U.S. Navy Gives Scientologist Tom Cruise Award for Pretending to Be In The U.S. Navy

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Last Updated on December 18, 2024

Tom Cruise, who pretends to be a Navy pilot in movies, was recently awarded U.S. Navy Awards Scientologist’s Biggest Star Its Highest Civilian Honor for boosting the Military Industrial Complex (MIC) in his movies over the decades.

Cruise, who is without a doubt Scientology’s highest flying representative, just ahead of John Travolta, also pretends to be in the U.S. Navy as a leader in the upper echelons of L. Ron Hubbard’s cultish “religion.”

During the roll-out of the Covid-19 BioWeapon, Tom Cruise was famously heard in an expletive-laden recording yelling at staff that they will be fired if they do not follow Covid restrictions.

Cruise apparently became enraged after spotting two crew members standing together at a computer screen in violation of an on-set rule requiring people to stand about two meters apart.

 

Earlier in his career, Tom Cruise made waves when he called into question the efficacy of psychiatry.

A 2005 clip recently resurfaced in which Cruise and now-disgraced news reader, the lecherous Matt Lauer, threw shade on the Freudian pharmacological factory the modern health system has become.

The United States Navy honored actor Tom Cruise with the Navy Distinguished Public Service Award on Tuesday for celebrating naval service with his blockbuster Top Gun movies.

The award ceremony for Cruise, the world’s most famous fictional Top Gun, took at Longcross Studios near London where he is currently on set for another movie and hosted by U.S. Secretary of the Navy Carlos Del Toro.

Presented with a medal and certificate, the 62-year-old movie star said he was proud to receive the “extraordinary acknowledgment.”

“I admire all of the service meant and women,” Cruise said in his remarks upon accepting the award. “I know in life, something that is very true to me, is that is to lead is to serve. And I know that to my core. And I see that in the servicemen and women.”

Cruise “increased public awareness and appreciation for our highly trained personnel and the sacrifices they make while in uniform,” the Navy said.

The long-time A-list celebrity was also commended for his roles in “Mission Impossible,” “A Few Good Men,” and “Born on the Fourth of July.”

In 1986, Top Gun was a smash hit when it first hit theaters worldwide, ranking in $354 million at the box office in its first release.

The sequel, Top Gun: Maverick, aired in theaters in 2022, despite the COVID mandates and then-ongoing pandemic lockdowns, garnered even more acclaim than the 1986 massive hit, earning over one billion at the box office upon its release.

January 6 defendants, over 80 percent of who are veterans, were reportedly able to watch the Top Gun sequel from their tablets while incarcerated. Those held captive in the DC Gulag said at the time they were inspired and encouraged by Cruise’s film which depicts the sacrifices made by service men and women.

As the U.S. Naval Institute reports, the Navy stated that TOP GUN: MAVERICK “brought nostalgia to older audiences and reinvigorated the minds of newer audience members, which effectively targeted a younger audience’s interest into the skill sets and opportunities the Navy can provide.”

After nearly 4 years of tragedy and a manufactured state of emergency under the Biden administration, America is making a comeback.

Cruise’s upcoming film, “Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning” is slated for release in May 2025.





Source
Las Vegas News Magazine

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