March 14, 1998 - SP Bill
This was my first picket. I had expected to encounter a
bunch of OT's with "the right stuff" who would get in our
faces and order us to leave immediately. Instead there was
no resistance from the clams whatsoever. Gregg's previous
picketing must have softened them up to the point where
they just stood around helplessly and let us take complete
charge of the situation. Gregg sure had those clams
well-trained!
The weather on Saturday morning was partly cloudy,
temperature around freezing. We met a few minutes before
the picket was due to start at a nearby coffee shop. It was
nice to be able to greet all the familiar a.r.s. names in
person for the first time.
At 10 am we headed over to the Org, which was just
opening up. They were caught completely off guard. The
ground floor of the Dianetics shop is pretty much enclosed
by large glass windows so we could peer inside. Sorta like
keeping a bunch of clams in an aquarium for pets. Within
moments of our arrival on the scene every scieno in the
place was on the phone. They all wore serious, even grave
expressions. Very efficient. No laughing, joking, smiling -
strictly business. I thought, "Aha, we are going to get
handled." A few minutes later a taxi pulled up at the side of
the Org. It was delivering a package which contained about
a dozen of those white foam-board placards. A female
staffer came out, paid the cabbie and took the placards
inside. Were they going to counter picket? I had my video
camera with me and turned it on the sea ogre types inside
the building. They definitely don't like being photographed.
Of course there were several cameras on the inside looking
out. They were determined to get all of us and our signs
duly recorded. One twit was even using a flash unit, trying
to photograph us from inside the main Org lobby (very dark)
through a plate glass window. We were outside on the
sidewalk where there was a whole lot more light. Silly clam.
After a while they quit photographing us and settled down
to business. The first body router they sent out was a
frail-looking woman who has been at the Org for eons - I
remember seeing her hanging around outside the org some
twenty years ago! She still carries the same haggard, drawn
expression like her life is such an overwhelming burden. I
don't think I've ever seen a sadder-looking creature. I asked
her if she was willing to communicate with me. She gave
me the best death-stare she could muster. Pretty pathetic.
I should have flunked her for not "just being there." I could
read the intense disapproval of the pickets and what we
were doing all over her face. She wasn't going to say one
word to me.
More body routers (BR's) showed up. They were trying to
lure potential victims into the Dianetics shop. Foot traffic
on Yonge Street was picking up nicely now, lots of people
strolling on the sidewalk. They needed half a dozen body
routers to keep up with all the pedestrians. The approach is
always the same - they use young women to step out into
the stream of people, shove a "free pass" into the hands of
some startled fellow, smile invitingly, then try to get them
into the building for a free "stress" test. They don't give up
easily. But things weren't going all that well for them on
Saturday. They had two or three men out on the sidewalk
and I don't think there were any takers for their pitch. With
so many picketers marching right in front of the org the
publics had to navigate through a maze of bodies just to
get past. The BR's stood very close to Org property, then
darted out to intercept each mark a second or two before
he'd come directly abeam. Some of the people ignored
them, looked straight ahead and charged through. I saw
that many of the inherently more polite Chinese (Toronto
has a large Asian community) walkers would accept the
tickets, mumble some excuse about why they could not
stop, and keep walking. As soon as they got a certain
distance away (where the clams weren't likely to notice)
they'd place the tickets on a convenient window ledge or
deposit them in a waste bin. It was like running a gauntlet
- not one member of the public wanted to have any
dealings with the scientologists; they were accosted by the
CoS body routers and hounded mercilessly to go inside.
Some of them actually went in, but we could see the pained
expressions on their faces. They were protesting, too polite
to refuse. They hoped their ordeal would soon be over so
they could escape and continue walking to wherever they
were going. I saw that if a picketer walked reasonably close
to a clam BR, in the middle of the sidewalk say, the publics
would always take a wide berth to avoid both. When
picketers stay on the edge of the sidewalk (far from the
Org) the publics are "herded" between picketers and clams
and become easy prey. Once this mechanism obvious to
me, I made a point of not walking on the outside edge of
the sidewalk so much :-)
The clams must have noticed their stats were going down
so they sent BR's far away from the Org where there were
no picketers. Didn't work. It is one heck of a lot harder to
convince someone to walk a block and a half back to the
Org to do a stress test. On the way back he has the time to
think about it and make up an excuse. Those BR's couldn't
get anyone in.
There was one scientology body router who was much more
successful than the rest: a blonde woman who had difficulty
with her English. Evidently not a native Canadian, but this
is a real professional. Her name is Dianne S. Her technique
was to jump in front of each young man as he came past,
shove a yellow card into his hands and while he was still
startled she'd say, "come in and do our stress test, it only
takes ten minutes and it's free. C'mon, C'mon" [gesturing
towards the org door, which was always only a foot or two
away]. Then without waiting for any response from the
mark, she'd flash her best "come-on" smile, turn abruptly
and head toward the Org door, pushing it open. By that
time she had already turned her back on the mark and was
walking away so he had no chance to say anything, no way
to make up an excuse. Many of those young men followed
her into the dungeon. They probably thought she was going
to administer the stress test. No such luck! The poor
suckers got stuck inside with some registrar. Each time,
Blondie would reappear on the street again within seconds
to find her next catch. She had another neat trick: whenever
someone was walking along the far sidewalk, on the other
side of Yonge St (a busy street) she'd hold out a clipboard
with some writing on it, as if to show it to the guys on the
other side of the street. Lots of arm-waving and gesturing.
Of course they couldn't read what was written because they
were much too far away. They would squint, she'd point at
the clipboard and hold it out in a gesture of making it
easier for them to read. The idea was to get them to cross
the street so they could read the words. If they took the
bait she had them hooked. I learned she was a "Field Staff
Member" (FSM). Apparently every time she "selects"
someone for training or processing it entitles her to a
commission on whatever he winds up spending in the
church. I have heard they get ten percent but I'm not sure if
that is accurate.
The lady seemed to shy away each time I panned my
camera in her direction; she was obviously trying to avoid
being photographed. If you want to see just how
camera-afraid she was:
[This page is no longer accessable]
Others disliked being photographed but they simply stood
there and glared at me. I began to wonder... with her shaky
English our high-stat blond body router couldn't have been
in Canada very long. But she'd obviously had some very
extensive training in Scientology's recruiting techniques.
Could she have worked in some other Org in a different
country before coming to Canada? In Europe maybe? Why
was she so worried about being photographed? What was
she hiding? I've seen those same furtive glances before in
people who happened to be working illegally in Canada.
I noticed three Scieno staffers standing outside the Org
watching us picket. They hadn't said anything to us, so one
time when I passed I turned to them and said I'd be happy
to communicate with them if they wanted. One of them told
me they were very happy we were picketing because on
each day pickets showed up the number of publics going
into the Org was much higher than on normal days. I told
him I'd heard that story before but that we had our own
data which gives an entirely different picture. I followed up
by asking where his information came from - could it be ..
Freedom magazine? He then blurted, "I am not stupid"! We
all had a good laugh over that. Seems the staff realize
"Freedom Mag" is a propaganda rag which puts a severe
spin on the news. They don't believe a word of it. While we
were chatting a stern-faced clam was observing everything
from the Org door. He seemed dismayed the three staffers
were in comm with a picketer and obviously building up
ARC. I had to keep moving so I turned to leave. Instantly,
Sourpuss rushed over and started to severely dress down
the three guys I had been talking to, even before I was out
of earshot: "You are not supposed to communicate with
them or to interact with them in any way! You knew that!"
The three staffers couldn't have cared less. They ignored
the (OSA?) goon. I'd say they were hi-stat auditors who
knew they couldn't be touched by ethics. These guys have a
little game going where they intentionally break the rules
now and then to provoke an outburst of tongue-lashing from
their local OSA asshole. Then with their body language they
tell him to get lost. Politely of course :-).
All in all, Saturday's picket was a good experience for me. I
hadn't had any contact with Scienos in years so I could see
them from a better perspective than when I was in. One big
cognition was that they were really no different from
devotees in other religious cults. I never realized that
before. Always thought Scientology was something special.
I had given it too much benefit of the doubt. Now I see all
the scienos as victims - not of any cult leader or of church
management, but victims of misunderstanding and
ignorance. All the clams I observed on Saturday were in
pretty bad shape case-wise. They seemed to be wondering
around in a daze. Especially big Al Buttnor. That guy is
pathetic. Oat tee nothing! I pity the lot.