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Stephen Pollard

By

Stephen Pollard,

Stephen Pollard

Opinion

The cult of Scientology

May 15, 2007 00:00
1 min read

One of my journalistic heroes is John Sweeney. A one-man justice machine, he is one of the few people in (to define it broadly) public life who is entirely a force for good, righting some terrible injustices. His most recent triumph was the case of Angela and Ian Gray (the couple wrongly convicted of poisoning their child with salt), which he wrote about in this Sunday Times piece.

He has been in the news this week because he lost his temper interviewing a spokesman for the Scientologists, in the course of a Panorama investigation. The cult put a clip of his temper loss out on YouTube in an effort to destroy his reputation and the message of his superb film.

Talk about backfiring! The Panorama film will doubtless have had far more viewers than otherwise, as a result of the publicity given to it by the cult's efforts to damage Sweeney. I urge you to watch it (you can see it here). Not only does it make clear that Sweeney's temper loss is understandable - I can't imagine how he kept his cool for as long as he did under the duress to which he was subjected - but it exposes the 'Church' of Scientology in the most effective way possible - through its representatives' own actions.

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