 |  | PROTEST |
Opposing Scientology
Protesters gather outside the new Philly HQ.  by St. John Barned-Smith

Their signs read “Open your mind (and close your wallet)” and “Honk if you think cults
should be taxed too.”
At first it was difficult to take the protesters seriously. Most looked like
well-dressed nerds who’ve spent way too much time watching V for
Vendetta or Hackers. They were decked out like the
Matrix’s Agent Smith, but wearing Guy Fawkes masks, bandannas—even
a plastic horse head.
On Saturday a crowd of more than 200 protesters staged a demonstration outside the
Church of Scientology’s new base of operations in Philadelphia, a vaguely art deco
12-story tower on Chestnut Street between 13th and Broad. Most of the protesters came
from an online organization that calls itself “Anonymous”—so-named because it recognizes
no leader, and any Internet user can join the group.
While eating cake and donning party hats in mock celebration of late Scientology
founder L. Ron Hubbard’s birthday (which was Saturday), they rallied against a laundry
list of alleged abuses, from Scientology’s aggressive silencing of critics to its
tax-exempt status and its stance on digital copyrights.
Depending on whom you talk to, these activists could be rebels who’ve finally found a
cause, religious bigots, computer terrorists or harmless pranksters. In any case,
they’ve finally found a target big enough to get them away from their computers: the
Church of Scientology.
The protest here in Philadelphia—there were others from Atlanta to Sydney—was led by
the tall, thin 21-year-old “Baconator” (to his many online peers) who opposes
Scientology based on their anti-psychiatry views.
“Their portrayal of psychiatrists and the psychiatric industry—they portray them as
people who give out drugs without any care or regard—and their views on mental health as
a whole are stuck in the 1940s,” Baconator said at Saturday’s protest, adding that
psychiatry has been crucial in helping him overcome his personal battle with bipolar
disorder.
“Without it, I’d be dead,” he concluded.
Of course Baconator isn’t alone in protesting Scientology’s stance on psychiatry. (Who
can forget Tom Cruise’s catfight with Brooke Shields over her choice to take drugs to
treat her post-partum depression?) But each of the protesters in attendance had their
own beef with the Church.
The vast majority of the protesters were high-school and college-age students.
“Enigma” (his online identity) looks barely old enough to shave.
Dressed in a suit, a red tie and a fedora on Saturday, he took issue with a broader
set of problems within the Church. But he insisted his anger wasn’t directed at
individual Scientologists.
“I’m not protesting the beliefs, but there’s too many shady things going on in there,”
he said. “They have tax-exempt status, and other religions are taxed. It’s a bunch of
things they’ve done. It’s intimidation … They literally drain the accounts of all their
members so they have nothing left. It’s a very cruel way to treat people, and it’s very
totalitarian.”
“Nancy and Dan,” a grandparent-y couple from the Philadelphia suburbs, were among the
oldest protesters gathered. They said they had watched their son join the group and go
from a dean’s list student to college dropout. “We didn’t know how deceptive or
deceitful it was,” said Nancy, who requested pseudonyms in case their son reads their
comments and gets offended. “More people need to know about this.”
And then there were the Scientologists themselves. Dressed in suits and purple
alligator jackets, they looked as formal as their Anonymous opponents—but a lot less
happy. They refused to speak to the protesters or the press. Instead, they stood outside
their building filming and photographing the protesters—one of the main reasons so many
of the protesters wore masks.
Although Scientology has officially ended “fair game,” a practice of doing everything
possible to silence critics, many members of Anonymous believe the tactic still exists.
In response to the Anonymous protests, a national spokesperson for Scientology has
called the group “cyberterrorists,” and compares them to communists and devotees of
Hitler and Mein Kampf.
Reaction to the protest was mixed. Some pedestrians blitzed by. Others paused to munch
on hoagies and read flyers.
“I researched [Scientology] years ago,” said Todd Gottlieb, a born-again Christian who
stopped to observe. And though it seems to him many people “drank the Kool-Aid,” he said
the Anonymous protest “shows young people are using their minds.”
“People were very receptive to us,” Baconator later says of the protest. “Those who
came out to look at us dancing on one side of the street stayed and listened to those
who were handing out fliers on the other side of the street.
|