost like simply taking the politicians out of the equations, and allowing the lobbyists to rule directly. Perhaps that wouldn't happen. Wikipedia works because the people who are trying to provide good information outnumber the vandals by a good margin. Maybe that would be the case with Metagovernment as well.

      Also, it's sexist to say "congressmen". There are a few women in there, ya know. It only takes a few more keystrokes to say "members of congress".

    31. Re:Open source governance by JoshJ · · Score: 1

      I'm under the impression that he wouldn't be able to run as VP after he's had 8 years of the Presidency.

    32. Re:Open source governance by ThePromenader · · Score: 1

      ... Is Bush going to be McCain's VP? Hmmmm...

      --

      No, no sig. Really.

      ThePromenader
    33. Re:Open source governance by the+phantom · · Score: 1

      Now you are running into the problem of self-selecting sample bias. The people that would choose to vote for or against a particular bill are only going to be those that have a strong opinion on the matter. So, for instance, a bill allowing same sex marriage would likely only be voted on by religious fundamentalists, and gays that want to get married. The passage of the bill comes down to whether or not gays outnumber fundamentalists, not what what the "will of the people" is. Again, that is not how I want my government run. The system we have is not perfect, but it is better than mob rule, which is what this basically boils down to.

    34. Re:Open source governance by h3llfish · · Score: 1

      Could you explain to me, exactly, what the difference is between "mob rule" and the "will of the people"?

      Isn't Democracy always "mob rule"? Is that so much worse that our representative form of government, which has been such a horrible failure recently? It seems to me that the alternative to mob rule is corporate rule. I'm fairly certain that mob rule is what our founding fathers had in mind. The only reason they went with a representative form of government is the practical concerns. Hasn't technology rendered most of those concerns moot? One no longer need ride several days on horseback to vote.

      Also, I'm not sure what's wrong with people not voting on issues that they don't care about. You're right about gay marriage. Many people would have no particular opinion, and would skip that vote. Is that so bad? If people are so ambivalent on an issue that they can't be bothered to vote, then is there really a "will of the people"?

      Besides, lots of people care about issues that do not directly effect them. I'm not gay, but I do care about that particular issue. So, I'd be sure to vote on that one.

      Modern life is far too complex for everyone to have an opinion about everything. It's hard enough just trying to stay informed on a basic level about issues of huge import. What attracts me to the Metagovernment model is that, like open software, people are free to devote their energies to projects about which they are passionate. That's in stark contrast to the current system, where money rules all.

    35. Re:Open source governance by celtic_hackr · · Score: 1

      Oh, you mean like the Swiss government?

      Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think every proposed new law in Switzerland goes before the voters to approve or disapprove. Now that's the way government should be. Although, perhaps something more than simple majority should be required. Say maybe at least 60% and better than 2/3 for constitutional changes although perhaps some issues could be by simple majority, but I find that simple majority opens up the ability to enact too many laws. I think 60/40 is a reasonable ratio.

    36. Re:Open source governance by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Yep, and it's not unheard-of either. We've already had one President who came to office by being VP and assassinating the Pres. His name was Lyndon B. Johnson.

    37. Re:Open source governance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Open source governance that Scientology can contribute to?

  32. The official police statement was: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Underage b&.

    1. Re:The official police statement was: by dotgain · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I chose between Slashdot and 4chan - you should do. Until then fuck off.

  33. Protester now faces harrasment. by westbake · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Indymedia has a good article about this. The protester, ironically, was objecting to "Fair Play", which is essentially harassment of any and all perceived foes. The citation identifies him and now he faces the same retaliation he objected to.

    --
    I am a name troll of Westlake. Visit my homepage to learn why.
    1. Re:Protester now faces harrasment. by DJMajah · · Score: 5, Informative

      that's not what "ironic" means. Quoth Wiki: Dramatic (or tragic) irony is a disparity of expression and awareness: when words and actions possess a significance that the listener or audience understands, but the speaker or character does not.

      Sounds like irony to me.
    2. Re:Protester now faces harrasment. by Hal_Porter · · Score: 5, Informative

      You mean Fair Game. Fair Play is Apple's ironic term for its DRM scheme.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    3. Re:Protester now faces harrasment. by elrous0 · · Score: 5, Funny
      Dear Irony Nazi,

      You are receiving this reply because you responded to a /. or usenet post with the pedantic "That's not the proper use of irony" reply, or some variant. *This* reply is to point out that, in your anal retentive zeal to show the world how smart you are, you obviously never even bothered to research the issue (beyond hearing your high school English teacher get all pissy about the issue once). Had you researched the issue, you would know that there is an academic disagreement within the field of modern linguistics between "descriptive linguistics" and "prescriptive linguistics," over this very sort of issue.

      To put this in clear and simple terms (for your benefit): There is no "the" definition of irony. It depends on what source you consult.

      To put it in even CLEARER terms: Sit down and shut the fuck up, you ignorant smug twat.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    4. Re:Protester now faces harrasment. by fucket · · Score: 1

      OK, you descriptivists win, everything can mean everything.

    5. Re:Protester now faces harrasment. by jsalbre · · Score: 1

      Oh, the irony of it all! :)

    6. Re:Protester now faces harrasment. by Z34107 · · Score: 3, Funny

      you obviously never even bothered to research the issue (beyond hearing your high school English teacher get all pissy about the issue once)

      Oh, the humanities?!

      --
      DATABASE WOW WOW
    7. Re:Protester now faces harrasment. by toriver · · Score: 1

      Oh, the humanities?!

      Such humour is just of academic interest.
    8. Re:Protester now faces harrasment. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ITYM Fair game.

    9. Re:Protester now faces harrasment. by imagin8r · · Score: 1

      Somewhere along the way in this subthread, the distinction between irony and paradox was lost. And given this is slashdot, the sandbox of anal retentives, that's a paradox. And an irony. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradox_(literature)#Paradox_and_irony

  34. The law in question by zakezuke · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'm not a resident of the UK. However this info has been shared

    YT video/a> of an officer explaining the new rule

    Racial and Religious Hatred Act 2006 (c. 1)

    I'm not in agreement, but this is the law being sited and enforced.

    --
    There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
  35. Well... by whitespiral · · Score: 0

    How about reading the judge a dictionary entry for "Cult". I bet it doesn't say it's a threatening, abusive or insulting word.

  36. Well, that's why in Germany by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you have to declare that you have no affiliation with the cult of scientology when applying for any public, government or law enforcement job.

    If a background check or later information reveals you lied, you're out.

    Germany considers the Cult of Scientology a Sect with an agenda to undermine the constitution.

  37. Colt by Dr.+Cody · · Score: 2, Informative
    1. Re:Colt by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Interesting, I didn't know that. But I guess they stopped offering this clearing option, I guess quite a lot of people did not fire at the floor when they realized just how much money they pumped into this money sink.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  38. Typo hunting by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    starting about 1 munite in

    What's a munite? And what's it in?

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    1. Re:Typo hunting by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

      Munite - alternate spelling and name for a Moonie, a follower of Reverend Sun Myung Moon (Mun). After all, this IS about cults...

      --
      Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    2. Re:Typo hunting by Dark_Gravity · · Score: 1

      You missed "sited" in the parent. ;-)

    3. Re:Typo hunting by Nullav · · Score: 1

      Muninite?

      --
      I just read Slashdot for the articles.
  39. Balls of steel by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 5, Insightful
    From TFA:

    The teenager refused to back down, quoting a 1984 high court ruling from Mr Justice Latey, in which he described the Church of Scientology as a "cult" which was "corrupt, sinister and dangerous".
    This action hereby has the Duke Nukem seal of approval.
    --
    It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
    Be yourself no matter what they say
  40. Bizarreness matters too by Totenglocke · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I'd also say that cults tend to have more bizarre / possibly insane aspects to them. Am I the only one who remembers Tom Cruise saying he was going to eat the placenta after Suri was born?

    --
    "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    1. Re:Bizarreness matters too by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 3, Informative

      Eating placenta is a ritual in some cultures. And it is par for the course among many mammals.

    2. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I happen to find people who believe in God to be bizarre and possibly insane.

    3. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Phydeaux314 · · Score: 1

      Although it's generally unusual for the males to eat it. It's usually consumed by the female, since it contains vitamins, fats, and other sources of energy that shouldn't go to waste. The mother needs a fair amount of mass to produce breast milk, after all.

      --
      Never underestimate the stupidity inherent in all human beings.
    4. Re:Bizarreness matters too by coleblak · · Score: 2, Informative

      Also, in the wild, the placenta being left around alerts predators to tasty, tasty babies being around. As for Cults/Religions, Cults COST you money, Religions GUILT it out of you.

      --
      77 HITS
      Really Long Off Topic Combo
    5. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Oktober+Sunset · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yea, I hear about this cult who worship a 2000 year old zombie Jew and believe they can turn bread and wine into his flesh and blood that then then devour in a cannibalistic ritual. Nutters eh?

    6. Re:Bizarreness matters too by zappepcs · · Score: 5, Insightful

      More bizarre and/or insane than what? FFS man, talking telepathically to an imaginary friend who is solely responsible for all that happens in the universe (including putting dinosaur bones in place as is to fool us) compares to evil galactic rulers and volcanoes in a better light in exactly what way?

      I have often spoke when I shouldn't have, but I have to say that there are far too many people who 'know' about religion, or think they do when in fact they know about some parts of ONE religion.

      Yes, the CoS is a cult, so is the CoE, by technical definition all religions are cults. That is what makes the entire censorship here totally ridiculous. It's rather like saying that there are dangerous humans at 1600 Pennsylvania avenue, or 10 Downing street.

      Drinking blood and eating flesh? Is that bizarre enough for you? How about sacrificing your own children? Incest? Genocide? The Christian Bible is full of examples of things that would just not work in today's society.

      I fail to see how CoS is any more bizarre than Christianity.

    7. Re:Bizarreness matters too by DMUTPeregrine · · Score: 5, Interesting

      How does bizarreness matter? The cult of scientology believes that evil space aliens murdered billions of other aliens by stuffing them into DC-10 like spaceships and blowing them up in earth's volcanoes with Hydrogen bombs. The cult of christianity believes that you can telepathically communicate with a dead god-fragment and tell him you love him and that he will accept you into his kingdom and cleanse you of a taint that was placed in all humanity by a rib-woman being tricked by a talking snake.
      Scientology is insane, but so are pretty much all other religions.

      --
      Not a sentence!
    8. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Melbourne+Pete · · Score: 1

      Bizarreness is in the eye of the beholder. Many millions of Catholics regularly eat the body of Christ for example.

    9. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, its not in the beliefs at all.

      its the methodology.

    10. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      You obviously have never played D&D.

      Animate Dead is a 3rd level spell.

      Raise Dead is a 5th level spell.

      Resurrection is a 7th level spell.

      And true res is a 9th level spell

      Don't be insulting God by calling him a low level spellcaster, pls. K? Thx.

    11. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Oktober+Sunset · · Score: 5, Funny

      true res? well he only lasted 40 days, so that's not really very impressive.

    12. Re:Bizarreness matters too by LKM · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "I fail to see how CoS is any more bizarre than Christianity."

      For all they do wrong, at least Christians believe in something that was always meant to be a religion, while Scientology believes in a science fiction novel.

      And of course, it's quite obvious that nowadays, Scientology is more detrimental to their members and to society in general than modern Christianity is.

    13. Re:Bizarreness matters too by gibbsjoh · · Score: 1

      DC-8s actually, not DC-10s. Why no, I _don't_ have a life!

      --
      -- "...I'm a bad guy because I, well, I sing some rock-and-roll songs." M. Manson
    14. Re:Bizarreness matters too by EasyTarget · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I fail to see how CoS is any more bizarre than Christianity.

      At a 'technical' level you are right, the bible is no less crackpot than the scientology 'technology'.

      One difference is that a lot of the various testaments have a good historical basis. For Instance I have no doubt about the existence of Jesus, Mohammed, Buddha etc.. they really existed! - Whether they were the son of god/prophet of god/being of divine light/etc is another question.. I believe they were just charismatic good people who others naturally followed. None of them seem particularly evil; that comes from those who followed them and wanted to assume that power over others for their own.

      The difference is in attitude, reputable religions want to spread the word. eg. I have a bible, a translation of the qur'an, and other texts; all of which were given to me for free by believers who genuinely believe that by reading the words I'll become converted.

      Compare and Contrast that to how Scientology spreads it's word...

      Even the nastiest promoters of mainstream religion (the religious right, jihadists, etc.) are very open about their beliefs. Unfortunately their methods are often similar in terms of infiltrating institutions and crushing dissent.

      --
      "Oops, I always forget the purpose of competition is to divide people into winners and losers." - Hobbes
    15. Re:Bizarreness matters too by complete+loony · · Score: 1

      (including putting dinosaur bones in place as is to fool us) Nice straw man there. The first page of results from a couple of different searches don't agree with your statement.
      --
      09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
    16. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Catapultam+habeo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think I just threw up a little in my mouth. Let me start by saying that I'm by no means religious. However, when I read such short-sighted and superficial comparisons between Scientology and mainstream Christianity I really want to smack somebody. The thing is this:

      Scientology makes its members pay to be involved in the church and to gain access to their "teachings." For example, modern Catholicism does not do this. You can go right now to your local church, go in, pick up a copy of the bible and there it is, free of charge. You can ask the priest pretty much anything and guess what, you are likely to get halfway straight and honest answer, without coughing up hundreds of dollars.

      Further, most people don't really buy into the whole cannibalism thing or take everything the bible, especially the old testament, seriously. Rather they tend to use the bible as sort of a set of guidelines. Of course were making points on Slashdot so it must be the case that the most extreme members of anything == all the members of anything.

    17. Re:Bizarreness matters too by rarity · · Score: 1

      I'd also say that cults tend to have more bizarre / possibly insane aspects to them.

      You mean like dressing in black all the time and telling anyone who'll listen that the Lord is going to come back and judge us all?

    18. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      amen!

    19. Re:Bizarreness matters too by kyknos.org · · Score: 1

      Is Christianity a cult or a religion? It is hard to imagine anything more bizarre than the Christian ritualized cannibalism. Eat body of Christ. Eek.

      --

      SHE does throw dice.
    20. Re:Bizarreness matters too by BakaHoushi · · Score: 5, Interesting

      At a protest outside a Scientology building, I saw a rather appropriate sign:
      Ask a Christian about the Bible, and he'll tell you.
      Ask a Jew about the Torah and he'll tell you.
      Ask a Muslim about the Koran and he'll tell you.
      Ask a Scientologist about HIS holy books and he'll tell you... after your check clears.

      Say what you will about Christianity and other modern religions, (and I will) they're not, at their core, pyramid schemes for making profits. Scientology is.

    21. Re:Bizarreness matters too by FireFury03 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      For all they do wrong, at least Christians believe in something that was always meant to be a religion, while Scientology believes in a science fiction novel.

      Not meaning to be disrespectful, but how do you know the bible wasn't supposed to be a sci-fi novel? :)

    22. Re:Bizarreness matters too by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1


      These are important indicators that Scientology is a cult and a dangerous one. I fully agree there, but I would say that you've missed out a couple of distinctions that are more important. After all, churches do take money from their parishoners to keep going - and as it's reasonably voluntary, that's not so bad (though you can dislike it as 'false advertising' if you are not a believer). The serious issue is that Scientology enforces your membership through nightmare tactics of social isolation, inducing altered mental states for their benefit and a whole raft of nasty, very damaging techniques. Yes - religions take a long slow approach in that most believers are raised in the religion, but ultimately the forces that keep you in a religion or bring you into it are weak ones. A cult like Scientology, is very, very different. It's not so much cost that is the vital difference, as it is choice.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    23. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Sobrique · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Now you've said that, I could probably draw some parallels between the Bible and the current Sci-Fi anthology I'm reading.

      There's a whole bunch of stories, that have a a bit of 'what if' to them, including a few where something believed impossible becomes possible.

      They're all in some degree a matter of society and human reaction, as that's what Sci-Fi is mostly all about - new possibilities, and it's impact on everyone else. Some have mysterious happenings, and stuff beyond the understanding of man.

      Some are carrying an interesting underlying message, moral or otherwise.

      *shrug*. There's a certain basis of argument that the Bible isn't the literal truth, but has value as fiction which educates. Not so very different to a Sci-Fi short story anthology.

    24. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I find it humorous that there are so many people that believe that telepathic communication with a 2000+ year old zombie and the ~6000 year old creator of a much older universe can ensure life everlasting, the bread and wine are and have always been meant as symbols, so it's not supposed to even be cannibalistic, just symbolic.

      Remember just because some people are retarded doesn't mean you get to make up idiotic rituals on their behalf.

      Now, if you'll excuse me, I have some dioramas of people riding dinosaurs to make.

    25. Re:Bizarreness matters too by AnotherUsername · · Score: 1

      How do you feel about the Middle Ages and the Catholic Church? Paying for penance, anyone?

      --
      I don't like Linux. This doesn't make me a troll.
    26. Re:Bizarreness matters too by howdoesth · · Score: 1

      Don't be insulting God by calling him a low level spellcaster, pls. K? Thx. God might not be a low level spellcaster, but I like to think He is smart enough not to blow a 9th level spell on true res when the body was in a perfectly fine state for the 7th level res. Most of His 9th level slots are taken up by preparing Miracles anyway.
    27. Re:Bizarreness matters too by AnotherUsername · · Score: 1

      And here I always thought the eating the unleavened bread was just symbolic of the Body of Christ, as he said that it was symbolic during the Last Supper, when he and his apostles were observing Passover, which has unleavened bread in it. I guess all those years of Catholic grade school were wrong about the whole thing. Hrmph, learn something new everyday.

      And no, I'm not a Bible thumper. Just someone who hates when Catholics get bagged on about mistaken(and sometimes flat out lies) beliefs about Catholic ceremonies. Believe me, there are plenty of stranger and more screwed up things in the Catholic Church to bag on rather than half-truths that Protestants mistaken spread when talking about how screwed up Catholics are. Sorry, it just annoys me for some reason.

      --
      I don't like Linux. This doesn't make me a troll.
    28. Re:Bizarreness matters too by mgblst · · Score: 1

      As opposed to eating the body of christ? Or drinking his blood. Try to think about that objectively.

    29. Re:Bizarreness matters too by sm62704 · · Score: 1
      the placenta being left around alerts predators to tasty, tasty babies being around.

      I looked it up

      "...And then you add some RITZ and bake it in the oven on 800F for 35 minutes..." ~ Martha Stewart on Her new baby casserole

      You know it makes sense.The human baby is considered a delicacy in many parts of the world, and thus a considerable following has built around it. So-called "Babiseurs" swap recipes and tips for achieving maximum flavour and the appropriate texture. It is well-known that human baby is the best tasting food in the entire universe.
      Well that may have been on topic for the topic of your comment, but the following was on the 'cyclopedia's front page today and is actually on topic for the subject of calling stupid scientology asshats a "dangerous cult" (as well as calling fire "hot" and ice "cold" and water "wet" in the UK:

      Democrazy
      (pronounced "Dem-OCH-Ray-Zee," "Dem-O-CRA-zee" and "Bicycle horn") describes a series of related governments linked by election of leaders by madmen. With origins in ancient Greece, Rome, south Asia and the inseam of my pants, democrazy has grown and expanded throughout history to become the preferred form of rule around the world. Even the sternest dictatorships, seeing the need to cloak their regimes in popular will, call themselves democrazies and encourage secret police to stick warm glue in their ears.

      The principles of democrazy emphasize the importance of the lunatic in government, and the necessity of handing the lunatic the keys to education, business and nuclear warheads. Democrazy is not without its skeptics, but most criticisms are drowned in a chorus of duck calls.
      Hey, at least I didn't quote wikipedia.
      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    30. Re:Bizarreness matters too by kalirion · · Score: 1

      Scientology reminds me of those Discworld monks who believe that money is the root of all evil, so they must martyr themselves by collecting as much of this evil as possible for the sake of the world.

    31. Re:Bizarreness matters too by sm62704 · · Score: 1
      Jesus H. Christ! All these trolls (yours followed by the ones farther down) modded "insightful". Actually I would have modded yours "funny". Some mods will lose karma come the metamoderation. There shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth.

      Troll (Internet)
      From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

      An Internet troll, or simply troll in Internet slang, is someone who posts controversial and usually irrelevant or off-topic messages in an online community, such as an online discussion forum or chat room, with the intention of baiting other users into an emotional response[1] or to generally disrupt normal on-topic discussion.[2]

      And from Uncyclopedia, the content-free encyclopedia:

      Trolls Habitat
      Trolls live everywhere where n00bs congregate. As they needs n00bs to live on, they keep a special place in their homes. Their homes harry is like bob the builder
      Their Newspaper, the UnNews, fittingly has an item that would fit the wikipedia definition of troll (but I found humorous because I'm batshit crazy) "Pope to appear in Girls Gone Wild film so Americans will know who he is". I found the picture of the Pope wearing a baseball cap backwards and a T-Shirt that reads "I fuck on the first date" hilarious, but Tami, AKA Lucy Furr, found it extremely offensive. I'm surprised she didn't burn my house down.
      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    32. Re:Bizarreness matters too by sm62704 · · Score: 1
      The difference is in attitude, reputable religions want to spread the word. eg. I have a bible, a translation of the qur'an, and other texts; all of which were given to me for free by believers who genuinely believe that by reading the words I'll become converted.

      Perhaps, but have you given thought to the idea that these texts may just contain true wisdom that could benefit even an unbeliever, rather than simply trying to convert you to their religion?

      Proverbs 3:13 from the Christian, Jewish, and Muslim bibles:

      Happy is the man that findeth wisdom, and the man that getteth understanding. For the merchandise of it is better than the merchandise of silver, and the gain thereof than fine gold. She is more precious than rubies: and all the things thou canst desire are not to be compared unto her. Length of days is in her right hand; and in her left hand riches and honour. Her ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace. She is a tree of life to them that lay hold upon her: and happy is every one that retaineth her.
      "Happy is the man that finds understanding" certainly applies to every nerd I've ever known.
      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    33. Re:Bizarreness matters too by sm62704 · · Score: 1, Troll

      You would have made your point far better had you been a little more accurate. The Christian bible says nothing of telepathy, nor that the Christ was a "god fragment". Nor that he is dead; the opposite in fact. The entire religion revolves around this man being tortured to death in order to pay for all the nasty shit YOU have done to other people in your life, then walking out of the tomb alive. The religion of Christanity is a religion based on giving, sharing, being non-judgemental, and forgiving of others' faults. If you see a Christian preacher wearing a five thousand dollar suit, he is one of the "wolves in sheep's clothing" that the man he preaches about warned against.

      If you're going to troll Christians, at lest get your facts straight.

      And yes, not only are there a lot of Christians at slashdot, a lot of scientests are Christians, Muslims, and Jews as well. Being deliberately offensive is trolling.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    34. Re:Bizarreness matters too by internic · · Score: 1

      ...the bread and wine are and have always been meant as symbols, so it's not supposed to even be cannibalistic, just symbolic.

      Remember just because some people are retarded doesn't mean you get to make up idiotic rituals on their behalf.

      In fact, this isn't made up: Look up transubstatiation. It seems this has been an issue of some controversy among various Christian sects, but some, including, notably, the Catholic Church, believe that the bread and wine really become the body and blood of Christ in essence, though they retain their former sensory appearance.

      --
      "You call it a new way of thinking; I call it regression to ignorance!" -- Operation Ivy
    35. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I feel like that was many hundreds of years ago? I also feel like that practice was adequately addressed during a schism, a reformation, a counter-reformation, and several very bloody wars? I feel like none of this has much bearing on the CoS's practices today, other than to perhaps illustrate that western society has already decided they are unacceptable?

    36. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ask a Scientologist about HIS holy books and he'll tell you... after your check clears. This is a misconception. Even your check clearing is NOT enough, you have to send many many checks and do many many many many hours of "auditing" to get to the appropriate level up in the hierarchy where they trust you not to hurt them. Basically it's further along in the brainwashing procedure, if you'd like to think of it that way, and that's why they've been as succesful at keeping their secrets as they have been -- you only get to hear them if they totally trust you and you've been essentially using a lie detector (emeter) frequently enough that they know you are not a journalist or suppressive in some other way. Only about 10% of Scientologists get to the level Operating Thetan Level III (3). It's at OT3 where you learn about Xenu and related things.
    37. Re:Bizarreness matters too by smaddox · · Score: 1

      To be fair, I'm pretty sure sacrificing your own children, Incest, are Genocide are not in the New Testament.

      Most (sane) Christians would say that there are several parts of the old testament that are no longer a part of the religion, and are basically just left in because it's easier than actually changing the bible.

    38. Re:Bizarreness matters too by BaronHethorSamedi · · Score: 1

      Not meaning to be pedantic, but I don't think the Bible was "supposed" to be anything. It's a collection of discrete documents with a variety of authors, spread out over a fairly large swath of history. As far as Christianity goes, there weren't even any attempts to put them all in one volume until some four hundred years after the man named Jesus died. Even today, there's only limited consensus as to which documents are part of the Christian canon, and various books have been added or subtracted by various councils, synods, conventions, etc. at various points in time.

    39. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just for fun, try replacing a few common terms in Revelations and then reading it. For God substitute "The Great Alien Overlord". For angel substitute "grey alien". For demon and devil substitute "red alien". Really, that is all it takes to make Revelations into interesting sci-fi.

    40. Re:Bizarreness matters too by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Say what you will about Christianity and other modern religions, (and I will) they're not, at their core, pyramid schemes for making profits. Scientology is.

      I'm unconvinced. I am convinced Christianity started as a doomsday cult that was a genuine religion, not a for profit endeavor. That said, by the time the bible was put together and Christianity really emerged in the basic form and beliefs it has today, I'd argue it was primarily just a way for priests to make money and gather power. Certainly some clergy truly believe, but then so do some scientologists. Certainly many modern christian churches started off as money making schemes and have remained that way (just look at the history of some of the major televangelists).

    41. Re:Bizarreness matters too by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      I think I just threw up a little in my mouth. Let me start by saying that I'm by no means religious. However, when I read such short-sighted and superficial comparisons between Scientology and mainstream Christianity I really want to smack somebody. The thing is this: Scientology makes its members pay to be involved in the church and to gain access to their "teachings."

      I don't really see that as a fundamental difference. As a money making scheme I could invent or adopt a religion and fleece believers I indoctrinated, browbeat, or frightened in a variety of ways. On way would be to get them to pay me to alleviate their fears and another would be to alleviate their fears and then use guilt and gratitude to get them to pay me. So long as I'm getting paid, this is just a matter of technique, not a fundamental difference.

      You can ask the priest pretty much anything and guess what, you are likely to get halfway straight and honest answer, without coughing up hundreds of dollars.

      How do you know it is an honest answer? How do you know they truly believe instead of just claiming to for financial security? Certainly there have been christian preachers exposed in the past as being complete scam artists based upon their comments in private.

      Further, most people don't really buy into the whole cannibalism thing or take everything the bible, especially the old testament, seriously.

      Most people pick and choose religious quotes and beliefs to support whatever they have already decided to believe. Some believe strictly in transubstantiation while others don't. Some "believe" strongly enough in fairly vague excerpts from the old testament that they feel it justifies their actions in beating a homosexual to death or burning down the house of a person of a alternate religion. For the most part, I find christians in the US know very little of what is in the bible and don't really care to. They have a set of beliefs formed as much from television depictions of their religion as anything else. For the most part they are fine people, but what they believe is cultural more than religious (in both good and bad ways).

      Of course were making points on Slashdot so it must be the case that the most extreme members of anything == all the members of anything.

      You seem to have missed the point. Any religion can be interpreted in different ways and christianity is just as wacky and irrational as any other. It can and is exploited for profit just as much too. I'm in no way opposed to christianity. The example is pointing out a very common but rarely considered aspect of christianity. Personally, I have no objection to cannibalism from an ethical/moral perspective. I do have issues with murder and with cannibalism from a health perspective. Why are you reacting so strongly to cannibalism anyway? Is it just the social taboo? Really, what is fundamentally wrong with eating meat from other humans?

      I've read the bible and think there are very valuable insights therein. I enjoy a good discussion of these things with a professional priest, because they have the time and education to discuss them in a less brain dead fashion than the average bloke. That said, if any priest wants to "convert" me, they'd better start from the position of having given away all their possessions, being destitute, and refusing to take gifts from others. If they aren't that convinced themselves, how can I trust them?

    42. Re:Bizarreness matters too by digitrev · · Score: 1

      No they won't. Trolling for catholics is fair game on /..

      --
      Cynical Idealist
    43. Re:Bizarreness matters too by digitrev · · Score: 1

      And protests changed that over time until it became a better institution. Much like what the people protesting Scientology are doing, attempting to change the way it is run.

      --
      Cynical Idealist
    44. Re:Bizarreness matters too by zappepcs · · Score: 1

      The trouble I see with your point is that while you are correct, the cult of Christianity teaches their adherents that the Bible is God inspired writings, and is the word of God, literally. Many sects within the cult consider the words of the Bible are to be taken literally; young earthers, creationists, snake handlers etc. as examples.

      The cult has grown, and in it's aging has forgotten it's roots, and has been taught not to question or seek truth outside what they are told is the truth. This is problematic in and of itself, and IMO makes Christianity also a dangerous cult. Then again, that's just my opinion.

    45. Re:Bizarreness matters too by EasyTarget · · Score: 1

      Perhaps, but have you given thought to the idea that these texts may just contain true wisdom that could benefit even an unbeliever, rather than simply trying to convert you to their religion?

      Very true indeed, I am well aware that there are many such tracts, in both religious and secular works, that provide valuable insight into how we can live. Although I doubt if this was the prime motivation of the very devout fellows who gave me the books (one of whom also left a copy of 'The Watchtower' on my desk every time it was published, a surprising intellectual read..)

      All ultimately in vain, I still prefer to believe in people rather than god.

      My personal favourite is desiderata ('go placidly ' etc..), which is so good that religion has tried to claim it as it's own..
      http://www.snopes.com/language/document/desiderata.asp

      --
      "Oops, I always forget the purpose of competition is to divide people into winners and losers." - Hobbes
    46. Re:Bizarreness matters too by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      You would have made your point far better had you been a little more accurate. The Christian bible says nothing of telepathy, nor that the Christ was a "god fragment". Nor that he is dead; the opposite in fact.

      First, praying can certainly be considered telepathy. You're communicating with another being remotely, using your mind. It fits the definition. Second, the catholic church and many others recognize a "trinity" where Jesus was one aspect of god, a "fragment" is not a misleading description. As to the alive versus dead versus both argument, it can be interpreted many ways, but is too vague to really argue any way in my opinion.

      The entire religion revolves around this man being tortured to death in order to pay for all the nasty shit YOU have done to other people in your life, then walking out of the tomb alive. The religion of Christanity is a religion based on giving, sharing, being non-judgemental, and forgiving of others' faults.

      Actually, christianity as practiced in modern times has as much to do with the old testament as the new and with arbitrary restrictions laid down therein. You'll have a hard time finding a practicing christian who does not know the ten commandments or a christian priest who does not believe you are supposed to follow them.

      As for christianity being based on giving, sharing, and being non-judgmental... christianity is an adaptable religion and has adapted itself to cultures in different places and times. It has been so judgmental at times that it tortured and killed everyone who disagreed, and in fact such things still happen with murders of physicians who perform abortions and homosexuals being a not too rare occurrence in the US and very common in other parts of the world. You can claim preachers with expensive suits don't count, but that is just the "no true scotsman fallacy" and it is a sliding scale. Are catholic priests who perform mass with golden crosses really christians? What about small town preachers who own televisions and haven't given away all of their possessions? The truth is, they're all christians because that is the religion with which they self identify and while you may disagree with them, you can't ignore their influence... regardless of if they are not from the one, true "western reformed presbelutheren" faith.

      If you're going to troll Christians, at lest get your facts straight.

      I don't think he was trolling at all. I think he was expressing his honest and very understandable opinion that all religions are making irrational and often incredible claims without presenting equally incredible proofs. Not that there is anything wrong with that, but it is not a way in which scientology and christianity differ.

      And yes, not only are there a lot of Christians at slashdot, a lot of scientests are Christians, Muslims, and Jews as well. Being deliberately offensive is trolling.

      He wasn't insulting your religion. Grow a thicker skin. If you can't see how someone can interpret praying to be a form of telepathy, then you're clearly not being objective. There is a difference between "things that might make you think about aspects of your religion rationally" and "being deliberately offensive." How is considering praying to be telepathy offensive? Is there anything wrong with telepathy as a word or concept? It is just communicating remotely using only thoughts. How does that threaten you and your beliefs in such a way that you're offended?

    47. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Mr.+Beatdown · · Score: 1

      true res? well he only lasted 40 days, so that's not really very impressive. Then the ascension to the astral plane kicked in.
      --
      My fellow Americans, let's restore the death penalty for child rapists. Let's do it . . . for the children.
    48. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, this is why once in a while you will hear stories about the church telling people they're going to hell because they are allergic to wheat. They can't eat the wafer and so theres no transubstantiation and no acceptance of christ's body into their own. Those lovely rice wafers just won't do either.. only the good stuff turns into the zombie flesh.

    49. Re:Bizarreness matters too by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      And here I always thought the eating the unleavened bread was just symbolic of the Body of Christ, as he said that it was symbolic during the Last Supper, when he and his apostles were observing Passover, which has unleavened bread in it. I guess all those years of Catholic grade school were wrong about the whole thing. Hrmph, learn something new everyday.

      Actually the doctrine of the catholic church is that it actually transforms. It's called transubstantiation and that has been the case since the council of Trent. They do hem and haw over the difference between substantially present and physically present when it is referred to as cannibalism, but not in any logical way. The official doctrine is it is to be accepted as a "mystery" which cannot be explained by any human.

      And no, I'm not a Bible thumper. Just someone who hates when Catholics get bagged on about mistaken(and sometimes flat out lies) beliefs about Catholic ceremonies.

      I'm not opposed to religion, but when the church makes official statements like "the sacrament of the most holy Eucharist, are contained truly, really, and substantially, the body and blood together" and then refuses to explain any more because it is a "mystery" well I think people should be given more than a little slack on their interpretation.

    50. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Squeedle · · Score: 1

      Without dignifying the traditional Slashdot slap-happy, uncalled-for insistence on insulting every one of us with a religion at every minute opportunity, I agree with the point that, taken by themselves without any cultural context, the origin story of Scientology is no more bizarre than anything else.

      However, it seems more bizarre to most people because it arose basically whole-cloth and with not a lot of cultural context. All of the so-called traditional religions developed over time and drew elements from the religious traditions around it (and rejected portions as being false or wrong). In that sense I think they were more evolutionary than revolutionary. This is the main area where Scientology differs. It also takes elements into its origin myths which are commonly believed to be false already. Most people of antiquity had no problems with the idea that there were other deities and that different tribes/nations/whatever worshipped their own. The aggressive cultures which adopted the world-dominating monotheism of Christianity and Islam changed all that in the Western world.

      The definition of "cult" depends upon who you're asking. If you're asking scientists like archaeologists and anthropologists, then any offshoot of a religion that is considered heretical by the mainstream, a religion that is not widely adopted is considered a cult. Christianity in its early stages is frequently referred to as a Jewish "cult," with no insult implied. Judaism also had a "cult" of Astarte, a fertility deity believed by her worshippers to be God's wife, which didn't make it into modern times.

      In the vernacular, we've attached a more pejorative meaning, and the best defintion I've read of a "cult" in this sense identifies several elements that tend to be present for this definition to hold: a charismatic leader, members must sever contact with family, members must hand over most or all of their money and/or possessions, members are discouraged from associating with non-members, and intolerance of dissent.

      --
      Love, Squeedle
    51. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Squeedle · · Score: 1

      You're not as fair as you think. There are lots of things that are "in" the "Old Testament" but that doesn't mean they're approved. Prostitutes and money lenders are "in" the "New Testament," but they are clearly not approved of. In fact King David's conduct for having Bathsheba's husband killed so he could take her for himself, is pretty harshly condemned.

      You're confusing origin stories that predated the establishment of Jewish law, with those laws. In the Torah, incest is explicitly forbidden, and human sacrifice is specifically replaced by animal sacrifice (starting with the binding of Isaac). The lesson of the binding of Isaac is that God does NOT actually want human sacrifice. There are portions in later books where some Israelites have taken up the practice (which is still being followed by their neighbors, by the way) and they are excoriated by the prophets of their time. So let's make this clear: human sacrifice and incest are FORBIDDEN by God in the Bible. Human actions occurring before the law of Moses was established are covered under the seven Noahide laws. (I leave finding out what they are as an exercise to the reader.)

      The genocide portions are pretty horrific to (most) modern sensibilities today, and rightly so. Any decent person should have issues with those passages.

      I keep reading the same wrong ideas over and over; I'm getting more than a little tired of people who seem to be relying on hearsay, poorly educated Sunday school teachers or Richard Dawkins talking points for their Bible knowledge, and then using this to form opinions about Christianity and/or Judaism. Even a small amount of study and reading in ancient Near East cultural history plus good Jewish AND Christian study Bibles would help. An uneducated opinion isn't an opinion at all.

      --
      Love, Squeedle
    52. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      CoS imprisons their religious staff. CoS forces them to have abortions or face leaving and losing connection to all scientologist family/friends. You have to continue buying courses or you're being a bad scientologist. You have to cut off ties with people the church doesn't like or you're being a bad scientologist. If it comes out during an "audit" that you've so much as thought anything negative about the church, you're a bad scientologist and subject to the aforementioned prisons. This isn't the crusades, this is happening right now.

      Are you so caught up in the past that you refuse to pay any more attention to things in the present?

    53. Re:Bizarreness matters too by zappepcs · · Score: 1

      You are preaching to the choir, but when you say it is more bizzare than 'normal' religions, I have to take exception. Look at my sig?

    54. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Sonja+Wiels · · Score: 2, Informative

      "Oh, Scientology is not really any more far out than Christianity" (Subtext: this makes it "ok", it's like other bona fide religions and we let them stick around, right?)

      I have heard this notion cast about for some time now, here at Slashdot and elsewhere, and it disturbs me that so many people miss the important point here. The issue is not whether Scientology is any weirder than other religions. Their bizarre beliefs are not in and of themselves the danger. The real danger is of the same kind we have seen before. It is very familiar, everyone here has probably read about it at one point or another, perhaps in a history book, or a newspaper.

      And that danger is that to the average Scientologist the only hope for the world is through the philosophy of Scientology. It MUST be spread to every corner of the globe by whatever means necessary. Our society MUST be rewritten according to its standards and methods. And its current standards and methods are clear that any means are acceptable to reaching that end. ANY means. The laws, morals, ethics, etc. of the rest of the world are secondary and can be ignored if it means furthering the aims of Scientology.

      THAT is the danger in a nutshell. As I have said, we have seen this sort of thinking before:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Jones

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Koresh

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazism


      And we have seen what happens when Scientologists are allowed to practice this "philosophy":

      http://www.whyaretheydead.net/

      http://www.scientology-lies.com/investigation.html

      http://www.xenu.net/archive/go/index.htm


      There are still other dangers to be considered as well. They turn people away from doctors, medicine and real mental help while giving pie-in-the-sky promises of curing all your problems (up to and including things like cancer, diabetes, schizophrenia, and homosexuality, which they consider a "mental illness"). Many have died believing Scientology would cure them.

      Then there is the fact they their "disconnection" policies have, and are continuing to rip families apart: http://www.scientologydisconnection.com/

      Children of Scientologists are often denied education, either by being discouraged to go to college (and in many cases any non-scientologist school), or if the parent is a staff member (or if the child is), they may be forced into a Scientology children's organization of one sort or another where they will receive a substandard education, if any. In my experience (which others shared with me and I have found out is all too common elsewhere), I was recruited at a young age and told that my education would be provided for. I and all the other children at the location I was at were given a 4-5 hours a day in a classroom-like environment in which we were to pair off and study "whatever". There were math books, science books, books on spelling and such. But there was no teacher, no curriculum, no grades, no structure of any sort. Often the class was cancelled if we were needed for more important matters (meaning anything to do with Scientology's well-being). To get around this we were all instructed and trained in how to lie if the city sent someone by to check on conditions there, and we were to tell them that we were always getting our study in.


      I understand that there are some similar practices in other religions as well. I oppose these too. Religions that forbid surgery or blood transfusions, those that sucker people into "faith healing", all are doing a tremendous disservice and must be opposed.

      Scientology too must be

    55. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Raenex · · Score: 1

      Off-topic? It's the topic of what is a "cult". Somebody gives a property that they think applies to cults, and comparisons to mainstream religions ensue -- completely on-topic. Catholic rituals are as bizarre as any cult's.

    56. Re:Bizarreness matters too by hurfy · · Score: 1

      Probably that whole resting on the 7th day instead grinding out a couple more levels :(

    57. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Repton · · Score: 1

      Just think how Christianity would have turned out if God had used Reincarnate instead!

      --
      Repton.
      They say that only an experienced wizard can do the tengu shuffle.
    58. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Calledor · · Score: 1

      How does bizarreness matter? The cult of scientology believes that evil space aliens murdered billions of other aliens by stuffing them into DC-10 like spaceships and blowing them up in earth's volcanoes with Hydrogen bombs. The cult of christianity believes that you can telepathically communicate with a dead god-fragment and tell him you love him and that he will accept you into his kingdom and cleanse you of a taint that was placed in all humanity by a rib-woman being tricked by a talking snake. Scientology is insane, but so are pretty much all other religions. The difference being the first part of what you posted is almost a word for word explanation of how the leaders of scientology and the founder himself believe the earth, and humans to have originated. That is their current belief. That is what Mr. Hubbard wrote sometime in the latter half of the last century.

      Christianity was formed WHEN exactly? The Old Testament stuff you are elementarily summerizing is how old? Do you even contemplate these things before you post them? Oh yes, a mythic monothestic religion founded at the dawn of written record that chooses to define an omnipitant creature that created everything as "God" is JUST as crazy as a modern man saying that you are the embodiment of a creature that was brought to volcanos millions of years ago (apparently tectonic shift does not factor in here) and blown up with atomic bombs. Written coinicidentally enough in the period of time when the threat of nuclear anhilation loomed high.

      You know, fuck it, you guys can go get asspounded by Tom Cruise when he uses his telepathic powers to bend you over his top gun.
    59. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      in the old biblical language (Aramenian, if i remember correctly), '40 days' actually means
      "a long time"...

    60. Re:Bizarreness matters too by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you're right, I've never seen any of the Catholic rituals so I have no idea what they do.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    61. Re:Bizarreness matters too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Religions don't require money for some kind of advancement within the religion. Some will have materialism as a value, with ideas like the size of your wealth corresponds to your quality as a human being, but they keep their money. Wether you give or not, you're an equal member under that religion.

      The second thing that seems to be common to all cults is separation from your "past life". All cults encourage breaking ties with anybody that's not part of the cult because otherwise the other people end up explaining to that person how stupid they are acting.

      So, a cult would be a pseudo religion in which members must provide money to advance in rank or quality within the religion and in which they may be asked to cut all ties with everyone in their social circle that doesn't share the same beliefs.

      This excludes so-called "honest religions" and can only include cults that steal your money and destroy your social circle to replace it with a false one destined to make you give even more money.

      So, now that the word cult has been better defined, Scientology is a cult, not a religion.

      Because a religion is just simpler than a cult. Religion is just a system of beliefs that involves the supernatural. That's the only definition broad enough to include them all.

  41. Could be pivitol for Anonymous by Nebulious · · Score: 1

    Well, 4chan and company have often been the target of scrutiny and I applaud the use of the large Internet community for a good cause like this. However, I think the real public face of Anon will be determined by cases like this where push comes to shove (especially how well the group supports an unmasked and targeted member). This can be settled quietly, or a real ruckus can try and be stirred up. I would hope a calm and professionally conducted attempt was made to publicize the case and really demonstrate the strongarm tactics of the CoS. I don't know how British Law works, but perhaps a losing verdict can eventually turn into an appeal about the Church's status as a tax-free religion.

    Either way, I hope this law gets overturned as a result of the case, as a favorable verdict to the CoS would help legitimize Scientology.

    1. Re:Could be pivitol for Anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean ebaumsworld, they did it.

    2. Re:Could be pivitol for Anonymous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, you're thinking of enturbulation.org;ebaums is the site that makes shitty flash movies.

    3. Re:Could be pivitol for Anonymous by xerxesVII · · Score: 1

      With all of this talk about definitions, I think you need to look up "make". Make does not mean "put your watermark on something someone else created".

      --
      "We shall grapple with the ineffable, and see if we may not eff it after all." - Douglas Adams
  42. The Nanny State strikes again! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I were English I would be so ashamed of my country. It seems like no one in Britain has any balls to stand up for common sense, and instead everyone has wrapped themselves up in laws so that no precious snowflakes will get their egos bruised.

    You can't call a cult a cult? No beef on British Airway flights out of fear of offending Hindus? Seriously, you English should be ashamed of your spineless country.

  43. How can he be facing prosecution for by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    saying what is true?

    1. Re:How can he be facing prosecution for by Skapare · · Score: 1

      Because they can't handle the truth!

      --
      now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  44. 1812 Overture... by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

    I can hear the crescendo building...

    1. Re:1812 Overture... by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yep. The only man to enter parliament with honest intentions.

      --
  45. If you disagree - WRITE TO THEM by zakezuke · · Score: 1

    http://www.writetothem.com/

    Contact your friendly neighborhood MP. From my limited understanding the hate speech laws are not intended to prevent people from being critical of a religion, not that Scientology is classified as a religion in the UK, or at least it's not a charitable organization.

    --
    There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
  46. information on "cult" definition as background by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Steven Hassan's book "Releasing the Bonds" has a good definition of a cult that is specified in belief-independent ways. He focuses on classic cult behaviors like encouraging members to cut off contact from non-members, demonizing outsiders as enemies, a totalistic belief system, the intolerance of dissent, etc. All of which characterizes Scientology to a "T," by the way. ;-)

  47. Be careful what you say... by Ux64 · · Score: 4, Funny

    I think I have to stop calling Linux users a cult before I get prosecuted.

  48. Well, it *IS* a cult. by n1hilist · · Score: 1

    If I turn to my Wikipedian Textbook of ye Olde knowledge, at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cult

    It clearly says "Cult typically refers to a cohesive social group devoted to beliefs or practices that the surrounding culture considers outside the mainstream, with a notably positive or negative popular perception. In common or populist usage, "cult" has a positive connotation for groups of art, music, writing, fiction, and fashion devotees,[1] but a negative connotation for new religious, extreme political, questionable therapeutic, and pyramidal business groups.[2] For this reason, most, if not all, non-fan groups that are called cults reject this label."

    And, yes - I don't agree with Scientology *AT ALL*, and by the definition above and in my dictionary, I'm leaning towards the notion that above mentioned kid should have been given a medal, or at least a pat on the back for pointing out the obvious.

    Also, it's called "free speech", innit.

  49. Re:The Nanny State strikes again! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And I were Welsh or Scottish I'd be pounding your face for just calling me English.

  50. She's a WITCH! She's a WITCH! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, a child is arrestted for telling the truth. The Emperor has no clothes, The sky is blue, Bush is stupid, and Scientology is a CULT. ( see Oxford English Dictionary, i.e. a cult is " 1. a system of religious worship directed towards a particular figure or object.
          2. a small religious group regarded as strange or as imposing excessive control over members.
          3. something popular or fashionable among a particular section of society."

    But even more towards "The Truth(tm)" a cult is according to the Cult Awareness Network, "Seperates you from your family, friends and cash" "tells you to replace your beliefs" "Has carismatic leaders." Since Tom Cruise isnt charasmatic, Ill say 2/3 is a CULT!

    We need to have George Galloway, MP, Respect party on the case. He is one for telling the truth...

  51. Hmmmmm..... by IHC+Navistar · · Score: 2, Interesting

    As an American, I'm tempted to go to the U.K. and recieve the same type of summons, too. Then, after I have enough of them to wallpaper my room, I'd return to the United States and dare those Stalinist Brits to come and get me. I guarentee there would be *pleny* of outrage to go around, if not lead.

    Scientologists claim that Scientology is just as much a religion as any other religion. I say he difference between the two is you don't have to pay thousands of dollars for spiritual enlightenment with the other religions. Religions shouldn't be allowed to charge for religious or spiritual guidence/help/enlightenment. When you start charging money, it stops being a religion and becomes a business.

    The Bible, Koran, and Talmud aren't copyrighted, even though they could be, and are freely available to anyone. Yet, the "freedom-loving" (read: freedom-fucking) Scientologists charge HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS of dollars just to look at their "Holy Texts" (read: sci-fi alien circle-jerk), charge HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS to practice Scientology (without being subject to their abuse), and charge HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS to gain "spiritual enlightenment". Plus, as much as people love to bash mainstream religion, none of the mainstream religions practise mind-control, brainwashing, blackmail, slander, libel, or lawsuit abuse.

    The charge that this poor kid got hit with could *easily* be challenged and won on Human Rights grounds.

    Politicians prefer unarmed peasants. Scientologists prefer just the politicians.

    --
    Knowing Google's lust for data collection, the Soviet Union is still alive and well inside the psyche of Sergey Brin....
    1. Re:Hmmmmm..... by dbIII · · Score: 1

      There are a lot of obvious differences - most noticably we have a lot of witnessess and a huge paper trail from the first day this scam started. The USA is very uptight about religeous freedom and Scientology is the most successful of the cults that have grown like a cookoo pretending to fit into that environment.

    2. Re:Hmmmmm..... by dargaud · · Score: 1

      you don't have to pay thousands of dollars for spiritual enlightenment with the other religions. How did they built all those cathedrals then ?

      ...none of the mainstream religions practise mind-control, brainwashing... Say that again to all the little kids who grow up into their parents' religion...
      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    3. Re:Hmmmmm..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Sects within the major religions certainly practice brainwashing and mind-control. Just look at an area where fundamentalists live. Either fundie Christians or Muslims. Children are raised in a secluded environment, only able to make friends with children whose parents are members of the same sort of cult.

      The difference is that there are moderate Christians and moderate Muslims, but there aren't any moderate Scientologists, either you're a nut, or you left the church after you found out how crazy it really was.

  52. Obvious advice by Goonie · · Score: 3, Funny

    The kid should consult a solicitor (Brit-speak for a lawyer) with a background in human rights issues. Liberty should be able to point him in the right direction.

    --

    Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
    --Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
    1. Re:Obvious advice by gowen · · Score: 1

      Yes. And that lawyer could've instructed him on the difference between a telling-off and a summons, told him he needs to cut down on the martyr complex, and then gone about her day.

      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    2. Re:Obvious advice by Lincolnshire+Poacher · · Score: 1

      > The kid should consult a solicitor

      Thereby perpetuating the legal cycle.

      1. Legal ``advice'' at whitepaper stage;
      2. Ambiguous act passed into law;
      3. Inappropriate charge based on misunderstanding of law;
      4. Legal representation on basis of ambiguity.

      Job done, money made; yes, even for ``Friends of Liberty'' as they call themselves.

      Much better in a case like this, with a lesser penalty, to go pro se. Most judges are willing to assist self-defendants with matters of procedure, though of course they still expect that the defendant will have prepared his case.

  53. Buy HIm a Plane Ticket to the States by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We should let this lad and his folks immigrate to the USA to avoid political prosecution in their homeland. There is a big career awaiting for a guy like this here.

  54. To be precise... by jcr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Scientology is a Criminal nut-cult.

    Although all cults are nuts, not all cults are criminal.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    1. Re:To be precise... by Dark_Gravity · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Scientology is a Criminal nut-cult. Although all cults are nuts, not all cults are criminal.

      Regardless of whether all cults are nuts, Scientology are clearly organized criminals masquerading as a religion (cult, by popular definition), and it is pathetic that the US allows their ridiculous charade to persist.

      If real entheogenic religions that use naturally occurring substances are denied First Amendment protection, why is such an obvious front for murder and extortion provided an undeserved safe haven under the same right?

      Dare I say: "F*** Scientology and F*** the UK (who forfeited their right to be considered a free society many years ago)?

      No. I dare not say it in this politically correct police state, now, do I?

  55. A typo. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The kid meant to say that "Scientology is a CUNT!"

  56. How about.. by 56ksucks · · Score: 2, Funny

    .. he call it the "fruity little club" instead?

    --

    ---- "Excuse me. Where's the children's gun section?"

  57. Plead not guilty by vorlich · · Score: 3, Interesting

    engage a pro bono and use your time in the witness box to introduce every single piece of evidence you or anyone else can think of to prove the case, subpoena the entire board of directors and introduce the public to their Naval Division. I should imagine the tabloids will devour this case.
    M'lud I would like to submit exhibit a) as evidence for the defense - The McLibel Case http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mclibel
    I would hazard an ejimacated guess, however, that it will never go to trial. The again, perhaps the present government is in need of a circus to distract everyone from their present poor standings. What could be better than a cult of goats?

    --
    Posts, MyBio or Sig, may contain satire, sarcasm, bolded nouns be sardonic or even witty & be Church of SD
  58. The litmus test for cult vs religion.... by mark-t · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Do you have to pay for detailed knowledge about the religion, or is all the information that is available offered freely and without reservation to anyone who asks? If the former, it's a cult. If the latter, it's a religion.

  59. Freedom from insults... by Kjella · · Score: 1

    which 'prohibits signs which have representations or words which are threatening, abusive or insulting.' ...is freedom from criticism, since you can always take it as a personal insult. It must be allowed to say that a person, a group, an organization or a government body is a bad influence without being put to trial over it.
    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  60. Calling Linux a Cult/Religion by Zombie+Ryushu · · Score: 1

    Thats a popular belief but its absolutely false. The truth is, Linux is a completely secular movement with the very secular aim of producing an operating system and computer software with the very secular doctrine of restoring the fair use and individual property rights of computer owners to use computers as they see fit and not as others would see fit. These are secular goals. It is a social reform movement. It is seen as anti-social by some people.

    Now, more and more, as time goes on, we are seeing some delusions surround Linux. They get wilder every day.

    "Linux is a religion." No, there is nothing super natural about Linux. Its an Operating system Kernel.

    "Linux is Anti-Capitalism." No, Linux has absolutely no restrictions on the development of non-free software so long as no "code lifting via linking" takes place where a non-free software author does something that closes off changes in the OS Code like the Kernel. Alot of people think that somehow non-free software developers are "entitled" to steal code from Linux.

    I have heard "Linux is anti-American" well, no, again, Linux has nothing to do with resisting the US Government for the sake of resisting the US Government. Linux as a social phoenomena is resisting the DMCA in a way. but not directly. Again, this is an example of a secular social belief due to a concept of private property rights and right to privacy. These are not religious concepts.

    I have only ever heard a "Linux is anti-Christian" comment from one person. A southern baptist Helpdesk administrator who was convinced that Linux really was a tool to take teenagers and indoctrinate them into a communist cult, but again. This guy was a southern baptist preacher. He actually told me that Windows was an OS Jesus would approve of.

    Now that is crazy.

    But still.

    Culturally, Linux users have a secular mindset, people like RMS are the minority. I'd say MOST Linux users want a fully functioning Linux computer that:

    A. Works.
    B. Protects them from the bad practices of specific software companies.

    But they may not entirely be opposed to closed source software, just that there should be some accountability and alternatives.

    Now, here is the Linux user's fear: That Linux is banned, and MacOSX is banned, and Windows is the only OS sanctioned by the government to run on "A computer" and if you run anything else, you are breaking the law.

    Those are secular fears, justified or paranoia aside. You will meet people with varying degrees of worry about this. But these are secular worries about real governments and real people passing real laws to create real consequences in the real world. These are not supernatural occurrences by any means. They are the result of the actions of real people.

    1. Re:Calling Linux a Cult/Religion by amorsen · · Score: 1

      "Linux is Anti-Capitalism." No, Linux has absolutely no restrictions on the development of non-free software Copyright on software is Anti-Capitalism. Handing out monopolies is a feudalistic practice which is really out of place in the 21st century.
      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
  61. statements of fact can be prosecuted? by Anthony+Boyd · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I want to add to what cynicsreport said earlier in this topic. The word "cult" has commonly accepted definitions, and if Scientology fits that definition, then the sign was a statement of fact.

    In particular, part of my liberal arts studies at Westmont college included multiple classes on cults (it is/was a religious school, so knowing about many flavors of cults was mandatory). We had a lengthy course on the difference between cults & religion. The main difference was secrecy, not legitimacy. A religion -- whether you believed it to be true or fake -- was an institution that had open processes. You could gain access to the teachings freely, and likely audit the finances, too. This means the institutions of Catholics, Christians, Jews, and a handful of others were "religions." Then there were other institutions like Scientology, Moonies, and lots of others that had closed processes. You couldn't audit the finances, you couldn't freely gain access to the teachings, etc. Those were cults.

    It's entirely possible that you could feel a particular cult held the truth while all religions of the world were shams. The word "cult" was not intended to imply who was right. If calling something a cult was an insult, it wasn't because the cult was crappy or false; it was because of secrecy, potential for deception regarding finances, and so on. And not surprisingly, when you fall back on the dispassionate definition, it gets really hard to refute it even if you DO take it as an insult. If someone says you're holding documents in secrecy and you say "That's an insult" well... ARE you holding documents in secrecy? If so, you're feeling insulted by the truth. In such a case, I don't really feel that a state should compel people to lie.

    1. Re:statements of fact can be prosecuted? by gowen · · Score: 1

      You could gain access to the teachings freely, and likely audit the finances, too. This means the institutions of Catholics, Christians, Jews, and a handful of others were "religions."
      What you say is, by and large, good and true and sensible. However, if you think you can audit the finances of the Catholic Church, you are deeply mistaken. The Vatican City is literally a state-unto-itself, and they are not at all open about the state of their finances.

      The open teachings thing though -- yeah, thats a good definition of the difference.
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    2. Re:statements of fact can be prosecuted? by RedWizzard · · Score: 1

      I want to add to what cynicsreport said earlier in this topic. The word "cult" has commonly accepted definitions, and if Scientology fits that definition, then the sign was a statement of fact. What's fact got to do with it? He's not being sued for libel or slander. He's being prosecuted because his sign (allegedly) had "representations or words which are threatening, abusive or insulting". I doubt many people who are not Scientologists will agree that he's guilty, but whether Scientology fits the definition of a cult is totally irrelevant to the case. To make an analogy, it doesn't become acceptable to use a ethnic slur to describe someone just because they are actually of that ethnicity.
    3. Re:statements of fact can be prosecuted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the main point here is that it was the boy's opinion and Articles 10 and/or 11 of the European Convention on Human Rights guarantee the freedom to express your opinions. You don't have to be right to be able to express your opinion. *That* is the main point here.

      I think even the law that denies allegations can't be interpreted here because calling something a cult is not the same as calling someone a criminal.

    4. Re:statements of fact can be prosecuted? by nosfucious · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure you could turn up to the Vatican and ask that Pope Benedict open up the chart of accounts. Nor would he give you the keys to the private libraries so that you could uncover the dirty laundry.

      I'm guessing that a company like PWC might get to audit the books though. Much more so than, say, Scientology.

      Is there any requirement that a tax-free Charity in the US has to be audited?

      "Man shall not be free until the last king is strangled with the entrails of the last priest." Jean Meslier

      --
      Q:I was listening to a CD in Grip and it sounded horrible! What's up? A:Perhaps you are listening to country music
    5. Re:statements of fact can be prosecuted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So your saying that Scientology and other cults are Proprietary and Christians, Muslims and other mainstream religions are Open Source?

      Never knew my local church could be compared to FOSS.

      Wonder what would happen if I tried to fork it?

    6. Re:statements of fact can be prosecuted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ask Martin Luther. :)

  62. I know this is a lot to ask... by gowen · · Score: 4, Informative

    I know this is a lot to ask, but please get the facts right.

    He hasn't received a summons.
    He's not being taken to court.
    He was warned, by a somewhat overzealous police officer, that he might have been in breach of the law, and he had his sign confiscated.

    The Crown Prosecution Service, who are the people who decide whether a prosecution will take place, have been told that these events happened. And will decide whether to proceed. If anyone wants to bet $10 to say they will, I'll gladly take your money here and now.

    That's it.

    --
    Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    1. Re:I know this is a lot to ask... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Quoting from the third link:

      I was read the Section 5 Public Order Act of 1986, and was told I was strongly advised to remove the sign. You can see my response in the video, as I read out Justice Latey's statement about the Cult of Scientology. I was given until 11:30 to remove the sign. At around 12:05 the police caught up with me, I was given a Court Summons and my details were taken down. Videos will surface. My sign was removed I assume you are correct, still he has been summoned to court and his right to free speech was curtailed.

      'The truth is, there is something terribly wrong with this country, isn't there? Cruelty and injustice, intolerance and oppression. And where once you had the freedom to object, to think and speak as you saw fit, you now have censors and systems of surveillance coercing your conformity and soliciting your submission.' - V for Vendetta There are protests planned for Saturday June 14th in Plymouth, Manchester, York, Brighton, Poole, Birmingham, Derby, Sunderland, London and more. None of them should be silenced in this manner.
    2. Re:I know this is a lot to ask... by arkhan_jg · · Score: 2, Informative

      He *was* given a summons by the police at the demonstration. The CPS haven't decided whether to go ahead with the case yet, as you say, and no date has been set for the court case. I too hope that it will be quietly dropped by the CPS, but I'm not at all 100% sure.

      That the police even went so far as to issue a summons is a scary indictment of the level of anti-speech legislation on the books and used against peaceful demonstrators. As someone said above, I wonder when they'll decide to ban 'war-criminal' and 'tax' protest signs.

      --
      Remember kids, it's all fun and games until someone commits wholesale galactic genocide.
    3. Re:I know this is a lot to ask... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



      In the UK i was under the impression that the COS was not actually a Religion as far as the law was concerted so isnâ(TM)t Cult far more accurate.

      If he was to be taken to court i would love to know on what charge.

      Also to prove they are a religion should they not be made to prove beyond unreasonable doubt that there beliefs are 100% accurate. In my view all religions are a form of cult...

      So letâ(TM)s have a look at the definition of "cult" then:

      Noun

              * S: (n) cult (followers of an exclusive system of religious beliefs and practices)

      Correct I doubt no one can say COS doesnâ(TM)t do this.

              * S: (n) cult (followers of an unorthodox, extremist, or false religion or sect who often live outside of conventional society under the direction of a charismatic leader)

      Well they certainly are out side of conventional society so correct again

              * S: (n) cult (a religion or sect that is generally considered to be unorthodox, extremist, or false) "it was a satanic cult"

      Yes in the most part the general majority believe it to be one or more of these so correct again

              * S: (n) cult, cultus, religious cult (a system of religious beliefs and rituals) "devoted to the cultus of the Blessed Virgin"

      Yes they are devoted to there own textsâ¦

      Well from that I believe it is Safe to say COS is a Cult but so is many of the current age religions. Well for a 15 year old he is truly accurate

      I would love to see this in court though

    4. Re:I know this is a lot to ask... by Inda · · Score: 1

      "the police even went so far as to issue a summons"

      This must be a new role for the police. They have never issued summons before. Cautions, yes. Charging you, yes. Summons, no - that is a job for the courts.

      But the Guardian says different. The Guardian.

      --
      This post contains benzene, nitrosamines, formaldehyde and hydrogen cyanide.
    5. Re:I know this is a lot to ask... by gowen · · Score: 1

      No, he wasn't given a summons. You can't get a summons on the spot. Summons include a court date -- as in you are summoned to appear before XXX magistrates on DD/MM/YYYY to answer a charge of "whatever you may have done" -- and the police don't get to hand out court dates, the CPS does.

      He "claimed" to have had a summons, but he also claims its on the video, which it singularly he isn't. He's not even given a caution, which would probably require him lawyering up. All that happens is he's appraised of his rights, and warned that he might be commiting an offence.

      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    6. Re:I know this is a lot to ask... by Anonymous+Cowpat · · Score: 1
      1. You're not 'given' a caution, you're offered one which you 'accept'. Aceepting a caution is an admission of guilt. Normally, refusing to accept a caution is grounds for arrest, but I'm not aware of any statutory prohibition of an officer offering people cautions even though he would have no grounds to arrest them, and just seeing how many people would accept them (and get themselves criminal records as a result), just for devilment.
      2. Lawyering up is useless once you already have a caution. Once you've accepted the caution you've admitted guilt already. If you refuse, pending consultation with your lawyer as to wether you should accept, you'll likely get arrested, and may be offered the caution again. The whole point of on-the-spot police cautions is to allow constables to dispense 'justice' without any of that having to prove people gulty, or 'scrutiny' nonsense. You just get someone who is clearly not qualified to make a judgement on the matter declare themselves guilty and move on to the next mug. Similarly with fixed penalty notices. (Read the legislation for those, it's exactly like a protection racket.)
      3. He may not have been given a summons, but the police have taken such information from him as necessary to issue one later. There's little practical difference between taking his details and sending a summons if the CPS decides that they have a case, and giving him a summons now and dropping it if the CPS decides that they haven't got a case.
        It used to be virtually impossible to demand someone's name & address on a British street. There are still only 3 circumstances (afaik) where you can:
        • This, so as to issue a summons, police may arrest you if you refuse to give them details or they believe that the details that you have given are false. Obviously requires a crime to have been committed that they believe can be pinned on you.
        • Under certain bits of anti-terror legislation, requires the home secretary to designate the geographical area that you're in as being under particular threat. Currently only used to harass political opposition (re: Walter Wolfgang)
        • When issuing a fixed penalty notice.

        But you certainly can't just stop people and demand their details because you want to. That they have thus invoked one of these to take his details is a big step itself.
      --
      FGD 135
    7. Re:I know this is a lot to ask... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems to me that the "caution" is effectively an admission (confession) of guilt if the person being "cautioned" accepts it; and if the caution is refused, the refusee is arrested and tossed into a holding tank.

      The dispute over "summons" is semantic blather. Accepting the caution is effectively a summary judgment because the person accepting the caution is confessing to a civil infraction.

    8. Re:I know this is a lot to ask... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You make it sound like it was okay that the cop took his sign away.

  63. Get a Barister/Solicitor by ps3udonym · · Score: 1

    kid needs a "law talking dude". I really can't see any way that those charges could stick. Certainly if you bring up the opinion of a JUDGE it would have to be thrown out. I am not a lawyer, but isn't that a "precident"? Now there may be some issue because there was a sign involved, and that seems to be the target of the bill. However, free speach IS protected, dispite what missinformed Yanks may think, and your speach didn't fall over into the area of UNprotected speach we call "hate speech". That is, directly advocating violent action or discrimination of a person or people based on race, gender, religion or sexuality.

    I belive in this case it would have to be proven that "cult" IS a derogitory term and I think it would be extremely hard to do so. I watch "cult" movies, listen to "cult" music, and I don't think of the word as an insult, but rather a run of the mill discription. On the otherhand, take the word "asshole" or "cunt".. in what case would these NOT be termed derogitory? That is the cutting edge of difference. Scientology will try and claim that THEY find the term offensive, and hense why the law should be enforced, but ANY word in that context could be offensive, should I but declare it so. I can find the letter "E" offensive and insulting all I like, but that isn't going to mean that if someone uses it on a sign that I have the right to have them arrested or the sign taken down.

    I wouldn't worry if I were this kid. DEFINATLY get a Barister/Solicitor (You need someone who is both.. not sure which is which, but one just a laywer and the other represents you in court.. think Kingdom, you need a "Mr. Kingdom" =)). You could probibly find someone to take the case Pro Bono, or even legal aid might help. I am sure that after this you will have no shortage of willing helpers =).

    1. Re:Get a Barister/Solicitor by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      It's a minor case with a maximum fine of £1000 ($2000). Legal representation would not be worth it and the kid couldn't afford it.

    2. Re:Get a Barister/Solicitor by jrumney · · Score: 1

      DEFINATLY get a Barister/Solicitor (You need someone who is both.. not sure which is which...

      A barrister is a lawyer who has passed the "bar exam", and is thus allowed to represent clients in District and High courts. A solicitor is someone who can advise the public on legal matters. In the UK, lawyers cannot be both solicitors and barristers, and a barrister is employed by a solicitor on your behalf, not directly. Clients always deal directly with solicitors, and given the minor nature of the "crime", it will probably be tried in a Magistrates Court, where solicitors can provide representation themselves.

    3. Re:Get a Barister/Solicitor by ps3udonym · · Score: 1

      It is a risk I would not, myself, take.

    4. Re:Get a Barister/Solicitor by ps3udonym · · Score: 1

      Cool. Found out from some of my clients (I do alot of IT support for law firms) that here in Canada that all laywers are both. It is just a older term that we never stopped useing.

  64. Advice from an older generation. by DigitalEntropy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I have advice for him, it's a document titled "The Declaration of Independence". I'll be sure to send him a copy.

    --

    Thank you for reading One Man's Opinion. No participation necessary. Offer void where deemed by law or PATRIOT Act.
    1. Re:Advice from an older generation. by Twisted64 · · Score: 2, Funny

      I think he's old enough to be legally independent anyway, but thanks for the offer.

      --
      Consciousness is a myth. Trust me.
  65. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  66. azlan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    whats more worrying is that the law that they are using in this case (the public order act) was actually written between world war I and II with the express purpose of stopping the british union of fascists from bieng able to engage in policitcal rallys in public, so if there still using it actively it gives them the power to basically

    1) stop any march/protest and disband it if they feel there is likelyhood of 'civil disturbance' or violence
    2) prevent any group from effectively organising themselves, or from wearing a uniform by calling them a paramilitary organisation
    3) ban any slogan or campaign message as likely to cause offense

    essentially... an act that was originally designed to stop fascism from taking hold in the UK can now be fairly effectively turned against any public dissent (unless some version of the act has superseeded the original in its entireity with those sections removed, which i do not believe is the case)

    but as for this guy.... as far as im aware, it should be possible to refer the judge to Mr Justice Lately's speech, as well as whine about free speech (although free speech isnt really free in the UK anymore...just if the governemnt want you to be able to speak freely) as well as arguing that the word cult is an accurate description of the organisation and workings of scientology... that should get him off the hook, as the judiciary seem to actually give a dam about the law still anyway

    --azlan--

  67. Easy solution to court order by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He should completely agree with the authorities who said he used the word "cult". He should disagree with them on the status of that word. THe word "cult" is not threatening, abusive or insulting, it's simply a statement of fact.
    Any dictionary definition of that word will do, and they all say things like "exclusive system of beliefs" - princeton, "cohesive group of people...outside of mainstream" - wikipedia, "those who hold beliefs other than one's own", or "A religious group which denies the essential doctrines of Christianity" , etc, etc. Nowhere do I see these definitions as threatening, abusive, or insulting, unless it's against the law to disagree with someone.?

  68. ... Fuck 'em and their law by lordperditor · · Score: 1

    This public order law is the one The Prodigy sing about in the track "Their Law" on the "Music for the Jilted Generation" album.

    I have to agree with their sentiment in the chorus:

    ... Fuck 'em and their law.

  69. Public Order Act 1986 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Section 5
    (1) A person is guilty of an offence if he-
            (a) uses threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour,
                    or disorderly behaviour, or
            (b) displays any writing, sign or other visible representation
                    which is threatening, abusive or insulting,
                    within the hearing or sight of a person likely to be caused harassment,
                    alarm or distress thereby.

    (2) An offence under this section may be committed in a
            public or a private place, except that no offence is committed
            where the words or behaviour are used, or the writing, sign or
            other visible representation is displayed, by a person inside a
            dwelling and the other person is also inside that or another
            dwelling.

    (3) It is a defence for the accused to prove-
            (a) that he had no reason to believe that there was any
                    person within hearing or sight who was likely to be
                    caused harassment, alarm or distress, or
            (b) that he was inside a dwelling and had no reason to
                    believe that the words or behaviour used, or the writing,
                    sign or other visible representation displayed, would
                    be heard or seen by a person outside that or any other
                    dwelling, or
            (c) that his conduct was reasonable.

    (4) A constable may arrest a person without warrant ifâ"
            (a) he engages in offensive conduct which the constable
                    warns him to stop, and
            (b) he engages in further offensive conduct immediately or
                    shortly after the warning.

    (5) In subsection (4) "offensive conduct" means conduct the
            constable reasonably suspects to constitute an offence under this
            section, and the conduct mentioned in paragraph (a) and the
            further conduct need not be of the same nature.

    (6) A person guilty of an offence under this section is liable
            on summary conviction to a fine not exceeding level 3 on the
            standard scale.

    Section 6
    (4) A person is guilty of an offence under section 5 only if he
            intends his words or behaviour, or the writing, sign or other
            visible representation, to be threatening, abusive or insulting,
            or is aware that it may be threatening, abusive or insulting or
            (as the case may be) he intends his behaviour to be or is aware
            that it may be disorderly.

    http://www.opsi.gov.uk/Acts/acts1986/PDF/ukpga_19860064_en.pdf

  70. Must have been using ISO 8601 Dates by Chrisq · · Score: 3, Informative

    ISO 8601 has a year 0 (or 0000), corresponding to the Gregorian 1BC. It then goes -0001, -0002 etc for prior years.

  71. Is it offensive ? by Da_Scotch · · Score: 1

    I'm not a native English speaker; in Romanian, my mother tongue, we call all religions, including ours, a "religious cult". I really cannot grasp the offensive term in "cult". Does it sound that offensive in English ?

    1. Re:Is it offensive ? by yotto · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm not a native English speaker; in Romanian, my mother tongue, we call all religions, including ours, a "religious cult". I really cannot grasp the offensive term in "cult". Does it sound that offensive in English ?

      Here in the US, at least, the word "cult" implies a large group of followers and a shaggy-haired leader, usually having sex with all the followers. He takes all their money, they live on a commune, and at his word they'll all happily commit suicide in order to transfer their souls to a passing comet. They also stockpile weapons and molest children.

      Yes, this is all stereotypical and there are plenty of cults that are simply communes, but there have been a decent enough number of the bad cases that it's not exactly a stretch to not want your cult to be called as such.

    2. Re:Is it offensive ? by Schmorgluck · · Score: 1

      According to my findings, the Romanian term would be roughly "secta" (I can't type the accent on the "a").

      --
      There's nothing like $HOME
  72. How to handle the court case? by fishbowl · · Score: 1

    How to handle the court case?

    Make sure, in Voir Dire, that no Scientology members are in the jury panel, and make sure the judge is not a member.
    Then simply describe what the cult believes...

    --
    -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    1. Re:How to handle the court case? by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Minor offences like this don't go before a full jury in England. It will be tried before a bench of judges, usually made up of fairly ordinary middle class people (often retired) rather than legal professionals.

      If it actually gets that far (The Crown prosecution service needs to believe there's actually a case), he presents his case reasonably, and mentions the Human Rights Act, and proves that Scientology is not a religion but a dangerous cult, then I'd be surprised if the case wasn't dismissed.

    2. Re:How to handle the court case? by fishbowl · · Score: 1

      I didn't get the impression that the goal was "to get the case dismissed".

      I thought the goal was to fight Scientology to the point that it is not accepted in the UK.

      --
      -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    3. Re:How to handle the court case? by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Well, the immediate concern is to make sure that people don't face charges for calling a cult a cult. Protests aren't going to be worth a thing if Scientology can get all the protesters arrested on spurious grounds.

  73. If it isn't a religion, then what is it? by trillex · · Score: 2, Interesting

    According to this Scientology is not considered a religion in UK, but then what is it, if not a cult? As stated by a lot of other people, their practices shows that they appear more as a cult, than anything else. So what's the crime? What's the charge other than a threat?

  74. Re:The Nanny State strikes again! by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

    No beef on British Airway flights out of fear of offending Hindus?

    Funny, because I had beef in my (admittedly crappy) airline meal last time I flew on BA, a couple of months ago.

  75. Oh dear by Haoie · · Score: 1

    Anons aren't going to like this 1 bit.

    Why the word "cult"? It's not so far from the fruth.

    --
    If each mistake being made is a new one, then progress is being made.
  76. Friends in high places by gilesjuk · · Score: 1

    I'm sure this kid was arrested due to someone in the Police being a member.

  77. That's what YouTube is for... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is why cops at protests LOVE to take video cameras away, but also why they're so incredibly valuable.

    The fix is simple: get someone to tape as much of the protest as possible. If the police act abusive, release the tapes TO THE MEDIA and YouTube.

    They can't hide from public outcry. There's no appeal in the court of public opinion. If they're out of line, they'll get called on it, provided you can bring it to attention.

    The main problem with that is that the above can also be used to shaft someone who wasn't out of line with selective editing. After all, cameras can lie.

  78. Fail. by uhlume · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Dramatic or tragic irony is a dramaturgical and literary device. Unless you're claiming that the scene in question was somehow intentionally scripted, the definition you cite has no relevance.

    The relevant definition is, "an outcome of events contrary to what was, or might have been, expected," which I think anyone familiar with Scientology will agree is hardly the case here.

    --
    SIERRA TANGO FOXTROT UNIFORM
  79. "DESTRUCTIVE " cults by DannyHaszard · · Score: 1

    Jehovah's Witnesses fanatics are JUST LIKE Scientologist fanatics they rant on about how they are being 'persecuted' for the outrage over their own religious rackets that rip off the innocents. Example:Scientologist are most litigious and went ape s**t over their parody south park episode although south park slams everybody equally. I think this shows that these groups are high control and VERY insecure.Just like with David Koresh and Jim Jones. Jehovah's Witnesses are intolerant bigoted fanatics. Yes they DEMAND the 'right' to go knocking on doors to the point of intrusive illegal trespassing on private property but go nuts if anyone questions their bogus dogmas. They are a religion of bigotry to the core. The very inception of JWs was based on hate. They hate the world, they hate other religions, they hate everything about "this system of things http://www.exjws.net/

    --
    Tell the truth don't be afraid
  80. Wildly un-PC? Try wildly inaccurate. by weston · · Score: 4, Insightful

    At the risk of being wildly un-PC

    More like "wildly inaccurate." At least on the Mormon front.

    a short list of religions that fit this description would include not only Scientology, but Mormonism and Islam. All three of these fundamentally disallow their members from choosing not to be members, up to and including outright murder.

    The Mormon church not only allows people to leave, there is an established process for removing your name from the records. You *will* be hassled about this if you opt to try it -- most leaders will make you ask a few times, they'll ask you if you're sure, they'll try to talk you out of it -- but in the end, they will drop you.

    There's also the easier option, which consists of simply not going anymore and avoiding the people who periodically come by to try to reactivate you. I've heard a few outlandish tales of machinations in member's lives, but for the most part, the only tool the Mormon church has is outright preaching and a bit of peer pressure. It is remarkably easy to do whatever the hell you want, especially if you have even the smallest idea of when to keep your mouth shut.

    an ex-Mormon in Salt Lake City is going to have a very hard time buying anything, anywhere.

    I'd be interested to hear how you came by this the idea that everyday purchases are affected by religious affiliation with any real frequency in Utah, because it's complete bullshit.

    There are a variety of problems I think someone who publicly leaves/denounces the Mormon church in Utah is likely to encounter, but with a few exceptions, they're pretty much all going to be directly related to coloring of social interactions with former peers inside of the church. But not only is there a significant enough non-Mormon presence inside of Utah that this wouldn't matter from an economic perspective, I don't believe I've met the Mormon that would actually refuse to sell to an ex-member.

    1. Re:Wildly un-PC? Try wildly inaccurate. by Joe+the+Lesser · · Score: 1

      The Mormon church not only allows people to leave, there is an established process for removing your name from the records. You *will* be hassled about this if you opt to try it.

      Textbook cult behavior. The fact that there is a 'process' at all is just so they can try and guilt trip you. Scientology has a similar process and it is so grueling few make it out that way unless they pretend to be suicidal.

      --
      "I only speak the truth"
      Karma: null(Mostly affected by an unassigned variable)
    2. Re:Wildly un-PC? Try wildly inaccurate. by weston · · Score: 1

      Textbook cult behavior. The fact that there is a 'process' at all is just so they can try and guilt trip you. Scientology has a similar process and it is so grueling few make it out that way unless they pretend to be suicidal.

      It's barely even comparable -- if you're going to collapse the difference between getting out of the Mormon Church and getting out of Scientology, you may as well also collapse the difference between a divorce and having to click "OK" on a "Are you sure?" dialog when you go to delete something important.

      When I say hassled, I'm talking about the same kind of social pressure you'd get from family if you just announced you wanted to quit your $100,000 /year job and become a park ranger or public library staff at $10/hr. Nobody's going to actually stop you from doing it, but they are going to ask you questions and make sure this isn't just some weird episode.

    3. Re:Wildly un-PC? Try wildly inaccurate. by rahvin112 · · Score: 1

      an ex-Mormon in Salt Lake City is going to have a very hard time buying anything, anywhere.
      Unfortunately I can't find the parent to this post. As an EX-MORMON Living in Salt Lake Vally (in the actual city of Sandy, but still considered the Salt Lake metropolitan area) I must take serious issue with your supposed statement of fact. Not only are there plenty of Ex-mormon's in Salt Lake, there is an internal name for those that no longer attend church, refered to jokingly as Jack-mormons. But not only that, you might be surprised to find out that Mormon's don't wear tattoo's or have horns that identify them as Mormons. As a result it's nearly impossible to determine Mormon vs. not-Mormon. Even if it were, discrimination based on faith is illegal and would be prosecuted, were someone stupid enough to engage in such behavior. Contrary to your supposed statement of fact I go shopping all the time and purchase whatever I feel like, amazingly, my lack of belief in god is never an issue as a baptized former Mormon.

      Atheists born and raised in the church are quite common in the valley, probably even around 5-10% of the population in the salt lake valley. Ex-mormons would probably be the largest group, comprising at least 20% of the population with Catholics as the largest "other" religion, near the neighborhood of 20% of the total population of the valley. In Salt Lake City proper (actually quite small) Mormon's aren't the dominant relgion (there is no majority religion, both mormon's and catholics are minority religions) and in fact there hasn't been a Mormon Mayor of SLC in about 20 years. Living in the suburbs of SLC about 1/2 my neighbors are non-mormon/ex-mormon.

      Before you make some ill-informed false statements about Salt Lake City I suggest you visit and actually take a moment to understand Mormon's. In my experience Mormon's are far easier to deal with than Southern Baptists. Rarely will an ordinary church attending Mormon try to "save" you outside the Mormon church's official recruiting system (missionaries). Rarely with an ordinary church attending Mormon lecture you about the inaccuracies and falseness of evolution or science in general. The same can't be said of the southern baptists I've met.

      And for what it's worth the FLDS (the fundamentalist Mormons that still believe in polygamy) are not like what you propose Mormons are like either. They are very much like Mormon's are any other American, but given their history they are very very lacking in trust of non believers due to the persecution they have suffered. The seizing of children in Texas is not the first time some state government claiming to act in the interest of the people has went in and seized their children and wives and moved them out. Given their history they have a well deserved, and needed IMO, distrust of those claiming to act in the interest of their members. The seizing of 400+ children for what were apparently faked abuse claims simply on the basis of beliefs is a tragedy of justice.
    4. Re:Wildly un-PC? Try wildly inaccurate. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Up till the very last couple of centuries anyone who declared themselves to be non-Christian anywhere in western Europe would have had a very hard time of it. Unless they were both well-born and very very rich or powerful. The Jews, for example.

  81. What is wrong with the use of the word cult.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most if not all religions are made up of two or more parts. The two main parts being the scriptures and the cult. The word cult can be used to simply describe the worship of a deity or an ideal. It actually stands to reason that in order to be a real religion Scientology has to include a cult of worship otherwise its just a book that people read.

    Just because the media have used to word to highlight what might be called bad forms of worship does not mean that there is anything wrong in using the word as a passive and obvious descriptive word that is applicable to all religions including christianity, islam, etc..

    The use of the word cult to describe a religion is the same as saying the hot fire or the cold ice ... the description is implied by, and an inherent characteristic of the noun.

  82. Cults by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But Scientology is a cult ... and so is Christianity, to be fair.

    Lucious Piso and Anus Piso wrote the Gospels between 60AD-to-90AD, based on the story of Nimrod/Tammuz. The only historian from that area and time who references Jesus was Josephus, and he was proven a fraud, a pen-name of one of the Pisos.

  83. Advice by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

    My advice (knowing that IANAL) is : don't worry. Scientology lawyers are trying frighten people by making this procedure appear in the press. They plan on loosing. UK is known to tolerate public hate speeches of radical imams without prosecution. I don't think the law has changed ever since.

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    1. Re:Advice by jrumney · · Score: 1

      Only reason they wouldn't would be that he refused to take down the sign having been asked several times.
      Is it a crime to disobey an obviously ludicrous order from a law enforcement officer? Does it help their case in the slightest? If not, I don't see why the CPS would take that into consideration at all. Obviously if he'd complied, it would never have gotten this far, but now that it has, it is the legality of the actual case before them that the CPS has to look at.
    2. Re:Advice by EEDAm · · Score: 1

      Don't confuse the reasonableness, or lack of it, with the issue of refusing to follow the instructions of a police officer several times in a row. Its the latter that is the issue and although the subject matter of his banner seems to me to be entirely reasonable, they will take into account his lack of compliance with a police order as contributing to public disorder.

    3. Re:Advice by jrumney · · Score: 1

      Don't confuse the reasonableness, or lack of it, with the issue of refusing to follow the instructions of a police officer several times in a row.

      This would seem to be the dictionary definition of "police state", where police can give unreasonable orders based on a deliberate misreading of the law, which the public has no option but to follow. But from the country that brought us ASBOs and CCTV everywhere, I guess I shouldn't be surprised. Luckily the CPS saw sense on this occasion.

  84. The same act that prosecutes im can defend him. by NimbleSquirrel · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Under Section 5 of the Public Order Act 1986 paragraph 3(c) he can defend his action, by saying it was reasonable. There is evidence to back him up: in a 1984 ruling, a UK High court JUDGE called Scientology a "cult" that was "corrupt, sinister and dangerous". Then in May 6th 1991 Time Magazine called Scientology the "Cult of Greed and Power". It is not like he is the first person to call Scientology a cult.

    The prosecution could go further to the UK Racial and Religious Hatred Act 2006. However it can easily be argued having a sign that uses the word cult to describe Scientology is simply criticism, which is specifically protected under the Section 26J of the act. I think the prosecution is going have a hard time bringing this to court.

  85. Uhmm... no. No he wasn't by 91degrees · · Score: 2, Insightful

    He was charged for carrying a sign saying "Scientology is not a religion, it's a dangerous cult".

    Specifically he was charged for carrying a sign likely to cause alarm, distress or harassment. Use of the word "Cult" is largely irrelevant.

    It's still a trumped up charge, but saying it's for calling Scientology a cult is completely misrepresenting it. Misleading stories are counter productive when you already have a fragrant abuse of the law.

  86. Common sense has gone out of style by FornaxChemica · · Score: 1

    This is preposterous. Who cares if he called scientology a cult or something else ? He's entitled to his own opinion, he could call any religion a cult or a mass brainwashing illusion if he wanted to, he's not inciting to violence against people, he's trying to raise awareness, that's how freedom of speech goes. At best, what he is doing is making it more difficult for Scientology to gain new followers; well, they'll just have to be more convincing if their purpose is really that pure and honest !

    Laws are guidelines for justice but not justice itself, how can anyone be so stupid as to read laws word by word, regardless of the circumtances, without room for interpretation or exception ? To see them wearing V's mask in the video makes the analogy with some of the events depicted in the film all the more eerie.

  87. We're not worried about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    then deciding someone is a murderer.

    So why this one?

    1. Re:We're not worried about by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      then deciding someone is a murderer.

      So why this one? If an individual is accused of murdering someone then a jury of his/her peers should decide if he is guilty or not. That's not 100% reliable, but the system needs to take the decision since you have to either punish someone if they are found guilty or let them go if they are found innocent. And the jury probably helps a bit, since the prosecution have to convince more than one person.

      But having government bureaucrats decide whether is a cult or a religion doesn't mean anything. Religions IMO suck to varying degrees. Scientology and Islam happen to suck a great deal.

      But still, I don't believe it is up to a secular state to decide how much religions suck. And labelling a group a 'cult' or whatever may lead to members of that group being discriminated against. The process is flawed too since it doesn't allow members of the public to veto a conviction.

      I'd prefer to let juries to decide on individual cases and punish those individuals. Elected governments make the laws to try to catch all the anti social behaviour and not catch all the non antisocial behviour. But I think having the government decide which organisations are good and which are bad is dangerous. The people that started America believed in freedom of association and religion, not in established churches. I don't think they would have supported a state, no matter how benign, deciding whether a religion, no matter how malign is a cult or not because that seems to be allowing the state to regulate religion. And the state regulating religion is something they were quite really very skeptical of. The amount of harm religion can do is inversely proportional to the amount of power it has. Allowing the state to regulate it opens up the possibility that one religion might capture state power and use it to declare competing religions cults.
      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
  88. Church of England is also a cult? by BradMajors · · Score: 1

    Apparently it is OK for the Telegraph to call the "Church of England" a cult. "What is the point, they ask, of having a national Church, with the Queen at its head, with Bishops Spiritual sitting in the legislature, when the institution is shrinking to little more than a minority cult, a weekend pastime for those too dysfunctional to take up Pilates?" http://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2008/05/09/do0902.xml

  89. The Late Dr. Gene Scott said by LM741N · · Score: 0, Redundant

    that "the only difference between a cult and a religion is that one has more members than the other." There you have it from a well known theologian.

  90. Advice by EEDAm · · Score: 1

    Since the 15 year old boy is looking for advice, it should be noted that the case has been referred to the CPS (Crown Prosecution Service) whose job is to decide whether there is a viable case to answer here or whether to proceed 'is in the public interest' before committing it to court. My advice to him (and IAFL - oh dear there goes the karma) is to relax and work with Liberty who have lawyers on their staff. I *strongly* suspect the CPS will drop this given the description of Scientology as a cult by the judge the boy quoted. Only reason they wouldn't would be that he refused to take down the sign having been asked several times. GL!

  91. The Placard! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1) Go to the Guardian link above.
    2) Click 'Placard' in the 3rd paragraph down.
    3) ?????
    4) PROFIT!

  92. copyright? not exactly by leomekenkamp · · Score: 1

    The Bible, Koran, and Talmud aren't copyrighted, even though they could be,(...)

    Since these books are hundreds and hundreds of years old and the current copyright term is 70 years after the death of the author (or less, depending on locaction), one can safely say that these books cannot be copyrighted. Don't know about newer translations, though.

    --
    Wenn ist das Nunstueck git und Slotermeyer? Ja! Beiherhund das Oder die Flipperwaldt gersput.
    1. Re:copyright? not exactly by Shimbo · · Score: 1

      Since these books are hundreds and hundreds of years old and the current copyright term is 70 years after the death of the author (or less, depending on locaction), one can safely say that these books cannot be copyrighted.

      Actually, the King James is still copyright in the UK. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_James_Version_of_the_Bible#Copyright_status

  93. Help me grok slashdot's moderation system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is the parent comment still at a perfect "(Score:5, Informative)" while the correction still has a flat zero and stays below the threshold? (Yes, I'm new here.)

  94. Calling scientology a cult by WereCatf · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I openly call scientology a cult and something I have no wish to have anything to do with it. I just am glad I live in Finland, I can not be sued for calling a cult a cult ^^ Seriously though, this is starting to get really unnerving :O A 15 year old getting sued for such a thing? Geesh!

    --
    -Nita
  95. There are quotes by british courts and officials, by spazmonkey · · Score: 2, Insightful

    that state unequivocally that COS is a cult. Members were or are even banned from emigration into the UK. It is not recognized legally there as a religion.
    Operation Clambake has a just a few of them here; http://www.xenu.net/archive/judge_quotes.html
    This should be more than enough fodder to fight the matter on if CPS even decides to press it to test.

  96. definition of 'cult' by TriggerHappy · · Score: 1
  97. tolerance of intolerance by circletimessquare · · Score: 2, Insightful

    is, by logical and moral extension, intolerance itself

    meanwhile, intolerance of intolerance, is, by logical and moral extension, tolerance

    now you can say that intolerance is a loosey goosey term that can be applied to anyone's actions. but, no, intolerance is not a random pejorative. it can be concretely and precisely defined in all situations: "i fight against xyz" "what is xyz?" "xyz stands against abc" "what is abc?" etc... your terms can be iteratively reduced to find at the root of any instinct fundamentally intolerant or tolerant impulses

    example: at face value, fighting scientology can be called intolerant. but we must iteratively examine what your terms are. here the next object before us is scientology, which most definitely does intolerant things. going further then, can the objects of scientology's intolerance be defined as intolerant as well? no. scientology stands against liberal notions of freedom of expression. so here the iteration ends: scientology fights against tolerant principles. therefore, to be intolerant of that which is intolerant of tolerant principles is, by logical extension, tolerance

    so the actions of the teenager in this situation is intolerance of intolerance, which, by logical and moral extension, is a form of tolerance

    or rather, its a good definition of tolerance in a better world, a world where those who take real world action against intolerant organizations and governments in this world are supported by liberalism. well, according to a classical definition of liberalism, such freedom fighters are supported

    but such fighters are not supported by the inert fungus that has infected the academia and cliquish so-called intellects of western liberalism. these so-called liberals embrace indifference or outright acceptance of real liberalism's enemies: virulent forces of religious fundamentalism and authoritarianism that hold sway over vast parts of the globe. and they do this, with the highest of ironies, in the name of tolerance, of all concepts

    i await the awakening of true classical liberalism in the childish naive confused west. virulent religious fundamentalism and authoritarian regimes must make more victories and inroads against the dying west before the old spirit is shocked and awakened, and the current fashionable "tolerance" of vile ideologies is dethroned. you spread tolerance by fighting that which destroys tolerance in this world. do not make any mistake about that

    religious fundamentalism and authoritarianism are not going away on their own. on the contrary, they are growing, and they are your enemy if you embrace the ideals that rose in the enlightenment. these enemies must be fought, in the name of tolerance, in the name of liberalism. understand that, or understand nothing about your world

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:tolerance of intolerance by wolferz · · Score: 0

      Yes! So lets just cut to the chase and kill all the evil people in the world, starting with the Muslims (obviously), so that we no longer tolerate their evil ways. /sarcasm

      Tolerance of intolerance is called freedom. Intolerance of intolerance is fascism and is itself just intolerance of a view that is unpopular. Whether the opinion you are intolerant of is itself intolerance is irrelevant. By refusing to tolerate their opinions you are by the definition of intolerance being intolerant. For freedom to exist an opinion and the ability to express that opinion must never be curtailed no matter how unpopular, selfish, or evil an opinion might be.

      See, to simplify this with an analogy... killing all the spiders to save the butterflies is a great idea on the face of it... but in doing so you yourself become a "spider." Who's gonna kill you? Who's gonna kill them? Where does it end?

      Your arguments against being tolerant are little more than circular logic. It is only your opinion that the other person is being intolerant because, if the rest of your argument is to be believed, it could be that Scientologists are being tolerant through their intolerance of some one else' intolerance. It begs the question "how do you know they are intolerant?" Also, trying to control the actions and opinions of others isn't liberal by any stretch of the imagination.

    2. Re:tolerance of intolerance by Joe+the+Lesser · · Score: 1

      Intolerance is only right when you are being intolerant of crimes against humanity, which the CoS purports as part of it's written policy.

      As a liberal I don't grudge the CoS to say what they will or believe what they will, but there are clear human rights violations which they are guilty of, and that is why it is okay to attack them. It is about human justice, not tolerance.

      The KKK and other ignorant/intolerant groups must be tolerated to preach what they will, but never allowed to practice their ideas. When they cross the line we must stop them.

      Only then can freedom defeat oppression, and if promote public education they will fade into the dustbin of history.

      Because CoS actually does practice their crimes, we can be intolerant of them.

      --
      "I only speak the truth"
      Karma: null(Mostly affected by an unassigned variable)
  98. Re:There are quotes by british courts and official by jrumney · · Score: 1

    Members were or are even banned from emigration into the UK.

    I'm not aware of any ban on any religious or cult group leaving or entering the UK. Perhaps Scientologists don't qualify for certain special visas that real religious leaders can get to visit on church business, but if they fit other criteria I don't see why they would not be allowed in.

  99. If it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck.... by gemtech · · Score: 1

    it must be a duck. I mean cult.

    --
    Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. Albert Einstein
  100. Re:If it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck. by gemtech · · Score: 1

    and then I just realized: Bart Simpson is voiced by a $cientologist. I'll have to fix that.

    --
    Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. Albert Einstein
  101. why do i want to kill muslims? by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    i didn't read the rest of your post after that bit of idiocy

    that reaction to what i said is so hysterical its not worth addressing

    i'll simply say this: if in your mind what i said turns into "lets kill all the muslims" then you haven't understood or read anything i said. you suffer from some sort of prejudicial replacement for thought due to the presence of an idea or two that smells like something you dislike. next time, try reading comprehension, what i actually say and think, rather than some sort of kneejerk partisan propaganda you function under based on vague impressions. you don't have an open mind. your mind is closed and propaganda-addled

    no one, no one is thinking about such a heinous crime as "kill all the muslims" except for one person. you

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:why do i want to kill muslims? by Millennium · · Score: 1

      i'll simply say this: if in your mind what i said turns into "lets kill all the muslims" then you haven't understood or read anything i said.

      We understand perfectly. Your "tolerance" and "intolerance" are nothing more than euphemisms for "us" and "them": not at all unlike the so-called "intolerant" groups you mention. Your targets are different, but the hate remains.

  102. No, Correct by Morosoph · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Prior to Alanis Morrissette's album, this is precisely how the word "irony" was used. In overcorrecting for "rain on your wedding day", which is simply bad news, it seems that people have turned to their dictionaries for the original literary menaing. Being geeks, the honest, popular yet informed meaning of "irony" is being dropped for an acedemic definition sepcific to the English department.

    Besides, in terms of prediction, what matters is whether the 15-year-old kid would have predicted the outcome. If you'd done the same thing, it wouldn't have been irony, but rather would have been civil disobedience.

    1. Re:No, Correct by Sobrique · · Score: 1

      The most ironic thing about the song 'ironic' was that she didn't know what irony was.

    2. Re:No, Correct by Adlopa · · Score: 5, Funny

      So "irony" isn't a synonym of "metallic", then? Hm.

    3. Re:No, Correct by RMH101 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Unless you're marrying a Weatherman.

    4. Re:No, Correct by sm62704 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Irony is the thingy your mommy uses to make your shirtys flat.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    5. Re:No, Correct by Joe+the+Lesser · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Which therefore means the song is actually extremely ironic, and she is a genius.

      --
      "I only speak the truth"
      Karma: null(Mostly affected by an unassigned variable)
    6. Re:No, Correct by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Blackadder: Baldrick, have you no idea what irony is?

      Baldrick: Yes, it's like goldy and bronzy only it's made out of iron.

    7. Re:No, Correct by Starcub · · Score: 1

      Besides, in terms of prediction, what matters is whether the 15-year-old kid would have predicted the outcome. If you'd done the same thing, it wouldn't have been irony, but rather would have been civil disobedience.
      The definition provided by the poster you responded to was the more correct definition. Irony is identified by recognizing the contrariness of the outcome with respect to the initiator; the actors need not be aware of their roles for a situation to be recognized as ironic since the recognition of irony is subjective, even if the definition is objective. For example, your typical slashdotian 'geek' might accurately consider this statement:

      Being geeks, the honest, popular yet informed meaning of "irony" is being dropped for an acedemic definition sepcific to the English department.
      ironic because to his mind, "geeks" are techno-junkies that don't care about english, but a 'geek' who graduated with a degree in English would not.
  103. scientology is a burglary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and the reason it hasn't been put down, so far, is money... end of game :(

  104. scientology is not a cult by someone1234 · · Score: 1

    Cults are religious splinter groups. Scientology is not religious and not a splinter group either.
    It is a simple tax evasion setup spiced with other criminal activities.

    --
    Patents Drive Free Software as Hurricanes Drive Construction Industry
  105. This is brilliant news... by MrNemesis · · Score: 1

    ...if it comes into law because it means that anti-Scientology protestors will be legally obliged to obfuscate their placards so as not to say anything offensive.

    SCIENTOLOGY - IT'S A CU*T
    WHAT A BUNCH OF CU*TISTS
    COME ON YOU CU*TS

    N.B. to americans not used to judicious use of the "C" word perjorative, please don't take this post as some sort of sweary troll. It's nowhere near as offensive here in the UK as it is in the states. It's not the sort of thing you'd say at dinner with the in-laws, but it's not the sort of thing that gets you blacklisted as some sort of social outcast. If this is the case in the states as well I apologise for being patonising, since it's the general consensus that saying "cunt" gets you universally reviled by everybody over there.[/derail]

    --
    Moderation Total: -1 Troll, +3 Goat
  106. What else would you call it? by louzerr · · Score: 1

    You can't call a cult a "cult" in England?!?

    Can you call a politician a "politician", or is that considered insulting, too?

    "Lawyer" is probably the most insulting word of all.

    --
    "The large print giveth, and the small print taketh away" -- "Step Right Up", Tom Waits
  107. Belgium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In Belgium the Church of Scientology was prosecuted for being a cult.
    In the UK you get prosecuted for calling the cat by its name...

  108. So sue me by dreamchaser · · Score: 1

    I changed my sig in honor of this young man. Enough is enough. Death to Scientology!

  109. let the judge(s) read L.Ron's tripe by flyingviking · · Score: 1

    A little L.Ron reading and the judges will recognize the sign as descriptive, not inflammatory.

  110. Re:Uhmm... no. No he wasn't by squizzar · · Score: 1

    Mmmm fragrant abuse of the law...

    I'll agree though, it does stink.

  111. microsoftianism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, definitions vary wildly ... in general, a "cult":

    • Typically follows one or more highly charismatic leaders, whose word is taken to be unquestionable.
    • Clearly divides the world into "us" and "them".
    • Believes that the world outside the "us" group is fundamentally bad/evil.
    • As a result, believes that interaction with the outside world is dangerous to members of the "us" group and is to be avoided when possible, or carefully supervised.
    • As a result, tends to form more or less isolated enclaves to minimize contact with outsiders, or mediate such contact through trusted group members in positions of authority.
    • As a result, believes that untrained persons interacting with the outside world are tainted and need to be carefully reassimilated to the group.
    • Typically holds beliefs radically different from what is considered mainstream or acceptable for the immediately-surrounding society.
    • As a result of the above, typically experiences a high degree of tension with the outside world, which can create a feedback loop (above tendencies lead to tension, which aggravates above tendencies, which leads to more tension...).
    Uncanny how that resembles Microsoft's volunteer marketing minions.
  112. NYCL to the rescue !! by unity100 · · Score: 1

    Now is the time for nycl to post out a wall of text full of advice for that kid.

  113. He needn't worry... by spiritraveller · · Score: 1

    The First Amendment of the United States Const...

    oh wait...

    Never mind.

    1. Re:He needn't worry... by BobTheLawyer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually there's a good chance the Human Rights Act will provide much the same defence (although it may not even be necessary to cite the HRA as the Public Order Act itself has a defence of "reasonableness" which I'd expect to apply to most political speech).

      Hopefully the guy involved will stop asking for advice on bulletin boards and find himself a decent human rights lawyer (many of which I am confident would take this on for free).

  114. Re:Uhmm... no. No he wasn't by 91degrees · · Score: 1

    Velly solly. I must have been typing on a chinese keyboard.

  115. Who or what is being "Insulted?" by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

    In the UK do churches or religions have "personhood?" because you can't "insult" or harm an inanimate object.

    The sign said "Scientology is a cult," as far as I know, that may offend some people, but it insults or intends to insult no actual people.

    File suit against the officer writing the summons for false arrest and violation of your freedoms. The cult of scientology should not be protected like this.

  116. Get out! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Get the hell out of Oceania while you still can!!!

  117. Quick question then... by hassanchop · · Score: 1

    but there are plenty of documents (for example Margna Carta) which were developed in the UK and limit state power.


    If that's true, how come none of them seem to be doing that?

  118. Nuke Nuke Washington!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Around the time of the Iraq invasion, I distinctly remember seeing a video on the nightly news in the US showing muslim protesters in London chanting.

    "Death To Tony Blair!"
    "Death To George Bush!"
    "Nuke! Nuke! Washington!"

    I also remember the police were there, NOT invoking the Public Order Act, but making sure they were safe to spew hate.

    Londonistan.

  119. Okay, I'll play straight to your troll. by reiisi · · Score: 1

    And it really is a troll, whether you think you mean it so or not. Somebody brings it up here every time there is any way to manufacture an excuse for the question, and it really is not relevant most of the time, present context included.

    The easy definition:

    Religion is what you believe (except sometimes in the case that you claim to be atheist or agnostic) about the world around you and the universe in general, how it ticks and how it all came to be, the bases for determining good and evil and answering moral questions (especially the question of evil), and the bases for your choices of priorities.

    Some of those who claim atheism or agnosticism ascribe the same thing to a system or a collection of systems of philosophies and/or cosmologies, which system or collection is constructed so as to avoid reference to superstition, or to a being or entity that would normally be called God

    (Others simply use agnosticism and/or atheism as an excuse to not go to the bother of trying to figure out what they themselves believe or why. They claim it should all be obvious, and they tend to speak of science in religious tones, and it's no wonder why.)

    A cult is the same thing (concepts, system/collection of philosophies, etc.) for the other guy, if it makes you uncomfortable, gets in your way, or takes something away from you that you, according to your religious or basic philosophical beliefs, believe to be your right.

    That's the easy definition, and, while it is not correct, it is meaningful and useful if you let it cause you to think seriously about what you yourself believe and what you think you don't believe, and why.

    --
    Computer memory is just fancy paper, CPUs just fancy pens with fancy erasers; the 'net is just a fancy backyard fence.
  120. Let's arrest the Pope too? by protomala · · Score: 1

    The Pope called all cristians religions that are not catholic, including lutherns, anglicans, ortodox, cults.
    Why no one goes and arrest him?

  121. Leave the tin foil hat at home, pick ut the torch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shawn had already stopped protesting/documenting the cult and had become increasingly sicker. He was indeed showing signs of nearing the end and had written several notes to his friends.
    I don't think it serves anyone to treat it as anything but a tragic suicide unless evidence to the contrary should surface, or evidence of the investigation being compromised.
    So let's remeber Shawn and carry on his mission. At least 10 people have risen up to take his place, in fact hundreds have done so, and thousands if you just count the large protests.
    For an example of somebody doing something similar to what Shawn did, see youtube.com/PlymouthScientology.
    These guys had never protested against Scientology before this year, and they are becomming very good at it.

  122. Some traits of religions vs cults by Nerdposeur · · Score: 1

    Whats the difference between religions and cults? As far as I can tell they really are the same thing.
    Cult = Small unpopular religion Religion = Large Popular cult.

    When I was in college, my psychology professor (I think she was an atheist herself) defined various traits of cults for us. I don't remember them all, but some of the key points were secrecy about beliefs, control over members, and a moneymaking scheme. Fanatical devotion to a leader was another - think David Koresh, Charles Manson, etc, who practically teach their followers to worship them.

    At the time, there was a quasi-Christian cult on campus which (supposedly) made members confess their darkest secrets, told them where to live and with whom, forbid them to have friends outside the group so that it would become very hard to leave, etc. I can confirm only the latter two statements based on my conversation with a member of the group.

    You can see this same control in Scientology: you pay big money to be "audited," i.e. give them blackmail info, and they guard their beliefs closely. Same for the Masons and other groups.

    By contrast, the Baptist church I grew up in was not secretive about its beliefs, exerted no real control over me, and never batted an eye when I left - moved to another town and joined a Presbyterian church with (obviously) no ties to them. Presbyterians (PCA) define their beliefs very openly, pointing to explicit documents you can find on the web if you like.

    You may think religions and cults are equally silly in their beliefs, but by my professor's definition, they are very different in how they treat their people. (I do think that there are "Christian" churches that would qualify as cults, but that isn't the rule.)

  123. Your so called"buddy's" conviction was thrown out by hassanchop · · Score: 5, Informative

    I knew a guy who was charged for shouting an obscene comment to a buddy while they were kayaking near a swimming area...


    http://www.freedomforum.org/templates/document.asp?documentID=15992

    I think you should have said "I read a story about a guy..." because we read it too. And that way when you find out that his conviction was overturned on appeal, you won't look so silly.

    "TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. -- The Michigan Court of Appeals yesterday struck down a 105-year-old law against using vulgar language in front of women and children, throwing out the conviction of a canoeist who let loose a stream of curses after falling into the water.

    A three-judge panel ruled in favor of Timothy Joseph Boomer. An Arenac County jury had found him guilty in 1999 of swearing after tumbling into the Rifle River."

    If you knew the guy like you implied, you'd know that too.

    And the obscenity laws you talk about have repeatedly been ruled unconstitutional when challenged.

  124. Oblig. Simpsons by HungSoLow · · Score: 1

    Bart: Church, cult, cult, church. So we'll get bored someplace else every Sunday. Does this really change our everyday lives?

  125. It is a cult no? by raind · · Score: 1

    Cite me

    --
    Get up!
  126. So what happens when... by hassanchop · · Score: 1

    And I have to agree that giving up a small part of one freedom in exchange for a much bigger freedom, might not be such a bad idea.


    So what are you going to do when they take a freedom you actually care about, and you can't say a thing about it because that freedom was already taken?

    Your point, and by extension your professors point, are crap.
  127. Britain 1, USA 0 by sm62704 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    When I saw this headline in iGoogle this morning (yes, slashdot is the most prominent site I have there) of course my reaction was WTF???

    It seems that English speaking countries are in a race to see who can become "Oceania" first. Britain is winning, but then again Eric Arthur Blair was British. I'm starting to believe some of the wags at slashdot who say he was an optimist (I think someone's sig says it too).

    The thing is, the fact that this kid was prosecuted says to me that any British subject can be thrown in jail at any time at all for saying anything at all. The dictionary puts no derogatory meaning at all to the word "cult".

    1. a particular system of religious worship, esp. with reference to its rites and ceremonies.
    2. an instance of great veneration of a person, ideal, or thing, esp. as manifested by a body of admirers: the physical fitness cult.
    3. the object of such devotion.
    4. a group or sect bound together by veneration of the same thing, person, ideal, etc.
    5. Sociology. a group having a sacred ideology and a set of rites centering around their sacred symbols.
    6. a religion or sect considered to be false, unorthodox, or extremist, with members often living outside of conventional society under the direction of a charismatic leader.
    7. the members of such a religion or sect.
    8. any system for treating human sickness that originated by a person usually claiming to have sole insight into the nature of disease, and that employs methods regarded as unorthodox or unscientific.

    -adjective
    9. of or pertaining to a cult.
    10. of, for, or attracting a small group of devotees: a cult movie.
    The only one of the eight definitions posted that can in any way be considered derogatory is fittingly #6, and Scientology is certainly unorthodox and extremist. Then again, so are Islam, Bhuddism, Hinduism, Shintoism, and Judism (not to mention Atheism) in Britain (afaik), and Christianity is unorthodox and extremist in Muslim countries.

    It is now illegal to discuss religion in Britain. If you are British and you post a comment in this thread, your government can throw you in jail.

    But we in the US don't have a lot of room to talk. As I wrote two years ago,

    But our own freedom to speak carries such heavy limitations that to think we are better than the Chinese is laughable. You can be arrested for "hate speech." If you badmouth the wrong corporation (and face it, the corporations are the government here, the politicians only being figureheads who do the corporations' bidding) you will be slapped down with a S.L.A.P.P. suit. You won't go to jail, but you will be financially ruined.

    2600.org wasn't allowed to link to an algorithm (DeCSS). The courts have held that you have no freedom of speech when writing in a computer language.

    Our freedom of speech is illusory.

    Religion? Again there's China, and Cuba. However, I don't think that Christianity or Hinduism are illegal in Saudia Arabia.

    On the other hand, children have been suspended and even expelled from school for evangelizing. They're being punished both for their speech and their religion.

    As to freedom of assembly, that's been gone for quite some time. You want to "petition the government for a redress of grievances" by protesting en masse in front of the statehouse? You're going to go to jail for not having a permit- in short, you must have permission to petition the government by peaceful assembly. Having to ask permission doesn't seem too free to me.
    As I argued in the linked story, the US bill of rights in "our" Constitution has become meaningless in the last two centuries.

    Welcome to Oceana, formerly called "Earth", number six.
    --
    mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    1. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by pnewhook · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I agree. Every religion in the world can be considered a cult by other religions because their beliefs are not mainstream in the other society.

      Even within a religion you can have cult references. American Christian Fundamentalists are certainly considered a cult by most Catholics and Anglicans that I know.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    2. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please switch sides. Your hyperbole is making things worse.

    3. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by DrgnDancer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The thing is, the fact that this kid was prosecuted says to me that any British subject can be thrown in jail at any time at all for saying anything at all. You know, had you read the article, you'd have seen the last line:

      We did not advise on this specific case prior to the summons being issued - which the police can do without reference to us - but if we receive a file we will review it in the normal way according to the code for crown prosecutors. He hasn't been prosecuted. His file hadn't even reached the Crown Prosecutors' (British equivalent of the DA) desks at press time. It is entirely possible that the whole thing will be laughed at and ignored. Hopefully he'll sue the London PD in that case. So far this is only an example of a police officer overreaching her authority. Unfortunate, but it happens. Should prosecution proceed, that would be something to make me worry about the future of free speech rights in Britain.
      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    4. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1, Troll

      The problem is the violent reactions to any criticism of islam. The west has "responded" by appeasing them. There is of course the problem that the quran itself is an extremely racist book, so equal treatment of religions and outlawing hate speech de-facto means outlawing islam (unless you consider "all non-muslims are lower than animals, you should never trust them, and only killing a bunch of them when you get the chance will help" just another "nice" statement. Then again, by Obama's standards that probably IS a nice statement).

      Since a certain prophet did indeed kill his critics (and obviously this was upon command of a certain imaginary friend of his), a certain religion consider's killing it's critics holy, and they have offices in mecca (a city where you can get beheaded for not being a muslim). Google "asma bint marwan". They even left her kids for dead.

      However there is no non-discriminatory way to prevent criticism of islam without making criticizing anything that calls itself a religion illegal.

      The govt are weasels, so they'll just appease scientology too. Wonder when the vatican will get the hint.

    5. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by rtb61 · · Score: 5, Interesting
      It is fairly clear that the article is in fact pointing out far more sinister overtones "the City of London police came under fire two years ago when it emerged that more than 20 officers, ranging from constable to chief superintendent, had accepted gifts worth thousands of pounds from the Church of Scientology".

      It would appear that an independent investigation by another regulatory authority needs to be carried out to investigate possibly corrupt links between the scientology cult and the London police force.

      The cult has a history of being willing to traitorously infiltrate government legal authorities to serve it's own subversive and criminal purposes. Perhaps this flagrant abuse of the law will justly trigger that investigation. I am sure a lot of other countries will be taking a very close look at what happens in this case and whether the cult intends to or already has extended this pattern of behaviour into other countries.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    6. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by mikael · · Score: 2, Funny

      There is a small suburb in Aberdeenshire called "Cults". So if you were to make a roadsign with this word and an arrow on it, you would have a alibi that it was a direction sign and not a political comment.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    7. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by bob.appleyard · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's odd that they're still using the Public Order Act 1986, when the Protection From Harassment Act 1997 or Serious Organised Crime and Policing Act 2005 pretty much give the authorities carte blanche to silence protest. One would have thought the police would have realised the amount of power they actually have now.

      The Protection from Harassment Act allows the Crown to prosecute anyone causing a person "alarm or distress" if this involves "conduct on at least two occasions." Conduct, it tells us, "includes speech"(5). Under this law, in other words, it is not necessary to demonstrate "threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour" to secure a prosecution. ... the first three people prosecuted were all peaceful protesters. It is now used routinely against non-violent animal rights protesters and people demonstrating peacefully outside military bases and at arms fairs.

      ...

      The Serious Organised Crime and Police Act would have been even more useful. Buried in the middle of this enormous piece of legislation, and missed by every MP who debated the bill, is a section on "harassment intended to deter lawful activities". Under this act, the definition of a "course of conduct" is broadened to include causing alarm or distress to "two or more persons"(6). In other words, Green would only have had to approach two revellers once to have fallen under suspicion of breaching the act. It appears to have been deliberately designed to criminalise protest. "Harassment" now involves seeking "to persuade any person ... not to do something that he is entitled or required to do, or to do something that he is not under any obligation to do."(7) Again, there is no defence for peaceful protest.

      Some nutty environmentalist.

      --
      How dare you be so modest!! You conceited bastard!!
    8. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by SeaDuck79 · · Score: 5, Informative

      True, but there are objective definitions.

      First, on matters of adherence to biblical doctrine, St. Francis said this: "In essentials, unity. In non-essentials, liberty. In all things, charity". This means that difference of opinion over worship style, dress, etc. should be unimportant, and shouldn't get in the way of focusing on the essentials of learning to follow God, and those differences don't define cults.

      When defining a cult, Dr. Walter Martin (RIP) wrote the definitive work in the 1970's called "The Kingdom of the Cults". It is an exhaustive, massive reference book that simply points out where each and every religious group in the world differs from Biblical doctrine.

      You know when you're in a cult when:

      1) The group is led by a charismatic leader who demands obedience to his word above any others.
      2) The leader insists on doing your thinking for you, i.e. arranged marriages, etc.
      3) The group grants teachings that are not the Bible equal or greater standing than the Bible.
      4) The leader teaches that all other churches/groups/whatever are missing it, and only HIS way is really hearing God.
      5) The leader doesn't even attempt to live by his own principles.

      Sounds like Scientology fits the definition to me.

      I'm definitely crossing the U.K. off my travel list. They've gone completely 'round the bend.

    9. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by AGMW · · Score: 2, Insightful
      3) The group grants teachings that are not the Bible equal or greater standing than the Bible.

      Do what now? So this berk's list of tests for whether or not you're in a cult uses the bible as some sort of yardstick?

      Anyone else uncomfortable with that please raise your hands!

      Here's my take on the whole religion affair:
      There are multiple religions and they mostly don't like other religions, each saying they are the true religion and the others are false. From this I can conclude that the chances that your religion is the correct one (if indeed there is a correct one) is small, therefore it is tantamount to child abuse to brainwash^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hteach your religion to children, your own or anyone elses.

      Let's not enforce any religion on children. Let's wait until they are old enough to decide for themselves. Anything else is religious grooming and should be frowned upon by a modern society.

      --
      Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
      handmadehands.co.uk
    10. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      Not just about cults if you can be nailed for a sign that is 'insulting'.

      Most ANYTHING could be insulting to someone.

      Hell 'long live the queen' is insulting to someone out there.

      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    11. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      the problem that the quran itself is an extremely racist book, so equal treatment of religions and outlawing hate speech de-facto means outlawing islam

      A lot of religious books preach a fair amount of hate. Most practitioners of most religions tend to take a more pragmatic approach and find some reason that the sections that don't really work in a modern secular society don't apply. Most muslims want the same as everyone else. A nice home, a decent job, good schools for their children, free time to spend with friends. Their religion isn't the be all and end all of who they are.

    12. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by nurb432 · · Score: 1

      *snip*
        I am sure a lot of other countries will be taking a very close look at what happens in this case and whether the cult intends to or already has extended this pattern of behaviour into other countries. You have more faith then i. I say in a week no one even remembers it happens as the press moves on to the next Brittney story.
      --
      ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    13. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      You didn't answer the central point I made. Should religions be treated equal, and any book that preaches hate, like the quran, be outlawed, and said law enforced ?

      Furthermore, if you insert human rights into law, then you are effectively outlawing acting out one's islamic faith :

      The one thing all muslim states agree upon : no human rights in islam

      Emphasis on no equality between faiths, death penalty for leaving islam, no equality between the sexes (such as no judicial access for women).

      So, answer this question : do you require muslims to follow human rights, and thereby outlaw at least part of their religion, thereby acknowledging the necessity of physical violence to be used against any muslim that prefers his faith to human rights ? Thereby maybe not outlawing the book "quran" itself, but outlawing following said book ?

      Or do you wish to drop human rights ?

      Let's hear it, I'm curious.

    14. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      Indeed. Some here at slashdot would call you a homophobe for saying "God save the queen", others are insulted at the very mention of God. Others would quote the cowboy on the train in Unforgiven who says "I recon we don't need no queens".

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    15. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by fugue · · Score: 1

      Whoever modded the parent (by AGMW) "flamebait" should be castrated. Metamods, please take heed!

      --
      "The biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place."
    16. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by Gnavpot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You know when you're in a cult when:

      I think it is strange that his list don't even touch two very significant cult behaviours:

      1. What they do to attract new members from the surrounding society.

      2. What they do to isolate those new members from the influence from the surrounding society.
    17. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by fugue · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I basically agree with your (Martin's?) definition of "cult". However, (1), (2), and (4) are just the definition of "religion" (with the addition of the word "charismatic").(3) is really "objective", there, christ-boy :P

      (5) I like. It makes a great deal of sense and rings true, although it happens far too often in mainstream religions as well (although it might still make sense to call them cults when this happens).

      --
      "The biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place."
    18. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by Fizzog · · Score: 1

      'There is a small suburb in Aberdeenshire called "Cults"'

      Totally offtopic, but that reminded me of when I used to live in Kent (in SE England).

      I once did some research into the history of Kent and found that the name became common after (I think the Vikings or some such) referred to the people living there as 'the kents'.

      I figure the pronunciation has changed over the years.

    19. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by somersault · · Score: 1

      It's only a couple of miles from me in fact :p In my original comment I was of course suggesting that the original poster's views were similar to those of the people of Cults. There are also Maryculter and Peterculter around here, I don't know who Peter or Mary are though.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    20. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by somersault · · Score: 1

      Oh, also for some reason I read your comment as "there is a small rhubarb in Aberdeenshire"

      --
      which is totally what she said
    21. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by somersault · · Score: 1

      Sounds like meta-moderation has become a lot more fun than since I last tried it! Are there any new additions other than the castration option?

      --
      which is totally what she said
    22. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by somersault · · Score: 1

      Others just don't like songs about bicycles

      --
      which is totally what she said
    23. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by dave87656 · · Score: 1

      Excellent post.

    24. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by spiko-carpediem · · Score: 1

      So if a British citizen finds a TV commercial disturbing...?

    25. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      [...] Scientology is certainly unorthodox and extremist. Then again, so are Islam, Bhuddism, Hinduism, Shintoism, and Judism (not to mention Atheism) in Britain (afaik), and Christianity is unorthodox and extremist in Muslim countries.

      From living in Britain for most of my life, I'd say that the only "unorthodox and extreme" religions on your list are Scientology (both counts) and Shintoism (only on the count of being very uncommon, and hence an "extreme" of the range of religions available). I don't think I know a single avowed Shinto-ist, but all the others I know multiple examples of. Don't forget the agnostics either ; agnostics and atheists together would probably be the large majority of people that I know, but since no-one much cares about your religion in Britain, it's hardly a topic of conversation.

      It is now illegal to discuss religion in Britain. If you are British and you post a comment in this thread, your government can throw you in jail.

      I rather doubt that this case will stand. Not having bothered to watch the video, it's possible that the person arrested was otherwise completely innocent, and it's possible that the charge laid was just the first one that came into the copper's head when there were a range of possible charges under the Public Order Act(s). Or other acts. What you're arrested for is not necessarily what you're tried for.

      Just as a FYI - when you're getting an entry visa or a desert access pass in Arab Muslim countries, you're probably better off putting down "Jew" as being your religion and/ or sept, instead of "Atheist" or "Agnostic". when I answered the question truthfully, I lost a day's work when the desert access pass had to be sent "upstairs" instead of being rubber stamped.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    26. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by crucini · · Score: 1
      Just commenting tangentially:

      The one thing all muslim states agree upon...

      I don't think there are any muslim states. The only one was Afghanistan under the Taliban. A muslim state will be ruled by Sharia law.

      In Pakistan, for instance, someone who commits an "honor killing" will be prosecuted. Whether honor killings are part of Islam or part of "local tradition" is another question.

      As for your larger question, I think the only consistent position for a free country is to get government out of religion completely. In the US we're mostly there, but we have tax exemptions. That puts the government in the position of deciding who is and isn't a religion. That's ridiculous.

      If churches were taxed on income (revenue minus expenses) just like corporations, most would pay very little tax.
    27. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      Or fat bottomed girls.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    28. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by MarkAyen · · Score: 1

      Sounds like Catholicism to me.

    29. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by wave_man07 · · Score: 1

      True, but there are objective definitions. First, on matters of adherence to biblical doctrine, St. Francis said this: "In essentials, unity. In non-essentials, liberty. In all things, charity". This means that difference of opinion over worship style, dress, etc. should be unimportant, and shouldn't get in the way of focusing on the essentials of learning to follow God, and those differences don't define cults. When defining a cult, Dr. Walter Martin (RIP) wrote the definitive work in the 1970's called "The Kingdom of the Cults". It is an exhaustive, massive reference book that simply points out where each and every religious group in the world differs from Biblical doctrine. You know when you're in a cult when: 1) The group is led by a charismatic leader who demands obedience to his word above any others. 2) The leader insists on doing your thinking for you, i.e. arranged marriages, etc. 3) The group grants teachings that are not the Bible equal or greater standing than the Bible. 4) The leader teaches that all other churches/groups/whatever are missing it, and only HIS way is really hearing God. 5) The leader doesn't even attempt to live by his own principles. Sounds like Scientology fits the definition to me. I'm definitely crossing the U.K. off my travel list. They've gone completely 'round the bend. A christian cannot define an objective definition of what a cult is... 1900 years ago they were cultists by the norms of the day. "Cult" v. "Religion" is inherently a relative value judgement, a subjective criticism of the "others". This a complete WTF moment for me. I am astounded by the arrogance of all extremists. This list is passing bizarre. Many American pastors fit this definition, with an emphasis on non-biblical tenets such as wealth (isn't greed one of the seven deadly sins?) over Jesus' actual teachings, which I will not bother you with. Except for one: let he who is without sin cast the first stone.
    30. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by bob.appleyard · · Score: 1

      Yes, because the bar has been set so low, on paper these acts could be used to effect total speech gridlock. Find the words of your boss telling you to work insulting? Bang the fucker up. Disturbed by that billboard you see on your way to work every day? Take 'em down. And so on and so forth, etc etc.

      Nobody seems to have really grokked the implications of these laws yet (well, apart from arms companies and what have you), so they haven't really been tested. Who knows how the courts will handle something like that. Would be interesting.

      --
      How dare you be so modest!! You conceited bastard!!
    31. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Well, actually there are three main religions all with denominations built from each other to a degree that encompass the majority of religion in the world(more then half). Both Christianity and the muslum religions build from the Judaism religion for the most part.

      I think your stretching the child abuse thing though. The belief in a religion isn't a bad thing. It carries answers to philosophical questions with a relatively pleasant degree of mental surety that can comfort people in their darkest hours. If something changes their minds later, they can choose something else. But if your a believer in something that is harmless but it also speaks of the mortality and immortality aspects of the human soul, then it would be wise to pass this information down to others so they don't escape it's comfort. Religion is more or less a comfort for people in trying times, to barrow a clause from someone I can't remember, a crutch for the weak when they aren't strong.

      The interesting thing about religions is that they (the popular ones) give you the tools to attempt to understand the thing yourself. The entire religion uses the same books and so on. Anyone who is brainwashed into it can read the books and make an informed decision of their own at any time. It isn't like they are forced to stay true to it forever. A good majority of people who call themselves religious don't follow or practice their religion regularly, they don't attend ceremonies and rituals, and they more or less use it to their advantage.

    32. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I find it interesting the England still doesn't have something guaranteeing free speech in their charter that provides for the function of their government. In America, it is called the constitution. I'm not sure what it would be called in england if they even have one. It would seem to me that something as fundemental to a free society as speech should be a little harder to change then a law would be no matter how popular the reason might be at the time.

      I noticed this a while back, the UK's speech freeness is pretty much an act of law which can be changed easily by another law at any time (Canada seems to leave the government the ability to remove it too). Some people say America ignores the constitution but when it appears that way, many of the politicians tend to be removed with people replacing them by running on platforms promising to restore their rights. It should also be noted that some claims of diminished free speech isn't considered protect by everyone (Free Speech Zones).

      Anyways, Is there something greater then a simple law protecting free speech in the UK or did I get it right when I could only find a law doing so?

    33. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by AGMW · · Score: 1
      I think your stretching the child abuse thing though.

      OK ... stretching things a bit, but to try and raise awareness of the issue. I just don't think it is right to fill kids heads with supernatural hogwash. By all means say something like "some people believe ...", but counter with the scientific facts - as I said, let the children decide!

      The belief in a religion isn't a bad thing.

      OK, I'll agree that everything religion does/says/teaches isn't bad. It IS good to be nice to each other, for example, but this isn't something that _only_ comes from religion. BUT, believing something that isn't true is, almost by definition, _bad_. I will also agree that mild forms of religion are less bad than the extremist versions, but one doesn't become an extremist without first encountering the religion in it's milder forms - think drugs and thing of the mild religions as a gateway to extremism.

      It carries answers to philosophical questions ...

      Assuming we can agree that religion is all hot air, any answers so derived must also be hot air.

      ... also speaks of the mortality and immortality aspects of the human soul ...

      The soul is another invention from religion, so, as with the philosophical answers, you can't really use it in an argument to support religion.

      ... it would be wise to pass this information down to others ...

      Unfortunately, here's where we really diverge. I am saying exactly the opposite. We are feeding a diet of, at best, myths and legends, and at worst fear, hate, misogeny and xenophobia to our children as TRUTHS and that is just wrong.

      --
      Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
      handmadehands.co.uk
    34. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      OK ... stretching things a bit, but to try and raise awareness of the issue. I just don't think it is right to fill kids heads with supernatural hogwash. By all means say something like "some people believe ...", but counter with the scientific facts - as I said, let the children decide!

      They can decide whenever they pick up the book and determine for themselves or they somehow otherwise figure it out. And for the scientific knowledge, it is just a bunch of hogwash to some degree to these people in the same ways you think a religion is anyways. You see, it will all end up boiling down to something said in a book for the majority of people. Nothing in science stands alone without the science backing it up. You either have to have faith in what your reading is true or be able to verify it yourself. The majority of people cannot verify the majority of science themselves. Peer review helps you but to the indoctrinated, it is very little different then the church elders saying that the church is preaching the right stuff.

      Your basically saying get rid of religion until I can approve of a time that someone would reject it when presented with the information about a philosophical question so you can answer with a science answer. Those are two separate positions and separate fields. With the exception of a very small amount of ancillary stuff, neither science nor religion cover the same grounds. You shouldn't be using one to discredit the other or vice versa. Where the disputes might be between the two, it is so minor in comparison of the two fields that if you were to graph the conflicts compared to over all knowledge, the sliver representing the conflicts would be almost invisible.

      OK, I'll agree that everything religion does/says/teaches isn't bad. It IS good to be nice to each other, for example, but this isn't something that _only_ comes from religion. BUT, believing something that isn't true is, almost by definition, _bad_. I will also agree that mild forms of religion are less bad than the extremist versions, but one doesn't become an extremist without first encountering the religion in it's milder forms - think drugs and thing of the mild religions as a gateway to extremism.

      I think your afraid of the dark. First there is no "proof" that anything isn't true. Your stating an opinion as a fact when it shouldn't be. Even scientific theory that explains an observation in conflict with a religion isn't proof of the validity of a religion. At best, it is evidence against it. But as we know, in science, one more then one occasion, we have thought we understood something just to have something else happen that was different and needed studying. This could be as simply as an observation producing an unpredicted result after 20 years of validation or even something else.

      Assuming we can agree that religion is all hot air, any answers so derived must also be hot air.

      Again with the opinions as fact. I don't know it to be hot air. You don't either because you can't verify anything outside of human thought. You can have strong opinions and a good portion of religion probably is little more then hot air. But it adresses something different then what can be verified by science. Philosophy is a question derived from human nature and thought rather then observations.

      The soul is another invention from religion, so, as with the philosophical answers, you can't really use it in an argument to support religion.

      No, you can use it. You appear to be thinking in one real in order to ignore something in another. What is that called when you bring something you believe in and attempt to impose it onto something else, prothletizing? I don't know but it seems to be something that religions do which is why I'm questioning the motivation of so call science minded people. It is as if they feel the need to push science int

    35. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

      The problem is that the British Government doesn't really have a foundational document of the type one thinks of when looking at the Constitution of the US, or the various constitutions and charters that have founded most modern states. Britain has one of the oldest (if not THE oldest, I don't know) contiguous governments in the world. Don't misunderstand, there are countries that are as old or older, but most of them have, at one point or another, had a complete change of government. The British government is essentially the same one as was established by William the Conquerer in 1066. During the intervening 1000 or so years there have been changes in monarchs, changes in rights and privileges available to various classes of people, even briefly a complete revolutionary change (during the English Civil War there was a very brief period where the monarchy was abolished), but in general it has been a thousand year evolutionary process of change.

      What this means is that there are many documents (the Magna Carta is the first and most famous) that establish the rights and privileges of various classes of people through the history of English government. To further complicate matters, some rights and privileges are enshrined in Common Law and Judicial precedent (Similar to the same concepts here in the US, but more so). Then there is the EU Charter, which the British Government is more or less bound to.

      So the simple answer is: "Yes, basic human rights are enshrined in more than law in England." The complicated answer is: "If you want to know where, exactly, a given right is codified, you might wanna talk to a solicitor specializing in the appropriate type of law." I'm sure someone more familiar with recent (last 200 or so years) British history could tell you where the big ones (speech, expression, etc) are, my detailed knowledge stops at around 1600 (I was a medievalist in college).

      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    36. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by SeaDuck79 · · Score: 1

      Both your ignorance and your intolerance are showing here. Not a great combination to win converts to YOUR beliefs.

      Actually, if you want your children to make sound choices regarding religious preferences, studies have shown that it's best to pick one (non-cult) religion and represent that to them during their childhood.

      Even if they decide later to reject it, the experience will make them more able to understand the alternatives than if they grew up in an atheistic vacuum.

    37. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I understand better now. Thanks.

      I didn't realize the complexity of discovering what we know think we had all along (rights) and protecting them from government actions without removing the abusive government in the first place. I'm not sure how hard it would be to invalidate a charter or something like the Magna Carta or whatever tool that purposes a certain right. I know in the US, it would require a constitutional amendment or a very liberal interpretation of some law with respects to a right like free speech. However in Canada, it just requires a reason the government feels is good in the matter of speech.

      Anyways, thanks again. I think I will start looking for more information along the line you discussed. I'm American so it is more or less informational. To think that a law could be used to prosecute a child for calling something that closely resembles a cult, a "cult" makes me wonder just how protected some of us are. I saw that the kid had everything dropped with instructions that Cult isn't strong enough to kick the law in but the idea of having to ask first is very frightening in my opinion. I'm not usually the extreme type of rights for everyone style of person. It isn't that I don't believe in rights, I just don't think they should trample on other people's rights (free speech zones around political events and so on). But this cult thing really stuck out there and raised my attention span a notch.

    38. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by DrgnDancer · · Score: 1

      I saw that the kid had everything dropped with instructions that Cult isn't strong enough to kick the law in but the idea of having to ask first is very frightening in my opinion. Basically it was overzealous policing. It happens here in the US too. People have been arrested for lots of things that aren't really illegal, because cops either didn't understand what their instructions were or were given bad instructions by someone higher up. Whole bunch of people were arrested in a demonstration in New York not too long ago. Nothing every came of it, but they spent 24 hours or so being jerked around by the cops. Most were never charged.

      Fact is, cops can write you tickets and even arrest you with no better reason than "because I said so". There might not be charges, and the cop might even get in trouble after the fact, but s/he can do it. We rely on the fact that they usually don't try to screw people, and the fact that if they screw very many people, or even one person really badly, they're usually fired. It's not a perfect system, but we hope it's as reasonable as possible.
      --
      I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
    39. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by AGMW · · Score: 1
      They can decide whenever they pick up the book and determine for themselves or they somehow otherwise figure it out.

      Hmmmm. OK, I guess my standpoint here is that I believe the wealth of scientific evidence, indeed more than believe - I understand a great deal of it - so I am comfortable with the concept that there is no divine, omnipotent being who created, or indeed controls, the universe. To try and counter this by asking whether or not I believe or understand the wealth of religious evidence would be somewhat self-defeating as there is no such evidence because, almost by definition, religion expects you to simply believe.

      I have talked to otherwise sane, rational, people who have such a deep conviction that their particular flavour of religion is true that nothing I, or anyone else, can say will be able to convince them otherwise. That said, I don't go around trying to break people of religion - in general I say live and let live and if that makes them happy (and doesn't interfere with my life!) that's pretty much fine by me.
      But I see it, much as Dawkins does, as a mind virus. Sure, mostly harmless like a verruca, but you don't want to give it to your kids if you can avoid it, and the strength of conviction displayed by the infected adults simply shows how successful the infection can become if not treated early enough!

      Those are two separate positions and separate fields.

      Now if they could keep the religious from spouting forth on subjects they know nothing about I'd perhaps be happy for science to step away from the fray, but they continue to wheel out religious figures in fancy dress to talk about science issues - global warming, cloning, genetic engineering, etc.

      But as we know, in science, one more then one occasion, we have thought we understood something just to have something else happen that was different and needed studying.

      As a scientist I do understand that my conviction is evidence-based, and whilst the current understanding is that religion is bunkum, there's no reason why some new evidence shouldn't be discovered and appear to lend weight to the religion theory, but I suspect it won't! My problem is that religion and the religious seem to be able to ignore the weight of evidence against religion at a whim.
      I would like to suggest that if the evidence could be wieghed in a non-partisan way that the conclusion would be that religion is (OK ... probably, but with a V. high probability!) bunkum.
      If you agree with that statement then you may also agree that anyone who is still a follower of any religion is probably delusional.
      If you don't agree then I guess this conversation/argument may go on for some time ;-)

      I'm questioning the motivation of so call science minded people. It is as if they feel the need to push science into everything as if it is the one true way.

      LOL - so call(ed) science minded people
      I would suggest that science minded people are pushing the one most probable way, and to suggest the scientists are exhibiting some kind of religious zeal is, I guess, doing the opposite of what I've been advocating :-
      I've been advocating that the religious should use science and the scientific method to help sway their opinion away from religion based on the wealth of evidence, and you just tried to imply scientists are pushing a message, almost as if science is another religion - convert you from Catholic to Muslim, from Jew to Hindu. Maybe that's why science has such a hard time winning over the religious - because once infected with Belief your only template for a replacement is another Belief.

      Scientists don't want you to Believe in Science, they want you to understand it! As you said, the current scientific thinking on almost all subjects is different from what it was at some point in the past as new knowledge has come to

      --
      Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
      handmadehands.co.uk
    40. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Hmmmm. OK, I guess my standpoint here is that I believe the wealth of scientific evidence, indeed more than believe - I understand a great deal of it - so I am comfortable with the concept that there is no divine, omnipotent being who created, or indeed controls, the universe. To try and counter this by asking whether or not I believe or understand the wealth of religious evidence would be somewhat self-defeating as there is no such evidence because, almost by definition, religion expects you to simply believe.

      I don't think you understood my position on this. You see, there is no need to indoctrinate someone to the exclusion of other rituals and beliefs. You are convinced that your way is the one true way but you also admit that some of the science you don't understand. I'm willing to bet that you couldn't recreate most of the experiments that supposedly prove one thing over another (due to materials, training, different procedures, whatever, I'm not saying your stupid) and if left to draw a conclusion on your own about things like evolution and whatnot, you most likely wouldn't have came up with the same theories if someone hadn't planted the seeds of it in your head. That isn't an observational induction of you, it is of the history of evolution and how long it took to come up with the idea. Something like evolution just isn't a natural occurring thought or we would have a record of it long before we did.

      Anyways, when presented with the facts, and every child will be presented with them with public education and so on, anyone can make up their own minds accordingly. But the acceptance or denial of spiritual thought because of scientific indoctrination isn't a good thing. Religions teach more then a omnipotent/omnipresent being looking down on you. In the early days it taught what was safe to eat and what wasn't. What to avoid to keep a family or society from imploding. It still teaches morals and ethics, it shows people things that their parents wouldn't be smart enough to teach. It sometimes teaches values that parents and other role models might not have. Sure you could replace all that with some other program or process but it would become a religion in the same sense. The value a person gets from a religion is much greater then from nothing or even science alone and society ultimately benefits for the most part.

      I have talked to otherwise sane, rational, people who have such a deep conviction that their particular flavour of religion is true that nothing I, or anyone else, can say will be able to convince them otherwise. That said, I don't go around trying to break people of religion - in general I say live and let live and if that makes them happy (and doesn't interfere with my life!) that's pretty much fine by me.

      That is pretty much the attitude I have. I have read the bible and come to the conclusion that few of none at all of the organized (christian) religions follow it very closely. But I say live and let live too. I think that is the best approach you can have. But I often see it religions, be it Judaism, muslum, christian, hindu or whatever, bashed by self proclaimed atheist who for some reason feel the need to inject into something that was otherwise private. I took your original statement of "making kids goto church being child abuse" as one of those. It simple isn't true.

      But I see it, much as Dawkins does, as a mind virus. Sure, mostly harmless like a verruca, but you don't want to give it to your kids if you can avoid it, and the strength of conviction displayed by the infected adults simply shows how successful the infection can become if not treated early enough!

      I would say that is the most fallacious argument on the subject I have heard. Most of the science you prescribe to in almost an alternative to a religion was started by religious people. Religious universities were the first to have science departments, (they were also the most common universit

    41. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by AGMW · · Score: 1
      Wow ... these are getting longer and longer!

      You are convinced that your way is the one true way but you also admit that some of the science you don't understand.

      Again, I don't think science is the one true anything. Science isn't a religion, however much the religious might like to think it is. Science, the Scientific Method, is a way of looking at the world, nay the universe, around us and trying to fathom out how it might work. Whilst I might not be able to reproduce experiments because of lack of equipment there are others who can, and do, repeat experiments in isolation of the originator of the experiment. If the experiment works for others it gains acceptance, and if it fails (see Cold Fusion!) it falls by the way-side. So I can be reasonably confident about the cannon of knowledge so produced because we are standing on the shoulders of giants.

      Something like evolution just isn't a natural occurring thought or we would have a record of it long before we did.

      I'm not even sure what that means! So all natural thought must be something that is known since the dawn of time? Sorry, but that is a nonesense! That discounts a number of things like the wheel, that all men (and women) are equal, gravity - to name but a few. All thoughts have to have a time when they haven't been thought yet and a first person to think them.
      FYI: One of the great things about the theory of evolution is how such a simple setup can create life's complexities. All, and I do mean ALL, of the evidence so far gathered points to evolution being true. I can say ALL with some confidence because if there was one scrap of evidence to the contrary then various religious groups would be publicising it far and wide. The interesting point is, that once the one piece of evidence that breaks evolution is found the scientist will accept it and move on. Scientists are happy to be proved wrong.

      ... scientific indoctrination ...

      Again, science isn't a religion. Sure, science has got stuff wrong in the past and taught those wrong things as being true, but as soon as science discovers the error it puts it's hands up and says so!

      ... self proclaimed atheist ...

      So you'd rather atheists didn't say they were atheists? On the child abuse front - what if all kids in Texas were forced to learn to be Muslims. Would you call that child abuse (I guess only for the non-Muslim kids?)? Now I'm not picking on Muslims specifically here, just assuming that most kids in Texas are likely to be of other religions, so to make the point by forcing them to become members of some other religion. Is that child abuse?

      Religious Universities ...

      Religion did indeed encompass a large part of society back in the day, and it was the start of what became the modern educational system. That science has long since left the cloisters is in no small part down to the fact that when scientists 'discovered' something new that the Church didn't like they prevented the new discoveries from being disseminated. Was this the first censorship perhaps?

      Do you really think they don't know anything about the subjects at hand?

      Often, yes! LOL: Cloning doesn't mean killing a fetus! The whole point of cloning is to get a copy, so if you kill the original you're still left with just one - oh, you mean the single cell (egg) into which the genetic material is placed. Is a single cell a fetus? Yet another argument I guess. I'd say it isn't, any more than any other single cell is a fetus. It has the capability to become one perhaps - though countless millions of such single cells die daily - hourly even - as most eggs don't get fertilized.
      Also, not quite sure you have Kyoto right their either, but whatever.

      ... saying that your science is t

      --
      Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
      handmadehands.co.uk
    42. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Wow ... these are getting longer and longer!

      Yea, that last one was probable a little painfull in it's length. Thanks for shortening it.

      Again, I don't think science is the one true anything. Science isn't a religion, however much the religious might like to think it is. Science, the Scientific Method, is a way of looking at the world, nay the universe, around us and trying to fathom out how it might work. Whilst I might not be able to reproduce experiments because of lack of equipment there are others who can, and do, repeat experiments in isolation of the originator of the experiment. If the experiment works for others it gains acceptance, and if it fails (see Cold Fusion!) it falls by the way-side. So I can be reasonably confident about the cannon of knowledge so produced because we are standing on the shoulders of giants.

      The one true anything isn't what it appears that your saying. Your saying that science should be injected into people and religion removed. Your justifying this because science is right and religion is wrong. Despite the fact that you can't prove a religion wrong. I also understand who science works, in your example it works much the same way as history works in that something is written down, circulated among the masses and those in a position to know better either accept or reject the concept or order of events. Now with the major religions, just like science when you can't do the experiments, someone has said that this is true, someone else has said, yes it is or no it isn't, and you end up viewing the aftermath and come to a conclusion that it is either true or false. The same mental mechanism that works to believe the scientific experiment A is correct so the conclusions must be correct is the same as saying Napoleon lost the battle of Waterloo and that must be correct just as it is the same as a book that in some cases dates back 4000 years and it is correct.

      You see, the mechanics behind them are the same. The differences is that they dont' entertain the same fields of study. Science isn't philosophy and vice versa. Your attempting to assert on over the other as if you can't distinguish between them anymore.

      I'm not even sure what that means! So all natural thought must be something that is known since the dawn of time? Sorry, but that is a nonesense! That discounts a number of things like the wheel, that all men (and women) are equal, gravity - to name but a few. All thoughts have to have a time when they haven't been thought yet and a first person to think them.
      FYI: One of the great things about the theory of evolution is how such a simple setup can create life's complexities. All, and I do mean ALL, of the evidence so far gathered points to evolution being true. I can say ALL with some confidence because if there was one scrap of evidence to the contrary then various religious groups would be publicising it far and wide. The interesting point is, that once the one piece of evidence that breaks evolution is found the scientist will accept it and move on. Scientists are happy to be proved wrong.

      What it means is that evolution isn't a natural occurring though process. It is a very specific concept that was tested with the science being wrapped around it instead of it wrapping around science. The distinction isn't that it is wrong or impossible but rather that it inverts the scientific process a little. Science is now being adjusted to the concept rather then it proving a concept. Because of this, you are in essence committed to an exorcise in blind faith that the results you are seeing (but can't replicate), are accurate and connected in more ways they coincidence. The evidence makes it believable in the same ways that the same type of evidence makes religions believable and supportable. I'm talking about the process of belief here, not the probability of correctness or the accuracy of the concept.

      Agai

    43. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by AGMW · · Score: 1
      The same mental mechanism that works to believe the scientific experiment A is correct so the conclusions must be correct is the same as saying Napoleon lost the battle of Waterloo and that must be correct just as it is the same as a book that in some cases dates back 4000 years and it is correct.

      Unfortunately not! You _can_ state that a theory is true based on an experiment that can be repeated to see if it is actually correct or not, but you can't say that a book must be correct just because it is old. Does a book get more correct as it ages? Obviously not, something is either correct or it isn't, so the age can't be a factor. The fact that (most?) religions are based on Dogma, ie tenets which are not to be challenged, reinforces that position. Also, ever played Chinese Whispers? For the first many thousands of years of existance of the stories in the bible they were passed down as an aural tradition. As and when necessary, some facets of the stories would be changed to meet the (then) current needs. New stories would be added. To claim any of the stories that survive to today as true is a leap of faith in itself, but they can't all be true as there are well documented inconsistencies that make it impossible.

      Your attempting to assert on over the other as if you can't distinguish between them anymore.

      It may seem as though I'm trying to assert Science over Religion, but actually I'm (just) trying to get people to use the Scientific Method to examine Religion. I guess this is perhaps the inverse of the case of religious figures using their religion to examine science in cases such as genetic research, IVF, abortion, etc. They can see that various things are obviously wrong, as judged by their religion - I can see things are obviously wrong, as judged by my science. Of course, it isn't just my science - LOL - and we return to the difference of opinion ;-)

      What it means is that evolution isn't a natural occurring though(t) process.

      How do you determine what is a naturally occuring thought process and what isn't? Darwin saw a number of variations of animals/plants on his travels around the globe, but mostly on pacific islands if my memory serves me well, and concluded that they must have somehow adapted to meet the environments. The somehow turns out to be natural selection. Would it have been a natural thought if perhaps a priest had come up with the idea?

      It is a very specific concept that was tested with the science being wrapped around it instead of it wrapping around science.

      Hmmmm. Are you saying that the concept was concieved first, and science applied to see if it matches? If so, then - yes indeed - that's how it's supposed to work. Come up with a hypothesis ("I think it might work like this"), devise some tests and see if you can predict the outcome. In this case, the wealth of fossil evidence supports the theory. The DNA evidence supports the theory - indeed, it is precariously balanced with the whole weight of ALL evidence so far found on one side and no evidence to the contrary. I say precarious because just one piece of evidence to the contrary would blow it out of the water, but so far there has been none, so we stick with the most likely option - evolution, survival of the fittest, natural selection.

      I says it is - you says it isn't - I have a huge amount of evidence to say it is, you refuse to accept the evidence as presented, and say it isn't.

      That's the bit I can't understand, as from where I'm standing there's an elephant in the room, and you don't see it, or (worse still!) refuse to see it. Why do you refuse to see it? Religion - well, I assume it's religion, but I guess you might just like the arguement ;-)

      Now you're an adult (well, if yer not, you do a very good impression of one!) and if you want to believe something then that's all fi

      --
      Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
      handmadehands.co.uk
    44. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by sumdumass · · Score: 1
      Sorry, but it's another long one. I'm not sure how you can hit such a wide variety of topics with such a short post.

      Unfortunately not! You _can_ state that a theory is true based on an experiment that can be repeated to see if it is actually correct or not, but you can't say that a book must be correct just because it is old. Does a book get more correct as it ages? Obviously not, something is either correct or it isn't, so the age can't be a factor. The fact that (most?) religions are based on Dogma, ie tenets which are not to be challenged, reinforces that position. Also, ever played Chinese Whispers? For the first many thousands of years of existance of the stories in the bible they were passed down as an aural tradition. As and when necessary, some facets of the stories would be changed to meet the (then) current needs. New stories would be added. To claim any of the stories that survive to today as true is a leap of faith in itself, but they can't all be true as there are well documented inconsistencies that make it impossible.

      No, it is the same mechanism. You see, when a person lacks the ability to directly verify or perform the experiment, they have to take the word of the person presenting the evidence or story to them. It is the same principle for them to believe in a bible, a science paper, or even a 1908 version of a science paper over a 1999 version that says completely different things. Dogma and history are almost interchangeable too. Don't put too much weight behind it the idea of Dogma. Nobody would claim that Napoleon won the battle of Waterloo. That fact can't be changed or disputed, it is dogma now.

      Now, your right in that the stories of the bibles were repeated by mouth before they were written down. But you seriously underestimate the organizational skills of storytellers. It isn't a situation where one person says something and it get bastardized over the course of thousands of year whenever someone else attempts to tell it. It is was a religion or religions where people told the same stories over and over and the people who told them were tested for accuracy. Much of the old testament was documented as it was happening too. A good portion of the old testament is nothing more then history. Almost all of the new testament is the same. The Koran was Mohammed's interpretation of the old testament with stories from the new from memory. He dictated it to a secretary and it has been updated from time to time in much the same ways as the stories of the old testament has been compiled. As you can see, the bastardization there created an entirely new religion based of an old one. It has been a long standing tradition of the jewish faith to study the scriptures (and stories before they were written down) in a fanatical way that is the basis of several holidays they have. The feast of tabernacle is basically a gathering where each book is studied over a set period of days by the rabbis who taught it. Passover in the jewish sense is the same thing. To say that they are all loose compilations of what they originally where is to over look the entire basis and rituals behind the religion. Jesus was a jew too.

      It may seem as though I'm trying to assert Science over Religion, but actually I'm (just) trying to get people to use the Scientific Method to examine Religion. I guess this is perhaps the inverse of the case of religious figures using their religion to examine science in cases such as genetic research, IVF, abortion, etc. They can see that various things are obviously wrong, as judged by their religion - I can see things are obviously wrong, as judged by my science. Of course, it isn't just my science - LOL - and we return to the difference of opinion ;-)

      No, you said all religion is false and we should stop teaching it to children and teach science in it's place. Now using the scientific method to examine philosophy is ridiculous. Philosophy is "I think therefore I am". This is unfalsifiab

    45. Re:Britain 1, USA 0 by SteveDob · · Score: 1

      > Actually, if you want your children to make sound choices regarding religious preferences, studies have shown that it's best to pick one (non-cult) religion and represent that to them during their childhood.

      Do you have a citation for that claim? I'd certainly like to see the definition of "sound choices regarding religious preferences".

  128. Quick correction by hassanchop · · Score: 1

    "As another user has pointed out, the British justice system doesn't work."

    Fixed that for you.

    1. Re:Quick correction by Kijori · · Score: 1

      Did you have any reasons behind that or was it just a throwaway remark?

  129. Re:What's the difference? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The dog thinks:

    "Hey, I live in a pretty neat place. I have a man who feeds me, provides me with shelter, entertains me when I need it and generally cares for me. He must be a GOD!"

    The cat thinks:

    "Hey, I live in a pretty neat place. I have a man who feeds me, provides me with shelter, entertains me when I need it and generally cares for me. I must be a GOD!"

  130. Not a random incident by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    This is part of the Church of Scientology's ongoing campaign against the Internet, which traces its roots back to the early nineties and the Usenet newsgroup alt.religion.scientology. Persons interested in the greater picture should take a look at the Wikipedia article on Project Chanology, and the project's material at youfoundthecard.com, among other things. The rest you can find through links at the latter site.

    The short of it is that tens of thousands of activists collectively known as Anonymous are taking the cult organization known as the Church of Scientology (aka the Religious Technology Center, among other things) on, originally due to the CoS' being complete dickheads on the Internet but the matter has expanded since. (Warning: link contains graphic material, may shock people who haven't already seen thousands of murders in feature films and prime-time television.)

    As for results, insider reports from within the CoS suggest that their leadership are pissing and shitting all over themselves over this. They cannot harass masked protesters, though they do try.

    It should also be pointed out that Anonymous is not after Scientology-the-religion, only the so-called Church of Scientology, the organization. This is not about suppressing a religion.

  131. Public Defender or Private Attorney by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would suspect that the UK has a provision in their Juvenile laws that any child charged with a crime is entitled to an attorney, so he should go to his local PD office and apply. Or, since this could be a great high profile case, he should find one of the well-known trial lawyers and set up a meeting. I know if I were still in private practice, I would take a case like this pro bono just for the publicity it would generate for me.

  132. But the truth is is is a CULT! by MrJerryNormandinSir · · Score: 1

    Damn the whole cult religion started with a bet between L Ron Hubbard and Gene Rodenberry!!!

    L RON -> Gene I bet you I can create a religion people will be dumb enough to join.

    Gene -> People are not that stupid, You are on!

    The rest is history.

  133. It's time for YOU to make a difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok guys, I know there are thousands of readers here on /. that are pissed off when they see this shit. This is a chance for every slashdotter in the WORLD to finally get out from behind the glow of the screen and DO something about it.

    Join the next Anonymous protest on June 14th. At the least start putting up anti scientology flyers in your schools, on sidewalks next to your warchalkings and putting cards on tables, in the pages of LRH books in libraries and anywhere else people will see them and pick one up.

    http://www.goanonymous.org/ (General info)
    http://www.enturbulation.org/ (Planning, see threads for each region for local anon planning boards)
    http://www.youfoundthecard.com/ (Has cards and flyers you can print out and put up or leave in stragetic places)

    Yes, this is your time. Join Anonymous in the fight against internet censorship. You've railed about this in the past. Now is the time to show you have the jones to fight it.

  134. Quoth Wiki? How about "quothing" a dictionary? by sm62704 · · Score: 1

    irony1 -noun, plural -nies
    1. the use of words to convey a meaning that is the opposite of its literal meaning: the irony of her reply, "How nice!" when I said I had to work all weekend.
    2. Literature. a. a technique of indicating, as through character or plot development, an intention or attitude opposite to that which is actually or ostensibly stated.
    b. (esp. in contemporary writing) a manner of organizing a work so as to give full expression to contradictory or complementary impulses, attitudes, etc., esp. as a means of indicating detachment from a subject, theme, or emotion.

    3. Socratic irony.
    4. dramatic irony.
    5. an outcome of events contrary to what was, or might have been, expected.
    6. the incongruity of this.
    7. an objectively sardonic style of speech or writing.
    8. an objectively or humorously sardonic utterance, disposition, quality, etc.

    [slow down cowboy, it's been three minutes since you posted the only comment you've posted so far today. Slashdot is for lysdexic nerds who don't read very fast. Go to some web site where everyone has gone past the sixth grade. Good luck answering all 31 of the "messages" that were left in the "slashdot message system" because of the highly rated comments you made yesterday. Now go away and leave us illiterates alone.

    Ok, lets see if this stupid web site will let me post this yet...]

    --
    mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    1. Re:Quoth Wiki? How about "quothing" a dictionary? by russotto · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      5. an outcome of events contrary to what was, or might have been, expected.


      This is way too broad a definition, IMO. A former prosecutor known for busting prostitution rings getting busted for hiring a prostitute -- that's irony. But me getting wet because I didn't expect it to rain -- not irony.
  135. LRH thought he was Satan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The creator of the Church of Scientology thought he was the devil. This, according to an interview of his son in the 80's by Penthouse.

    Dude thought he was the devil...what does that make scientologists? Devil worshipers. Crazy.

    Wake up people. This is as FAKE as religion gets.

  136. Hmm by PalmKiller · · Score: 2, Insightful

    But Scientology is a cult by the dictionary definition, so why are they suing him? It at least fits 1, 4 and 6 (at least the extreme part) and perhaps others from the dictionary.com definition.

    From Dictionary.com:

    cult

    1. a particular system of religious worship, esp. with reference to its rites and ceremonies.
    2. an instance of great veneration of a person, ideal, or thing, esp. as manifested by a body of admirers: the physical fitness cult.
    3. the object of such devotion.
    4. a group or sect bound together by veneration of the same thing, person, ideal, etc.
    5. Sociology. a group having a sacred ideology and a set of rites centering around their sacred symbols.
    6. a religion or sect considered to be false, unorthodox, or extremist, with members often living outside of conventional society under the direction of a charismatic leader.
    7. the members of such a religion or sect.
    8. any system for treating human sickness that originated by a person usually claiming to have sole insight into the nature of disease, and that employs methods regarded as unorthodox or unscientific.
    -adjective
    9. of or pertaining to a cult.
    10. of, for, or attracting a small group of devotees: a cult movie.

  137. Of course it is a cult of nonsense. by jopet · · Score: 1

    Like all religion. Cults of nonsense.
    Anyone should be allowed to follow whatever cults of nonsense they fancy as long as they do not harm or limit the freedom of others.
    However, no cult of nonsense should get any legal protection or special status.

    And it is time that people do something against the intellectual and non-intellectual abuse of innocent children by parents, relatives and their social peers who are follwers of cults of nonsense, be that Christianity, Judaism, Islam, SoC, or any other such cult.

  138. That descibes by mario_grgic · · Score: 1

    a lot of Geeks I know.

    --
    As the island of our knowledge grows, so does the shore of our ignorance.
  139. So they take the kid to court by kannibul · · Score: 1

    What's going to lose, honestly?

    Scientology is a sue-happy scum-sucking bunch of lunatics.

    South Park did such a wonderful job portraying them in one of their episodes...

    But, my point is, the kid is a teen - what does he have to lose in all of this?

  140. Calling it what it is by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

    The first problem is ... naming an act the "Public Order Act."

    So if I put up a sign calling the "public order act" a public order, would I get cited as well? If Scientology is not a cult what the heck is it? If I check in the Merriam Webster for the definition of cult, then for definition '2' I get "a system of religious beliefs and ritual". Should I be calling it "an organised group designed to oppress anyone who has anything bad to say about it"?

    --
    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    1. Re:Calling it what it is by RexRhino · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter the definition of "cult". What matters is if there is a reasonable expectation that calling them a "cult", right outside of their headquarters, is likely to intimidate or cause offense.

      Hate speech is determined by the distress it causes to the victim, not on the factuality of the speech itself. It can be argued by calling them a "cult" with a sign immediately outside their headquarters, as opposed to an online message board or something, was an explicit attempt to insult them or intimidate them.

      The real topic of debate is whether we should regulate criticisms of people's religions at all. Once a society has decided to censor speech that religions might find insulting or offensive, which most "progressive" societies do nowadays, then these kind of small details like the definition of "cult" are no longer relevant.

      Calling Scientology a "cult" makes them feel insulted, and the law clearly establishes that their right not to feel insulted overrides your right to free speech or your right to protest.

  141. totally insulting by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    How dare he!

    One man's cult is another man's money making machine!

  142. I forget... by tooyoung · · Score: 3, Funny

    It is now illegal to discuss religion in Britain. If you are British and you post a comment in this thread, your government can throw you in jail.

    But we in the US don't have a lot of room to talk. As I wrote [kuro5hin.org] two years ago,

    But our own freedom to speak carries such heavy limitations that to think we are better than the Chinese is laughable. You can be arrested for "hate speech." If you badmouth the wrong corporation (and face it, the corporations are the government here, the politicians only being figureheads who do the corporations' bidding) you will be slapped down with a S.L.A.P.P. suit. You won't go to jail, but you will be financially ruined.
    How do you mod someone Bushy-bearded nut job on the street corner?
    1. Re:I forget... by russotto · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How do you mod someone Bushy-bearded nut job on the street corner?

      In today's world? +1, Insightful.
    2. Re:I forget... by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      Hey, guys, I trimmed my goatee this morning!

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
  143. Scientology _IS_ a cult by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please, please sue me next! I would be cool among my peers!

    Scientology is a cult!
    Scientology is a cult!
    Scientology is a cult!

  144. Situation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anonymous has been made aware of the situation, a a few days before this article actually. The incident will be dealt with.

    Because none of us are as cruel as all of us.

  145. he got it wrong by wardk · · Score: 1

    it's not a cult, it's a scam

  146. good news by nguy · · Score: 1

    prohibits signs which have representations or words which are threatening, abusive or insulting.'

    I find Scientology threatening, abusive, and insulting (not to mention idiotic and ridiculous).

    So this must mean that Scientology may not display its signs in public anymore, right?

  147. CoS by pbhj · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure the moderator of the Church of Scotland (CoS) is going to like what you said. The Church of Eritrea might have issues too, dunno.

    CoE I'll give you. Call the others Scientologists or Scientology.

  148. puree all govt people over 60yo by cheekyboy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I say for all the faults of the last 30 yrs, put all the govt people over 60yo into a giant blender, turn on high, add
    some sugar, and milk and strawberries, then Gordan Ramsey can say, "Shit, this still tastes like shit, it will never taste good, into the bin"

    One message to all old rich pricks, your RICH, give up, retire, enjoy your viagra, and disapear!!!! I know your wifes are ugly, but jeez, find a
    20yo hooker, because thats all you will enjoy.

    Pass the torch you fuckers, retire, get a heart attach, because as Gordan says, you are useless shit, fricking die already you sods.

    Done.

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
  149. Re:GET IT RIGHT, FAGGOT!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't try to put the Slashdot twist on it to make them look like the bad guys.

    Or are you one of those people, who believes a company shouldn't be allowed to earn a return on their investment since you can steal their shit so easily? If they are a religion, their "tech" cannot be copyrighted, and therefor, no "theft" has taken place. If they are however, a pyramid scheme with the name "church" tacked on to avoid taxes, then they are fraudsters and as such should be denied any protection untill they pay up.

    I see the hubbardbots have caught the scent of this discussion... Wonder how long it'll last before this place is flooded with them.
  150. God Bless America by srobert · · Score: 2, Funny

    Thank God I live in the U.S. where at least we have free speech zones where we are free to speak our minds. We value our freedom of speech so highly that we protect those in the free speech zones with chain link fencing and barbed wire.

  151. Re:GET IT RIGHT, FAGGOT!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, when an organsation's income through its usual venues start to dry up because people are stealing their shit, they rightly turn for the courts to sue the guilty parties.

    For reference, see SCO, RIAA... Don't try to put the Slashdot twist on it to make them look like the bad guys.

    Or are you one of those people, who believes a company shouldn't be allowed to earn a return on their investment since you can steal their shit so easily? If they are a religion, their "tech" cannot be copyrighted, and therefor, no "theft" has taken place. If they are however, a pyramid scheme with the name "church" tacked on to avoid taxes, then they are fraudsters and as such should be denied any protection untill they pay up.

    I see the hubbardbots have caught the scent of this discussion... Wonder how long it'll last before this place is flooded with them. When did SCO and the RIAA declare themselves religions? What the fuck are you even talking about?
  152. Did anyone ASK the officer her connection to CoS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has anyone asked the justice officer if she's EVER taken a Scientology class OR if she knows any Scientologist friends, family, or colleagues asked her to intervene on that day?

    Is she on the record answering that question?

    Just wondering.

  153. Atheism link by Clueless+Nick · · Score: 1

    My sig points to a chatroom where atheists meet.

    --
    Chat with other atheists http://secularchat.org
  154. When Governments use the word "Cult" by tigerflag · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's ironic to prosecute a kid for using the word "cult" when in the U.S. the government freely uses the label "cult" to denigrate a group of people in the public's eye. Refer to citizens as "cultists", get the media to refer to citizens as "cultists". Do this enough, and people who don't see the propaganda for what it is will come to view them, not as citizens anymore, but as dangerous Threats to Society.

    "Citizens" are good. "Cultists" are bad. Not entitled to the same protections as the rest of us. Then it's not only easy, but proper to violate their Constitutional rights and even kill them without due process, with the public's blessing.

    Words are powerful. If, during the months of the Waco siege, the media had referred to the victims there as "Citizens" instead of "Cultists", do you think people would have been so accepting of the government's actions? Hell no! In my opinion, Waco was a test, and the government learned that if it can sufficiently demonize and marginalize people in the public's eye, it can do pretty much whatever it wants to them and people will accept it. So now we have the Mormon raid in Texas, and everybody applauded. Child abuse sucks, but government agents tearing children away from their families without due process is downright scary!

    I despise religions that wield their beliefs as weapons to control their followers in destructive ways. But I'm wary when words like "cult" are used to label citizens who live differently from the norm. Next time it could be you or me and and our families, and people will have been conditioned to accept it when we're killed or hauled off to the camps.

    For the record, I also despise laws that infringe upon freedom of speech and action. And governments that try too hard to protect everybody from everything. Big Brother is far worse than any ills it tries to protect us from. "Utopia is not an option."

  155. corruption of public officials by garyrich · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This was my first thought when I heard this story. Their de facto ownership of the Clearwater PD seems to have worked well enough that the program is being expanded globally. I assume, true to style, that most/all of the Co$' "private" security for this demonstration were off duty constables? Lovely legal way to buy the hearts and minds of the cops. If the cops are recruited to the cult they can even count on getting their money back from them.

    --
    -- your Web browser is Ronald Reagan
  156. Scientology is a Cult by Bob9113 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Just wanted to get it out there in case the U.K. wants to bring me up on charges. Come on you authoritarian assholes, I dare you. Scientology is a cult. Mormonism is a cult. Christianity is a cult. Islam is a cult. (and by leaving them out, my intent is that followers of Judaism feel insulted for being excluded (chosen at random) (and yes, they too are a cult))

    Aside from the heinous idea that a person feeling insulted should be sufficient to inhibit free speech, how about the anthropological (as opposed to bullshit media bigotted "big means good, small means bad") definition of cult:

    cult

    In anthropology, an organization for the conduct of ritual, magical, or other religious observances. Many so-called primitive tribes, for example, have ancestor cults, in which dead ancestors are considered divine and activities are organized to respect their memory and invoke their aid. A cult is also a religious group held together by a dominant, often charismatic individual, or by the worship of a divinity, an idol, or some other object. (See animism, fetish, and totemism.)


    Thank you, Houghton Mifflin Science Dictionary. Here's a quick note: they're all cults. They all engage in brainwashing too. Look up the definition, then tell me what those repetitive chants and rituals are. If you can come up with a consistent definition of brainwashing that does not include the ritual repetitive chanting at Sunday morning services, I will concede the point. Feeling insulted by the truth is all real sad and everything, but, um, tough shit. Stop being a cult and I'll stop calling you a cult.

    And blow me, England. Hey, there's an idea! What say The Queen blows me? She's got a purty mouth. No, I'm not talking about Charles. I would never use queen as a derogatory term for a poofter - being a poofter like Prince Charles is a personal choice and I fully support his lifestyle (though I am not sure I support his closeting of it).

    And with that, a little bow. Thank you for playing, England.

  157. From Meriam Webster - Dictionary Definition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From reading the dictionary definition below, it would seem the term fits.

    Main Entry: cult
    Pronunciation: \klt\
    Function: noun
    Usage: often attributive
    Etymology: French & Latin; French culte, from Latin cultus care, adoration, from colere to cultivate -- more at wheel
    Date: 1617
    1: formal religious veneration : worship
    2: a system of religious beliefs and ritual; also : its body of adherents
    3: a religion regarded as unorthodox or spurious; also : its body of adherents
    4: a system for the cure of disease based on dogma set forth by its promulgator
    5 a: great devotion to a person, idea, object, movement, or work (as a film or book); especially : such devotion regarded as a literary or intellectual fad b: the object of such devotion c: a usually small group of people characterized by such devotion

  158. Professionals by azzuth · · Score: 3, Insightful

    it is interesting to me how adept the Scientologists are at all of this. Despite the number of critics and the widespread information about the strange beliefs of the religion, not to mention that it was started by a Sci-Fi author, and a whole laundry list of questionable practices, the church has a large following and tons of money at its disposal.

    It will be interesting to see how all of this plays out over the course of the next 100 years... Would be a shame to see it emerge as a new world wide religion.

    1. Re:Professionals by JoshJ · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Strange beliefs, a laundry list of questionable practices, a large following, and tons of money at its disposal? Man, this reminds me of a conversation I was having about the Catholic Church.

  159. Rise of the hive mind by mcrbids · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The "Open Source" government may be closer than you think.

    The phenomenon of anonymous, whatever you may personally think of their current "war" on Scientology, is something rather unique in human history. We have a relatively well coordinated, well mannered, peaceful "organization" having no membership, no particular leaders, no apparent fund-raising mechanism, and no organizational structure. Rather than being coordinated by a chain of command with structured communication channels, it seems to be organized chaotically by "memes" - ideas that become something like a cliche.

    Despite all these properties which, in times past, would have been severe limitations, anonymous has now coordinated an international protest at dozens of cities around the world involving many thousands of people. This is simply incredible!

    I believe thisto be an artifact of the Internet age, and a sign of things to come. While anonymous "members" appears to mostly consist of the younger college age, remember that the college kids of today are the first generation to grow up with ubiquitous global telecommunications. Just like hippie movement of the 1960's was the first generation to grow up with ubiquitous global communications in the form of television, so does the current new generation of anonymous represent the first generation to grow up with the Internet.

    As a self-proclaimed Internet addict, I've watched anonymous with interest - the "memes" that provide so much power within anonymous apparently comprise nothing more than an idea posed by someone that others enjoyed and repeated. Anybody can throw up an idea, and the classic value of "reputation" seems to be lost, here. Ideas are presented by anyone, and when repeated by others who like the idea, they become memes. And memes are, as much, a way of doing or presenting information as it is the information itself. For example, there's a common theme in Digg articles of repeating adjectives. EG: "The lame article is lame". Of course, there's Rick-rolling, variations of "LOL", and a few others.

    Could this meme-based anonymous evolve into a world government? In a sense, it already has, because this structure of memes is already coordinating the behavior of thousands! Why couldn't this evolve into a new way of governing? My guess is that anonymous evolves into a sort of meta-government. Rather than directly become a government agency, it becomes a sort of unstructured political party that exerts considerable power at the voting booth, and is able to reinforce its power through real-life protests and events, much like those going on against Scientology today.

    Fascinating times! Watch and see!

    --
    I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    1. Re:Rise of the hive mind by Kelbear · · Score: 2, Funny

      Great, our new government's anthem will be "Chocolate Rain".

    2. Re:Rise of the hive mind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      [Anonymous is a] well mannered, peaceful "organization" You must not be familiar with Anonymous' actions other than the Scientology war.
    3. Re:Rise of the hive mind by spazdor · · Score: 1

      Raise your neighbourhood's insurance rates!

      --
      DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
  160. woah by azzuth · · Score: 1

    I've gotta read that book! Sounds awesome!

    On a side note, anyone watch Stargate SG-1 and notice a HUGE similarity between the Ori and Christianity?

  161. Protests by kellyb9 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think you are all missing the point. Protests are only a useful tool of public disobedience if it garners media coverage. Protests of 10 or 20 people are gigantic wastes of time. In this case, I think we should look at this as a HUGE victory. I've read about this story on just about every major media related Web site. The majority of them mention the police received gifts from the church, and the basic violation of human rights. Regardless of whether this person is fined or not, big victory in the court of public opinion.

  162. They both... by AioKits · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...have noodly appendages, so I can see some validity in their fight.

    --
    "Quote me as saying I was mis-quoted." -Groucho Marx
  163. How to Start a Cult by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most applicable to Scientology:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mnNSe5XYp6E

  164. Total parody of the scientology.org website. by Larryish · · Score: 1

    Check out http://www.churchofmyconology.com/

    Excerpt:

    Myconology is the worship and consumption of huge mounds of manure while living in a stale, lifeless environment and giving yourself entirely to some relentless moron. The Mycon system of belief firmly embraces all of the following:

    Mushrooms have it good. They are kept completely in the dark and eat whatever is laying around, with no need for conscious thought. Mushrooms can be harvested for the sole benefit of the reaper without the need for compensation. Why can't humans be more like that? The truth is... they can.

    In Myconology, there are no worries about social pressures or making correct decisions, because all the decisions are made for you. Just keep your mouth shut, produce for your owners, and pay the money on time. Anything else is counter-productive and will be punished.

  165. Why is *this* guy getting in trouble? by weaselsrippedmyflesh · · Score: 1

    I think it's fair to say that if you're protesting a dangerous cult and are arrested for identifying them as such, then you have no rights. Seriously, why is this guy in anymore trouble than the Church of Scientology?

  166. Science wasn't invented yet... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Not meaning to be disrespectful, but how do you know the bible wasn't supposed to be a sci-fi novel? :)

    Because Christians like Mendeleev, Newton & co. didn't invent science until later.

  167. i can has sockpuppet plz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hi twitter.

    1. Re:i can has sockpuppet plz by TheSpoom · · Score: 1

      Who cares if it's twitter or not? GP was informative and moderated as such.

      --
      It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
      - E. Debs
  168. The /b/ Entity is many things... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...but "peaceful" is not one of them. More than anything, it's the collective Ids of its members (who categorically refuse to be called "members of Anonymous" - they usually claim to just be along for the ride). People who attempt to direct the /b/ Entity fail spectacularly, rebuffed with cries of "GTFO" and "Anon is not your personal army"... unless the collective "just along for the ride" members think it would be amusing to continue. That's the main driving force of Anon. Not what it thinks is right or important. What amuses it.

    Anonymous is the genus loci of the Internet, running Agent-Smith-style on the Ids of those who observe it. No more, no less.

    1. Re:The /b/ Entity is many things... by spazdor · · Score: 1

      The indifference of a million teenagers is actually a remarkably difficult force to subvert.

      That might be what gives this movement its power; if these protests were being carried out by a small cadre of dedicated, passionate ideologues, then the CoS would have people to retaliate against.

      When the raid is huge and each individual's contribution to the raid is small and disinterested, then a campaign of retaliation becomes prohibitively expensive. No one person has done enough to warrant fighting back.

      --
      DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
  169. Irony? by Radical+Moderate · · Score: 1

    I would have said that's ironic, but now I'm not so sure....

    --
    Never let a lack of data get in the way of a good rant.
  170. It is not mob rule; not at all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the same way that Wikipedia has more information than disinformation, and more organization than vandalism, a completely open government is not mob rule. (And no, nobody is saying Wikipedia is perfect, but it is a good start.)

    When everyone can participate in every decision in every community, the obvious corollary is that nobody can participate in even a significant fraction of everything out there. People will self-select what parts of government they wish to participate in. Many will opt to not participate at all. As long as everyone still has the chance to participate in everything, then both democracy and meritocracy tend to prevail.

    1. Re:It is not mob rule; not at all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Certainly sounds better than the status quo.

  171. Freedom of Speech!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't believe this friggin world and its quiet transformation into a police state. Of COURSE its a cult!
    All I can say is at least the US still has freedom of speech. US citizens never EVER take that freedom for granted. We may not have it for much longer the way things are headed.

  172. how parliament can involve everyone by spazdor · · Score: 1

    the answer is right in front of you.

    Mod points!

    --
    DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
  173. Double standards by ClientNine · · Score: 1

    So certain groups can stage public displays insulting everyone and others can't. I suppose it's all in whether or not you've claimed the victim mantle in the media's eye.

  174. Sorry, my mistake. by triso · · Score: 1

    My sign said "Cult" but I sometimes confuse 'l' with 'n'. Sorry! Where's the exit?

  175. Better use 'cu*t' by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 2, Funny

    Rather than that why not a sign reading "cu*t". If the police stop you you could explain that you always find Scientologists somewhat curt but didn't want to hurt their feelings by spelling it out. After all it is not your fault if there are at least two other appropriate letters.

  176. so, when i champion tolerance by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    in the name of fighting exclusivity and those who spread "us" versus "them"

    you see me committing the very crime i fight

    my head asplode

    how the hell do you arrive at that conclusion?

    no, seriously: in your mind, there is no conflict in this world between intolerant groups and tolerant groups in this world? there is no conflict between tolerance and intolerance in this world? you sincerely believe that?

    and, yes, you fight intolerance. how the hell does this become the same thing as intolerance?

    have even thought about the subject matter?

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:so, when i champion tolerance by Millennium · · Score: 1

      in the name of fighting exclusivity and those who spread "us" versus "them"

      you see me committing the very crime i fight

      my head asplode

      how the hell do you arrive at that conclusion? Because ultimately, most forms of "intolerance" are merely different definitions of what is "good" and what is "evil." You do the same, defining "evil" as "defining evil" and advocating the same solution: marginalization.

      no, seriously: in your mind, there is no conflict in this world between intolerant groups and tolerant groups in this world?

      That's not quite it. In my mind, there is no conflict because one of the sides doesn't exist. "Tolerant groups" are merely those who have defined their Evil That Must Be Destroyed in a slightly unorthodox fashion -namely, anyone other than them who defines an Evil That Must Be Destroyed- and refuses to recognize this for what it is. Perhaps it just takes one to know one.

      there is no conflict between tolerance and intolerance in this world?

      Rather, that there cannot be conflict. The moment tolerance tries to set itself against intolerance, it eliminates itself by becoming its own enemy.

      and, yes, you fight intolerance. how the hell does this become the same thing as intolerance?

      Because you've begun your march to eliminate that which you define as "evil," exactly like The Other Side. You've become the very thing you fight against, complaining about the splinter in your enemy's eye without seeing the splinter in your own.

      have even thought about the subject matter?

      More than I think you understand. But it doesn't take all that much thought to see that what's good for the goose is good for the gander.
  177. Just saying by Eco-Mono · · Score: 1

    some religions (not just cults) rely on the concept of "mysteries" and would be, uh, fundamentally damaged by their mysteries being opened to all.
    Fun fact: Scientology is organized as a mystery religion (c.f. the "canonical" explanation of OT level copyright enforcement).
    --
    (rot13) rpbzbab@tznvy.pbz
    1. Re:Just saying by Reziac · · Score: 1

      I know... but one cannot force opening up of even the bogus cults without, in fairness, forcing the same on the "real" religions. (With "real" defined as at least founded on ideals, rather than on scams.)

      ISTM the best deterrant would probably be financial -- a high tax rate imposed on all church income that is not then spent on some form of charity work, in keeping with the ideals espoused by said religion. No building up huge war chests!

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  178. mod parent up by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    someone understands what is at stake in the world

    others imagine no conflict, and no threat. and therefore to even defend the idea of tolerance, perversely, in their minds, becomes intolerance

    its insane and bizarre. and yet a very much real and en vogue way to think in certain ivory tower segments of western society that don't understand the world they live in. it blows my mind how some people can be so sheltered

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  179. There's only one man... by billius · · Score: 1

    There's only one man in the whole of England powerful enough to save this kid from the clutches of the evil Scientologist thugs. I think we all know who I'm talking about...

  180. don'tcha think... by spazdor · · Score: 1

    Whoa, that's totally the opposite conclusion from what I would've expected!

    --
    DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
  181. But... it is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sure it's been called a cult in the houses of parliament in the past, because it lacks the status of charity... you're not allowed a profit making religion.

  182. What is Britain? by mrmeval · · Score: 1

    He had a lot to say.
    http://www.amazon.com/Country-Right-Left-1940-1943-Journalism/dp/1567921345

    My favorite though it is most hated by some political persuasions is this.

    Even as it stands, the Home Guard could only exist in a country where men feel themselves free. The totalitarian states can do great things, but there is one thing they cannot do: they cannot give the factory-worker a rifle and tell him to take it home and keep it in his bedroom. That rifle hanging on the wall of the working-class flat or labourer's cottage, is the symbol of democracy. It is our job to see that it stays there.

    --
    I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
  183. Isam does has a Judeo-Christian heritage! by DerangedAlchemist · · Score: 1

    I'm going to ask you to be a mature, rational adult and evaluate nations sprung from a Judeo-Christian heritage, and compare then against nations with an Islamic heritage. Where would you rather live? "
    During the which period? Do you mean the now secular nations, that have a Judeo-Christian heritage? Or back when the church had real power, and could burn witches or condemn people to death for saying the sun is the center of the solar system, etc. Christianity has some very dark history. Apparently much, much more evil than you are aware
    Whichever religion has had political power has behaved in morally atrocious manners. That's the difference I see.
    1. Re:Isam does has a Judeo-Christian heritage! by dfenstrate · · Score: 1

      During the which period? Do you mean the now secular nations, that have a Judeo-Christian heritage? Or back when the church had real power, and could burn witches or condemn people to death for saying the sun is the center of the solar system, etc. Christianity has some very dark history. Apparently much, much more evil than you are aware
      Whichever religion has had political power has behaved in morally atrocious manners. That's the difference I see.


      I'm quite aware of religious history, thank you. Do you imagine we allow the adherents of one religion to run rampant because our forebears have done atrocious things?

      --
      Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
  184. my head asplode by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    Because ultimately, most forms of "intolerance" are merely different definitions of what is "good" and what is "evil." You do the same, defining "evil" as "defining evil" and advocating the same solution: marginalization.


    "i hate black people"

    is intolerance. is evil. absolutely

    now you are going to tell me, that someone somewhere thinks its good to hate black people. therefore, because someone out there believes that, i have to accomodate him. and if i don't, then i am just like him!

    this is what you are telling me

    that his belief is equivalent to mine. just because it exists. i can't fight him, i can't condemn him, because, in your view, i'm just like him when i do that!

    so someone comes in the room: "i think muslims should be our slaves"

    if i were to condemn him for that, i am automatically intolerant

    OF HIS INTOLERANCE!

    you sincerely believe that we are equivalent?!

    in your world view, there is no value definition of what someone believes. or, there is in your wordlview: the only value definition is the effort one takes to defend their values. that that, that alone, makes one as bad as someone else, completely regardless of what they actually value! therefore, in your world, the only person of any worth is someone who will not defend their values at all. well genius, what does that say about the passion behind what that person actually values?

    you're insane. i can't believe people like you exist. and yet there are thousands of dunderheads like you walking around spouting this nonsense: "an attempt to defend your values is the worst sin. it doesn't actually matter what you value"

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:my head asplode by Millennium · · Score: 1

      "i hate black people"

      is intolerance. is evil. absolutely

      And thus, you prove my point. Tolerance is about abandoning absolutes, about removing conflict where it exists. As soon as you take on absolutes, as soon as you try to create or join a conflict, you are betraying the most basic principle of your beliefs.

      now you are going to tell me, that someone somewhere thinks its good to hate black people. therefore, because someone out there believes that, i have to accomodate him. and if i don't, then i am just like him!

      As long as it goes no further than beliefs, then yes. Taking on the tools and techniques of the intolerant is anathema to the truly tolerant.

      this is what you are telling me

      that his belief is equivalent to mine.

      Not quite. He probably at least recognizes his hate for what it is.

      just because it exists. i can't fight him, i can't condemn him, because, in your view, i'm just like him when i do that!

      Not necessarily in my own personal views. But from the definition of tolerance, yes.

      There are some among the tolerance movement who recognize this, and are trying to get away from the "tolerance" euphemism. Usually they try to replace "tolerant" versus "intolerant" with things like "more inclusive" versus "less inclusive" or "exclusive," and then they go about their intolerance as usual. At least it's less hypocritical.

      so someone comes in the room: "i think muslims should be our slaves"

      if i were to condemn him for that, i am automatically intolerant

      OF HIS INTOLERANCE!

      you sincerely believe that we are equivalent?!

      Yes. Your targets are different, but you still seek to marginalize if not eliminate, to place yourselves above others. The proper response, according to tolerance, is to try and work this out between you.

      in your world view, there is no value definition of what someone believes. or, there is in your wordlview: the only value definition is the effort one takes to defend their values. that that, that alone, makes one as bad as someone else, completely regardless of what they actually value!

      You describe it a little more verbosely than I do. I'd phrase it as "Evil is not about what you want, but about what you are willing to do to get it." But yes, your description is a little simplistic but fairly accurate; you've got the basics.

      therefore, in your world, the only person of any worth is someone who will not defend their values at all

      Not quite. There's actually another conclusion that can come from this worldview. Up until now you've been assuming that "tolerance," as commonly defined, is a virtue. As long as you hold that assumption, then you do indeed come to a contradiction at this point: the only way to hold the virtue is to do nothing, and clearly that's not virtuous.

      Discard the assumption, however, and the contradiction vanishes. You do not stand for some kind of neutrality. You have taken a side in this conflict. Recognize it, and stand for it with pride, and while I may not be on the same side as you I would respect you as a foe. Preaching that it's something other than what it is, however, is silly at best and reprehensible at worst.

      well genius, what does that say about the passion behind what that person actually values?

      Sometimes the hardest thing to do is to do nothing. Or perhaps the value itself is flawed; this is the path I've taken.

      you're insane.

      Not really. In the broadest sense, you could call me a moral externalist: someone who believes that morality comes from an external (possibly universal) source. You could contrast it with moral internalism: the belief that morality is internal to each individual. That is the conflict I choose to take my stand on, and I strongly suspect you are on the opposite side of it.

      Do I hate internalists? No. Hell; I married one of the staunchest in

  185. my comment seems to have died by Anonymous+Cowpat · · Score: 2, Interesting
    so, to repeat, get a proverbial shot across their bows:
    1. Get on to the IPCC. They're about the best avenue for getting the relevant officer held personally responsible for their actions.
    2. Write to your MP, they can get questions asked in the house
    3. Similarly, write to any member of the House of Lords that you think might be interested and could ask questions there
    4. Write to the Minsiter of Justice (but write to their House of Commons address)
    5. Write to the local newspaper
    6. Write to all the nationals, particularly the ones who like to kick up a stink about this sort of thing (i.e. the Daily Mail)
    7. Perhaps tip Private Eye off, they seem to like taking a pot-shot at corrupt police officers, and are quite used to dealing with legal threats, and if they go 'fair game' on Hislop, it's hitting prime-time national media at 9p.m. on Friday.
    8. Tip the BBC off as a news organisation.
    9. Look into getting legal aid, both for defence, and possibly to sue to get your sign returned - if they had no authority to take it, you can probably get it back. Repeat media-alerting when you get it back - big photo of you holding it up outside court.
    --
    FGD 135
  186. History by DerangedAlchemist · · Score: 1

    During the which period? Do you mean the now secular nations, that have a Judeo-Christian heritage? Or back when the church had real power, and could burn witches or condemn people to death for saying the sun is the center of the solar system, etc. Christianity has some very dark history. Apparently much, much more evil than you are aware Whichever religion has had political power has behaved in morally atrocious manners. That's the difference I see.
    I'm quite aware of religious history, thank you. Do you imagine we allow the adherents of one religion to run rampant because our forebears have done atrocious things? I expect you to realize that it has nothing to do with this one religion as the history of your forebears clearly shows.
    Religions, of all types, have promoted immorality. It takes a religion to make someone feel morally just and good about killing someone for drawing a picture of Mohamed or forcing a terminally ill person to live for years in incredible agony as they beg to finally be allowed to die. This happens whenever questioning faith is not allowed. Realizing history shows that the particular religion is not the problem, is very important in realizing how to address it.
  187. This is definitely a good thing. by gd23ka · · Score: 1

    Heil Hitler!

    It feels good to be able to say that again in public and not be laughed at or punched into the face. There has been a lot of badmouthing of "Nazis" these past decades. Now thankfully there is powerful legislation in place that protects us from your hate speech!

    Sieg!

  188. Scientology has its own intelligence agency by gd23ka · · Score: 1

    FYI

    Scientology actually has its own Intelligence Agency... The Office of Special Affairs (OSA) formerly known as the Guardian Office (GO).

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Office_of_Special_Affairs

  189. What is better? Mob rule or Elite controlling a by Calledor · · Score: 1

    mob rule? The 'mob' as you and Plato himself would call it isn't as bad as you think if one could do a cursery elimination of certain factors, the primary being people who can control and sway the mob to their own ends.

    What you are refering to, or what you seem to be referring to, has never happened, you can say it has, but a historical anylisis will hold that most cases involved a charismatic leader, an oligarchy, or some other such entity driving the mob entity to a very narrow and disastrous end.

    As industrialized nations become increasingly populous and educated it more likely a beneficial element to have 'mob' rule, an educated citizenry participating in the workings of government, than an elite or moneyed group of people sowing fear, distrust, and anxiety among the 'mob'(more commonly known as yourself and your neighbors). Basically the only way, in todays world, that you can condemn mob rule is to say "The mob, or the group of people I am in, is too stupid to guide itself. I am therefore of the opinion that someone should tell me what to do," at which point in time logicians heads start exploding.

  190. Situation! by Calledor · · Score: 1

    I am a customer. You are a business owner. Your business is seen by me to be hurtful to the environment/freedoms/poor people/cute kittens. I thusly get a placard and go protest your business front in an obnoxious and disruptive way. People can't go into your establishment without seeing me, and they can hear me inside.

    Do I have the right to continue if a policeman has informed me of the disruptive nature of my act? I am protesting in a public place in a non-violent albiet loud and obscene manner.

    Further information, I (the protestor)am in fact shit nuts and off my meds. The business I am protesting is a maker of enviromentally safe teddy bears that make children smarter and more confident through learning programs and encouragement. My speech borderlines on the point that if people aren't incited to destroy the ediface of the complex I very well might do so my self, and seeing this, various customers and clients have decided that they'd rather let kids be stupid and self-concious than brave a mad man.

    So in closing. Freedom of speech is assured in this country. Trying to be like Ghandi, or MLK Jr. is admirable, but if you're resorting to being a loud and obnoxious prick yourself then you have more or less failed and faultered in their footsteps. Words are incredibly powerful, but despite a prevelance of places to practice and perfect speech most people just resort to being somewhere they can't be missed and raving like a lunatic. If you are less eloquent than a stand up comic, don't bother showing up to a protest, no one needs to hear you be a retard in person, and no one will cry when you're beaten over the head in attempt to remove you from our everyday lives.

    1. Re:Situation! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love your post. It pains me to see all the Americans who cry and moan about not being able to stand exactly where they want when they are having having a large protest, while people in other countries are at risk of death just for having the opinon or expressing it in private while a government informant hears it.

  191. I would say the degree of control. by Calledor · · Score: 1

    While someone listed other designations in a more technical manner (ie, a list), I find that the only organizations that spring to mind as a "cult" to me are the ones that have an overbearing control on their members. It's really hard to call a lot of buddists cultists, and if you were to inform a catholic that his religion is and was a cult, you'd first have to find him, and if you waited at church on sunday or saturday you'd still be hard pressed to do that.

    People by and large don't have time for religions that double as cults. Religion is fine by itself, it releaves a lot of the stress caused by metaphysical questions most of us can't answer or would really rather not. That's everyones right and more power to them. Going the extra step of telling people you are right and they are wrong is saddening, but also AOK, they have their opinion and you're an asshole, fair enough. It's the additional effort of keeping people who listen to you indoctrinated and controlled for the duration of their life with no escape and no agency that scares the shit of most free thinking people, and it also happens to be something scientology has shown itself capable of doing.

  192. Modded 5 Insightful? by Calledor · · Score: 1

    Not even a fucking paragraph setup for the obligatory christian jesus joke and this gets modded to five? Insightful of all things? How? What cave have you people been in? Can I get modded 5 insightful if I start ripping off Jim Carry jokes?

    Sorry what I meant to say wasy "Oh ho ho, rather good shot that was. Quick, hit me with one about creationists before 2005 rolls about."

    1. Re:Modded 5 Insightful? by Oktober+Sunset · · Score: 1

      It's all about timing, I hit it, you missed it loser.

  193. Religion Vs. Cult by XNine · · Score: 1

    Ok, so you can all say your clever little "all religions are cults" lines. Yeah, we haven't heard that a BILLION fucking times before (insert roll-eyes emoticon here). The true difference between a religion and a cult is the ability to leave said movement without being vindicated. Anyone who leaves Scientology is harassed to no end. Leave a REAL religion and they'll wish you well. Leave a cult and they'll condemn you. That's the difference. Please remove craniums from rectums now.

    --
    Never monkey with another monkey's monkey.
  194. Re:Your so called"buddy's" conviction was thrown o by ushering05401 · · Score: 1

    The story you link to is completely different from the account I relayed.

  195. Then you really fail at history. by Calledor · · Score: 1

    A majority of the events based in the Old Testament could have been based on some real events, mind you I am obviously excepting the talking bushes, donkeys, and other supernatural encounters. Even then there are some spectacularly strange phenomena that can be observed in the desert and certainly could merit an inclusion in embelished fashion in someones spiritual life prior the age of science. The rest is dramatic exposition that has a certain timeless quality with various influences from more existential fare to the fantastical both with their own peculiar logic at times but often lacking glaring points of outright insanity, in or out of context.

    Scientology by contrast was concieved entirely by a SCIENCE FICTION AUTHOR. It includes, among other things, provisions for erradicating a field of science (psychology and psychiatry), broad application of questionable behavioral improvements (various techs), and violence/agression towards even the slightest detractors.

    Mind you I am perfectly aware that there are Christian Cults that are very close to the same thing AND worse. The thing people are protesting against is that Scientology is on a campaign to be what the Catholic church USED to be through influencing public and political leaders to forward their agenda.

    Dismissing the criticisms of Scientology by saying "Christianity is just as crazy" is not only a remarkably questionable bit of reasoning, but it's a stubborness combined with a lack of history that seeks to silence those trying to raise the alarm.

    In short, research your generic point before posting it and getting it modded 5 insightful by people that have the same fetish for "edgey" yet oft-repeated irony.

  196. Indeed, wonderful age those Middle Ages by Calledor · · Score: 1

    That was how long ago now? 600 years? Didn't they precipitate a massive divide in Christianity, various reforms, people speaking against purportedly infallible authority?

    Current Events are just a fad to you aren't they?

  197. Now that religion makes way more sense. by Calledor · · Score: 1

    Seriously, that I could get behind.

  198. I appreciate your response to him, but by Calledor · · Score: 1

    Your whole arguement is based on scemantics with someone who is telling you the meaning of what they believe. If you were to open up a dictionary, and read the definition of "dog" and you said "It could just as easily be a cat" and an English speaker said "No it's a dog" and you persist then you're really just being a douche for douches sake now aren't you?

    Furthermore going on with historical points that do not describe current status, and then insisting in some abstract way that it does or that it should, is equally contrarian. When you describe how the catholic church or christianity was to justify how something is, and it is mutually agreed that it was bad, and that something currently is bad, then you're basically saying that finding a historical equivilant that dominated a period justifies it's existence in the modern world. Hey remember serfdom? Lets do that, AGAIN. Fun times.

    And you're also incorrect, he is trolling, and you're trying to defend him on the basis of your own belief that all of religion is hogwash. You didn't say it explicitly, but he and I can read between the lines. You don't have to lie to someone because they are offended by something that is meant to offend them. Notice I'm not telling you should grow a bigger brain because you misunderstood the fellow, I'm saying you did so deliberately and you should stop.

    1. Re:I appreciate your response to him, but by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Your whole arguement is based on scemantics[sic] with someone who is telling you the meaning of what they believe. If you were to open up a dictionary, and read the definition of "dog" and you said "It could just as easily be a cat" and an English speaker said "No it's a dog" and you persist then you're really just being a douche for douches sake now aren't you?

      No, my argument is based upon someone else trying to claim what the original poster said does not apply because they believe the definition does not fit, for an unspecified reason and they assume it is derogatory, again for no reason specified.

      Please address my examples specifically. How is referring to praying as telepathy inaccurate or derogatory?

      The poster to whom I was describing was the one claiming the terms were inaccurate and derogatory and he is not the person who originally used them. We're all speaking English here and no one of us has more authority in that area than any other.

      Furthermore going on with historical points that do not describe current status, and then insisting in some abstract way that it does or that it should, is equally contrarian.

      I used both historical and current examples to demonstrate that christianity is very different in different places and times and such blanket statements about what its "main themes" are, are less than useful, especially when completely unsupported.

      And you're also incorrect, he is trolling, and you're trying to defend him on the basis of your own belief that all of religion is hogwash.

      Wow, generalize much? You're making broad and completely incorrect assumptions about my religious beliefs. I said it is understandable to assert that religion is irrational, which is part of the definition. I never said it was "hogwash" or wrong, or anything else of the sort.

      You don't have to lie to someone because they are offended by something that is meant to offend them. Notice I'm not telling you should grow a bigger brain because you misunderstood the fellow, I'm saying you did so deliberately and you should stop.

      I lied to no one. I asked some very pointed questions which both the person I was replying to and you have completely ignored. If you're going to have a coherent discussion you actually have to address my points specifically. Otherwise, it is naught but empty rhetoric.

      Please go back and address my points logically and stop making assumptions about what I think and feel. The original poster had some very good points in showing ways in which christianity and scientology are similar and claiming to be persecuted or that such comments are trolling does nothing to logically disprove them.

  199. Edit: Last paragraph by Calledor · · Score: 1

    Edit:And you're also incorrect, that person is trolling, and you're trying to defend that person on the basis of your own belief that all of religion is hogwash. You didn't say it explicitly, but the fellow you attacked and I can read between the lines. You don't have to lie to someone because they are offended by something that is meant to offend them. Notice I'm not telling you should grow a bigger brain because you misunderstood the fellow, I'm saying you did so deliberately and you should stop.

  200. And as a result... by Calledor · · Score: 1

    the Catholic church and various Christian denominations have nearly taken over the country, killing those that would denounce them, suing others, and basking in the glow of righteous power. MWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!

  201. Seriously, every religion should incorporate by Calledor · · Score: 1

    Godwin's Law somehow. Additionally there should be a contemporary SNL skit to parody "The chuch lady" but instead of an overweight forum poster say "Hitler!" instead of "Satan!".

  202. Separation of church and state by Rickus+Dickus · · Score: 1

    Well, I might be wrong, but isn't there supposed to be a separation of church and state (SCS) in most of Europe? Seems like the lawyers of our demonstrator will have a pretty strong case:

    (a) Either scientology is a 'real' religion, in which case you might wonder if it is acceptable that a police officer in function is so emotionally involved in Scientology that he feels insulted by the use of the word 'cult'. That's a violation of SCS, which is in most non-dictatorships a pretty basic constitutional principle.

    (b) Or Scientology is not a real religion and the SCS is not applicable here. In that case, demonstrator guy is right: every religious group not accepted by mainstream society is per definition a cult (see source of all wisdom; also in OED).

  203. I loved those posters! by Nick+Ives · · Score: 1

    My favourite one was the huge tube poster they did, it was as wide as about three train carriages, IIRC, and pasted onto the wall opposite the platform.

    It showed the skyline of London at night all lit up with hundreds of those eyes looking down; The "SECURE BENEATH THE WATCHFUL EYES" tagline went right across it. When you were stood opposite waiting for a train it totally filled your field of vision - a masterpiece of totalitarian art!

    Stuff like this makes me proud of our system of Ingsoc, always keeping us safe!

    --
    Nick
  204. Oh, Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe the Scientologists have been contributing significant cash to politicians favorite charities in London, or perhaps have followers in office in the city. They are headquartered in the USA, where "cult" does carry a highly negative connotation. The powers that be at Cleared Central Headquarters are acutely sensitive to anything even potentially negative, and this carries over to there operations in other countries.

    More to the point, though, we forget that the great El Ron started his Dianetics thing in the pages of Astounding/Analog Science Fiction and Science Fact magazine back in the 50s as a way to make some money as a science writer and then, when he saw he was onto something and had an enthusiastic supporter in John W. Campbell for a few years, ramped it into a popular self-help business that he soon started calling Scientology, of which Dianetics was but a part.

    The business did not become a cult until El Ron realized he could tack on a spiritual component, declare his operation a Church, and avoid paying taxes. Since he had been a prolific author of galaxy-spanning space operas, this was a fairly simple thing for El Ron to accomplish. He only needed to adapt a space opera template to scientology, and there you have it: a religion based on tales of interstellar space adventures and Secret Masters of the Universe.

    The IRS in the USA begs to differ that this is real religion as opposed to a clever tax dodge. The inner Thetans of Scientologists disagree. They want to run their cash registers free of government oversight.

  205. then your values will die with you by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    your children won't have the same values as you. they will have my values, or your wife's values. so you don't represent a valid coherent belief system. simply because all belief systems must be defended, or even better, aggressively proselytized, in order to survive. if a belief system doesn't have a will to survive, if it won't exert action or even violence to defend itself, it will simply die, becauser some other belief system will act aggressively towards your belief system, and simply kill it, because it isn't defended. killing your belief system, in this analogy, means that it will impose upon your children or your grandchildren how to believe. and since you won't defend your beliefs from that type of activity, your children or grandchildren will simply not believe as you believe. and your beliefs will perish from the earth. your beliefs therefore are simply incompatible with reality, and are therefore pointless

    is that right? is that wrong? doesn't matter, it is simply an undeniable ugly truth of the world you live in. reality doesn't care about some sort of absolute right and wrong, as you assert. therefore, it also doesn't care if a violent belief system that does assert an absolute right and wrong forces its way into the world. reality doesn't care if that belief system grows and spreads. the reality about the artificiality of human moral constructs works against your logic, it doesn't support your logic. you are attempting to hew closely to the indifference of reality towards human belief systems. except that human beliefs systems never needed reality to support them, and never will

    if you understand the concept of memetics, that is, that the competition between ideas and their spread between humans and societies functions sort of like genetics and the darwinian struggle for survival, then what you represent is a failed mutation. a stillborn child. you're missing a chamber in your heart, or your kidneys are unable to remove a toxin from your blood: your conception of morality is a flawed darwinian unfit memetic mutation. a novel memetic change that represents instant failure. a novel new idea that does not provide any survival advantage, and in fact, a severe survival deficit in the ecosystem of ideas and values of the human society in which you attempt to frame what you believe

    an interesting thing about a set of beliefs or values is that they are always challenged, and must be defended. the same way a biological organism is challenged every day to survive: an organism must reproduce and eat. sex and eating are both ugly, but necessary functions. that they are ugly doesn't invalidate their necessity. that they are repugnant does not change the fact that they are intrinic aspects of the need to continue existing. similarly, rejecting the notion that all belief systems must be defended with action and adhere to absolute ideals simply means you embrace the death of your beliefs. its ugly. but its also true

    rejecting sex, or not eating food, simply means you die. same with memetics. rejecting the basic necessity of believing in the absolute value of your set of beliefs and therefore aggressively promoting and defending them, is an essential component of any valid belief system. "valid" means, in this scope: that the belief system can survive

    so you spout all this wonderful nonsense, but you do it like the guy who says "sex is ugly and interferes with an ascetic pursuit of life". ok, fine. and his genes and his memes die with him. history is replete with various dead end beliefs and utopians societies that fade away simply because they are maladaptive to human nature and the way things work in ugly ways in the real world

    here's the truth about the world you live in, regardless of whether you accept it or not:

    the only belief systems that grow and spread and therefore survive are the ones that believe they are absolutely correct, and will defend their right to exist to the violent death. that's ugly. it's also 100% undenaibly true about the reality you find yourself

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:then your values will die with you by Millennium · · Score: 1

      your children won't have the same values as you. they will have my values, or your wife's values. so you don't represent a valid coherent belief system. simply because all belief systems must be defended, or even better, aggressively proselytized, in order to survive.

      I think you've misunderstood something here. I do defend my values, and vehemently so. The point of my last post was to show how "tolerance" in its modern definitions cannot do this. To survive, it has to violate its own definitions, to become something quite different from what people tend to think it is.

      Tolerance is far from the first value system in history to do this. The twentieth century showed us many other examples: communism, capitalism, and socialism all had to mutate, to become something else. None could survive in their "pure" forms. The same is true of modern notions of tolerance. You understand this part; what you don't seem to get yet is that the result is no longer what it originally was. It's something else entirely, something that I'm not sure has a name of its own yet.

      if a belief system doesn't have a will to survive, if it won't exert action or even violence to defend itself, it will simply die, becauser some other belief system will act aggressively towards your belief system, and simply kill it, because it isn't defended.

      And thus, tolerance dies.

      My beliefs do not. What you don't seem to understand is that I have rejected modern "tolerance" (in quotes because I'm attempting to use the common definition) for precisely the reasons you've been stating. And with that rejection, I am free to defend my beliefs again.

      killing your belief system, in this analogy, means that it will impose upon your children or your grandchildren how to believe.

      Perhaps, but that is not the work of a tolerant belief system. The moment tolerance chose to fight, it joined its enemy. You lost before you could even begin.

      ...and since you won't defend your beliefs from that type of activity...

      But I will.

      ...your children or grandchildren will simply not believe as you believe. and your beliefs will perish from the earth.

      I do worry about this, yes, and I believe the world will be a worse place for that. This would be why I defend my beliefs. In doing so, however, I have no choice but to reject modern notions of "tolerance," which would prohibit me from doing so.

      your beliefs therefore are simply incompatible with reality, and are therefore pointless

      You seem to think I've been talking about my beliefs all along. I have not. I've been talking about yours, or rather, what you claim your beliefs to be.

      reality doesn't care about some sort of absolute right and wrong, as you assert.

      I assert that it does, and that you are presenting a misinformed opinion as though it were fact.

      the reality about the artificiality of human moral constructs works against your logic, it doesn't support your logic. you are attempting to hew closely to the indifference of reality towards human belief systems.

      Only under assumption that morality is a thing to be constructed, rather than discovered. I believe the opposite.

      except that human beliefs systems never needed reality to support them, and never will

      Does it? I'm not so sure about that. But whether or not reality requires human belief to support it, humans require reality to support their belief systems. I believe this to be the fatal flaw in internalism.

      if you understand the concept of memetics, that is, that the competition between ideas and their spread between humans and societies functions sort of like genetics and the darwinian struggle for survival, then what you represent is a failed mutation. a stillborn child.

      Ah, memetics, and from there to Dawkins: a prominent atheist externalist, or

  206. "My America" by EmptyHead · · Score: 1

    Actually, years ago I was surprised at how far the protective detail for POTUS, VPOTUS, FLOTUS, etc will go to protect the hecklers' right to free speech.

    My rebellious little brother was at a Dan Quayle speech in Wyoming many years ago and was with a group of obnoxious rebels without a cause shouting miscellaneous non-sense. They apparently did a good enough job to annoy the Young Republicans (YPs) and were harassed. One of the YPs blasted an air horn in their face and attracted the attention of the Secret Service detail. The agent informed the YPs that if that happened again they would be arrested for assault and, furthermore, that the hecklers had a constitutionally protected right to be there and say almost anything they wished.

    Little Brother, and his band of hecklers actually were so impressed by this that they ceased and went home. It was probably his first patriotic experience and he tells the story teary eyed as an affirmation of "His America".

    There is a lot to be proud of in our country (USA), we simply take A LOT for granted.

  207. Re:Your so called"buddy's" conviction was thrown o by hassanchop · · Score: 1

    No, it's not. You quite clearly were recounting a story you read and passing it of as something you actually witnessed.

    Please stop pretending otherwise, it's even more embarrassing than lying in the first place.

    Not to mention, you were factually wrong in any case.

  208. Bad Summary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The police are actually the true Anonymous. They're just tired of the newfags and charged this kid with being cancer.

    Enjoy being Bubba's bitch.

  209. Re:GET IT RIGHT, FAGGOT!! by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    I'm one of the people who think an organisation should not have the right to defend their outdated business model through frivolous lawsuits. I'm a firm believer in free market. Can't survive on your own, get out of the way for something new. If there is a market for something, someone will come up with a way to make money from it. If there is none (anymore), it's not your god given right to continue your business like nothing changed just because you've always done it that way.

    Else we'd still drive around in hackneys because cars cut into the business of those hack cabs, thus cars would have to be banned.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  210. Re:GET IT RIGHT, FAGGOT!! by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Religion, money, care to explain the difference? Both were created to make life easier for the people and both were finally abused to gain power over the people.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  211. if something can be defined as intolerance by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    and it is irreduceable, that is, it isn't pointed at someone else's intolerance, then defying it, fighting it, has the effect of spreading tolerance

    example: "i hate black people" if you hate someone because of an intrinsic aspect of their identity, nothing to do with their behavior, then this is irreduceable intolerance. therefore, there is no logical or moral inconsistency, with the concept of tolerance, to fight people who hate people just because they are black

    dude: you have not become intolerant if you fight racists. truly you can understand the simple logic here

    "The point of my last post was to show how "tolerance" in its modern definitions cannot do this. To survive, it has to violate its own definitions, to become something quite different from what people tend to think it is."

    you mean quite different from your own malformed understanding of the principle of tolerance. your average joe understands what i am talking about. its not complicated. you have a malformed conception of what tolerance means. your average person doesn't. you think fighting intolerant people somehow makes you intolerant as well. no, it simply doesn't. its logical and morally sound, and anyone can easily understand the delineation. except you

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  212. Re:The Nanny State strikes again! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.organiser.org/dynamic/modules.php?name=Content&pa=showpage&pid=238&page=29

  213. Re:The Nanny State strikes again! by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

    Read the article - their second largest market for economy-class long-haul flights is to India. Presumably, then, it makes some sort of economic sense to stop serving beef on flights largely full of people who have a religious objection to eating beef. Would you serve pork in your airline meals if a major market segment was flights to Israel?

  214. Re:The Nanny State strikes again! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What relevance does that have that it's the second largest market? Did you even bother to check what that statement meant? For the record, BA has 16 flights a week to India. Because of 16 flights a week, you're going to take all of your beef from all your flights? That is preposterous.

    Another example of political correctness gone mad, and Britain is the poster child for groupthink en masse. George Orwell was a genius, his country is turning into exactly the type of nonsense he imagined it would.

  215. Re:The Nanny State strikes again! by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1

    Because of 16 flights a week, you're going to take all of your beef from all your flights?

    Did *you* read the article? It's removed from pikey-class flights.

    Personally I'd rather see all airline meals be vegetarian - not because I'm a vegetarian (I think vegetarianism is stupid and deeply ecologically unsound, but that's an argument for another day) but because the risks inherent in reheating cooked meat correctly in the primitive facilities of an airliner galley outweigh the benefits of serving meat.

    BA stopped serving pork, ham and bacon *years* ago, to stop Jewish passengers complaining. Is that "groupthink" too?

  216. A Spade is a Spade by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He called it what it is