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Is Suri's Bottle Filled With Scientology?

  1. AOL NEWS.COM

May 9) -- Recent pictures of 2-year-old Suri Cruise still using a bottle made some question Tom and Katie's parenting skills. But is Scientology to blame?

According to a baffling report from Defamer, L. Ron Hubbard ordered Scientologist moms to feed their children a mixture of barley water, homogenized milk, and lots of honey -- a recipe he obtained during time travel to ancient Rome. One issue, though, is that the kiddie cocktail can be toxic.

 

L. Ron Hubbard may be the reason that Suri Cruise is still drinking from a bottle at the age of 2, Defamer suggests, reporting that the Scientology founder urged his followers to use his own special formula recipe that he obtained during time travel. Unfortunately, it contains honey, which can be toxic to young children.

In what is purported to be testimonials by former Scientologists who have had experience with "Hubbard's baby formula," some say it caused the teeth of the children to rot due to high sugar content. Honey, which is to blame for the high sugar content, can be toxic to infants, as it contains a bacteria that can cause botulism. Others say it made the babies "thin and colicky," while one even claims children "screamed themselves to death."

And Suri isn't the only Scientolo-tot with a penchant for bottles. On a recent appearance on 'Rachael Ray,' actress Leah Remini talked about how her 3-year-old daughter Sophia still drinks upwards of "six or more bottles a night. Remini goes on to say that she "could see her drinking a bottle 'til she's 16."
Watch a Clip Here

Over the past few years, Cruise's relationship with the controversial religion has been front and center. While promoting 'War of the Worlds,' the actor got into a heated debate with 'Today' host Matt Lauer on the ethics and practices of psychiatry. Cruise famously told Lauer that he was being "glib," and proclaimed that only he knew the truth behind the science.

In January, Gawker posted a video of Cruise giving a candid discussion about Scientology, calling them "the authorities" and saying it is a "privilege" to become one. The clip, which Gawker labeled an "indoctrine video," was never meant to be seen by the public, which prompted a lawsuit from the Church of Scientology.

 from defamer.com

       We've become just about as well-versed as we want to when it comes to the bizarre practices of Scientologists, which run the gamut from silent birth to e-meters. But after hearing that Katie Holmes' precious little Suri is still on the baby bottle even after turning 2 years old, and that fellow Scientologist mommy Leah Remini's "sweet witty pain in the ass" 3-year old Sophia still drinks six bottles a night, we discovered some disturbing tales from other members of the cult religion who used "Hubbard's baby formula," only to wind up with "thin and colicky" toddlers that had their "baby teeth destroyed" and "screamed themselves to death."      
       But as the defiant Remini says in this clip, "I could see her drinking a bottle 'til she's 16."
         More details on Hubbard's toxic formula that was developed using methods from Ancient Rome (!!!) after the jump.

 

      On a segment from the Rachael Ray show a few weeks back, a visibly exhausted and seemingly brainwashed Remini told viewers in the most melancholy of tones how addicted her daughter Sophia is to "the baba."

 

         And if self-professed Scientologist Remini is following the religion's doctrines correctly, this means she is obeying founder L. Ron Hubbard's instructions to never breastfeed and, instead, feed babies a mixture consisting of barley water, homogenized milk, and oodles of sugar-heavy honey. But this is hardly the scary part.

 

       You see, Hubbard, who we must note claimed he had visited Heaven several times during his life, also claimed he discovered this baby formula after magically traveling back in time to hang out in ancient Rome: "I picked it up in Roman days and have used it since...Modern hospital formulas and patent mixes for babies are not just bad, they are criminal."

 

       While we're pretty sure that keeping one's baby on a proper nutritional diet is the furthest thing from criminal, we're equally sure that keeping the little ones sucking down Hubbard's formula well past their third birthday isn't doing any favors for the child's social development skills. As they say, this one is developing...

[Photo Credit: INF]

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