Neil DeGrasse Tyson: Christians have no right to call Scientologists crazy
Neil deGrasse Tyson
Neil deGrasse Tyson

(Cindy Ord/Getty Images for FOX)

Astrophysicist and cosmologist Neil DeGrasse Tyson is defending Scientology in light of HBO's highly critical documentary on the church.

HBO's documentary "Going Clear" did not show the church in an entirely positive light — Scientology has a built a reputation for tormenting members who leave it, reportedly with either surveillance or harassment.

The film highlights the celebrities who made the religion intriguing to the world as well as the horrific stories of abuse from former members.

But Tyson, in an interview with The Daily Beast, declined to bash the controversial church, saying people are free to believe whatever they want.

"So, you have people who are certain that a man in a robe transforms a cracker into the literal body of Jesus saying that what goes on in Scientology is crazy? Let’s realize this. What matters is not who says who’s crazy, what matters is we live in a free country," Tyson, known for his skeptical views of Christianity, said. "You can believe whatever you want, otherwise it’s not a free country—it’s something else. If we start controlling what people think and why they think it, we have case studies where that became the norm. I don’t care what the tenets are of Scientology. They don’t distract me. I don’t judge them, and I don’t criticize them."

There is dispute, however, about whether or not Scientology is a legitimate religion.

France convicted the organization for “organized fraud.” And it is notorious for convincing people to join its system, having them pay for "readings," and allegedly employing types of blackmail to keep people in the organization.

Former members of the church have sued, claiming the church has duped people into donating millions of dollars toward misrepresented causes, according to The Telegraph.

A 2011 tax filing values the three organizations comprising Scientology at $1.5 billion, according to The Wrap. The church sought a tax-exempt status from the IRS for several years before it finally got it in 1993.

l ron with chart
l ron with chart

(HBO/"Going Clear")L. Ron Hubbard unveils the "Classification and Gradation Chart," which lays out the step-by-step advancement in the organization.The church's founder, science fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard, "started his career as a writer doing pulp-fiction works for which he was paid a penny a word."

Most of his writing was science fiction, specifically about missions into space — themes that would later come up again in Scientology's unbelievable theory of how the world began.

Hubbard reportedly said, "You don't get rich writing science fiction. If you want to get rich, you start a religion," at a meeting of the Eastern Science Fiction Association in November 1948.