Citizens for Social Reform
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Citizens for Social Reform (CSRPAC) is a political action committee founded in 2001 by Scientologists, directed "to work with elected officials toward the goal of bringing about more humane and effective solutions to social ills like illiteracy, criminality, substance abuse and the general decay of moral character", mainly by promoting Scientology associated programs such as Narconon, Criminon, Applied Scholastics and CCHR, and their goals and issues, with legislators at the US federal and state levels.
Their website, csrpac.org, while often avoiding direct references to the Church of Scientology, uses much L. Ron Hubbard-based language. Most notably, they use the complicated term "Citizen Hat" which has an entire section devoted to it on their site, and illustrated with cartoons by Scientologist Virginia Romero. [1] The bibliography at the end of the "Citizen Hat" treatise lists Scientology books such as The Antisocial Personality and The Thinking Book side by side with basic civics texts such as The Federalist Papers and the U.S. Constitution. [2] Their website also tends to focus almost exclusively on anti-psychiatry issues, which is a key issue with Scientologists.
The current president of CSRPAC is Don Pearson, executive VP of the e.Republic Inc. group of magazines.[1]
It would come as no great shock. Corporation records show that Don Pearson opened a local chapter of the Citizen’s Commission in 1998, and Pearson also set up a political action committee called the Association of Citizens for Social Reform, designed to "play offense" in eliminating "public support for social, educational and mental health programs that are intrusive, force-based or damaging to individual awareness and competence." | ||
—Sacramento News & Review, [1] |
[edit] References
- ^ a b Evans, Jim. "Scientology Inc.", Sacramento News and Review, 2001-08-23. Retrieved on 2006-10-08.
[edit] External links
- Citizens for Social Reform Web site
- CSRPAC page explaining the reasons for creating CSRPAC (archived Oct 10th, 2004)