Someone submitted Alanzo’s March 26 video “Scientology’s Tax Exemption What You Need to Know with Gerry Armstrong” 1 to Reddit, and “Sneakster” Michael Hobson commented:
Armstrong has had three decades to get rid of Scientology’s tax exemption since it was reinstated in 1993. I submit that he doesn’t actually know how to get it removed. 2
Worldometer says the planetary population in 1993 was five billion, five hundred seventy-seven million, four hundred thirty-three thousand, five hundred twenty-three. All these people have had just as much time as I’ve had to get rid of the Miscavigeite Scientology cult’s exemption. Some have died, sure, but billions are still alive and none of them have gotten rid of it.
According to Scientologist logician Michael Hobson, a trained Scientology “Data Evaluator,” nobody knows how to get the tax exemption removed, which is proven by it not being removed. It was unlawfully obtained, and was, and remains, lawfully and eminently undeserved. Those facts are key to getting it removed, but Hobson, for a very obvious reason, has ignored them.
In order to scientifically confirm his clear conclusion that nobody knows how to get rid of the unlawfully-obtained tax exemption, he would have to interview every now-living person, some eight billion, one hundred fifteen million, seven hundred twenty thousand, nine hundred ninety-nine as I type this. In his interview, he would have to get all of them to attest that they indeed do not know how to get rid of the cult’s tax exemption. He would have to, moreover, determine beyond a reasonable doubt that none of them is lying, because some of them might actually and secretly know how to get rid of it. He would also have to himself know how to get rid of the tax exemption in order to determine that all of these more than eight billion people’s suggestions, if they have any, for how to get rid of it, are wrong. He would have to do all that to be able to honestly state that no one actually knows how to get it removed.
Again employing Scientologic, because no one since 1993 has gotten rid of the Scientology’s cult’s unlawfully-obtained and undeserved tax exemption, and it being concluded based on that fact that no one actually knows how to get it removed, no one should be listened to concerning its removal. No one can possibly know how it can be removed, because it hasn’t been. Q.E.D.
No Major League baseball player has hit five home runs in a game since 1948, and tens of thousands of them have had seven and four-fifth’s decades, so none knows how, because they haven’t done it. No one who hasn’t been to Poughkeepsie can possibly know how to get there. If they knew how to get there, they would have been there. Billions and billions of them.
Why then did Hobson single me out, as if I am the only person on earth in all these years since 1993 who hasn’t gotten rid of the cult’s tax exemption? Why am I the only person, he submits, who doesn’t actually know how to get it removed? And why am I, therefore, the only person, he implies, who shouldn’t be listened to?
Because he serves David Miscavige’s purposes.
Hobson has cyberstalked me for many years. 3
Don’t be fooled because he criticizes cult head David Miscavige, even if Hobson calls him a midget. Miscavige knows a midget is a few inches short of himself, and “critics” have been calling him a dwarf, even an asthmatic dwarf, or, as Hobson standardly calls him, “Darth Midget,” for decades. He doesn’t care. He has lifts. But he seriously cares, and treasures it gargantuanly, when a seeming critic of himself, like Hobson, attacks me.
I really haven’t said much about how to get the Miscavigeite Scientology cult’s IRS tax exemption removed. I have provided usable bases for various approaches for achieving its removal: extortion, false statements, violations of public policy. I can, however, provide one essential step that needs be taken by the removers: they must want to remove it.
Miscavige, of course, certainly knows how to get rid of his unlawfully-obtained and wholly undeserved IRS tax exemption. Just tell the truth. Tell it publicly. Tell it to his victims. Tell it to his underlings. Tell it to his US Government coconspirators. He has had since 1993 to get rid of it, and he hasn’t. But that doesn’t mean he doesn’t know how to get it removed. He and his coconspirators simply do not want it removed, and he uses his cat’s paws like Hobson to black PR his hated targets. And Hobson too does not want to get rid of the Miscavigeite cult’s tax exemption.
For the record, I discovered my first bit of what the Miscavigeites submitted to the IRS to get tax exemption when I got my first Internet account in 1997. That bit, which included some nasty black propaganda on me, caused me to leave my home in California and return to Canada, where I would be able to live more freely. That’s an incident I’ve written about many times. I found more pieces of the cultists’ submissions and more black PR over the next few years. Only in 2014 did I connect enough dots to conclude that the IRS, DOJ, etc., were not conned by the Scientologists, but conspired with them. They are coconspirators, and must defend and preserve the conspiracy.
The Miscavigeites – Mike Rinder, Mark Rathbun, Miscavige himself – state in their submission to the IRS, which bagged for them tax exemption, and other undeserved benefits” “Relying on Armstrong or the Armstrong decision is wholly unjustified.” This is Hobson’s message as well.
The US Government coconspirators did not investigate anything the Miscavigeites stated about me in their submissions. These officials did not even contact me. They did not object to the lies the Miscavigeites told about me, even though these lies were refuted by the documented truth in the Government’s own files. The involved officials of the IRS, DOJ, etc. were happy to go along with, indeed require, their Miscavigeite coconspirators’ scurvy lie that relying on me, my testimony, the judgment in my litigation were wholly unjustified.