Forward: For a systematic, detailed, professional exposure of
Scientology's "Narconon" front group, visit the
Narconon Exposed web site.
[NOTE: After it was discovered that Scientology's NarCONon is a quack
medical fraud with no scientific basis, the crooks were thrown out
of our children's schools. There's no telling how much damage the
norotious cult did to the kids who were subjected to their frauds.]
Schools urged to drop antidrug program / Scientology-linked teachings
inaccurate, superintendent says
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=3D/c/a/2005/02/23/MNGQJBFKV81.DTL
Schools urged to drop antidrug program
Nanette Asimov, Chronicle Staff Writer
Wednesday, February 23, 2005
State Superintendent Jack O'Connell urged all California schools on
Tuesday to drop the Narconon antidrug education program after a new
state evaluation concluded that its curriculum offers inaccurate and
unscientific information.
"We'll get a letter out to every school district today, saying this
program is filled with inaccuracies and does not reflect widespread
medical and factual evidence," O'Connell said of Narconon Drug
Prevention & Education, a free program with ties to the Church of
Scientology.
O'Connell requested the independent evaluation in July after The
Chronicle reported in June that Narconon introduced students to some
beliefs and methods of Scientology without their knowledge.
The stories reported that Narconon's instruction rests, in part, on
church beliefs that drug residues remain indefinitely in body fat,
causing people to experience repeated drug flashbacks and cravings. Some
teachers also reported that Narconon instructors taught their students
that drug residues can be sweated out in saunas and that colored ooze is
produced when drugs exit the body.
Scientology correspondence obtained by The Chronicle said Narconon's
instruction is delivered in language purged of most church parlance, but
includes "all the Scientology and Dianetics Handbook basics."
Narconon classroom instructors made presentations in at least 39
California school districts since 2000, including San Francisco, Los
Angeles and Sacramento.
San Francisco and Los Angeles schools banned Narconon after The
Chronicle reports appeared. Narconon had had unfettered access to San
Francisco classrooms from 1991 until last summer.
"Now we need to get a memo out to schools saying that because of the
state superintendent's recommendation, which concurs with the San
Francisco finding, schools are not to be using Narconon," said Trish
Bascom, director of school health programs for the San Francisco
schools.
The report, funded by the state and released today by the Hayward-based
California Healthy Kids Resource Center, did not evaluate whether
Narconon crossed the church-state line in public schools.
Instead, five medical doctors and nine school health education
specialists evaluated Narconon for scientific accuracy and how well its
teaching methods might help students avoid taking drugs.
Information provided to students by Narconon "does not reflect accurate,
widely accepted medical and scientific evidence," the researchers said.
"Some information is misleading because it is overstated or does not
distinguish between drug use and abuse."
The report offered these examples of Narconon's inaccuracies:
-- Drugs burn up vitamins and nutrients.
-- Drug-activated vitamin deficiency results in pain.
-- Marijuana-induced, rapid vitamin and nutrient loss causes food
cravings known as "munchies."
-- Small amounts of drugs stored in fat are released at a later time
(and) cause the person to re-experience the drug effect and desire to
use again.
Examples of "misleading statements" include the ideas that the amount of
a drug taken determines whether it acts as a stimulant or sedative, and
that drugs "ruin creativity and dull senses."
The report also criticized Narconon for using ex-addicts to make its
presentations.
"Authorizing ex-addicts to teach drug prevention in schools may tacitly
reinforce student perceptions that drug use really isn't risky," the
researchers said.
And they found fault with Narconon for making no distinction between
what presenters tell young children versus teenagers; lecturing to
students without giving them a chance to practice drug-refusal skills;
suggesting to students that drug-taking is more widespread than it is;
and using scare tactics, such as telling students that too much caffeine
can kill.
"Narconon is proud that throughout our nearly 40 years of service we
have been able to help millions of youth worldwide to turn away from
drug experimentation and a life on drugs," Narconon's president, Clark
Carr, said after reading the report.
"We are always open to suggestions how we can achieve even better
results.
Narconon staff will continue to do everything they can to help youth
learn true information about drugs so they can make informed choices."
Carr was reached by phone in Hawaii, where he said he had been invited
to introduce Narconon to classrooms there.
Hawaii state school officials had already contacted their California
counterparts, O'Connell said, to ask about the report's findings.
The one positive nod researchers gave Narconon was that it could be
entertaining. The report quotes from a Narconon script advising
presenters to tell kids that "People don't decide to become addicted to
a drug. Nobody goes home at the end of a a school day and says, 'What am
I going to do tonight? Wash my bicycle ... and become a drug addict.' "
That kind of engaging approach is what got biology teacher Gary Sninsky
of Gardenia High in the Los Angeles Unified School District to invite
Narconon presenters to his class year after year. He was among many
teachers who said they were disappointed when their district banned the
antidrug program.
"I was impressed by their ability to hold a passel of teenagers'
attention," Sninsky said Tuesday, adding that he just assumed what
Narconon presenters said was accurate.
Deborah Wood, executive director of the California Healthy Kids Resource
Center, said inaccurate programs should not be permitted in classrooms
even if they are free to cash-strapped schools and entertaining to
glazed-eyed students.
"Ask instead if that would be appropriate for a math or science class,"
Wood suggested. "The standards need to be the same when we're talking
about valuable instructional time."
In his letter advising district superintendents not to allow Narconon in
their classrooms, O'Connell wrote: "Fortunately, many programs are
available to schools that have evidence of efficacy in preventing
violence or drug use."
The new state report will be available on the Web at www.cde .ca.
gov/ls/he/at/research.asp.
E-mail Nanette Asimov at nasimov@sfchronicle.com.
The name "Narconon"® is trademarked to the Scientology
organization through one of their many front groups. The name
"Scientology"® is also trademarked to the "Church"
of Scientology. Neither this web page, nor this web site, nor any of the
individuals mentioned herein assisting to educate the public about the
dangers of the Narconon scam are members of or representitives of the
Scientology organization.
If you or a loved one needs help -- real help -- there are
a number of rehabilitation programs you can contact. The real
Narcotics Anonymous organization
can get you in touch with real people who can help you.
Click [HERE] to visit Narcotivs
Anonymous's web site. Narcotics Anonymous's telephone number is
1 (818) 773-9999.
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Scientology-linked teachings inaccurate, superintendent says
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