News (Media Awareness Project) - US NM: Mayor Abandons Anti-Drug Program Affiliated With Church |
Title: | US NM: Mayor Abandons Anti-Drug Program Affiliated With Church |
Published On: | 2008-12-07 |
Source: | Las Cruces Sun-News (NM) |
Fetched On: | 2008-12-07 15:57:16 |
MAYOR ABANDONS ANTI-DRUG PROGRAM AFFILIATED WITH CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY
LAS CRUCES -- The city is immediately ending an anti-drug program
aimed at third-graders after it was revealed it was created and
bankrolled by the Church of Scientology.
The "Drug-Free Marshal" program, started in late November, had only
been presented to five schools but was intended to be promoted
eventually among all third-graders in the Las Cruces Public Schools.
Mayor Ken Miyagishima apologized Saturday and said it was not his
intention to promote the religion. The mayor said he was approached
this summer by Richard Henley, of Foundation for a Drug-Free World,
who showed him a pamphlet adorned with the seals of El Paso,
Espanola, the Rio Arriba County Sheriff's Department and the Horizon
City, Texas, and Socorro, Texas, Police Departments and asked if the
city would "support eradicating drug use in the community."
In small type at the bottom, the pamphlet is copyrighted by
Foundation for a Drug-Free World, Narconon and Association for Better
Living and Education, all Scientology programs.
"It's my fault for not checking it out," Miyagishima said. "This is
something that I have to put an end to, this portion of it, since it
was brought up to me."
Since all the material was free, Miyagishima said he asked about the
funding. He said Henley told him it was donated by a private
individual who was interested in eradicating drug use.
"He gave me a couple of names, but not (founder and science fiction
author) L. Ron Hubbard," Miyagishima said.
Most of the literature deals with illegal drugs, but one pamphlet
specifically focuses on Ritalin, considered by Scientologists to be a
harmful and "mind-altering psychiatric drug." According to
Scientology.org, "psychiatry is not a science." Henley said Saturday
the church was only one backer and that the material did not have a
religious message, comparing it to the multi-faith origins of United Way.
"There is no religious message in any of the materials and the only
message of Mr. Hubbard is in connection with the discovery of the
toxins," Henley said, also describing the foundation as "secular."
When asked if he told Miyagishima about the connection with the
Church of Scientology, Henley said "it's all in the videos on the Web
sites that they acknowledge (the connection between the pamphlet and
the church)."
Henley also declined to say if the materials had been provided to
other New Mexico schools, saying the requests had come from
"individual teachers or classes ... for two or three years."
As for the foundation's message against psychiatric medication,
Henley said such prescriptions were up to a "medical doctor" or
"medical physician," terms used in Scientology to distance such
doctors from psychology and psychiatry. But he was clear about what
he said was the danger of such prescriptions.
"Every single one of the shooters in the schools have been on one
form or another of these psycho-pharmaceutical drugs," he said,
though Scientology is opposed to far more than these drugs. According
to the Scientology handbook, even aspirin will make someone
"unfeeling, insensitive, unable and definitely not trustworthy, a
menace to his fellows actually."
The "Marshal" program was one part of Miyagishima's "5-2-1-0" fitness
initiative, which also encouraged children to eat five servings of
fruit and vegetables, spend no more than two hours watching TV, get
an hour of exercise a day, and not to drink sodas -- aspects which
have recently been praised by U.S. Sen. Jeff Bingaman, Sen.-elect Tom
Udall and the New Mexico Department of Health.
Only the "Marshal" program is affiliated with Scientology.
"I'm going to have to pull the marshal's badge (program),"
Miyagishima said. "First off, I'm not happy that I wasn't fully
informed, obviously, and two, that's something there that I can't be
- -- the city can't be seen as promoting any type of religious activity."
LCPS Superintendent Stan Rounds said the mayor's decision Saturday
was a good solution to a common problem. As superintendent in Des
Moines, N.M., Rounds said his staff was given boxes of materials on
math that also contained messages about "the godliness of study" and
other evangelical themes. "We had to black all of that out so we
could use the materials," Rounds said.
Miyagishima said he would give out Las Cruces Police Department
sticker badges at future events and that anyone with a
Scientology-provided badge could trade it in.
"I don't want to lose any momentum with this program," Miyagishima said.
As for the Scientology material, Rounds called it "regrettable, but I
think the mayor's planned direction is the right one. Our message to
kids is not to use illicit drugs."
LAS CRUCES -- The city is immediately ending an anti-drug program
aimed at third-graders after it was revealed it was created and
bankrolled by the Church of Scientology.
The "Drug-Free Marshal" program, started in late November, had only
been presented to five schools but was intended to be promoted
eventually among all third-graders in the Las Cruces Public Schools.
Mayor Ken Miyagishima apologized Saturday and said it was not his
intention to promote the religion. The mayor said he was approached
this summer by Richard Henley, of Foundation for a Drug-Free World,
who showed him a pamphlet adorned with the seals of El Paso,
Espanola, the Rio Arriba County Sheriff's Department and the Horizon
City, Texas, and Socorro, Texas, Police Departments and asked if the
city would "support eradicating drug use in the community."
In small type at the bottom, the pamphlet is copyrighted by
Foundation for a Drug-Free World, Narconon and Association for Better
Living and Education, all Scientology programs.
"It's my fault for not checking it out," Miyagishima said. "This is
something that I have to put an end to, this portion of it, since it
was brought up to me."
Since all the material was free, Miyagishima said he asked about the
funding. He said Henley told him it was donated by a private
individual who was interested in eradicating drug use.
"He gave me a couple of names, but not (founder and science fiction
author) L. Ron Hubbard," Miyagishima said.
Most of the literature deals with illegal drugs, but one pamphlet
specifically focuses on Ritalin, considered by Scientologists to be a
harmful and "mind-altering psychiatric drug." According to
Scientology.org, "psychiatry is not a science." Henley said Saturday
the church was only one backer and that the material did not have a
religious message, comparing it to the multi-faith origins of United Way.
"There is no religious message in any of the materials and the only
message of Mr. Hubbard is in connection with the discovery of the
toxins," Henley said, also describing the foundation as "secular."
When asked if he told Miyagishima about the connection with the
Church of Scientology, Henley said "it's all in the videos on the Web
sites that they acknowledge (the connection between the pamphlet and
the church)."
Henley also declined to say if the materials had been provided to
other New Mexico schools, saying the requests had come from
"individual teachers or classes ... for two or three years."
As for the foundation's message against psychiatric medication,
Henley said such prescriptions were up to a "medical doctor" or
"medical physician," terms used in Scientology to distance such
doctors from psychology and psychiatry. But he was clear about what
he said was the danger of such prescriptions.
"Every single one of the shooters in the schools have been on one
form or another of these psycho-pharmaceutical drugs," he said,
though Scientology is opposed to far more than these drugs. According
to the Scientology handbook, even aspirin will make someone
"unfeeling, insensitive, unable and definitely not trustworthy, a
menace to his fellows actually."
The "Marshal" program was one part of Miyagishima's "5-2-1-0" fitness
initiative, which also encouraged children to eat five servings of
fruit and vegetables, spend no more than two hours watching TV, get
an hour of exercise a day, and not to drink sodas -- aspects which
have recently been praised by U.S. Sen. Jeff Bingaman, Sen.-elect Tom
Udall and the New Mexico Department of Health.
Only the "Marshal" program is affiliated with Scientology.
"I'm going to have to pull the marshal's badge (program),"
Miyagishima said. "First off, I'm not happy that I wasn't fully
informed, obviously, and two, that's something there that I can't be
- -- the city can't be seen as promoting any type of religious activity."
LCPS Superintendent Stan Rounds said the mayor's decision Saturday
was a good solution to a common problem. As superintendent in Des
Moines, N.M., Rounds said his staff was given boxes of materials on
math that also contained messages about "the godliness of study" and
other evangelical themes. "We had to black all of that out so we
could use the materials," Rounds said.
Miyagishima said he would give out Las Cruces Police Department
sticker badges at future events and that anyone with a
Scientology-provided badge could trade it in.
"I don't want to lose any momentum with this program," Miyagishima said.
As for the Scientology material, Rounds called it "regrettable, but I
think the mayor's planned direction is the right one. Our message to
kids is not to use illicit drugs."
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