Showing posts with label Tom Cruise. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tom Cruise. Show all posts

Monday, July 9, 2012

Pinching, purification and finding The Bridge to Total Freedom: Inside a very sinister induction at the Scientology HQ



* Members are checked if they are 'Clear' - which costs £82,000 to achieve
* Cameras and audio monitor Clearwater site to keep a check on followers
* Newcomers must undergo 'purification of toxins' which involves sweating out in a sauna


By Kerry Hiatt

I'd been pinched – hard – in some kind of strange lie-detector test and seen rooms where people went to be ‘purified’.

I’d spent an hour subjected to a gruelling and invasive ‘personality’ test and revealed my deepest inner thoughts as if hypnotised.

I’d also been invited to cross the Bridge To Total Freedom – but, in a panic, instead I found myself running away from Scientology as fast as I could – after just a day as a guest of the controversial religion.

look back on my visit last week to Scientology’s Florida headquarters  to celebrate July 4 as one of the most unsettling experiences of my life, and yet it all started so innocently... 

The invitation from the Scientologists had suggested we celebrate Independence Day at ‘the Friendliest Place in the Whole World’. Why should I refuse? The event sounded fun. There would be a barbecue, pool games, live music, a petting zoo and fireworks – just like other celebrations across America.

However, there was a hint that this party would be different. The invitation also said: ‘Get briefed on Scientology’s exponential expansion across the globe, our penetrating 4th Dynamic Dissemination Campaigns and a full view to our future.’

It had been sent to a close relative of mine who had briefly worked for Scientology almost a decade ago, inviting him to the Florida town of Clearwater, Scientology’s spiritual headquarters – where Scientologists own more than 200 shops, restaurants, hotels, banks and small businesses.

Invasive: The new Super Power Building of the Scientologists in Clearwater Florida

Almost 9,000 members live and work here, alongside non-Scientologists. They run schools, day-care centres and a drug-rehabilitation clinic.

Given that Katie Holmes had reportedly just ended her marriage amid fears Tom Cruise planned to send their daughter Suri to Clearwater – known to Scientologists as ‘Land Flag Base’ – my curiosity was piqued and we decided to go along.

Bizarrely, the invitation did not mention times or venues. We called into the opulent Fort Harrison Hotel – owned by Scientologists – to ask for directions. A security guard stopped us. We showed him the invitation and my relative explained that he had previously been a Scientology staff member and still received event invitations via email.

‘Name?’ the guard asked my relative, striding to a computer. He tapped it in and the screen filled with information. Our information. My new home address was there. How did they have such personal details and why was this data accessible on a hotel lobby computer?
The guard looked at the screen and raised an eyebrow. ‘You’re Clear?’

‘Clear’ is one of the very highest levels within Scientology. The status had either been conferred on my relative without his knowledge, or there was a mix-up in the system. The cost of reaching this level is estimated at $128,000 (about £82,000) and Clear members are among the church’s most trusted.

‘It says you’re Clear,’ the guard repeated before giving us directions to the Sandcastle Spiritual Retreat, where the party was being held. We’d passed the first hurdle.

Mysterious: It's anyone's guess what this room would be used for - but no doubt it would be difficult to find out from the Scientologists

Scientology symbols are everywhere in Clearwater; on plaques, in paving stones, and engraved into the architecture. Security cameras are on all Scientology properties and even hidden in the shrubbery. Every move and, no doubt conversation, can be monitored. It feels incredibly sinister.

The town is dominated by the Church’s £57 million Super Power Building which will, eventually, be a centre for learning. Construction paper covers doors and windows so I couldn’t see what was inside and no one could tell me when it would open.

The Sandcastle – another Scientologist-owned hotel – was a ten-minute walk. There was live music and a bouncy castle in the grounds, red, white and blue balloons tied to the patio furniture and smoke rising from the barbecue. Families wandered around in bathing suits. I relaxed.

But again, the second we entered the lobby, we were interrogated by  a guard. Who had sent the event invitation? Where were we from? Eventually, another computer was consulted.

‘Ah, you’re Clear,’ the receptionist smiled. We purchased our day tickets and made our way out to the swimming pool. Children laughed and splashed all around us.

Later, sitting in the shade, I turned to my relative and asked whether he had seen the bizarre series of posters – featuring, among others, John Travolta and Kirstie Alley promoting Scientology movies –  that lined the Spiritual Retreat’s lobby walls.

He stared at me in dismay and it was only then that I noticed a small camera and audio device  poking out of a bush close to my chair. I felt panic.

Strange: Presumably the changing rooms for the saunas, where you would be expected to clear your body from 'toxins'

Had they heard me mocking the posters? ‘Why don’t we get out of this sun and watch a movie?’ he said.

While my companion organised a film screening, I explored. Just off the lobby was a large gift shop and cafe. There were stacks of merchandise featuring L. Ron Hubbard,  Scientology’s founder: books, films, pads and pens.

One wall was dedicated entirely to brightly coloured vitamin-pill bottles. ‘The vitamins are for use during the purification process,’ it was explained by an older lady who had approached me.

‘When we start services, it’s important to rid our bodies of our former life’s toxins, whether it be from  pesticides, alcohol or drug use.

‘You can see the rooms just down the hall where we spend several hours a day during purification.’
I went to see the ‘purification rooms’ – which were nothing more than a small gym and sauna.

I retraced my steps to find my relative waiting, about to be subjected to a two-hour DVD celebrating L. Ron Hubbard’s life.

‘I understand you’re new,’ a Scientologist said to me. ‘I’ll take you to be tested and assessed.’
The testing centre was a short walk away and I was placed in the care of a young woman around my own age.

At the centre, after a short DVD introduction to Scientology, I was hooked up to the infamous ‘e-meter’, an electronic device used during ‘auditing’. The e-meter is supposed to indicate whether a person has been cleared of the spiritual impediment of past experiences.

Another world: The inside of the Super Power Building looks more like something out of a spacecraft

To illustrate how I was holding on to bad experiences, I was pinched and told to recall the pinch over  and over again. Instead, to see what would happen, I silently recalled scenes from The Sound Of Music. Unsurprisingly, the e-meter did what was expected and I was told I was carrying painful memories that were holding me back in life.

What did she recommend? ‘A  personality test. You must answer a series of questions before I can assess what steps you need to take.’

I spent the next hour under observation by Sea Org members – elite Scientologists – while I answered hundreds of questions such as ‘Do you smile much?’ and ‘Does life seem vague and unreal to you?

The test results were analysed by computer – yet more data to be stored away, no doubt – and I was told that I’d tested as extremely nervous and irresponsible. ‘Are you nervous?’ the woman asked. ‘Do you take too much on in life and feel as though you can’t cope?’

I’m usually a private person but I opened up by talking about my occasional feelings of inadequacy and my need to strive for perfection.

Why was I telling her things, I wondered? I remembered reading that many Sea Org members use hypnosis techniques when communicating. I didn’t believe I’d been hypnotised but I’d certainly said much more than I’d intended.

‘You’re an extremely smart cookie who could move up The Bridge very quickly,’ the woman said.
‘The Bridge To Total Freedom’  is the training process by which Scientologists try to reach the state of being ‘Clear’. They can then move on to higher levels.

‘I’d like to start you on the Hubbard Qualified Scientologist and Dianetics Book Courses,’ she said.
‘You could finish those in a matter of weeks. Each would cost just $60.’

I was led into a classroom filled with people studying. ‘You will study here for a few hours per day. We have lots of different study rooms in this building, including ones specifically for children.’
‘How old are children when they start services?’ I asked.

‘They start as soon as they can read and write.’ I thought of Katie Holmes and Suri.

‘You need to begin your purification process, too. That ranges between $3,000 and $5,000 and you’ll need to spend several hours a day sweating out the toxins of your life while adhering to a strict vitamin regime. You can start that today.’

Things seemed to be moving far too quickly. Surely she didn’t expect me to sign up for these things now?

‘Well, actually I’d like to have my relative look over your course recommendations and see what he thinks, if that’s OK?’ I said.

‘That’s fine. Give me your cell phone number so I can find you during the fireworks.’

Suddenly everything seemed to be a demand, the atmosphere had changed. I gave a false phone number, promised to meet her and then bolted.

Back at the Spiritual Retreat, I found my companion. It was already dark. Suddenly, I longed to go home. As the fireworks exploded, we were already on our way out of Clearwater, checking periodically to see if we were being followed. Why I thought we might be, I can’t explain.

I’m already receiving emails inviting me back for more special events but I won’t be returning.
In fact, I will never set foot in a Scientology-owned building again.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

How Accurate Were Minority Report’s Technology Precogs?




By Wired StaffEmail Author

Released 10 years ago today, Minority Report served up a captivating and thoroughly convincing look at what the future might hold. But how well has the film's bold vision aged?

Wired took at look at 10 key technologies from the film — which built on concepts dreamed up during an "idea summit" of tech thinkers convened by director Steven Spielberg — to compare the decade-old science fiction to today's reality.

Above:

Iris Recognition

In Minority Report: Devices that scan the distinctive features in the iris — the colored portion of the eye — are everywhere in Minority Report. They're used in place of security badges and IDs, and they help billboards tailor ads directly at you as you pass by. Also, spiderbots shuffle around scanning irises in search of suspects.

The reality today: The ID system portrayed in the movie works because the government has every citizen's iris on file, and that is eminently plausible, says Patrick Grother of the National Institute of Standards and Technology, the government agency that oversees biometrics. India has already scanned the eyeballs of 150 million citizen enrollees, and border control agencies around the world use the technology. Preregistered travelers can move in and out of the United Kingdom, cross the US-Canadian border, and navigate the Middle East without a passport as long as their irises are approved. Recent advances — better compression algorithms that allow iris data to traverse networks faster, cameras that can scan irises from up to 9 feet away while people are in motion — will only expand the iris scanning's reach. —Amber Williams


Self-Driving Cars

In Minority Report: In the world of 2054, a symphony of self-driving cars zoom down the sides of sheer skyscrapers and onto horizontal highways and back. The vehicles form a system dubbed "individual mass transportation," where the wealthy can get from their deluxe penthouses to their destinations without brushing elbows with the lower classes living below. "The beauty is that your own vehicle is sort of an extension of your taste and the design of your apartment," says Harald Belker, the conceptual auto designer for the film. The vehicles are voice-activated and run using magnetic levitation, a technology that lets vehicles float inches above a surface.

The reality today: Maglev systems are already employed in a handful of railways across the globe, delivering speeds up to 361 mph. The self-driving part of Minority Report's vision is also practically here, as Wired's 20.02 cover feature detailed. Google's got its own roving band of driverless vehicles that navigate city streets, pedestrians and red-lights, and can hit up to 75 mph while merging between lanes on highways. BMW, VW and Toyota have their own robot-car projects as well. A wide-scale system like the one in the film would require huge outlays for infrastructure. "If there isn't any way to modernize the transportation system, we'll never make any progress," Belker says. —Christina Bonnington



Spiderbots

In Minority Report: A squadron of tiny, eight-legged bots scampers autonomously through a flophouse, using an array of on-board sensors — including, memorably, iris scanners — to identify residents and relay that information to the authorities.

The reality today: Say hello to your robotic insect overlords. The US military (with the help of British Aerospace) has been developing a fleet of insect robots made specifically for reconnaissance missions. The goal is to equip soldiers with an extra pair of eyes in urban environments and other potentially hostile areas. There are nonmilitary applications, too: A team of spiderbots was recently deployed inside of Mount St. Helens. Each was equipped with a seismometer for detecting earthquakes, an infrared sensor to detect heat from volcanic explosions, a sensor to detect ash and a global positioning system to sense the ground bulging and pinpoint the exact location of seismic activity. —Bryan Gardiner



Predictive Policing

In Minority Report: A trio of psychic precogs lie partially submerged in what looks like the world's least enjoyable hot tub, their brains hooked up to police computers that display their visions of crimes yet to happen. From there, the cops can race out and arrest the bad guys before they break the law. Or, as Tom Cruise's character puts it to one would-be wife-stabber, "Under the authority of the District of Columbia Pre-Crime Division, I'm placing you under arrest for the future murder of Sarah Marx."

The reality today: Predictive policing has become a buzzphrase in the last 10 years, and a handful of police departments have actually opened units and programs that aim to take a pre-emptive bite out of crime. In Los Angeles, police use an algorithm that analyzes seven years of data to predict where and when burglaries, auto thefts and car break-ins are most likely to occur. Officers on patrol then pay particular attention to those "hot spots." Not as cool as psychic-based murder prediction, sure, but in the first few months of this year, these crimes are already down by 22 percent, translating to about 153 property crimes prevented.

Predictive policing programs in Santa Cruz, Memphis and Chicago have seen similar results — and Chicago has even been able to predict more violent crimes, like shootings. Unlike the movie, though, it's not about slapping handcuffs on a would-be perpetrator before a crime has been committed. "It's just about disruption," says Captain Sean Malinowski of the LAPD. "You go out there and prevent a crime from happening through your presence. There's still the Constitution." —Elise Craig


3-D Holograms

In Minority Report: Tom Cruise converts cherished home videos into a 3-D hologram. His character is able to look at projected images of his wife and missing son. As he moves around, he sees them from different angles.

The reality today: Approximations of holograms have been around since the 19th century — in the form of images projected on glass. (The much-tweeted performance by the long-dead Tupac at Coachella in April was a high-tech example.) But the kind of 3-D tech depicted in Minority Report has what's called dimensionality — when viewed from different points of view, different aspects are visible. (Think Princess Leia's "Help me ObiWan, you're our only hope" projection in Star Wars.) That's called motion parallax, and no one has figured out how to create it. Minority Report brainstorming session participant Neil Gershenfeld, head of MIT's Center for Bits and Atoms, says we'll soon see more and more realistic onscreen 3-D, thanks to lenticular displays that eliminate the need for 3-D glasses, plus head-tracking systems that know exactly where our eyes are in relation to the image being generated. "It's relatively easy to make a holographic TV screen," he says. "The problem with Star Wars-style 3-D projected in mid-air is that the physics don't work." —Bryan Gardiner



Sick Sticks

In Minority Report: In 2054, police descend on uncooperative civilians wielding a special sort of baton called a sick stick, which had the almost magical ability to "make you lose control of your bowels and/or throw up," says brainstorm participant Shaun Jones, a technology consultant and former director of Darpa's Unconventional Countermeasures Program. Nothing like instantaneously expelling the contents of your digestive tract to tame rebellious impulses.

The reality today: Sick sticks don't exist yet, but nonlethal weapon development is in full swing, Jones says. At the Department of Defense, scientists are working on machines that can direct beams of sound that impair hearing and emit electromagnetic waves that generate uncomfortable heat. New nonlethal weapons are making their way into cities, too: Police departments in Southern California are testing a weapon that incapacitates its target with superbright lights that strobe at different wavelengths. Funded by the Department of Homeland Security and developed at Intelligent Optical Systems in Torrance, California, the LED Incapacitator 3 looks like a standard flashlight, but its light show causes temporary blindness and disorientation. One of its inventors, Vladimir Rubtsov, says it's a good substitute for the taser and can be used for riot control or against unruly drunks heading for their cars. —Amber Williams


Personalized Billboards/Ads

In Minority Report: Wherever he goes, Anderton is tracked by cameras and biometric sensors and bombarded with intrusive personalized ads. "The whole idea was that the ads would not only recognize you, but also your state of mind," says Jeff Boortz, a consultant on the film. Deducing that stressed-out Anderton needs a relaxing break, he is offered targeted products like an Amex card and a Guinness.

The reality today: Amazon and Google have long been reading our searches and helpfully suggesting products we might like to buy. DVRs know your taste in police procedurals and when you like to watch them. NEC is experimenting with dynamic ads that target specific shopper characteristics, such as gender, ethnicity and age. Using billboards equipped with a camera and facial-recognition software, the company is able to target a given message with a great degree of specificity. Not far over the horizon: facial recognition cameras in malls and other public places that can guess age and gender, then flash demographically targeted ads as you pass by. Can retina-recognition devices be far behind? —Bryan Gardiner



Gestural Interface

In Minority Report: Tom Cruise waves his gloved hands around to manipulate objects on a giant screen in front of him. Every gesture is registered, allowing him to rifle through files, expand and contract windows, and select onscreen objects. Finally: an alternative to the mouse and keyboard paradigm. "To build a genuinely new user interface, you have to build it from the ground up, like what the original Mac did in the early '80s," says John Underkoffler, chief scientist with Oblong and the designer of Minority Report's gestural interface.

The reality today: Gestural interfaces seem to be conquering the world. Most of us pinch and zoom on a daily basis now — but on touchscreens, not in mid-air. But there's also Microsoft's Kinect interface, which uses infrared-light and "Time of Flight" algorithms to pinpoint the position of a person's limbs, kind of like sonar. Microsoft has sold more than 20 million units — which don't even require the gloves used in Minority Report — and plans to build Kinect support into PC operating systems as well. New smart TVs from LG and Samsung use similar technology that lets you adjust the volume and change the channel without a remote. As camera and sensor technology becomes more refined over the next decade, we'll eventually be able to control personal computing devices with smaller, subtler movements at closer ranges. —Christina Bonnington



E-Newspapers

In Minority Report: News is delivered on flexible e-paper screens that update in real time and show video. And cheap screens take media beyond the news sphere: Cloying cartoon animals come to life on the sides of a cereal box, and they dance around with glee as Cruise gobbles the cereal in his bowl. (It looks as annoying as it sounds.)

The reality today: Newspapers, magazines and books are migrating to Kindle and iPad screens, but flexible e-paper remains mostly in the lab. Korean electronics giant LG has begun producing a flexible, plastic e-paper display that could hit the mainstream within the next five years. The current version is 6 inches wide and .7mm thick, but the company has dabbled in 19-inch, newspaper-size versions as well. Samsung is working on a similar flexible display using OLED technology. When flexible displays arrive in earnest — as early as 2015 — look for them to be wrapped around everything from building support columns to coffee mugs, delivering things like headlines, status updates, stock alerts and ads. —Christina Bonnington


Jetpacks

In Minority Report: Cops zip around the sky in personal propulsion systems complete with red and blue lights flashing.

The reality today: Spielberg insisted on including jetpacks in Minority Report because — just guessing here — they make for indelible cinema. But unlike the more plausible bits of futurism in the film, the jetpacks were closer to what was envisioned in Commando Cody serials than to the impractical devices that actually exist. —Amber Williams