Yes, LG, but journalists aren't lawyers. The case is what lawyers call 'distinguishable'. Sometimes a case is 'distinguishable on its own facts', that is that it is decided on certain facts without which it could not be so decided and your facts are different, sometimes it is 'distinguishable in law', most commonly because the key question, the fundamental one upon which the Court is being asked to decide, is one narrow one or one only, and confined in itself. Anything the Court says about anything beyond that question is 'obiter dicta', things said which may be helpful when they concern some other question but which are not binding on any court when that court has to decide that question. So far as we can tell, there are not any obiter dicta on the wider question of the status of Scientology as a religion for other purposes, so even that doesn't justify speculation about what any court or this one would hold.