Jehovah’s Witness

LEAH REMINI HAS MORE INVESTIGATING UP HER SLEEVE

While we’re on the subject of Scientology, we’re not sure how long Leah Remini’s Emmy-winning series, Scientology and the Aftermath, will continue (hopefully a LONG time) but she already has her eye on another religion she wants to scrutinize. The Hollywood Reporter revealed that Leah will produce a special for A&E focusing on Jehovah’s Witnesses. Remini aims to put an end to abuse in religions. She wants people to “have a negative feeling about church abuse and people taking away their money and families.” The special will air after season 3 of Aftermath, which, by the way, is expected to really agitate the Scientologists.

Photo: A&E

PARIS JACKSON IS IN CHARGE OF HER OWN LIFE: WHAT WOULD MICHAEL THINK?

She’s fifteen now and Paris Jackson is developing a mind of her own. Since she started going to a regular school she realized there is much to experience beyond the world of the Jackson family. She sought out and seems to be enjoying a friendship with her birth mother Debbie Rowe – they’ve been seen shopping and having lunch together, among other things. Paris also rebelled against her grandmother Katherine and now refuses to go door to door spreading the word of Jehovah’s Witness to her neighbors in Calabasas. That, combined with her two-tone hair and striking beauty, indicates she’s becoming a force to be reckoned with.

PRINCE WON'T VOTE AGAINST GAY RIGHTS

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There’s no need for Prince to backtrack on his recent comments to the New Yorker that implied he was against gay marriage. It seems that in recent years, Prince has become a fervent Jehovah’s Witness (like Michael Jackson used to be.) Consequently his views on social issues have become quite conservative, in contrast to his own highly liberated history. Personal opinions notwithstanding, the upside of this religious dilemma is the fact that Jehovah’s Witnesses DON’T VOTE! Prince and his ilk want nothing to do with politics and they remain neutral. That’s what the bible tells them to do. So in their own way, they separate church and state, and that’s fine with us.