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Tuesday, July 15, 2008

David Miscavige - Scientology's Leader

Meet David Miscavige, Church of Scientology's leader.

What kind of a leader is David Miscavige?

Let's see, when I think of great leaders, I think the greatest of all lead by example. They are the first ones to risk it all, they ask nothing of their followers that they themselves wouldn't do. They lead from in front and are an example of all that is good in the group.

Nope! Leading by example is definitely not Miscavige's style. He demands long, long hours from all staff, with poor food, very poor pay, no rewards and no benefits for his workers. His staff sleeps in bunk beds or, very often they are forced to sleep under their desks. While he, himself, sets his own hours, has luxurious private quarters with servants, has the very best food and whiskey, $500.00 Egyptian cotton shirts and $3,000.00 suits, his own custom van, private cars, and a $20,000.00 custom motorcycle. He takes multiple vacations every year -- at no cost to himself! Staff pay is around $50.00 per week, if they are lucky (and they often are not so lucky), while Miscavige pulls in over $140,000.00 per year -- with no out of pocket expenses!

Nope! Miscavige is not that kind of leader. So what kind of leader is he?

Well, some very good leaders have lead by inspiration and charisma. These leaders inspire great things from their followers because they have a vision, a force of will, ideals that people just want to support and follow.

Nope! This is not Miscavige's style of leadership either. Actually, Miscavige has no vision he can admit to. His core vision is making money and controlling people, which he can't really admit to publicly. When Miscavige is "running things" in any one of his many offices, he has all the charisma of Attila the Hun. Oh, he can appear to be charming at his grandiose, fanciful events, but every phrase, every smile, every pause-for-applause is carefully scripted and is completely fake. No, charisma is not in Miscavige's skill set.

Nope! So far, we've discovered what kind of leader Miscavige is not. But what kind of leader is he? Let's look further:

Does he lead with courage? Some mighty fine leaders get by with great amounts of courage alone.

Nope, Miscavige is a coward. He is a bully. He beats people up because he knows they can't fight back. He browbeats people because they cannot answer. He struts around -- but only because he is surrounded by a retinue of muscle-boys and sycophants. No, Miscavige has never shown any courage.

Well, how about leading by taking responsibility? Some leaders take on huge amounts of responsibility and excite, in their followers, a desire for more responsibility themselves.

Oh lord, definitely not! Miscavige comes up with these "bright" ideas for things, slams his idea through and then takes absolutely no responsibility for the inevitable disaster that follows. Miscavige's "bright" ideas always cause failure and inevitably result in things getting much, much worse. But whatever happens, it is never his fault! He's never responsible for the disasters directly caused by his plans! He blames anyone and everyone else, and metes out punishment by the truckload -- usually by sending his targets to the church's private prison camp. But no matter how many people Miscavige blames for his failures, he keeps failing.

So how does David Miscavige lead the Church of Scientology? He uses these:
  • Intimidation: He yells, threatens, insults and abuses.
  • Lies: He will tell any lie to get what he wants. He tricks, he lies, he fools people.
  • Beatings: He likes to hit, choke, slap, punch. But only when he has his muscle-boys with him. He especially likes to attack people without warning. He smiles as he does it.
  • Punishment: At the Int. Base there are many levels of punishment. You can lose your pay, your time off, your meals, your rights to go home and sleep, to see and talk to your family, to take a bath, to get medical attention. These and many more "privileges" can be and are denied by Miscavige and his henchmen, for some minor infraction or for no infraction at all. Note that there are not, and have never been, any balancing "rewards" for good work. Miscavige has used up all the rewards on himself.
  • RPF: The "Rehabilitation Project Force", a private prison at a number of primary Sea Org bases, where those who are to be punished are forced to do manual labor, with poor food and little sleep, and they must engage in endless "confession" sessions, for years, many years. Some, who "know too much", will, apparently, never be released.
  • SP Hall: The nickname for a large room at the Int. Base where Miscavige has locked up many of the prior leadership of the Church of Scientology. Their crimes are unknown, but they, too, must endure the never-ending punishments and "confessions" of the RPF.
  • Sec-checks: All the staff at the Int. Base must endure never-ending "Security Checks", intense sessions of confession, to elicit confessions of any and all transgressions. If a staff member has no transgressions, they are hammered at until they confess to something, anything. Under this intense pressure, most will confess to completely fictitious "crimes", just to escape the room. Oh, but, Miscavige does not, ever, get a Sec Check. Or auditing. Or training.
  • Degradation: Miscavige loves to read aloud, at staff meetings, everyone's confidential "confessions" from their Sec Checks, the more discreditable, the better. Despite the claims of the church that "auditing sessions are confidential," for Miscavige, they are the joke-of-the-day. Given that these "confessions" are forced and, often, fictitious, the results are truly degrading. But Miscavige has a very good time.
So, that's "leadership" as defined by David Miscavige. That's at the very top of the Church of Scientology. That's the epitome of Scientology in action. That's what Scientologists support, every day.

What kind of a leader is David Miscavige? He leads by psychopathic abuse.
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10 comments:

  1. Question: Were you actually involved in life at the Int Base and did you see and experience this stuff first-hand? I hope this guy's reign ends very soon!

    Anon

    ReplyDelete
  2. The information in this blog is from people who experienced this insanity first hand.

    Each day brings the end of Miscavige's reign of terror closer.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Keep up the pressure! Excellent analysis. I hope his underlings pass this one on!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hey Bill, I've heard the Fluffy Little Tail has taken to drinking. Can you verify that?

    -Red

    ReplyDelete
  5. Word is he is drinking half a bottle of the very expensive Glenfiddich Single Malt Scotch Whiskey. Paid for by all the generous Scientologists.

    Hey if you're going to be a psychotic alcoholic cult leader, you might as well go with the best!

    ReplyDelete
  6. I have worked under this man and can confirm much of what you say. What was even more heartbreaking to me personally was the fact he will eventually turn you into his enemy when all you wanted to do was serve the cause with everything you had. Even if you think you are on his good side, it is a matter of time before he will viciously turn on you, label you his enemy and THEN make you his enemy. In other words, you weren't his enemy in the first place, you didn't want to be his enemy, but he goddam well ACTIVELY turns you into one. In a way he did me a favor, because it was this vicious side of him that broke my trance and woke me up to fact that I had slowly been turned into a religious zealot and had lost my ability to look and think for myself. Thank God I have finally broken free of Miscavige's cult.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Despite growing up in Scientology, it seems that Miscavige doesn\'t believe in it. Or do you think he has some serious psychological problems and actually believes in the tech despite his actions?

    Also, how far up in management do you have to get before you find people that don\'t actually believe in Scientology?

    ReplyDelete
  8. Note to RonBotHunter: I'm glad you write long articles about Scientology. Please do not randomly post them here as "comments". While interesting, they are too long and off topic.
    Thanks.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Here is an article on Miscaviages abuse of the post he holds.

    http://the-scientologist.com/hollow-chairman.shtml

    regards,

    mike
    IFA

    ReplyDelete
  10. @Michael Moore

    You guys just don't get it. David Miscavige is the symptom not the cause of the problems with the Church of Scientology.

    One guy corrupted and suborned thousands of Scientologists, thousands of OTs, thousands of highly trained auditors? One guy?

    You can't fix what's wrong with Scientology until you recognize what's wrong with Scientology.

    ReplyDelete

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