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DORADO, PUERTO RICO •
Working with the many volunteer groups, EMTs, members of the military, police, and all of good will who have rolled up their sleeves to help the people of the island, the Scientology Volunteer Ministers Hurricane Maria Disaster Response is here for the long haul to make sure the island not only reco
PASADENA, CALIFORNIA •
The premiere of a new documentary produced by a team of San Gabriel high school students was the culmination of a project conceived and launched by Tim Bowles, Human Rights Director of the Church of Scientology Pasadena.
WOBULENZI, UGANDA •
Scientology Volunteer Ministers conduct seminar in Central Uganda village of Wobulenzi
Some 35 miles (57 kilometers) north of Kampala in the Luwero District of Central Uganda, villagers of the town of Wobulenzi learned an important lesson at a Scientology Volunteer Ministers seminar on conflict resolution.
The town council chairman and local teachers were among the 900 villagers who attended the program conducted by a team of Kampala-based Scientology Volunteer Ministers.
Commitment to the protection of human rights is one of the guiding principles of the Ferrero Group yet you are paying to keep an anti-religous TV show on the air. Are you aware that the Leah Remini Series has inspired more than 500 threats and acts of hate and violence against a religion and its members? Do the right thing and cease sponsoring this show.
Atlantic Coast Brands should take a page from Christie Brinkley, the face of their company, and “choose to create beauty, through mutual respect, compassion and love.” Instead, they are endorsing the opposite by sponsoring A&E’s anti-religious programming, Leah Remini Scientology and the Aftermath, which has already inspired more than 500 threats and acts of hate and violence.
Nestle states its purpose is enhancing quality of life and contributing to a healthier future and that it is guided by values that are rooted in respect, yet the company is funding Leah Remini's anti-religious hate that has inspired more than 500 threats and acts of hate and violence against a religion and its members.
Honda claims to believe “that the Human Being is born as a free and unique individual with the capacity to think, reason and create—and the ability to dream,” and that its wish is “to nurture and promote these characteristics” by “respecting individual differences and trusting each other as equal partners.” Yet Honda is funding anti-religious hatred with its advertising dollars.
Anheuser-Busch claims it is “committed to business practices that do not infringe on human rights and do align with various international standards of responsible business conduct, including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,” and that “leadership by personal example is the best guide to our culture.” You are setting a very poor example by using your advertising dollars to keep A&E’s Leah Remini Scientology and the Aftermath on the air—a show that has has already inspired more than 500 threats and acts of hate and violence.
MEXICO •
A team of Scientology Volunteer Ministers returned to Mexico City this week after completing a rigorous course of training in disaster search and rescue in various locales around Mexico. The training was supervised by Los Topos, the renowned Mexican search and rescue team featured in a National Geographic documentary on the Japan tsunami of 2011, and other top professionals. The purpose: to leverage experience and expertise gained to direct the activities of the Scientology Volunteer Ministers Disaster Response in the worst possible disasters.