UK Prosecutors Say 'Cult' Acceptable
An anonymous reader notes that following our discussion this week about the 15-year-old who was under threat of prosecution for calling Scientology a cult in a recent demonstration, the UK Crown Prosecution Service has decided that there is no case to answer. They have issued new guidance to the City of London police clarifying when they can use their public order powers. Quoting: "A [CPS] spokesman said: 'In consultation with the City of London Police, we were asked whether the sign was abusive or insulting. Our advice is that it is not abusive or insulting and there is no offensiveness (as opposed to criticism), neither in the idea expressed nor in the mode of expression.' A spokeswoman for the City of London Police said: 'The CPS review of the case includes advice on what action or behavior at a demonstration might be considered to be "threatening, abusive or insulting." The force's policing of future demonstrations will reflect this advice.'"
...the Cult of Scientology is about to ask for its money back.
But insulting??? How can anyone justify insults as crimes?
Every religion is a cult, just a popular one. Scientology isn't popular in any definition of the world and as such "cult" is very appropriate.
I hope the UK CPS is Clear!
i would say amongst the slashdot community it certainly is, but in wider society, its a simple descriptor of a small religion. you may happily supply the negative connotations of calling something a cult, but as these judges wisely ruled, the negative connotations are not automatically implied
if the student held up a sign saying "bill gates is a geek", amongst the 13 year old male jock contingent, this is a horrible slander. but with the rise of the internet, its almost a compliment, especially as "geek" implies new wealth nowadays
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
But has replacing an 'S' with a dollar sign ever been tested in court? It is a powerfully clever insult, but that makes it all the more likely to be noticed. I am afraid of taking on both Microsoft and Scientology united.
It shall be remembered that 20 years ago, the cult of $scientology was deemed a criminal organization in Ontario after it infiltrated the Ontario Ministry of Justice and proceed to trash their evidence file. The Supreme Court of Canada has also recently ruled so.
ZOMG !
We won one ?!
I can't just believe that sanity has won out over
religious sensitivities...and in the UK too !
Grats to the young gent for holding his ground.
There just might be some hope left for this generation.
End of Line.
he should be thrown in jail.His description of scientology as a cult was sadly one letter out.
Unfortunately the account is of a reporters understanding of a 16 year old's understanding of the law. Was he arrested, or charged, or was his name just taken down? Since he was involved with the police, the kid may have thought he was in more trouble than he actually was.
Now, I'm an athiest, but I can't stand the misuse of terminology, even if it feels clever to do so.
Cults engage in serious mind control. Religions are just a set of spiritual principles. For example, there are some Christians who worship in a cult-like society, and some that do not.
To those who want to cite bible passages, you're missing the point. It is the current behavior of the group that defines this, not what's in their books.
Anyone who studies scientology will know how intense their brainwashing is, and since I was once part of a Christian church that was not a cult, I know it is as different as night and day.
Cult behavior is along the lines of 'removing subject's ego, connections outside the church, ability to question doctrine', and these factors can sometimes be found in any religion, but are not attributed to the whole set of that religion.
Since the Church of Scientology is a hierarchal organization, it can be classified as a cult, but there are practitioners of Scientology beliefs in the 'Freezone' which do not answer to the CoS command and are not cultlike.
"I only speak the truth"
Karma: null(Mostly affected by an unassigned variable)
"Thank you, Thought Police!"
Trolling is a art,
that there is somewhere in the world where the system works rationally and figures itself out.
Chris [CapitalC]
I saw that Ontario is passing (or passed, maybe) new hate crime legislation that's limited to offenses against a "vulnerable minority". If the law is going to be applied selectively to defend only groups the prosecutors care about, it seems preferable to just state it up front like they're doing.
What I'm listening to now on Pandora...
...a rose by any other name is still a cult. Good news!
Going on means going far
Going far means returning
So using the word "cult" is not insulting or offensive, so he gets away... well, good for him, but that's the wrong principle. Freedom of speech is serious business, damnit! Everyone must have the right to insult and offend and wipe the butt clean on the holy books of every damn religion out there.
Circumcision is child abuse.
If you go around calling people "cults", it is very offensive.
We live in pluralistic society, people! Have some sensitivity to people different from you!
Bart: Church, cult, cult, church. So we'll get bored someplace else every Sunday. Does this really change our everyday lives?
How appropriate.
C-x C-s C-x k
While I don't disagree, I can't help but wonder how things would have gone if the statement was "The Anglican church is a dangerous cult." The wording of the ruling basically says this is criticism and is fine. It will be interesting to see this tested.
All negative connotations aside, the only functional difference between a cult and a religion is popular acceptance and usually membership size.
Her Majesty's Crown Prosecution Service will no longer accept cases for calling the sky blue or the grass green.
If you haven't been down-modded lately, you aren't trying.
Sacred cows make the best hamburger.
You're not fooling anyone, buddy.
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
This is weird. Calling Scientology a cult is a no go .
Holding a sign that says "Behead those who insult Islam" is all well and good.t
http://seekerblog.com/wp-content/uploads/_blogger_5932_1957_1600_religion_of_peace_1-1.jpg
The scientology planned on loosing this one...
http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=559324&cid=23489324
The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
that there's no need to love god as long as you live right.
Also the bible says that you must love your family.
the bible is a collection of short stories, hacked together into one book. And so its inconsistencies are irrelevant to the people who are religious.
How many people hate their family and love only God? The majority of christian sects.
I'm an atheist too, but if we walk down the road of villification, we're no better than those that say without God in your life, you cannot be a moral person. We can hardly counter that with amoral FUD, can we?
Sadly, the young fellow will probably be harassed by the Scientology group from now on.
that the policewoman doing the summonsing didn't request him to remove his mask...
Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
I was just rummaging about and I discovered and interesting tit bit it appears in Scotland they are not allowed to call themselves a religion. If they are not a religion and can't call themselves that what do they characterize them selves as? (I really should look into that, as I live there...hmm might be able to get them into trouble)
.. was DEFINITELY abusive (of powers), offensive (beyond reason) and insulting (to anyone's intelligence but the plods who came up with this travesty).
Does it really need a COURT judgment to decide that this was A Very, Very Stupid Idea? Slow day at the police? Was there an arrest quota they needed to fulfill or was there just a general desire to make the police force look ridiculous?
Sjeez.
This isn't a major liberties issue.
There have been several major changes to British liberties recently - the Terrorism Act is the beast behind almost all of them. Those changes - such as the outright ban on demonstrating near parliament and the requirement of express permission in order to do so nearby - are completely distinct from what has happened here.
Also, don't confuse the recent legal order curtailing legitimate demonstrations to a specified area either (Brian Haw has been protesting the Iraq war outside of Parliament for 6 years!)
What has happened here is quite simple: an irate Scientologist who doesn't know the Public Order Act as much as the officer involved, persuaded a PC to halt the demonstration because of the wording on the sign.
This was a mistake by the officer based upon the facts and wording of the sign which, as the CPS said, cannot be deemed to be threatening, insulting or abusive (Public Order Act).
The "cult" description of Scientology is now a matter of fact within UK (there's an EU opinion too) born from the obiter of Justice Latey from a 1984 high court ruling which the sign incongruously quoted.
The officer should have better exercised his office of constable, chosen to read what written, and make up his own mind (in the UK a police officer is responsible for his own actions, he cannot be commanded by those senior to do anything he does not believe is lawful - he is personally liable for what he does and does not, save for contractual/employment obligations). Here the PC showed he was inadequately aware of the Public Order Act which permits the 15 year old's protest.
The CPS was right. They did the lawful thing. It would never have gone to court from the get go. It is an utterly laughable mistake by the PC that even Lionel Hutz would have recognised!
I hope the London constabulary involved is property briefed on their public order duties. I personally feel this was entirely avoidable - especially since R(Laporte).
Matt
I agree that this decision is a good one. But I wonder...How would they rule on someone holding up a sign that says, "homosexual behavior is sinful"? Would that be seen as "threatening, abusive, or insulting"?
Should it be? If so, why?
Scientology doesn't really care about winning these cases. One of their tactics to cause fear and control people is by prosecuting and harassing them. This is nothing new!
That spelling error on his sign turned out to be fortuitous. "Scientologists are complete cults."
Being as the captcha is "jeopardy", will stop there and put on my flame retardant underwear.
Was tempted to use Linus instead of CmdrTaco, but figured it would just open the Gates of Hell.
Strangely enough, $(cent)i(euro)nt(currency)£(currency)g¥ is the only word I could think of containing all of c, e, l, o, s and y. An interesting connection, really. :/
Also, neither cent, euro or generic currency symbols are supported with or without JS in the new discussion system, making this post way less funnier
No mention of what's going to happen to the police who have have abused their power. Probably the same thing that happened to the chaps who shot that poor Charles de Menezes eight times in the head without provocation, nothing.
What ever happened to the days of the local Bobby? Friend to all law abiding citizens, there to help and not hinder. Nowdays when you REPORT a crime they're rude to you.
What the fuck happened?
You feel sleepy. Close your eyes. The opinions stated above are yours. You cannot imagine why you ever felt otherwise.
Religion: A large, popular cult.
Cult: A small, unpopular religion.
Thinking for yourself: Awesome.
Question everything
That means we can hold up signs in 144 point fonts. F*&!ING* CULT
and in 12 point. * "FOOLING"
Yes, because nobody ever gets riled up about what Middle Easterners say. It gets taken so lightly.
Hehe, that Ahmedinejad, he's such a joker. He made another joke about the holocaust. We should give him a seat in the Security Council just for his comedic value. How about as a prank I'll send a crate of non-alcoholic beer, only, I'll actually put alcoholic beer in it! Imagine that! We'll have the whole General Assembly in stitches!
I hate printers.
Damn, it was supposed to have Bush: at the start in triangle brackets, but it got stripped. Hmm... Bush got stripped...
I hate printers.
If thats not coercian of the worst kind I don't know what is. And it was a part of the roman catholic church - a supposed religion.
For those that don't understand the parent post, read about the Cult of $cientology bribing the cops.
I wonder how much would City of London Police go for on eBay? Pretty cheap probably.
The head of the crown prosecution service has just been arrested by the chief operating thetan of the city of London police and charged with being a suppressive person.
Cult: A small, unpopular religion.
-torgis
It's a crime to insult someone?
I thought that hate speech, inciting a crime, or defamation are the only types of speech that are illegal?
So what does freedom of speech mean then if you can't insult anyone or any organization? It's negative criticism generally insulting?
So the Scottish appeasers won't let people call the Co$ a religion? Now that would be an abusive, insulting label!
I am a v1ral sig. Plse c0py me and h3lp me spread. Thank y0u?
While I fear that _anything_ being posted below this rather abusive first post will get modded Troll, I have to say that wasn't all that offtopic in the first place.
Maybe American readers of this site are not that much aware of the situation in Britain, but for the last years signs held up at demonstrations asking to 'behead those who insult Islam' or for 'death to Israel' have gone 'unnoticed' by the British authorities, meaning that no-one ever got arrested for displaying them (or relentlessly shouting similar slogans). Many Europeans are already taking this as proof that Britain has finally fallen to the Islamists.
In that light, it would have been outrageously laughable if voicing this rather common sense opinion on Scientology would have resulted in prosecution.
A World in a Grain of Sand / Heaven in a Wild Flower,
Infinity in the Palm of your Hand / And Eternity in an Hour.
Theres apparently going to be a big protest on June 14th 'At A City Near You'.
My web domain.
http://badpsychics.com/thefraudfiles/modules/news/article.php?storyid=775
Actually no, those Islamist protesters were prosecuted for inciting religious and racial hatred and found guilty. They are now in jail.
What if Tetris was invented by Nazis?
First there was this:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2008/may/17/horseracing
and then just today, the use of illegal search warrants has been frowned upon:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/hampshire/7416117.stm
For the benefit of those outside the UK, the police force that covers most of London is the Metropolitan Police. The "City of London" force just covers a small patch of ground to the east of the centre (the historic "City").
http://www.libdemvoice.org/why-im-glad-nick-griffin-was-acquitted-235.html
Nick Griffin, the Leader of the BNP, was acquitted yesterday of charges of inciting racial hatred. In 2004 Griffin made a speech to BNP activists in which he described Islam as a "wicked, vicious faith" and said that Muslims were turning Britain into a "multi-racial hell hole".
Griffin is a racist, he espouses an ugly creed based on fear and ignorance, almost every word he says is offensive. But being offensive shouldn't be enough to land you in jail.
Yesterday, Mizanur Rahman, a young radical Islamist was jailed for his part in the protest earlier this year over the Danish newspaper cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed. Rahman waved banners and chanted into a megaphone shouting "Annihilate those who insult Islam" and "Behead those who insult Islam."
Although he apologises now, Rahman's remarks were full of hate, they were grotesque, offensive and shocking. But being shocking shouldn't be enough to get you convicted.
I'm a black gay man and much of the anti-hatred legislation that Griffin and Rahman were prosecuted under was designed to protect people like me. But freedom is a delicate thing, and I believe that our current raft of hate crime laws in danger of undermining the very freedom they aim to protect.
So the "Behead those who insult Islam" guy was jailed, the scientology protester and the guy that called Islam a "wicked vicious faith" were not. Seems fair enough to me. Rahman clearly stepped over the incitement line and Griffin didn't (or more likely didn't step over it in public).
Rahman got six years in prison
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mizanur_Rahman
He participated in the Islamist demonstration outside the Danish Embassy in London in 2006, where he prayed "Oh Allah, we want to see another 9/11 in Iraq, another 9/11 in Denmark, another 9/11 in Spain, in France, all over Europe. Oh Allah, destroy all of them." [3] On November 9, 2006, he was found guilty of inciting racial hatred[4]. The jury could not reach a verdict on the charge of inciting murder. The Crown indicated it would seek a retrial.[5] At his retrial in 2007 he was additionally convicted on the solicitation to murder, and sentenced to six years in prison.
The government must really hate you if they keep trying you until they get the right result. And everyone else must hate you too if no one questions this dubious piece of gamesmanship. Many Europeans are already taking this as proof that Britain has finally fallen to the Islamists. I'd say France's suburbs have already fallen to the Islamists. And Malmo in Sweden is pretty close to doing so. But the British state has centuries of experience ruling all sorts of people. The people at that demonstration are a tiny, unpopular minority on state benefits and the rules can be rewritten to make life very unpleasant for them. In that light, it would have been outrageously laughable if voicing this rather common sense opinion on Scientology would have resulted in prosecution. I agree it would have been laughable if this 15 year old Anonymous guy had been prosecuted. I'd throw the book at Rahman though. And rewrite it and throw it again if the first time didn't do the trick.
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;
From the GP post:
"Anyone who studies scientology will know how intense their brainwashing is, and since I was once part of a Christian church that was not a cult, I know it is as different as night and day."
From your post:
"If you really believe this then I suspect that you have not been subjected to a "religion" firsthand."
You might want to read the post you are criticizing someday....
Thanks, and guess what: in this case, I'm perfectly happy to stand corrected.
Not so sure about the BNP guy, anyway. If those guys were opposed to Islam and similar cults only, that would be ok, but seeing that they are openly xenophobic against all non-whites (and some white folks as well, I figure), they would make bad allies for the case of defending civilization. The German neo-fascists are openly embracing Islamists, by the way, and are trying to join forces against Israel and the US.
A World in a Grain of Sand / Heaven in a Wild Flower,
Infinity in the Palm of your Hand / And Eternity in an Hour.
No good deed goes unpunished. - Avon, Blake's 7
Isn't the guy who does the voice of Bart Simpson a Scientologist?
"Quote me as saying I was mis-quoted." -Groucho Marx
If you love any of those things more than you do God you can not call yourself the disciple of God, since you "serve" something else.
Nothing new really, Jesus said the same thing on many other occasions and in different terms (you can't love both god and money, you can't serve two masters for you will love one and despise the other etc).
Now if you try to use these passages to "prove" that Jesus was inciting hate in his followers, then you don't have a point. For Jesus also said he did not come to abolish "the law" (i.e. old testament) and the commandment to love your parents is in there too.
As the island of our knowledge grows, so does the shore of our ignorance.
cult: â"noun
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.
What protects Christianity from being a "Cult" is that many consider it NOT TO BE FALSE.
Once again, the stupid inflammatory propaganda is modded up, while the simple truth is ignored.
I know you all like to have a big circle jerk over how Europe is being taken over by the Muslims, who get away with anything, but it simply isn't true.
The protesters who were caught by police chanting those slogans were arrested, and they were prosecuted and some of them are now in jail.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/6904622.stm
I'd hardly call 6 years in jail is hardly unnoticed.
Muslims are not being allowed to get away with hate speech any more tan anyone else, Abu Hamza (the crazy hook handed guy for those who don't know him) is in jail for inciting racial hatrid, and soliciting murder, so have other muslim preachers http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7354397.stm
Muslims are held accountable just the same as everyone else. I'm afraid your apocalyptic fantasy of a Muslim takeover is just that a fantasy.
"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible, make violent revolution inevitable" - JFK
Not so sure about the BNP guy, anyway. If those guys were opposed to Islam and similar cults only, that would be ok, but seeing that they are openly xenophobic against all non-whites (and some white folks as well, I figure), they would make bad allies for the case of defending civilization. The German neo-fascists are openly embracing Islamists, by the way, and are trying to join forces against Israel and the US. Well they aren't allies - the English interned fascists in World War II, and would do so again if the BNP became too powerful.
But Nick Griffen manages to avoid incitement, at least in public. So he's not going to get locked up.
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;
If incitement were legal the BNP and the Muslims will both get their followers to attack each other and there will be chaos.
I think it's the same in the US. The first amendment prevents the government from using prior restraint. But if KKK members make a speech telling people to lynch blacks they could still be prosecuted.
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;
Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
A cult, not a cunt! Can't you fucking read my sign?!
His statues, his pictures, his words were revered.
The state was officially atheist. We were talking about religion, not gods.
You can't take the sky from me...
Even Red Dwarf fans could be called a cult. The sign said Dangerous Cult.
Plus when talking about mind control cults we should be using cult expert methodology rather than broad dictionary terms.
But yes, Christianity started out as a Jewish sect. There's no question about that.
The problem is that Jehova's Witnesses, Scientologists etc. are used to saying "we're no more a cult than Christianity is". So don't fall for it.
Been thinking about this ever since the story broke. Unless there's something in COS rules forbidding the joining of any other group...
Yes, there is a difference. But where is the line? And who gets to draw the line? There can be too much abuse with line maintenance.
"I would rather be exposed to the inconveniences attending too much liberty than those attending too small a degree of it." --Thomas Jefferson
"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible, make violent revolution inevitable" - JFK