France is notoriously tough on anything it considers
non-mainstream religion or a cult. I'm surprised they
haven't gone after the TMO.

Back when the Da Vinci Code came out, I was still living
in Paris. Literally every major publication in France had
a cover story on it, literally every one of them not only
negative about the book, its plot, its faux history, and
its terrible writing, but literally every one of them putting
down the readers as being almost "un-French" for get-
ting sucked into such "irrational trash." There was a
concerted effort in the media to portray anyone who
bought into the Priory Of Sion crap (and it *was* crap;
it was nothing but a rumor or a put-on back in history
and it's nothing but a rumor or a put-on now) as some-
how mentally deficient.

Fascinating thing to watch. Even more fascinating is that
it didn't hurt sales of the book or the eventual movie one
bit. It was as bit a seller in France as anywhere else. Makes
one wonder who was "driving" this campaign to demonize
mysticism, how they got the millions of Euros it cost to
conduct the campaign, and what they thought when it
completely failed.

--- In [email protected], "Hugo" <richardhughes...@...>
wrote:
>
> Scientology centres convicted of fraud in France
>
> Church fined over £500,000 after case brought by former members.
>
> Two flagship branches of the Church of Scientology in France have been
sentenced to pay fines of over €600,000 (£550,000) after being
convicted of "fraud in an organised gang" today by a court in Paris.
>
> The judgment against the Scientology Celebrity Centre and a related
bookshop in Paris is one of the most important to involve the
controversial organisation in recent years.
>
> The judges stopped short of the total ban the prosecution had called
for, so the church will be allowed to continue its activities in France
where it is estimated to have 45,000 members.
>
> Four officials of the church in France received suspended prison
sentences of between 18 months and two years as well as fines ranging
from €5,000 to €30,000.
>
> Judges said that the four had avoided jail in part because of "efforts
by the [church] to change its practices". An appeal is expected.
>
> The case was brought by two female former members who alleged that
they were pressured into paying large sums of money to the church after
joining in the 1990s. They also alleged that members of the church had
harassed them to buy a variety of products including vitamins and to
sign up for "purification" courses costing thousands of euros. One said
she had been advised by a financial adviser from the church to take out
a large loan to finance her activities within the organisation.
>
> Prosecutors had at one point requested that the group be dissolved in
France and be fined €4m. However, last month it was revealed that an
obscure modifiction of French law meant that courts no longer have the
power to dissolve organisations found guilty of fraud.
>
> The news sparked controversy forcing the minister of justice,
Michèle Alliot-Marie, to explain the change on television. Lawyers
representing those who brought the current case alleged that
scientologists had infiltrated the national assembly.
>
> Defence lawyers for the church have called for the debate to be
reopened to "wash" their clients of any suspicion. The church denies all
wrongdoing.
>
> Scientology was founded by the science fiction writer L Ron Hubbard in
1954 and claims to have 12 million followers worldwide. A series of
cases against them has led the Church of Scientology to complain of a
"climate of hatred" and a state-sponsored "inquisition" against them in
France. Scientology was described as a "sect" rather than a religion in
an official French report in 1995.
>
> From:
>
>
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/oct/27/scientology-church-fraud-fra\
nce
>


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