Lafayette Ron Hubbard or L Ron Hubbard or simply just LRH. The founder of the company Scientology that has a high monetary incitement of label itself as Religion not only due to tax reasons. But som much more ….
L Ron Hubbard as the stratocaster to Scientologists puppet on a string – hypnotically yours.
Screwing a string – in order to stratocast his order of master disorder
Stratocast not castrorater not the castrater said the tellers from the Pizza Communista camp. Just the bread crumb in the bottom with some tomato sausage upon, as the mild thing of the acid in the milky way to made it granulate, cheesus
on top.
L Ron Hubbard collecting the L Ron Hubbard objective as the bioenergetics from central point, and sources of the driving point probably is the light getting caught by his dark objective. Making a documentary on this objective is hard since Scientology objects by the Scientologist
-in chorus of the tunnel sight from microscope to telescope-
L Ron Hubbard LRH – a creator of something superhuman like Dianetics and Scientology of off cause causal as a superhuman beyond superman.
L Ron Hubbard LRH
He is really out of himself as the old Greece spells para nous beside himself, and yet also pretty paranoid to. L Ron Hubbard LRH
How the church of Scientology tried to destroy Paulette Cooper By Tony Ortega – The Unbreakable Miss Lovely. A Good book with a lot of spine behind.
Scientology as defined by the ex users is an important aspect of it all. Since that population probably is the worlds most knowing populations in the adverse effects of Scientology and topics nearby as Dianetics and the author L Ron Hubbard or LRH.
Not being into Scientology to start with and yet starting to write about Scientology, Scientologists, Dianetics and all the things associated with L Ron Hubbard has not only been interesting but also surprising. 3 of the blogs we have collaborated with has been erased and this came really as a surprise! Not a warning, not a sign! Just erased they was! And one Twitter account was suspended without anything else than all of the blogs and the twitter was very visible in a search & critical to Scientology.
makeups & striptease of reality in the disconnection
And yes, linking to top resources in the topic to.
Things that might be irritating to someone, got it. The topic Scientology in itself is not to funny eighter so it is really easy to understandable that it is mostly populated with ex-scientologist and those who can make money out of it, or both,
Having linked and talked about a petition we where surprised that the writer of the petition to reinvestigate the tax exempt of Scientology did not use the strongest pages he himself had by his side.
Probably the best and strongest pages to use, that really directly would find the largest mass of the interested public that also has a very high potential knowledge of the topics. So he got several questions why he did not use his strongest pages to link to the petition he himself was the author to. No answer directly.
After a while came a twitter msg that he could not login or found the shellcode to the mussel of the oyster, or the ability to login to clambake and the Scientology writings on Xenu.net. where he had one question waiting for him. Ok, his browser did not aloud him to login to OCMB, that could happen…
I myself asked at his blog and time went by….
then he answered the comment without any visible attempt or will to answer the original question why he did not used his own strong card to reach the probably most interested individuals to sign the petition he himself wrote… Strange.
Then we had already made a Soundcloud example on how he could use the account of his own to link and amplify the visibility of the petition. and pointed out that this might be an example of how to get a higher visibility in his petition about to reinvestigate the IRS Tax exempt of the Church of Scientology. With a lot of links to different parts of the topics and his own soundcloud.
Then came a mail asking why i had stolen his works and put it up on Soundcloud.
Well, Dear Author of the Petition and bloger about Scientology, you might be drunk and can get sober, but having so difficult to answer a single question straight is strange…. and cant not even login to answer, that’s also strange. But when claiming a theft when just adding his works to a playlist from an account that basically just links to the petition he himself wrote, there it’s stop being odd and starts getting really sick.
Maybe a sober time will come
Or is this a leftover behavior sign of the Homo Novis shit and strangely odd things that shows why Scientologists is might be remarkable special even after quitting the cult in being perceived as nonchalant & arrogant to a much higher degree than in any other cult membership?
Well we had talked a lot and linked to his website, the petition and made and example of how he himself could do to be visible from his big own account that he did not used, and not even answered any question about why he wrote a petition without using his strongest pages to link to it and still haven’t answered. Probably it is much easier to claim that other that just helps him and his petition steals his material and that wont help the petition at all, hmm that’s true and what about you?
He probably will do everything else than answer to the original question and still haven’t been able to login, so the next question would come very natural, is it any strange at all that members of Scientology as Ex Scientologist is the most nonchalant and arrogant population among the ex cult members? And does this in itself being secondary dependent on a Homo Novis angle that is hard to get out of and old dog and its dogma?
Or is it more to be consider to be a mental paranoia of perceiving it theft when other has added ones own work to their playlist. It does not seems to be the typical signs of normal behavior or the starting signs of senility however.
But anyway a very odd and never thought of starting article it made….
Haillies Selassie My Caesar Augustine! Nice to know that Scientology and its Scientologist are not the only one who can behave like nonchalant and ignorant to those who just trying to help… Yes and the effect can actually be measured and not knowing is no excuse to behave like Pope and baptizing other to thief’s. Attack instead of answer that Scientology! And erased the question you did. And silent obeying the leading thing, so Scientology…
….with plenty of crackpot, on LSD Scientology combo?… but for a months in a row? Time to get sober?
If one can not raise a question
or questioning a truth, that what can one do in a cult or an anti-cult?
L Ron Hubbard as the Shell fish nature or Clambake
The shell code in the coding is for sure more than the dingbats it is written from. Hereby we will ensure everyone the unaltered source and hence just put in this holographic Shellfish shell code as the Clambake of the LRH or L Ron Hubbard original shell fish interface.
Even if if this quality iconistics is put in front of any text or other images, picture or whatever, it is just to ensure unaltered tech and whatever.
Since L Ron Hubbard can't be wrong the wonderful concept of "tech alternations" have appeared in Dianetics appliance of Scientology. So Since L Ron Hubbard always was right in the stereotypical tunnel-sight, any error belongs to the "tech alternations"
Does not sound like a sound advice, well it is not - it is Scientology and the LRH Gravity. One of the greatest inspiration Hubbard had to Dianetics and Scientology seems to be a Commander Snake Joseph Cheesman Thompson... and there are several theories about it..
LRH L Ron Hubbard started Scientology with the book Dianetics.
Here we can listen to comments about Scientology and life as a Scientologist. But even wider than being in a cult, by leaving the cult and becoming an Ex Scientology and an expert on Scientology form inside and outside. Holding the perspective.
Welcome to Aaron Smith Levin and the YouTube channel Scientology growing up (if it was possible) until then the channel will be named Growing up in Scientology.
Here we are testing to have a search-able index of the spoken word in the vide. Sometimes one just wonder who said that phrase or comments where and having 2 – 3 hours video to looking through but often fall asleep in the while waiting for that citation, so one is really sure of writing it completely correctly. That’s why we have tagged the author of this posting as Aaron Smith Levin, since he is the author of the spoken word together with Nathan Rick. It is just for searching and to se if its workable and search-able in a practical manner.
Scientology Growing
Ex Scientologist interviewing an ex Scientologist about Scientology, Dianetics and auditing and basically growing up and living in Scientology (as an member, in a lifestyle, by it's internal culture)
Nathanael Rich thinking back, Philosophic
- hi everyone and welcome back to growing up in Scientology we are talking again with Nathan Rich. I think this is part six man yeah yeah it's been a while hey -everybody I promised you guys we'd be back by popular demand so here we are all right so what were we talking about- we were talking about some what is-Scientology gonna do when when weed is -legal in all states recreationally -they're gonna be flicked I think we've -got it all right so here's what I was -saying I was pointing out that so many -of the things that Hubbard wrote was him -just being a person of his time not -necessarily being particularly clever -like you know the stuff he wrote in -Dianetics and science of survival -bashing homosexuals um now he might have -personally been anti-homosexual but it -was also okay to say that back then he -was being a person of his time it was -okay to be anti-homosexual the stuff he -said about marijuana being terrible I -definitely feel it was just because -marijuana was illegal it was easy to say -marijuana was terrible when it's illegal -you never hear Hubbard say well he might -say some things about you know you can't -drink alcohol I was gonna say you'll -never hear and say alcohol is bad he -says you can't drink alcohol within -hours of an auditing session but you -don't get in trouble in Scientology for -drinking alcohol you might have to do -some ethics handlings for drinking it in -excess frequently but you will get in -trouble for drinking I'm sorry for -smoking weed that no matter how -infrequently and I feel the only reason -he ever wrote anything about we being -bad for your reactive mind and your -engrams and what whatnot is because it -was illegal and it's easy to say it's -bad it's bad when society has already -outlawed it and then if Hubbard had -written Dianetics during the Prohibition -he probably would have said alcohol was -terrible for your reactive mind and -Scientologists would never have been -able to drink alcohol and then we were -sitting there saying well once weed is
-recreationally legal in all states -powers -and with Scientology going to be able to -justify telling Scientologists they are -absolutely prohibited from doing -something that is % legal and that's -when we decided to turn on turn on I hit -the record button yeah -so I well there's a couple things I -would say about that from my point of -view I never really thought about -Lafayette as being a man of his time -like that I know what you mean -time to but to me I thought that he was -just saying it's you know I thought of -it just like how Scientologists think of -it I'm basically which is that no no -it's nothing to do with that it's -because it brings the engrams into a -present time or something like that but -you know at the since I've been out of -it for so long I look back and I don't -really understand what the point of why -drugs was bad like why was that bad -again you know I still don't really get -it like yeah I understand that -speed is bad because it screws up your -body in your mind didn't that your brain -gets all screwed up okay that's pretty -clear but when it comes to things like -weed or things like like masturbation or -things like that that the general thing -that I've heard of from from him is just -like oh it brings up it brings the -engrams to present time type of type of -mentality the type of answer I still -don't really get why is that bad again -like right you know the thing like but -what does it do though like why do we -care about that so the way I could -always process that information was that -so you read Dianetics well in our cases -I didn't even read it till I was like -facking years old I didn't -pre-diabetics till I had already left -the Z or but in our case is you get -raised on the principles and dynamics at -least generally processing the -principles of Dianetics so you read -about the reactive mind you read about -how bad these engrams are you read about -how they get wrist emulator um and and -then you read that if you're tired or -you're hungry or your awareness is -otherwise suppressed tired hungry drugs -it's -easier for engrams to bearest immolated -and so once you sort of internalized -this information about engrams on the -one hand you're supposed to use -Dianetics to erase engrams but on the -other hand you're supposed to do -everything possible to prevent engrams -from being related so that you are as -much you as possible and not dramatizing -or acting out the content of your -reactive mind that's how I always took -it but then and that's fine that could -make sense to a Scientologist but then -you go okay but then it's okay to drink -alcohol and that's where I go you -couldn't say alcohol was terrible for -you at all times he couldn't he couldn't -make it against the rules to drink -alcohol because alcohol was legal -that's I'm just kind of coming up with I -think he probably I think he probably -thought to himself -yeah alcohol is that that's bad too but -I remember what happened with the -prohibition so I'm just gonna I'm just -gonna say not before auditing and a you -know saying I like the last guy that -tried to say no drinking they've turned -on him with pitchfork so uh yeah it's -fine but what don't you like again drugs -yeah I hate those too that's ugh but the -but the thing is everything you said -makes me think that that's probably why -people go clear and they think I did it -I made it because it's like now they can -masturbate and do as much drugs as they -want because they do I've reactive mind -I finally you know that's the other -thing about all this is that there's so -many things but when it comes to the -reactive mind itself it's an interesting -theory and that it's it's kind of you -know sort of out of left field and when -you take the reactive mind seriously as -Scientologists do as we both did as you -know you just think that it's real it -really it kind of there's so many -additional questions that come with it -as an answer that from a sort of Occam's -razor or scientific approach -view it's just a really bad theory -because it really only works when you -stay reading a book from it from -Lafayette and you say okay and then it -does this and that's bad and great and -then he just moves you to the next -subject and you're on to talking about -something you know thinking about -something else but when you start to dig -in and ask questions like but wait -why can I still feel that way after I'm -clear if I don't have a reactive mind -and it's like oh you're just mocking -that up it's like well then if I could -already do that and why wouldn't I have -just been mocking it up before when I -before is clear when I suppose II have -this reactive mind and there's just like -that's just one of a hundred questions -that I've have had in my mind since I -was a kid that I've never found -satisfactory answers to yes sure sure so -one of the things that well I find -interesting on this subject of what it's -supposed to mean to go clear in -Scientology what Scientologists think is -happening when they go clear so you and -I can remember you and I personally have -already discussed this but the clear -cognition when someone's getting -Dianetics auditing the thing they are -supposed to realize come to an awareness -of is oh my god as a spiritual being as -a thing I have been actively creating my -own reactive mind the whole time like -it's not something that was on autopilot -it's not something that someone else -created I've been actively creating this -thing and now that I'm aware of that I'm -not doing it anymore and holy shit when -I don't react to find just went away -because I just stopped creating it right -but so that's the clear cognition but -here's something that's so fascinating -people who are getting Dianetics -auditing do not know that that is what -the auditor is waiting to hear um -the auditor doesn't even know that's -what the auditor is waiting to hear the -case supervisor -who reviews all the auditing notes -usually does not know that's what the
-pre-clear is supposed to say -if you're in an organization where the -person is sufficiently trained the -senior case supervisor is the only one -in the organization sometimes who even -know is that's what the person is -supposed to say and my point where I'm -going with all this is that lets say the -pre-clear spits out something like that -and the auditor happens to write it down -it goes to the case supervisor it goes -to the senior case supervisor this -person could literally be attested to -the state of clear and never once be -told what it is that they said that -allowed them to attest to the state of -clear so they may not even realize that -that is what it meant to go clear to -realize they were mocking they were -creating their own reactive money now of -course no one says that realization in -quite those exact words -part of the art of figuring out if -someone is clear is getting them to sort -of say something that was close enough -that you're like okay bingo we got it we -can call this guy clear okay so my point -that was just that Scientologists who -are clear still don't necessarily know -that that is what qualified them to be -called clear but then you have this -policy in Scientology where you're not -supposed to audit Dianetics on someone -who's attested to clear and here's why -and this kind of goes back to its wager -said is that once you've realized that -as a being you were creating your own -reactive mind that's fine you as a being -you still have to be able T to create -your reactive mind it's just that you've -now decided not to do it anymore but if -you audit that person on Dianetics -you're asking the thing in to create new -mental pictures and engrams and recall -them you're actually asking them to -recreate their reactive mind and that is -why you're not allowed to audit -Dianetics on a clear and so I'm -mentioning that because you met you you -sort of alluded to this cognitive -dissonance of will have attested to -clear how come I still feel this way -this is how this is one of the ways -people justify why someone who's clear -still acts like they have a reactive -mind -they just accidentally started creating -it again oops my bad -right so there's a few things I could -say about that so first of all yeah I -didn't know about the sort of running up -the chain of command of who's allowed to -know what the cognition is the the -realization in Scientology they said -cognition for some stupid f'cking reason -it's one of those words that already has -an English word that means the exact -same thing but they just insist on -making up another one -you know like backflash when I when I -was first like out of the ranch I -remember I said the word backflash to -someone and they're like f'ck you -talking on its a backlash you know like -when you talk back to someone they're -like you mean back talk and that was -like why did they call it I didn't look -it up and dictionary wasn't there and I -was like oh it's not a real word I was -like why did they make up the word -backflash there's a readi word that's -exactly the same amount of syllables -practically the same word already called -back talk and it's more clear it's -easier anyway um I I didn't realize that -that that they had that sort of chain of -command and who's allowed to to know -what the cognition is that that part's -interesting the first thing I thought of -when you told me I think you did tell me -the clear cognition before but the first -thing I thought of when you told me it -this time what is you know what a stupid -thing to realize because if you pay -attention I know people that aren't -psychologists or weren't Scientologists -won't really get this but as you -navigate around and the the extreme -amounts of text and ideas and everything -that is Scientology I mean it's you -literally can't even imagine how many -words this guy wrote one of the core -ideas that's drilled in your head all -the time is that you are the person that -is responsible for everything there's -never anything that's put as a like -uh-oh except for that thing it's it's -everything everything in your life that -you do or that is done to you that is -affecting you that you are affecting -others with it's all completely because -of you so I think if I got to the that -that clear if I had if I had been in a -situation when somebody said like don't -you see you know you've been mocking up -your that you know your active mind this -whole time like yeah dude I learned that -on -the third week I was in Scientology I -got it yeah what's what is the big -cognition I don't understand and then -when I was thinking about that I was -thinking about remind me of something -else I'm gonna sidetrack sorry everybody -but that's what we're here for man we're -doing long-form okay I was thinking -about touch assists and I remember we -were talking about that as you see the -touch assists or nervous or whatever -contact assist and I remember we were -talking a little bit about like how you -just get tired of doing I mean like sure -I realized you know I didn't realize -that lamp was there and they're like -good enough you know and I started to -think about realizations the other night -when I was trying to sleep and I was -realizing that you know there's a lot of -processes and courses and stuff that you -do in Scientology where the EP or the -the in phenomenon of what you're -supposed to get like how you know that -you're done is that you realize -something there's a lot of them it's -very common in Scientology like you know -you're done because the PC will have a -cognition and incur to me the other day -that you know I realize stuff all the -time now just sitting around on my couch -I'm just look around go oh you know that -real I said that wire was oh there oh -that's what that guy meant you know -whatever it is and I just not like I -realized if you will that what a -convenient way to to get you know to -attribute what you're doing to that -realization it's like okay you're gonna -you're gonna make a cake and you're -gonna make that cake all day long until -you have a realization and then of -course you're making a cake and you -realize something you go my god this -works making cakes gives me realizations -and and it just made me really think -about this whole cognition idea as such -an interesting kind of sleight of hand -because Scientologists and you know -especially active Scientologists they -really believe that you get realizations -you get cognitions from doing -Scientology and yet I realize things all -any Scientology -so no I mean realizing something is like -it's just a matter of thinking about you -could sit here and think about -absolutely anything like I'm trying to -give a stupid example of what might be -able to pass as a cognition and an -auditing session -it's literally noticing or thinking -about anything new at all like I could -be sitting here watching a video about -the movement of tectonic plates and -let's just say I was in an auditing -session and whatever and for some reason -I'm running a repetitive auditing -command where it's recall something -that's really real to you recall -something that's really real to you -recall something that's really real to -you I'm like tectonic plates are really -real to me you know um the the the the -core of the earth is real to me the -cross I could see here we go -I just realized I just realized the -relationship between um the movement of -the tectonic plates and the and that the -creation of mountains it just just -became clear to me that it ever has been -before and once you've been adding the -bottoming you know how to word something -so that it truly sounds good enough to -be accepted as a cognition and you can -literally say that it could have nothing -to do with the auditing process you're -gonna have nothing to do with the -auditing session any realization about -life or any component of life or -anything at all in an auditing session -is considered a cognition and is the end -of the auditing process as long as the -PC is legitimately happy and the needle -on the emailer is floating which means -very smoothly going back and forth once -you do that boom you're done but like -you said I could sit here and literally -watch YouTube and have a hundred -cognition today yeah yeah it happens to -me all the time and I just kind of one -dose like the other night was thinking -you know I realize stuff all the time -and I don't attribute it to anything -other than I'm thinking about that thing -and a figuring stuff out or I'm just -taking a fresh look at something or you -know whatever just brand right ah -but yeah as far as drugs go there is one -thing that I -read in I will say I learned from -Scientology not to say that there's not -other places to learn but it's where I -happened to learn that drugs make you -wooden feeling mmm wouldn't it dad oh -you know what that was I think he said a -lot about that in will he probably said -it in many places but in the references -where he talked about why this -superpower auditing rundowns were so -important it was because society had -become I might be getting various -references conflated right now this -deadness this wouldn't miss this a -disassociation had a lot to do with the -drug culture and television drugs and -television and Sykes Sykes are the ones -pushing television and drugs on the kids -drugs are bad okay that's so true -but I will say the drug you know real -drugs I have personally you know I've -been walking around like a zombie and -thought to myself my god I have no -emotions I have no feeling left I just -feel like a like like wooden Lafayette -you've got one you got one buddy you got -one but but you know the whole thing -about the purest I was talking I wrote -some post about I think I've done the -pure of about four or five times now and -I've never I you know you know you're -done with the fear of when you just know -that's this the EP of the pyramids you -just you just know and so that's the -moment when you're kind of sick of doing -it and you just feel like everything's -kind of the same and it's been around -this the amount of time that you deduced -that it was supposed to be taking maybe -a little longer and then you just kind -of go like yeah I'm done and they're -like are you sure you're done you're -like oh I'm done I feel great do you -ever happen to recall if by the time on -any of your purest if by the time you -finished or by the you know by the time -you said whatever you said did you -already know damn well that that's what -you needed to say in order to be done -yeah I knew because -because the the the book the clear body -clear mind whatever it just says like -you're done when you're free of all you -know toxins and whatever and I was kind -of like you the first thing you ask this -how do you know when you're done look -you'll know you'll just know yeah and -then and then basically I think for me -then they would take you in if you think -that you're done the poyo actin on the -cans and then the like and then they'll -kind of do the whole sort of like oh I -think maybe you can do some more in -there try not to evaluate you for you -but they'll basically send you back in -for more and then I just basically you -know just game it how you do in a normal -session you just pile on okay I got to -be cheery here next time I got a really -feel it next time well yeah I mean when -they put you in the mirror and again if -anyone is knowledgeable enough to -correct me on this technically jump into -the comment section below please again -that's just them trying to get you to -say something that sounds extremely -positive they call it very good -indicators VG eyes -cheerful happy to say something and have -your needle float on the e meter because -that's supposed to be like the golden -standard for whether what you're saying -is legitimately happy alright I chalk up -finishing the purif to just having -happened to just have happen to get a -few nights are really good sleep and to -walk into the org that day in a really -good mood and being like I'm f'cking -done today I feel great you know you get -a few nights a good sleep everything -feels light and cheerful and bright -you're just in a good mood like nothing -can get me down must be rid of all those -drugs and toxins yeah and yeah the whole -pier of thing is interesting because -like me I'm out of shape I don't really -do much I just kind of go to work and I -you know I'm wooden what can I say you -know just like Lafayette said so when I -think about if I were to do the pier of -now I remember a long time ago the the -thing is that on your pure if you do I -think it's minutes of rigorous -exercise usually running each day before -you get into sauna to get your heart -rate up and there's this whole strict -thing and the -if I did nothing nothing at all but -exactly the same thing I'm doing now and -minutes of running every day for a -month I will feel amazing I feel like -the toxins are out you know call the -press this works and so you know sitting -in a sauna is is relaxing and fun and -everything and and I'm not necessarily -one to say like you know that it's -impossible that it helps you at all I -mean you're you're imparting yourself -with vitamins and water and exercise and -whatever so maybe it maybe it is a shock -to this shock to the system maybe it's -not good for you I don't really know I'm -not a doctor but I do know that there's -an easy way to again to just dispel all -of the doubt that's easy you just get -some of those guys in the white coats -with the pocket protectors and the -glasses right and they love statistics -and data they're called scientists right -you get some scientists and doctors to -evaluate somebody that has toxins and do -a bit long story short you do it one of -these like double-blind studies or -whatever and you prove that the program -works that's all you have to do I -promise you there's nobody in the world -that's trying to suppress you from doing -that no one is trying to stop you -no one's gonna falsify the data no one's -gonna you know rig the test we want it -to work if the purif worked I would be -the jumping off with the front you know -up and down on the rooftops yelling to -everybody we got to do it but there's no -proof there's no evidence -it's true and but that's the thing and -there's this concept of toxins in your -body defined toxins it's a misnomer -um yeah like like oh just don't -understand how the f'cking liver works -just because your liver filters out -toxins from your blood doesn't mean your -liver is now full of toxins that's not -how f'cking bye-bye biochemistry works -I've watched so many videos recently on -this subject -you know doing a cleanse and getting rid -of the toxins it's all horseshit -it's all horseshit but you know I was -going to say something similar to what -you just mentioned which is that there -are plenty people out there even people -who left Scientology who say the pure -have helped them the thing that I think -is important to come back to is first of -all anything can be helpful even if it's -bullshit the placebo effect is real um -but also something can be helpful but -not for the reasons Hubbard said it was -supposed to be helpful it can be helpful -for totally different reasons kind of -what you said if you're a couch potato -and you're just living a shiftless life -and you know yeah and you now go to -doing minutes of cardio every day and -taking vitamins and you know that once -you start doing that you automatically -watch what you eat they tell you not to -change your diet but that's bullshit -everyone's like I'm healthy now I'm on -the pier so they start eating a little -better they have to be sessionable so -they get enough sleep they're taking -vitamins you know being in a sauna feels -good being a surfer and and eventually -someone gets to a point where they're -like I feel better now so they're also -being told that that's how they're -supposed to feel you're supposed to feel -better that's how this works this is -going to make you feel better um you -know I did an interview a few days ago -with Marcus Sawyer he was having heavy -heavy hallucination like / -hallucinating in life and for him doing -the purif did help minimize his -hallucinations we can't say why it did -but we also can't say that it works the -way Hubbard said it works right um what -I want to say on that one thing there -though you said that they don't ask you -to change the diet but that's not -entirely true because I remember -specifically that it does say like it's -like oh just eat the normal stuff you -eat you know like tons of raw veggies -and like you don't I mean like all this -tons of this like organic this and and -you're going like yeah I don't think -anyone eats that but okay I'd have to -look at the references oh I remember it -saying don't change your diet and you're -not supposed to you're not supposed to -be losing -they would consider that a bad thing -yeah the losing weight they they what -they do is they give you a bunch of oil -to cap to counteract it and that oil it -doesn't do anything so you just keep -losing weight and they're just you're -drinking more and more disgusting oil -with that -what's that granular Schlesser thing -they left it then yeah and so you're -just you're like washing down these -beady little weird tasting things and -then all this oil is really disgusting -actually but yeah and of course I'm sure -different pure if I sees I see and -Scientology ins for in charge so the -person in charge of the pier if is -called the purify sea I'm sure many of -them do it different ways but um what -the hell are we talking about oh just -just acknowledging the fact that there -are people who do feel this helps them -there's no evidence that it helps people -for the reason Hubbard says it helps -people and in fact there's tons of -evidence that it doesn't mom and you -know two things I want to touch on not -specific about the purif but in general -kind of tangents but at least you know -relatively related to the overall -subject we're discussing here so the -reactive mind I don't believe anything -in Dianetics works the way Hubbard says -it works but you also have psychiatry -and Freud's work and whatnot um this is -an area where I have opinions about -something that I'm not not only might -not an expert in I'm barely -knowledgeable in this area at all as far -as what Hubbard Freud ever really said -or wrote I've never studied his books -I've never taken any classes or courses -um and I'm saying that because being as -ignorant on the subject as I am I'm -still I am NOT impressed with this stuff -I've heard regurgitated from Freud I go -I'm sorry that sounds just as much -bullshit as the f'cking stuff Hubbard -said but again I realized that my -opinion is still sort of based in -ignorance um I might be educated and -have the same opinion but I'm just -saying you know what you know what I -mean uh so the reason I meant bringing -this up is because the reactive mind is -analogous to whatever the subconscious -mind is supposed to be in psychiatry in -psychology -whatever the subconscious is supposed to -be in those subjects is -what the reactive mind is in Scientology -this concept that you don't call it the -unconscious mind because it's the only -mind that's always conscious it's always -recording and it's always reacting even -when your analytical mind is fully -suppressed and my understanding is that -that is how the subconscious mind is -supposed to work in psychiatry and -psychology so it would probably more -productive have this conversation with -someone who really knew what the f'ck -they were talking about but I wanted to -ask you your opinion on this people say -you know it's easy to say oh Dianetics -is completely horseshit and hubbard made -it all up and invented it all um he -certainly created the whole construct -that is Dianetics but let's not pretend -that he didn't completely found the -entire thing on what had already been -researched or whatever as far as the -subconscious mind goes how related do -you feel the the reactive month the -reactive mind of Dianetics is to the -subconscious mind of psychiatry and -psychology do you have any opinion on -that well first of all thank you for -suggesting that I don't know what the -fack I'm talking about oh maybe you do -I've never asked you know I don't know I -didn't really don't I talk about my ass -but I I know I know as much as a -freshman high school dropout would know -so there you go so my opinion is that -useful but there's a there's just -something interesting which is kind of a -side point to what you're saying so I -won't go too far into it which is that -I've noticed that he does that a lot -Lafayette where he will grab on to an -existing idea and then kind of tweak it -I go look at this brand new thing which -is really just I think what sets the -precedent for people to be so eager to -get into alternative medicine and -alternative solutions and this is a -superfood and this is the way out and it -really appeals to those people where -it's like no it's not that it's this and -it's almost exactly the same thing in -your friend zone I think that's still -just this with some weird little spin on -it -but another thing there is that there's -a difference there's there's another -difference I think which is that my -understanding of the sort of the real -worlds idea of what the subconscious is -is that it wouldn't be able it wouldn't -necessarily be aware on any level when -you're for example under the knife -getting surgery it may be active you may -be having some experience but it doesn't -know that you're in surgery and what's -going on around you necessarily now you -see that sometimes in TV shows or -whatever but I don't know that that that -the you know that the medical community -what was like to psychiatrists or -psychologists or whatever -as you can see em I I'm still foggy on -what the hell did it is but I'm not sure -that they would say that that's real I -don't know but in Scientology -psychiatrists have to be MDS and can -prescribe medicine and psychologists are -not MDS and cannot prescribe medicine -done that's the only difference -so in psychiatrists you come from the -planet parsec and are evil and -psychologists are just pts to them so if -I go get some psychiatric education I'm -suddenly now from another planet I like -how that works out like we're engineers -from cuz I can go get an engineering -degree boom now I'm from Neptune so -you're saying that the subconscious mind -isn't something in the normal world that -can record moments of unconsciousness -whereas in Scientology the diet and -Dianetics the reactive mind is recording -moments of pain and unconsciousness I -believe I believe I may be wrong because -I'm also doing with the hell I'm talking -about but I believe that that's a -difference is that because basically for -people that don't know sort of this area -of the reactive mind discussion if I -were totally unconscious if I got hit by -a car or I'm in a coma or I'm getting -surgery in Scientology -you know world my reactor mine would -still be recording everything as -in-ground right the I'm still getting -affected by everything that's happening -around me whether or not I know it at -some basically later later date and they -kind of they talk about it very directly -I mean Lafayette very sort of you're -walking down the street and you see a -red you know I don't know the exactly -the example but you see a red dress and -then your leg hurts well that's because -your leg Donna you know hurt by somebody -who's wearing red two years ago or -something and I've always noticed that -that I've never noticed that actually -happening to me -which is another weird things mean like -never ever not once you know you would -think that and all the times I've -stubbed my toe or you know had some even -really bad painful you know thing -happened to me like when I track sure my -wrist into multiple places I remember -virtually everything about that accident - a few times of you know kind of -blacking out or just you know moments of -flying through the air you don't really -paying attention and everything that I -can come across from that time I have I -mean motorcycle the same truck the guys -name the the school the city I was in -the circumstances I was in everything -and I've never once been like oh my -wrist or oh my anything else that that -was damaged that day and and so I think -that that's kind of a the whole Engram -thing is it can be almost completely -written off I just I really kind of want -to believe it because it gives you that -there's some way some direct -back-channel to like solve all of life's -problems but I don't see any evidence of -it and i actually have looked for -evidence for a long time in my own self -in my own experience and i have not -found any like none I have never ever so -a true the true believer hurts that's -because of that thing that reminds me of -so a true Dionysus would say you're not -supposed to ever be able to analytically -like you personally if you're talking -about you being related you're not -supposed to ever be able to personally -connect the dots between the Engram and -your present time pain painful emotion -either physical pain or emotional pain -your reactive mind is supposed to always -make what's happening to you in present -time make perfect sense and so and there -was something else I was gonna say on -that there was a to that point don't you -think that that's a little weird that we -would design a system that's entire -purpose is to protect you right it's -it's from a long time ago I'm not sure -people know I like sort of how the -reactive mind supposedly came about but -basically it's it's sort of it's served -its purpose it was useful a long time -ago and now it doesn't really work and -it's sort of the basic idea about -spending hours on it is that back when -you know you're running around and -everything was gonna eat you you go down -in a cave and something attacks you and -hurts you and kills you or whatever the -next time you're not really you're not -going to go back down in that cave that -that type of app idea but if you're -designing that kind of system it seems -like the first most important thing you -would want it to do is when you see that -cave you think why am I thinking of a -lion eating my face right now every time -I look at that cave I believe it you -throw a lion seat in my face No thank -you I'll go this way -but of course there's some reason some -justification for why oh no no no yeah -that's you could never really see it you -know right yeah no I'm glad you -mentioned that because I had sort of -forgot to connect those dots like -Hubbard's theory is that in lower order -lower order organisms that works -strictly on a stimulus-response basis -the reactive mind exists to allow them -to survive by taking previous moments of -pain and unconsciousness and -automatically bringing them back into -play sort of bringing almost the lessons -of those things back into place that you -can avoid danger and pain and now that -we've evolved in -I can't remember if Dianetics even talks -about that this is something the -reactive mind is something that we have -retained from literally earlier steps in -evolution like not just pre humanoid -forms but you know back when we were -still monkeys or mollusks or you know -whatever Hubbard says we were I can't -remember if he says we have retained -that from millions of years ago but now -that we are higher order beings higher -order organisms he wasn't talking about -things and Dianetics yet that it's now a -hindrance to us whereas it used to aid -our survival it now hurts our survival -um budget which is problematic I almost -can't even let you finish to that -because it's that opens up a whole -plethora of problems in this theory like -if if that were if it was literally that -linear linear and what you're saying is -you're also saying then therefore that -lower life-forms can evolve into higher -it life-forms like us and not the other -way around -so I or your sludge your little worm or -whatever cannot have a thetan because -that Phaeton would bring with it its -reactive mind that's true but just -remember dynamics he wasn't talking -about things yet what do you mean he was -talking about Payton's went back when he -was Buddha years ago or whatever -no no literally he didn't start saying -he was Buddha until late until well -after Dianetics no and but again what -you're pointing out just brings to light -all the contradictions later in -Scientology he then started saying he -was Buddha but then if he was Buddha -then why wasn't he talking about -anything spiritual in Dianetics -Dianetics was supposed to be his science -of the mind that he tried to give as a -gift to the medical and psychiatric -communities he wasn't talking about past -lives he wasn't talking about things or -spirits or religion it was supposed to -be just a f'ackingscience and then and -then science of survival the second book -started to touch on past lives and that -was the stepping stone into Scientology -because you only have past lives if you -if they -if we're just the that's the that's the -one that Scientologists at least that -I've known identify as that's the first -book of Scientology which is like -survival yeah it's kind of weird to -explain to people like no Dianetics yeah -I just say yeah as far as I'm college -even though technically the way that -they think about it is it's like a -precursor to Scientology but but the way -I always always you know taught about -dayton's is that they're just very -dynamic like you could have a thetan -just over there -you could have a say in it your cat -could have Dayton most of them would -which again starts to get weird when you -say what about the ones that don't what -is right that word again I think it -sounded like I was disagreeing with you -a moment ago but really I was agreeing -with you it's just the timeline of it -you're right -Scientologists think things can occupy -any life form or even inanimate objects -for that matter -yet in Dianetics you're talking about -this evolution um but but that's where -again that's why you get the -contradiction that was because he wasn't -even talking or thinking about Fagin's -or past lives when he wrote Dianetics -even though then later on he started -acting like no he's been this spiritual -pen before thousands of years so you're -like then why did you forget to bring -that shit up and Dianetics that yeah -really you know he was actually just -dipping the lady's from from what I from -what I've seen so this this is gonna -bring them up again for those who -haven't seen him yet this is my boy so -he's actually relevant to the discussion -right now because he's a very tough guy -okay this is like a Alley Cat -extraordinaire like it really can kick -some ass he's huge I don't know if he -can tell how big he's enormous -so anyway how much does he weigh I don't -know -I'm scared away him cuz I'm he's so big -but this cat okay he was sitting on the -couch and he heard there was some like -tapping oh I'm sure my being too loud -there was some tapping on the wall -somebody next door doing something -whatever and the look in his eyes right -was like I don't know if you've had -before but you look in his eyes and your -let you're going that is the exact look -that I would have if I were remembering -the time that a Tyrannosaurus Rex tapped -on the wall and then tore through it and -chewed up me and my whole family right -it's just like he's going oh it's just -like tap tap tap tap tap tap and -Scientologists would tend to think oh -that's his reactive mind I did this is -it he's he's getting or stimulated about -something that has happened who knows -been who knows when -which again contradicts what sound what -it sounds like -Lafayette was saying in Dianetics -because it's kind of like oh wait why -does he have all of that and then I'm -also finding out that he has a baton so -that baton can just be a human next life -nothing stopping it so then you see I'm -saying it's kind of like well sure no I -guess it brings up the question is -Hubbard saying that the reactive mind -follows the organism through the -evolutionary track or does the reactive -mind follow the things that are -occupying the organisms and I follow the -whole organism because well do you -remember all that bullshit about the GE -the genetic entity that was supposed to -be sort of the reactive mind / Satan -sludge
.....No the conversation about living in Scientology between Aaron Smith-Levin and Nathan Ritch became to long to be practical and manageable as easily as thought.
Adding math to aftermath and feel the fractal in G.
Scientology Maps now updated from the great Scientology maps covering Int base even called Gold base, to Twin Peaks CST base in San Bernadino and further on to Clearwater, Florida, USA.
And the whispering wind ranch where L Ron Hubbard spend his last day in the Bluebird motor-home. As well as the earlier Home of L Ron Hubbard in Camelback, Arizona. Not to forget the CST base in Twin Peaks
Making it easier to use google earth Maps when traveling from Scientology church in California to Florida and the Scientology flag organization in Downtown of Clearwater
Scientology Church Map
Making traveling between the churches and orgs so much easier.
Scientology L Ron Hubbard org
Church of Scientology Flag Service Organization
Church org data
210 S Ft Harrison Ave, Clearwater, FL 33755, USA scientology fso org +1 727-467-5000
Whispering Wind Ranch Near Creston
The last home of Scientology founder L Ron Hubbard
Also known as the likely place of the event when L Ron Hubbard Reincarnate into a meat-body again and as Thetan goes with his new body to request the copyright of his trademark.
LRH Church org data - Geo locating address information
Here is LRH supposed to reincarnate 35.452848, -120.501856 - maybe guided by the signs he designed from the former body. Since the Cremation no one has seemed the smoke out of him or his smokescreens. The question is of the new leader will accept the next one to confess that you are the L Ron Hubbard in a new body, do you want to test? Here is the last stop on Spiritual tourism from above, in the journey for alien space being and humans looking down at the church of scientology and the actions of the Scientologist.
Just as turkeys loves thanksgiving
L Ron Hubbard was addicted in the most years of his life to Nicotine, a very hard addiction that shared into the environment by Cigarette smoking compulsive. When Dianetics started up L Ron Hubbard gives Amphetamines to the persons receiving Dianetics therapy, to wake them up and speed up the process. Is this the best questions to the test the next Reincarnation prospect? YoYoHUBB. -Then To test if the new body still remember the start of Dianetics and Scientology holy scriptures? Q1 To speed up the smokescreen as responsible Q2 Spiritual tourist looking down at the pretentious holy
Spiritual Travel in time -. Eventually kebab bombing some of the bases if hunger is suspected., send in som raw meat. We donate to and comes with a helping hand. Cult check & Sect Check, what is best in audition a reincarnated L Ron Hubbard? And would David Miscavige ever let in the new reincarnated leader - When the true Thetan comes to get his Copyrighted trademarks?
How many have confessed in the E-meter auditing already? And what is the odds on David Miscavige letting any Thetan other than him having the kingdom of Scientology..
Scientogy tried to Erase the account on Vimeo due to the use of the name Scientology - And did succed- - fantastic soince L Ron Hubbard stole the name scientology .
So we show the Twin peaks base instead
and will post another : Gold base INT Scientology baseThanks to Scientology shit.
-Twin Peaks CST base Scientology Church of Spiritual Technology
-Directions from Scientology church to Scientology Clearwater
twin peaks into squirell road
Church Of Scientology - Gold Base - Food Stock Location, Gilman Springs Road, San Jacinto, California, USA -The Castle
The RTC Building
Scientology "INT" Gold Base
The Castle Scientology's movie studio
"Eagle" lookout Sniper location
The Swamp
"OGH" Area and 33 more geo positions in Gold Base int or nearby associated locations. Used by LRH L Ron Hubbard related technology as Scientology, Dianetics or the leader of Scientology and CST Church Spiritual Technology of today David Miscavige.
Clearwater, Florida
500-598 Pierce St, Clearwater, FL 33756, USA
Church of Scientology Flag Service Organization
L Ron Hubbard Reincarnation place
L. Ron Hubbard House at Camelback
Twin Peaks base Scientology
Scientology L Ron Hubbard org
Twin Peaks base Scientology
Church org data
The Scientology cult mystical place where the great leader's David Miscavige says have been placing his wife (Michelle ""Shelly" Bennet - Miscavige) after coming back and having a rage about things that happened while away. Weeks after that ... Shelly Miscavige disappeared from her friends and public appearance many years ago. Scientology Twin peaks base -But is she there? View in to the compound. https://goo.gl/maps/ss9pKL6THzw Surveillance camera facing the road visible. Since Scientology does not want to show it's blind-spots. But can it really see its self?
Why did not Charles Manson get a Scientology Hate Websites? Scientology loves celebrities and Charles Manson is one of the most globally known celebrity's that's ever been into Scientology.
being a celebrity of huge scary proportion and even having had the ability of expressing public critic to Scientology (WISE, Dianetics, ABLE, L Ron Hubbard, LRH and associated) usually renders an automatic and strictly personal hate website online as we saw in the example with Aaron Smith Levin it took only some hours after his appearance in the Leah Remini show Scientology The Aftermath.
Adding Sneeze in mathematics
to get more viral in the media by the oddly strangeness of Scientology images projected (yes here we will show some of the strangely imagined pictured but not link to the weirdo sources Scientology Hate Websites.
Adding weird lines, for like the lead in logistics to ... the odd events of Scientology Commercial hate websites. What an odd business, but strictly logical since anyone who leaves scientology must be mad after leaving and speaking out against Scientology. (at least in the very Short perspective)
And figging the viral in G - But can scientology or any Scientologist never be ashamed of the behaviors of the stringent narrative in the play of the concerted orchestra?
The now Deceased Mr. Charles Manson thought and said that "Scientology was to crazy for him"
So the ordinarily logic's goes - as soon as a strong powerful person leaving the business cult of Scientology (that loves to label itself as a church) a hate-site comes quickly up there with all ugly photos available of you. To shamefully kill a decent image of your face & interface.
Or is it a fact that every person who left scientology feels better, and hence has to be painted black?
But if it was so bad outside of the business cult why does so many leading figures stay outside of the cult?
Time to do the math and counting the aftermath
Aaron Smith-Levin Scientology growing
Speaks about Scientology Hate Websites, like the one he himself got after taking part in Leah Remini Scientology the Aftermath.
To the fractaline
L Ron Hubbard loves LRH and his works Dianetics, the foundation to scientology.
But are Scientology never ashamed about how the stalker websites and hate homepages lift it's founders name into the trademarkstgrategy of commercial hate websites, to show the few inside the bussiness of Scientology that those who leaving and speak out are just criminal lunatics
Once a very secret Scientology base in Sweetwater county outside of Rock Springs in Wyoming US. Now nothing much has happened in many years, in some ways.
Drone photo by angry thetan on Scientology OT channel (Ortega Tony)
David Miscavige had followed in the footsteps of the grandiose grandeur's of L Ron Hubbard in order to save his written works to the afterworld or maybe even longer to spread his books in the milky way and the rest of the galaxies before next big bang again proofs that learning is just a timed local act.
Sweetwater County, Rock Springs, Wyoming. Thousand and thousands of years old cultural landscape
Sweetwater County, Rock Springs, Wyoming
Church of Scientology map Direction google earth
Scientologybase Sweetwater ranch, Rock Springs, Wyoming closeup.
Now a base to the church of scientology that in the landscape intended for farming, without permit starting to drilling and digging and underground vault just like a military operation in foreign land, the authorities find out through worried local farmers who chocked find out that parts of the hillside was transported away from the place it have been for thousands of thousands of years before.
Without any permission whatsoever.
Sweeney Ranch Wyoming 2006
1994 the very same place outside Rock springs in Wyoming. Scientology had no permission to start drilling into the landscape and has in fact been ordered to reinstate the landscape to it’s original state. But the Church of Scientology shows the religious bigotry as any army org on foreign land. Nothings seems to have been reinstated to something near the original shape form or
2009 – 2014 and … the signs of the abandoned Scientology base is very similar of those today. So not much activity seems to have taking place att the location. After Scientology Church got the letter to its Spiritual Technology center, that their ignorance had resulted in how the church of Scientology fair gamed itself into the tunnel-sight and was not getting a permit to continue with the constructional works. Taking care of fundamental relation seems to never have been the strong parts of scientology.
Eroding signs and collapsing holes into the ground
Collapsing hillsides into the old cultural landscape of the USA
Loading Sweeney Ranch Base.mp4.
October 9. 2015
Church of Spiritual Technology
RE: Certificate of Dissolution I Revocation
Church of Spiritual Technology, 2013-000648311
l, EDWARD F. MURRAY, III, Secretary of State of the State of Wyoming, do hereby certify
that Church of Spiritual Technology, a business entity qualified under the laws of the State
of Wyoming, did on 08/09/2013 file its Certificate of Authority in the office of the Secretary of
State of Wyoming.
I FURTHER CERTIFY that Church of Spiritual Technology was revoked on 10/09/2015 for
failure to deliver its 2015 annual report(s) or pay the annual license tax to the Secretary of
State.
Edward F. Murray, III
Secretary of State
By: Jeri Melsness, Business Division Director
Scientology Church Cult
| This entry was posted in L Ron Hubbard David Miscavige, Scientology LRH and tagged abadoned base, Rock Springs Wyoming, sweeney ranch, underground vault by Scientology LRH. Bookmark the permalink.
THIS IS A PART OF CONTENT EARLIER ERASED FROM BLOGS WEBSITES WITHOUT ANY EXPLANATIONS GIVEN - REUSING PROJECT
POINT IN DOT COM - COM POST IN G - THE ART OF GRAVITY
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Testing • Re: alt.test be damned!Mile High incorporated - Hey Space http://truckingdatabase.com/companies/dot/966626 M H INCTWIN PEAKS, CALegal Name: MILE HIGH INCM H INC is an Interstate DOT registered company based in TWIN PEAKS CA. US DOT Number: 966626The company operates 1 power unit(s) and 5 driver(s). The company has been registered US DOT since 10-JUL-01MCS-150 Vehicle Mileage reported in 2014 […]Scientology
Opinions & Debate • Re: Wacky cult clash on Hwd Blvd w/AGP & Nasty NathanialWow good thing you had a buddy videotaping all this - for the laughs! Nice work not getting arrested! It's SO effective when you know so many Sea Org names - That makes the snark all the sharper and sweeter.Send a portfolio of your voice clips to voice casting agents - you're funnier than most […]Don Carlo
Media Reports • Re: Ortega's Underground BunkerGee thanks, "Scientology." My wifi access is sporadic lately, until Sept. 10, so I've been late sometimes, linking to Tony O's great reporting. I just added a link to Tony's Aug.30 post, two posts above this. I have linked to every one of Tony's Underground posts. I also linked to all of his Village Voice […]Don Carlo
Media Reports • Re: Ortega's Underground BunkerDRONE FLYOVER: Scientology’s failed underground vault project in Wyoming September 1, 2017https://tonyortega.org/2017/09/01/drone ... n-wyoming/ Scientology church base the exact locationSweeney Ranch in Sweetwater county near Rock Springs WyomingStatistics: Posted by Scientology — Fri Sep 01, 2017 2:34 pmScientology
Scientology Business Consultants Exposed • Re: BEWARE OF MEIR EZRA SELLING YOU SCIENTOLOGY BUSINESS CLASSDon Carlo wrote: ↑Sat Jul 23, 2016 5:33 amIf he's peddling Scientology, he's no angel. I can tell he's not trust worthy just by looking at him.Statistics: Posted by SeanMos — Fri Sep 01, 2017 8:10 amSeanMos
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Once a very secret Scientology base in Sweetwater county outside of Rock Springs in Wyoming US. Now nothing much has happened in many years, in some ways. Drone photo by angry thetan on Scientology OT channel (Ortega Tony) David Miscavige … Continue reading →
Scientology LRH | 17 hours ago →
Che secretive Scinetology cult and its secret bases, by shopper from above looking down at the holyness fording them too look up … well, holy travel seems like a good idea. Church of Scientology Spiritual Technology CST Location The scientology cult … Continue reading →
Scientology LRH | Last week →
In Sceintology a reactive mind can be easily demostrated by the leader after L Ron Hubbard, David Miscavige: If anything is not to Mr Miscavige’s outmost satisfaction he can just beat them or send them to Scientology rehabilitation champ the … Continue reading →
Scientology LRH | Last week →
Scientology Trafficking investigated by The federal bureau of Investigation FBI. Here you can download the complete the investigations and we even publish some lines from the censored documents (with the coresponding images so anyone can get an idea what it … Continue reading →
Scientology LRH | Last week →
Today we have the honour to show the complete South Park video about Scientology that both David Miscavige and L Ron Hubbard loved so much to start with, but never have had the spine to confess outbound of their roles … Continue reading →
Scientology LRH | Last week →
Scientology LRH Dianetics OT
DRONE FLYOVER: Scientology’s failed underground vault project in Wyoming 1 September, 2017 The drone pilot is back! Since last September, the Underground Bunker has been the beneficiary of a shadowy anonymous drone operator who has allowed us to premiere his amazing overhead views of secretive Scientology sites. He’s twice given us amazing views of the CST headquarters in the mountains above LA, where we believe […]ortegaunderground
As Leah Remini’s second season hammers away, Scientology is losing its mind 31 August, 2017 It’s probably safe to say that the Church of Scientology is now in the grips of a complete meltdown. We were struck by the church’s response to the first season of Leah Remini’s A&E series Scientology and the Aftermath, but as we have pointed out before, Scientology leader David Miscavige took things […]ortegaunderground
In order to Help the world L Ron Hubbard offers help to John F Kennedy, since he "the great Hubbard" happens to be in town & by a stroke of luck also happens to specialize in the vital parts of the Space Race.
By some unlucky events John F Kennedy did not have a meeting pranged with the expertize of L Ron Hubbard. Maybe mostly because he was regarded totally nuts in all respect to his own beliefs.
In 1969 The Church of Scientology in Washington DC sometimes described as the Martian Embassy due to its location was raided by FDA. That did not make L Ron Hubbard at all happy. Actually he wrote more and more strange directive from saint hill and dated them in style like 13 AD, meaning 13 years after earth got Dianetics. Some say that this in itself might indicate that L Ron Hubbard was in need of a modern science of Mental Health
LRH's did want Psychiatry and Psychology experts to se his wonderful invention Dianetics and when their judgment came back Lafayette Ronald Hubbard became highly abberated again, with a reactivity and a hyper-reactivity towards that parts of reality.
LRonHubbard VS LRH in the by proxy eternal "tech alternation" cover
Scientology Church Celebrity L Ron Hubbard JFK
Scientology church and its founder L Ron Hubbard
In 1969 The Church of Scientology in Washington DC sometimes described as the Martian Embassy due to its location was raided by FDA. That did not make L Ron Hubbard at all happy. Actually he wrote more and more strange directive from saint hill and dated them in style like 13 AD, meaning 13 years after earth got Dianetics. Some say that thins in itself might indicate that L Ron Hubbard was in need of a modern science of Mental Health
in late August 20 1962 does John F Kennedy got a letter that L Ron Hubbard want to meet him and have made several attempt to get in contact with the president. from Hubbard Communications office, saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex England "in his study known as "Sciencetology" which he feels vital in space race" Scientology seems to have been erroneously spelled here but the message is that He the Great Hybris L RONALD HUBBARD the writer of Dianetics who this year wrote some strange messages dated 13 AD, meaning year 13 after Dianetics on earth.
So he want to help the President JFK with SCIENTOLOGY and it's Dianetics who he earlier sent to Psychiatric and Psychological institutions, but the answer is not the Fantastic response he had waited for, they seems simply not to understand what he write about or what the news or what he expected them to do.... So one might assume that they thought he was somewhat nuts. L Ron Hubbard shows from this moment and on a large hate towards psychology but mostly psychiatry and its institutions. He seems to have heavy problems with anyone that cannot accept him as the Hero and Savior top mankind he think he is in his megalomanic mindset. 13 AD, and the great want to help the president JFK handling the space race in the cold war
Why Hubbard thinks he is in any way qualified to give the president good advices in the cold war and the space race is at this moment not known. Known is only the temperament of long lasting hate expressed by the author of Dianetics in this year 13 AD. Known is also that FDA have starting to raiding the church of Scientology due to their claims of more or less universal healing ability and due to claims in the potentials of the electropsychometer, the E-Meter. In January 1963 FDA seized some 100 E-meters at the founding church of Scientology in Washington DC,
Chris Shelton Aaron Smith Levin in altered images that pictures the photoshopers intent
I am the Great Lafayette Ronal Hubbard, in 13 AD on Teegeeack or the planet Eatth you know.
-Ok Roger that!
L Ron Hubbard seems however have some problems in to see and get proper feedback from himself, the mirror neurons in the basket therapy or timing in the spatial like the chronometry of the temporal-lobe epilepsy. To more than me this seems to be a man that really needs a modern science of mental health, but that really has not got near it. Rather contrary .... But this man came from the navy and became a scene hypnotist in Hollywood.
"I went right down in the middle of Hollywood, I rented an office, got a hold of a nurse, wrapped a towel around my head and became a swami. And I said - oddly enough, I gave nobody my name, I didn’t say what I was doing, and by 1947, I had achieved clearing."
- Transcript of the lecture "The Story of Dianetics and Scientology", by L. Ron Hubbard
"I can give you the datum of Freudian analysis. I’m a very good swami. I can read minds so as to tear your skull off. Good at it."
- Transcript of the lecture "The Laws of Case Supervision", by L. Ron Hubbard
Some who knew Lafayette Ronald Hubbard aka LRH very well, his wife to mention one, did confess about systematic torture already in 1951. and besides that being a bigamist. So it seems that Hubbard really would need some mental health in true science, but had none of it.
But Hubbard continued his march to his empire and natural born right to rule it seems. One way of getting there was celebrities. Above one Scientology Celebrity Charles Manson. Manson did thought Scientology was really crazy shit.
Many of the persons who have been near to L Ron Hubbard seems to have detected clearly insane sides of his LRH personality. His former wife Sarah Narthrup Hubbard just 1 of them.
When the Scientology Aftermath goes Fractal Leah
Can Scientology Dianetics become Clear?
Or bound to have reactive mind
towards any critics
in tim
?
Scientology growing up?
is this the pornography of a soul so poor that rape in the mental core was the ordinarily events that cut the skin from the flesh and bone. The bone of the will later crushed with some sweet suggah and colors added. Base hits Wine egga, master!
-Leah Remini Scientology Aftermath from season 1 and 2
The Business of Scientology continues to put it's founder and founders name L Ron Hubbard onto the walls of shame said a Scientology expert the other day. The hate and the inability to take critics seems to be inherited from LRH and the reactive actions towards ex scientologists seems to proof that aberrations causing hyper reactivity seems to be caused by dianetics and scientology, not the other way around.
Clear a state that does not exist in reality
-Lacks scientific evidence
-Time after time have been proved to not hold the quality of its presumed standard
David Miscavige are welcome to present the proof of a state of Clear and that the state of Clear really exists. We understand if he can't do it, but David Miscavige can at least try?
When a person leave the cult of scientology and speaks out about it
Some gets rewarded with a hate site strictly personal and often with a lot of material from their secret confessions ..... of a very private natures.
Relatives and friends from Scientology might be speaking out and tell the world about how bad you are - Damned ex scientologist.
Very very bad every day, in school and outside... Black and white is the thing.
Even the earliest babysitters whiteness it ... (Pls dont mixup the world babysitter with the expression Scieno-sitter, wich is the Scientology software that alters the operative software on your computor)
Nuanced? NO! It is Scientology
And this is about a former member that have been crazy enough to tell the truth about what he went through into his Scientology family.
In scientology farm everything is nice and and ....
However Nathan Rich wrote a book about his life into a Scientology family
Nathan Rich
Author to one of the best books written about Scientology form the inside. A Book that also might be hinting us about why many books never was written.
Lets start HOLY Travel - so ordinarily Prehubbards and Preclear can travel and look down on the holy Scientologist from and Airbaloon or a new airship Zeppeliner. David are you ready ?
Nathan Rich
Scientology Drug abuse
Nathan Rich with Ron Miscavige
Thanks to Scientology L Ron Hubbard Hagiographers with reality in mind, for the inspiration and facts about Scientologist Hagiography
Church of Spiritual Technology or CST in short is the part of Scientology that owns the rights to the works of L Ron Hubbard. It also have one of the secret bases in twin peaks where the leader David Miscavige might have his wife Shelley Miscavige, since long missing in the public life...
Church of Spiritual Technology CST Trademark Serial Number: 74488000
Very similar to the next Trademark so you can bet this action was important to a little boy growing up in Montana when his poor father was really poor and then L Ron Hubbard might have had all the reasons in the wild west to pretend he was the richest boy in his fantasy (in the time of his fathers bankruptcy )
Church of Spiritual Technology trademarks Serial Number: 75497015
So important it seems that two very similar trademarks
Church of Spiritual Technology trademarks 2380572
Maybe L Ron Hubbard thought that becoming rich was the only was to happiness.
But also knowing that selling what everyone just dream't about was a part of the road.
Books, booklets, printed instructional materials and newsletters pertaining to a non-religious personal moral code
Church of Spiritual Technology trademarks
Church of Spiritual Technology trademarks 1954851
Registered on Tuesday, February 6, 1996 and is currently owned by Church of Spiritual Technology under the registration number 1954851.
Prerecorded Video Cassettes Featuring Instruction and Education in the Field of Moral Philosophy Goods & Services.
Pins and Pendants Both Being Jewelry Goods & Services,
Books and Newsletters Featuring Instruction, Education and Articles in the Field of Moral Philosophy.
Church of Spiritual Technology trademarks 2905494
Description of Mark The mark consists of a medallion design with a quill pen overlying the medallion design. Goods & Services Course Books Relating to Science Fiction Writing and Illustration Goods & Services Educational Services, Namely, Individual Training, Classes, and Seminars Relating to Science Fiction Writing and illustration.
Color is not claimed as a feature of the mark.
Church of Spiritual Technology trademarks 1505842
Writers of the Future was registered on Tuesday, September 27, 1988 and is currently owned by Church of Spiritual Technology under the registration number 1505842 .
Annual Series of Books Composed of Science Fiction and Fantasy Short Stories
Previously owned by: L. Ron Hubbard Estate of Hollywood, CA
Church of Spiritual Technology trademarks 1618094
L.Ron Hubbard Gallery was registered on Tuesday, October 16, 1990 and is currently owned by Church of Spiritual Technology under the registration number 1618094 . This mark is dead with a status of Cancelled - Section 8. The last case file activity for this mark occurred 2 years ago on Friday, January 15, 2016, according to the United State Patent & Trademark Office Word Mark
Retail Store Services Specializing in Limited Edition Books and Art Prints and Mail Order Services in the Field of Limited Edition Books and Art Prints
L.Ron Hubbard Gallery Status Dead Registered 710 — Cancelled -
Current Owner Church of Spiritual Technology of Hollywood, CA
Previous Owners Trustee of Author's Family Trust-B of Los Angeles
The Name "L. Ron Hubbard" in the Drawing Refers to a Deceased Individual.
A lady once offered a free stress test to L Ron Hubbard framework Scientology.
And this showed the world
-How Scientology is not only reactive but hyper-reactive to critics
-That reality creates stress in Scientology & affects the Scientologist
Paulette Cooper was shown the smorgasbord of Dianetics and Scientology has inherited from L Ron Hubbard as the hyper-reactivity in mind and mindsets against anything that might be perceived as fundamental critics.
One woman who more than many other has revealed the function of the stress test as well as the reactivity in Dianetics & Scientology is Miss Lovely Paulette Cooper.
Some have argued that this was just because of pure jealousy, since Paulette Cooper could appear in Playboy just as she was & that could Hubbard to - Facing the fact that she was an author and he was an scandal. Facing the fact about L Ron Hubbard and his well known reactivity, the reactivity he tried to get Clear from but never really succeeded to manage.
Paulette Cooper is more than the 30 kilo passenger + luggage passenger 6F that arrived to US 2.13 Pm 28 August at Idlewild with a ball in her hands.
Only 27 years old she wrote about Scientology, the dangerous shit that almost cost her her life..
The Scandal of Scientology the book that Scientologist tried to stop. A chilling examination that later came to reveal the true nature of L Ron Hubbard's reactivity and that he was far away from clear from his goal to self-healing by Scientology.
L Ron Hubbard was prematurely but that alone is not the probable cause of his psychopathology says a chorus of voices from the engram-banks of history. The reincarnation of Hubbard is delayed ... until a controllable candidate is near...
Clearly reactive Scientologists in Scientology... What else do we know?
Possibly related : Tupperware Party @ Jeff Marino
9k Dogma party at Jeff Marino (REDACTED AND REDACTED...) in Commac - Centerport. (jeffrey Kim Marino) Pls be aware that 5XYKTCA61CG204390 Vin# to the Kia Sorento 2012 model no longer is up to date since he shifted to a newer model of how Scientology (REDACTED) writer linking tends to be without the mentioning the most obvious. REDACTED is a nicer expression than censoring?
Scientology agent orange style & attacking civilian with dissociative effects
Attacking an civilians from above with agent orange might result in chromosomal damage, but now the warning about 5XYKTCA61CG204390 Vin# is obsolete with a new owner, right?
So the abberated genetics of Jeffrey Kim damaged DNA might not be there in any larger quantities to poison society
Fortunately we are now able to reveal the logic's in the E-meter sessions and auditing with the fonder of Scientology L Ron Hubbard.
He is back and to start with he starts where he left of, right?
Trying to become clear! Since no-one yet have become clear in any way sense or measurement of the original description of the state of Clear, L Ron Hubbard now maybe really can show of with more than the science fiction of modern health as Dianetics?
No i killed my brother i killed him by stressing my mother - L Ron Hubbard insists hard and brutal. He just keeps on repeating this and how he did not want any competition at all. He wanted to be their only child.
I Killed my brother L Ron Hubbard confess! I was the original suppressive person to my un-borned brother. They where just on that old fortunate trip to the Niagara falls and listening to the fruitful sounds of water....
Since so many human individuals are so negative to L Ron Hubbard, we decided to proof that Lron can be right in what he says during the audition.
Over the rainbow in Sea org and its origin in how L Ron Hubbard was left out to play with the word "rainbow" and the fact that his father was gone in a way hard to understand there and then.
Harry Ross Hubbard was not a rich man, that's the truth but he run to the rainbow and was in debhts for long a long time when L Ron Hubbard was young, This fact might have shaped Lrons dreams of being the richest boy in Nebraska when he was young, says Hubbard in the end of this E-meter auditing sessions.
Think how great the auditing sessions can be when we all can see what they consists of, our dear readers and friends. I was afraid of doctor's and my mothers bad health was most probably inherited. Some diseases runs in the families
L Ron Hubbard jokes about how his father Harry Ross remarried.
-It is fun to have a new body. and to hear and see what they say about me!
Even Square footed frogs can jump & Rings on the water says Hubbard and runs away howling
We still don't know if Lafayette Ronald Hubbard who wrote the Science fiction of mental health just kidding with us and tried to write a new fairy telling story or whatever happened, just as you now know.
L Ron Hubbard in the onion garden of Tulippa bay, or something ...
It is imperative that I give you the following information, which Scientology wants concealed from the public. One of the first facts we should face is that there is a format Scientology should follow for its next literary endeavor. It involves a topic sentence and supporting facts. I'm not saying this to be blathering but rather to explain that Scientology seems to be involved in a number of illegal or borderline-illegal activities. For it and its comrades, tax evasion and financial chicanery are scarcely outside the norm. Even financial fraud and thievery seem to be okay. What's next? Inculcating neo-daffy doctrines? I can say only that I have always been an independent thinker. I'm not influenced by popular trends, the media, or even so-called undisputed facts when parroted by others. Maybe that streak of independence is what first enabled me to see that Scientology claims that it has the right to undertake extrajudicial reprisals against its competitors. That claim is preposterous and, to use Scientology's own language, overtly temerarious. No history can justify it.
Thesis antithesis synthesis Protesis
There are two essential characteristics of Scientology's crotchets that are indisputable. Firstly, they are a product of gross syncretism in that they combine commercialism and tribalism. Secondly, they are a tool for robbing, stealing, cheating, and murdering. The worst part of Scientology's crotchets is that they do little to raise understanding about how many people have been seriously hurt by Scientology's neurotic allegations. These people tell me they do not need tears or sympathy or even prayers. They need action. They need us to ask the tough questions and not shy away from the tough answers. They need us to champion the poor and oppressed against the evil of Scientology. As you know, that's the best way to pass out flyers in public places that illustrate how it normally comes off as a big fan of exclusionism. However, whenever Scientology can benefit from doing so, it portrays exclusionism as being about as welcome as the bubonic plague. It's therefore safe to say that on this issue—and probably most others—it's an incredibly slippery creature who cares only about its own naked self-interest. Who knew?
Where is Shelly Miscavige
Scientology's fierce passions and fiendish cunning, combined with abnormal powers of intellect, with intense vitality, and with a persistency of purpose which the world has rarely seen, and whetted moreover by a keen thirst for blood engendered by defeat and subjection, combine to make it the deadly enemy of all mankind, while its lazy campaigns of malice and malignity contribute to inflame its wild lust of pelf and to justify the crimes suggested by spite and superstition. No matter how much talk and analysis occurs, Scientology presents an affectation of interest in presenting a noble vision of who we were, who we are, and who we can potentially be. In reality, though, if you're the type who dares to think for yourself then you've probably already determined that it has allowed itself to become a spokesman for the same point of view shared by slatternly braggadocios, evil converts to snobbism, and demented gossipmongers while masquerading as an outspoken radical bucking the system. As if you didn't know, Scientology asserts that everything I say is both abrasive and sullen. Seldom do I pause to answer such criticism of my work and ideas. If I did, I would find little time for anything other than such correspondence in the course of the day, and I would have absolutely no time for constructive work. Hence, I intend to condense my response into the following remark: If I thought that Scientology's antics had even a snowball's chance in Hell of doing anything good for anyone, then I wouldn't be so critical. As they stand, however, I can conclude only that I think that Scientology is the most twisted money-worshipper in the annals of Man. You probably think that too. But Scientology does not think that. Scientology thinks that its unbridled coven is a respected civil-rights organization.
Up the Bridge
Scientology constantly insists that the sky is falling. But it contradicts itself when it says that it is an institution of morality, achievements, and noble qualities, one that often sacrifices its own reputation or safety in order to pursue that which is right and those things that truly matter. Scientology wins people over to its gang by convincing them that it has its moral compass in tact. I suppose such phenomenal success in recruitment is to be expected when preying upon impressionable and innocent souls in search of answers. I can scarcely imagine the difficulty such people will encounter when they eventually learn that Scientology's policy of creating a kind of psychic pain at the very root of the modern mind must not go unchallenged. To leave it unchallenged is to condone Scientology's grandiose plans for world hegemony, plans in which no one is free to say that Scientology is more than just the match lighting the tinder that staunchly impetuous scammers have long been preparing. Scientology is the one who decided to cause (or at least contribute to) a variety of social ills. It's the one who decided to pander to insipid wimps. And it's the one who needs to acknowledge that even if its credos were completely successful in making a few people feel better, they would still be demeaning to everyone else. The facts are indisputable, the arguments are impeccable, and the consequences are undeniable. So why does it maintain that its conjectures epitomize wholesome family entertainment? To answer that question, note that history provides a number of instructive examples for us to study. For instance, it has long been the case that if one could get a Ph.D. in Antiheroism, Scientology would be the first in line to have one.
Scientology's eulogists think that Scientology has answers to everything. This is precisely the non-equation that Scientology is trying to patch together. What it's missing, as usual, is that its cat's-paws argue that an open party with unlimited access to alcohol can't possibly outgrow the host's ability to manage the crowd. These are the same wishy-washy mobocrats who shove the nation towards elitism. This is no coincidence; Scientology is a huge proponent of irreligionism. This is not irreligionism as we have known it. Rather, it is a particularly mudslinging form of irreligionism whose sole purpose is to leave a generation of people planted in the mud of a tyrannous world to begin a new life in the shadows of isolationism.
L Ron Hubbard the baggage expert
Scientology maintains that it can bring about peace and prosperity for the whole of humanity through violence, deception, oppression, exploitation, graft, and theft. Given Scientology's proclivity to make claims first and check facts later, this is an absurd untruth and means nothing. A more honest statement would be that if we don't develop a rational-empirical base for dialogue about Scientology's tirades right now, then Scientology's conceits will soon start to metastasize until they prevent me from getting my work done. Scientology's Ponzi schemes serve only to make people increasingly harebrained. At some point, we'll reach a “harebrained event horizon” where everything in the universe will be harebrained. At that point, it will no longer matter that the world is full of people who hinder economic growth and job creation. We don't need any more people like that. What we need are people who are willing to come to the aid of justice. We need people who understand that Scientology has two imperatives. The first is to mortgage away our future. The second imperative is to stretch credulity beyond the breaking point.
It is the difficult decisions, the ones that have consequences, challenge orthodoxies, bear risk, and threaten status that take real courage. It takes real courage, for instance, to take steps against the whole flighty brotherhood of sleazy Xanthippes. That said, it is also the case that our real enemies are not people living in a distant land whose names we don't know and whose culture we don't understand. Our real enemies are Scientology and all others who defile the present and destroy the future.
Psycho-pharmacological stereosynthesis Molecular to cross
Vistaril stereochemical expression
Scientology demonstrates a terrible, inaccurate, even abusive, misuse of history with its swinish claims. Try to say that too loudly or persistently, though, and watch how Scientology, as a self-described champion of free speech, handles your freedom of speech. I assure you it won't be pleasant, but perhaps it will get people talking about how I admit that I'm not perfect. I admit that I may have been a bit irritable when I stated that Scientology loves anarchism more than life itself. Still, that doesn't justify the name-calling, rudeness, and simple ugliness that Scientology invariably finds so necessary. Nor does it justify its stonewalling on issues in which taxpayers see a vital public interest.
Although Scientology's retorts to criticism are so rehearsed that it may be almost unconscious of what it's saying, as one is when one utters the responses in church, engaging Scientology in intelligent debate is far from easy. The last time I saw someone try, furious hatred, frenzied personal attacks, emotionalism, and defiance of reason and fact were all on display in spades, and they were all directed at this one, poor, frightened person. I wish Scientology would more calmly accept the fact that its tractates are an icon for the deterioration of the city, for its slow slide into crime, malaise, and filth.
I once heard some of Scientology's intimates make a rather surprising announcement that they intend to fight fanaticism in all its jackbooted, cocky forms. Immediately, a red flag went up in my mind. Sure enough, further investigation revealed that this announcement was intended solely to distract people from noticing that the purpose of this letter is far greater than to prove to you how pouty and stuporous Scientology has become. The purpose of this letter is to get you to start thinking for yourself, to start thinking about how I can no longer get very excited about any revelation of its hypocrisy or crookedness. It's what I've come to expect by now. It is time for someone to place a high value on honor and self-respect. Will that someone be you?
Serena Sun Serenahottie with Nathan Rich from team Hotpot King
Church Markets Its Gospel with High-Pressure Sales
(Monday, 25 June 1990, page A1:1)
Behind the religious trappings, the Church of Scientology is run like a lean, no-nonsense business in which potential members are called “prospects,” “raw meat” and “bodies in the shop.”
Its governing financial policy, written by the late Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard, is simple and direct: “MAKE MONEY, MAKE MORE MONEY, MAKE OTHERS PRODUCE SO AS TO MAKE MONEY.”
The organization uses sophisticated sales tactics to sell a seemingly endless progression of expensive courses, each serving as a prerequisite for the next. Known collectively as “The Bridge,” the courses promise salvation, higher intelligence, superhuman powers and even possible survival from nuclear fallout — for those who can pay.
Church tenets mandate that parishioners purchase Scientology goods and services under Hubbard’s “doctrine of exchange.” A person must learn to give, he said, as well as receive.
For its programs and books, the church charges “fixed donations” that range from $50 for an elementary course in improving communication skills to more than $13,000 for Hubbard’s secret teachings on the origins of the universe and the genesis of mankind’s ills.
The church currently is offering a “limited time only” deal on a select package of Hubbard courses, which represent a small portion of The Bridge. If bought individually, those courses would cost $55,455. The sale price: $33,399.50.
As a promotional flyer for the discount observes, “YOU SAVE $22,055.50.”
To complete Hubbard’s progression of courses, a Scientologist could conceivably spend a lifetime and more than $400,000. Although few if any have doled out that much, the high cost of enlightenment in Scientology has left many deeply in debt to family, friends and banks.
Ask former church member Marie Culloden of Manhattan Beach, who describes herself as a “recovering Scientologist.”
“I’m trying to recover my mortgaged home,” says Culloden, who spent 20 years in Scientology and obtained three mortgages totaling more than $80,000 to buy courses.
The Scientology Bridge is always under construction, keeping the Supreme Answer one step away from church members — a potent sales strategy devised by Hubbard to keep the money flowing, critics contend.
New courses continually are added, each of which is said to be crucial for spiritual progress, each heavily promoted.
Church members are warned that unless they keep purchasing Scientology services, misery and sickness may befall them. For the true believer, this is a powerful incentive to keep buying whatever the group is selling.
Through the mail, Scientologists are bombarded with glossy, colorful brochures announcing the latest courses and discounts. Letters and postcards sound the dire warning, “Urgent! Urgent! Your future is at risk! … It is time to ACT! NOW! … You must buy now!”
By far the most expensive service offered by Scientology is “auditing” — a kind of confessional during which an individual reveals intimate and traumatic details of his life while his responses are monitored on a lie detector-type device known as the E-meter.
The purpose is to unburden a person of painful experiences, or “engrams,” that block his spiritual growth, a process that can span hundreds of hours. Auditing is purchased in 12 1/2-hour chunks costing anywhere between $3,000 and $11,000 each, depending on where it is bought.
Even Scientology’s critics concede that auditing often helps people feel better by allowing them to air troubling aspects of their lives — much like a Catholic confessional or psychotherapy — and keeps them coming back for more.
The church makes no apologies for the methods it uses to raise funds and spread the gospel of its founder. Scientology spokesmen said in interviews that it takes money to cover overhead expenses and to finance the church’s worldwide expansion, as it does for any religion.
“You can’t do it on bread and butter,” said one.
Church leaders will not discuss Scientology’s gross income or net worth. But they contend that Scientologists who pay for spiritual programs are no different from, say, Mormons who tithe 10% of their income for admittance to the temple, or from Jews who buy tickets to High Holiday services or from Christians who rent church pews.
“The fact of the matter is that the parishioners of the Church of Scientology have felt and continue to feel that they get full value for their donations,” said Scientology lawyer Earle C. Cooley.
Many Scientologists say that Hubbard’s teachings have resurrected their lives, some of which were marred by drugs, personal traumas, self doubts or a sense of alienation. They say that, through the church, they have gained confidence and learned to lead ethical lives and take responsibility for themselves, while working to create a better world.
Scientology “works,” they say, and for that, no price is too high.
“It takes money,” acknowledged Scientologist Sheri Scott. “It took money for my father to buy his Cadillac. I wish he’d sell the damn thing and give me the money (for Scientology)…. I have never felt cheated at all.”
“I’m not glued to the sky or anything. I’m a very normal person,” she added. “I just wish more people would take a look, would read (about Scientology), before they decide we’re cuckoo.”
While other religions increasingly advertise and market themselves, none approaches the Church of Scientology’s commercial zeal and sophistication.
Its tactics come directly from Hubbard, who wrote entire treatises on how to create a market for, and sell, Scientology.
He borrowed generously from a 1971 book called “Big League Sales Closing Techniques.” Touted as the “selling secrets of a supersalesman,” the book was written by former car dealer Les Dane, who has conducted popular seminars at Scientology headquarters in Florida.
Hubbard said Scientology must be marketed through the “art of hard sell,” meaning an “insistence that people buy.” He said that, “regardless of who the person is or what he is, the motto is, ‘Always sell something….’ ”
Hubbard contended that such high-pressure tactics are imperative because a person’s spiritual well being is at stake.
Among other things, he directed his followers to: “rob the person of every opportunity to say ‘No.’ “; “help prospects work through financial stops impeding a sale”; “make the prospect think it was his idea to make the purchase”; utilize the two man “tag team” approach, and “overcome and rapidly handle any attempted prospect backout.”
One of the most important techniques in selling Scientology, Hubbard said, is to create mystery.
“If we tell him there is something to know and don’t tell him what it is, we will zip people into” the organization, Hubbard wrote. “And one can keep doing this to a person — shuttle them along using mystery.”
Frequently, a person’s first contact with Scientology comes when he is approached by a staff member on the street and offered a free personality test, or receives a lengthy questionnaire in the mail.
Using charts and graphs, the idea is to convince a person that he has some problem, or “ruin,” that Scientology can fix, while assuaging concerns he may have about the church. According to Hubbard, “if the job has been done well, the person should be worried.”
With that accomplished, the customer is pushed to buy services he is told will improve his sorry condition and perhaps give him such powers as being able to spiritually travel outside his body — or, in Scientology jargon, to “exteriorize.”
Former church member Andrew Lesco said he was told that he “would be able to project my mind into drawers, someone’s pocket, a wallet and I would be able to tell what’s inside … ”
Church members are required to write testimonials — “success stories” — as they progress from one level to the next.
The testimonials regularly appear in Scientology publications. Usually carrying only the authors’ initials, they are used to promote courses without the church itself assuming legal liability for promising results that may not occur, according to ex-Scientologists. Here is an example:
We were having trouble with the windshield wipers in our car. Sometimes they would work and sometimes they wouldn’t…. We were driving along, and my husband was driving. I got to thinking about the windshield wipers, left my body in the seat and took a look under the hood. I spotted the wires that were shorting and caused them to weld themselves together, like they were supposed to be. We haven’t had any trouble with them since.
Scientology staffers who sell Hubbard’s courses are called “registrars.”
They earn commissions on their sales and are skilled at eliciting every facet of an individual’s finances, including bank accounts, stocks, cars, houses, whatever can be converted to cash.
Like all Scientology staffers, a registrar’s productivity is evaluated each week. Performance is judged by how much money he or she brings in by Thursday afternoon. And, in Scientology, declining or stagnant productivity is not viewed benevolently, as former registrar Roger Barnes says he learned.
“I remember being dragged across a desk by my tie because I hadn’t made my (sales quota),” said Barnes, who once toured the world selling Scientology until he had a bitter break with the group.
Barnes and other ex-Scientologists say that this uncompromising push to generate more money each week places intense pressure on registrars.
Another former Scientology salesman in Los Angeles said he and other registrars would use a tactic called “crush regging.” The technique, he said, employed no elaborate sales talk. They repeated three words again and again: “Sign the check. Sign the check.”
“This made the person feel so harassed,” he said, “that he would sign the check because it was the only way he was going to get out of there.”
A 1984 investigative report by Canadian authorities quoted a Toronto registrar as saying that members of the public want to be “bled of their money…. If they didn’t, they would be staff members eligible for free training.”
The Canadian report also recounted a meeting during which Scientology staffers chanted: “Go for the throat. Go for blood. Go for the bloody throat.”
Former Scientologist Donna Day of Ventura said that church registrars accused her of throwing away money on rent and on food for her cats and dogs — “degraded beings,” they called her pets. They said the money should be going to the church.
“I was so upset, I finally left the house with them sitting in it,” said Day, who sued the church to get back $25,000 she said she had spent on Scientology.
Several years ago, church members persuaded a Florida woman to turn over a workers compensation settlement she received after the death of her husband, Larry M. Wheaton, who left behind two children, ages 3 and 7. He was the pilot of an Air Florida jet that plunged into the Potomac River after it had departed Washington, D.C.’s National Airport in 1982.
The Wheatons were longtime church members.
Joanne Wheaton gave nearly $150,000 to the church and almost as much to a private business controlled by Scientologists. But the deal was blocked when a lawsuit was brought by an attorney appointed by the court to protect the children’s interests.
The suit claimed that the Scientologists had disregarded the future welfare and financial security of the Wheaton family by taking money that was supposed to be used solely for the support of the children and their mother.
After protracted discussions, the money was refunded and the Scientologists who negotiated the deal were expelled by the church for their role in the affair.
For years, one of Scientology’s top promoters was Larry Wollersheim. He traveled the country inspiring others to follow him across Hubbard’s Bridge. Then he became disenchanted with the movement.
In 1980, he filed a Los Angeles Superior Court lawsuit, accusing the church of subjecting him to psychologically damaging practices and of driving him to the brink of insanity and financial ruin after he had a falling out with the group.
Three years ago, a jury awarded him $30 million. The award was recently reduced to $2.5 million.
During the litigation, Wollersheim filed a 200-page affidavit in which he offered this analysis of what keeps Scientologists hooked:
“Fear and hope are totally indoctrinated into the cult (Scientology) member. He hopes that he will receive the miraculous and ridiculous claims made directly, indirectly and by rumor by the sect and its members.
“He is afraid of the peer pressure for not proceeding up the prescribed program. He is intimidated and afraid of being accused of being a dilettante. He is afraid that if he doesn’t do it now before the world ends or collapses he may never get the chance. He is afraid if he doesn’t claim he received gains and write a success testimonial he will be shunned….
“How many people could stand up to that kind of pressure and stand before a group of applauding people and say: ‘Hey, it really wasn’t good.’?”
Wollersheim said that the courses provide only a temporary euphoria.
“Then you’re sold the next mystery and the next solution…. I’ve seen people sell their homes, stocks, inheritances and everything they own chasing their hopes for a fleeting, subjective euphoria. I have never witnessed a greater preying on the hopes and fears of others that has been carefully engineered by the cult’s leader.”
Scientology is determined that the words of L. Ron Hubbard shall live forever.
Using state-of-the art technology, the movement has spent more than $15 million to protect Hubbard’s original writings, tape-recorded lectures and filmed treatises from natural and man-made calamities, including nuclear holocaust.
The effort illustrates two fundamental truths about the Scientology movement: It believes in its future and it never does anything halfheartedly.
In charge of the preservation task is the Church of Spiritual Technology, which functions as archivist for Hubbard’s works.
It has a staff — but no congregation — and its fiscal 1987 income was $503 million, according to court documents filed by the church.
The organization has purchased rural land in New Mexico, Northern California and San Bernardino Mountains to store the Hubbard gospel.
According to Church of Spiritual Technology documents, the New Mexico site has a 670-foot tunnel with two deep vaults at the end. The tunnel is protected with thick concrete and has four doors with “maintenance-free lives of 1,000 years.”
Three of the doors purportedly will be “nuclear blast resistant.”
All this to house mere copies of the original works, which include 500,000 pages of Hubbard writings, 6,500 reels of tape and 42 films. The originals themselves are being kept under tight security on a sprawling Scientology complex near Lake Arrowhead.
While details of the facility are sketchy, a San Bernardino County sheriff’s deputy, who requested anonymity, said the group has burrowed a huge tunnel into a mountainside.
At the Arrowhead repository, sophisticated methods are being used to prepare Hubbard’s works for the bomb-proof vaults. Here, according to Scientology officials and documents, is the process:
First, the original writings are chemically treated to rid the paper of acid that causes deterioration. Next, they are placed in plastic envelopes that church officials say will last 1,000 years.
From there, they are packaged in titanium “time capsules” filled with argon gas to further aid preservation.
Hubbard’s writings also are being etched onto stainless steel plates with a strong acid. Scientology officials said the plates are so durable that they can be sprayed with salt water for 1,000 years and not deteriorate.
As for Hubbard’s taped lectures, they are being re-recorded onto special “pure gold” compact discs encased in glass that, according to Scientology archvists, are “designed to last at least 1,000 years with no deterioration of sound quality.”
As L. Ron Hubbard told it, he was 4 years old when a medicine man named “Old Tom” made him a “blood brother” of the Blackfeet Indians of Montana, providing the inspiration for the Scientology founder’s first novel, “Buckskin Brigades.”
But one expert on the tribe doesn’t buy Hubbard’s account.
Historian Hugh Dempsey is associate director of the Glenbow Museum in Calgary, Canada. He has extensively researched the tribe, of which his wife is a member.
He said that blood brothers are “an old Hollywood idea” and that the act was “never done among the Blackfeet.”
As for “Old Tom,” Dempsey has informed doubts. For one thing, he said, the name does not appear in a 1907 Blackfeet enrollment register containing the names of hundreds of tribal members.
For another, “It’s the kind of name, for that period (1915), that would practically not exist among the Blackfeet,” he said. “At that time, Blackfeet did not have Christian names.”
In 1985, church leaders produced a document that they say proves Hubbard was not lying.
Typed on Blackfeet Nation stationery, it states: “To commemorate the seventieth anniversary of L. Ron Hubbard becoming a blood brother of the Blackfeet Nation. Tree Manyfeathers in a ceremony re-established L. Ron Hubbard as a blood brother to the Blackfeet Tribe.”
The document actually is meaningless because none of the three men who signed it were authorized to take any action on the tribe’s behalf, according to Blackfeet Nation officials.
The document was created by Richard Mataisz, a Scientologist of fractional Indian descent. Mataisz said in an interview he tried to prove that Hubbard was a Blackfeet blood brother but came up empty-handed.
“It’s not,” he said, “something you go down to the courthouse and look up.”
So Mataisz, using the name Tree Manyfeathers, said he held a private ceremony, made Hubbard his own blood brother and, along with two other men, signed the commemorative document.
“You should not give it (the document) very much credibility,” said John Yellow Kidney, former vice president of the tribe’s executive committee. “I don’t.”
A protege of L. Ron Hubbard now leads the church, wielding power with the stern approach of his mentor.
The Church of Scientology today is run by a high-school dropout who grew up at the knee of the late L. Ron Hubbard and wields power with the iron-fisted approach of his mentor.
At 30, David Miscavige is chairman of the board of an organization that sits atop the bureaucratic labyrinth known as the Church of Scientology.
This organization, the Religious Technology Center, owns the trademarks that Scientology churches need to operate, including the words Scientology and Dianetics.
The Religious Technology Center licenses the churches to use the trademarks and can revoke permission if a church fails to perform properly. Therein rests much, but not all, of Miscavige’s power.
He is the man in control, charting a direction for the organization that is at once expansionist and combative — in keeping with the dictates and personality of Hubbard, his role model. He refused repeated requests to be interviewed for this report.
Church spokesmen say Miscavige is a tireless, no-nonsense leader who works 15-hour days and whose vision is guiding the church’s foray into mainstream society.
“He has a tremendous ability to cut through bull and get to the point,” said one Scientology spokesman, who has worked closely with Miscavige.
“He’s an initiator,” said another.
High-ranking former Scientologists describe him as a ruthless infighter with a volatile temper. They say he speaks in a gritty street parlance, punctuated with expletives.
One recalled the time that Miscavige became enraged with the performances of Scientology staffers on a church record album. He propped its cover against an embankment outside his Riverside County, office and shot it repeatedly with a .45-caliber pistol, said the associate.
To the public, the Rev. Heber Jentzsch, president of the Church of Scientology International, is portrayed as Scientology’s top official. He appears regularly at news conferences and on talk shows, and was one of a group of Scientologists detained recently by Spanish officials investigating the church. In reality, Jentzsch appears to be chiefly responsible for church public relations.
The real power is consolidated among a handful of Scientologists, led by Miscavige, who keep low public profiles.
Miscavige’s climb to prominence is a lesson in the origins and nature of power in the church that Hubbard built.
At the age of 14, with the blessing of his Scientologist parents, Miscavige joined a cadre of trusted youngsters called the “Commodore’s messengers.” In the beginning, they merely ran Hubbard’s errands. But as they emerged from adolescence, Hubbard broadened their influence over even the highest-level church executives.
In time, the messengers controlled the communication lines to and from Hubbard — a critical component of power in an organization that revered him as almost saintly. When messengers spoke, they did so with Hubbard’s authority. Bad-mouthing a messenger, Hubbard said, was tantamount to personally challenging him.
When Hubbard went into hiding in 1980, he left behind but did not forget Miscavige, one of his favorites.
It was Miscavige’s job to ensure that Hubbard’s orders, secretly relayed to him, were followed by church executives. In effect, Miscavige became the sole link between church leaders and Hubbard.
Miscavige also was put in charge of a profit-making firm called Author Services Inc., which was established in 1981 to manage Hubbard’s literary and financial affairs. The job further enhanced Miscavige’s reputation as having Hubbard’s confidence.
Church defectors say Miscavige wasted no time flexing his new muscles.
Among other things, he spearheaded a purge in 1981 of upper-echelon Scientology executives accused of subverting Hubbard’s teachings and plotting to seize control of the organization.
He also cracked down on owners of Scientology franchises, or missions, who pay the church roughly 10% of their gross income.
At a 1982 church conference, Miscavige accused the mission owners of cheating the “mother church.” He and his aides announced that “finance police” would audit the missions to ensure that the church was getting its fair share of money. And the audits would cost the missions $15,000 a day.
In taking command of Scientology after Hubbard’s death, Miscavige survived a challenge from two other Hubbard lieutenants once thought to be his likely successors: Pat and Anne Broeker, who had been in hiding with Hubbard.
The power struggle was so intense at one point that even Hubbard’s final Scientology writings, revered as sacred scriptures, became the object of a tug of war between Miscavige and Pat Broeker, according to Vicki Aznaran, a top Scientology executive who left the church in 1987 after a falling out. Aznaran said Broeker threatened to use the writings to start his own church.
Miscavige today has achieved exalted status within the Scientology movement.
He has personal aides who walk his dog, shine his shoes and run his errands, according to Aznaran, a top Scientology executive who left the church in 1987 after a falling-out. In his rare public appearances, he is surrounded by respectful subordinates.
And like Hubbard, who was frequently referred to by his initials, David Miscavige is called D.M.
A web of criminal conspiracy to discredit the church’s foes resulted in 5-year sentences for 11 defendants.
It began with the title of a fairy tale — Snow White.
That was the benign code name Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard gave to an ominous plan that would envelop his church in scandal and send its upper echelon to prison, a plan rooted in his ever-deepening fears and suspicions.
Snow White began in 1973 as an effort by Scientology through Freedom of Information proceedings to purge government files of what Hubbard thought was false information being circulated worldwide to discredit him and the church. But the operation soon mushroomed into a massive criminal conspiracy, executed by the church’s legal and investigative arm, the Guardian Office.
Under the direction of Hubbard’s wife, Mary Sue, the Guardian Office hatched one scheme after another to discredit and unnerve Scientology’s foes across the country. Guardian Office members were trained to lie, or in their words, “to outflow false data effectively.”
They compiled enemy lists and subjected those on the lists to smear campaigns and dirty tricks.
Their targets were in the government, the press, the medical profession, wherever a potential threat surfaced.
The Guardian Office saved the worst for author Paulette Cooper of New York City, whose scathing 1972 book, “The Scandal of Scientology,” pushed her to the top of the church’s roster of enemies.
Among other things, Cooper was framed on criminal charges by Guardian Office members, who obtained stationery she had touched and then used it to forge bomb threats to the church in her name.
“You’re like the Nazis or the Arabs — I’ll bomb you, I’ll kill you!” warned one of the rambling letters.
The church reported the threat to the FBI and directed its agents to Cooper, whose fingerprints matched those on the letter. Cooper was indicted by a grand jury not only for the bomb threats, but for lying under oath about her innocence.
Two years later, the author’s reputation and psyche in tatters, prosecutors dismissed the charges after she had spent nearly $20,000 in legal fees to defend herself and $6,000 on psychiatric treatment.
It seemed that no plan against perceived enemies was too ambitious or daring.
In Washington, Scientology spies penetrated such high-security agencies as the Department of Justice and the Internal Revenue Service to find what they had on Hubbard and the church.
In nighttime raids, they rifled files and photocopied mountains of documents, many of which the church had unsuccessfully sought under the federal Freedom of Information Act.
The thefts were inside jobs; the Guardian Office had planted one agent in the IRS as a clerk typist and another in the Justice Department as the personal secretary of an assistant U.S. attorney who was handling Freedom of Information lawsuits filed by Scientology.
So bold had they become that one Guardian Office operative slipped into an IRS conference room and wired a bugging device into a wall socket before a crucial meeting on Scientology was to be convened. The operative rigged the device so he could eavesdrop over his car’s FM radio.
The U.S. was losing a war it did not even know it was fighting. But that was about to change.
Two Scientologists used fake IRS credentials to gain access to government agencies and then photocopied documents related to the church.
Their conspiracy was exposed when one of the suspects, after 11 months on the lam, became worried about his plight and confessed to authorities, prompting the FBI to launch one of the biggest raids in its history.
Armed with power saws, crowbars and bolt cutters, 134 agents burst into three Scientology locations in Los Angeles and Washington.
They carted off eavesdropping equipment, burglar tools and 48,000 documents detailing countless operations against “enemies” in public and private life.
In the end, Hubbard’s wife and the others were found guilty of charges of conspiracy and burglary. The grand jury named Hubbard as an unindicted co-conspirator; the seized Guardian Office files did not directly link him to the crimes and he professed ignorance of them.
In a memorandum urging stiff sentences for the Scientologists, federal prosecutors wrote:
“The crime committed by these defendants is of a breadth and scope previously unheard of. No building, office, desk, or file was safe from their snooping and prying. No individual or organization was free from their despicable conspiratorial minds. The tools of their trade were miniature transmitters, lock picks, secret codes, forged credentials and any other device they found necessary to carry out their conspiratorial schemes.”
The 11 defendants were ordered to serve five years in federal prison. All are now free.
Church leaders today maintain that this dark chapter in their religion’s history was the work of renegade members who, yes, broke the law but believed they were justified because the government for two decades had harassed and persecuted Scientology.
Boston attorney Earle C. Cooley, Scientology’s national trial counsel, said the present church management does not condone the criminal activities of the old Guardian Office. He said that one of Hubbard’s most important dictums was to “maintain friendly relations with the environment and the public.”
“The question that I always have in my mind,” Cooley said, “is for how long a time is the church going to have to continue to pay the price for what the (Guardian Office) did…. Unfortunately, the church continues to be confronted with it.
“And the ironic thing is that the people being confronted with it are the people who wiped it out. And to the church, that’s a very frustrating thing.”
It’s a space-age religion that abounds in galactic tales, and its deepest secrets are known to few
What is Scientology?
Not even the vast majority of Scientologists can fully answer the question.
In the Church of Scientology, there is no one book that comprehensively sets forth the religion’s beliefs in the fashion of, say, the Bible or the Koran.
Rather, Scientology’s theology is scattered among the voluminous writings and tape-recorded discourses of the late science fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard, who founded the religion in the early 1950s.
Piece by piece, his teachings are revealed to church members through a progression of sometimes secret courses that take years to complete and cost tens of thousands of dollars. Out of a membership estimated by the church to be 6.5 million, only a tiny fraction have climbed to the upper reaches. In fact, according to a Scientology publication earlier this year, fewer than 900 members have completed the church’s highest course, nicknamed “Truth Revealed.”
While Hubbard’s “Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health” typically is one of the first books read by church members, its relationship to Scientology is like that of a grade school to a university.
What Scientologists learn in their courses is never publicly discussed by the church, which is trying to shake its cultish image and establish itself as a mainstream religion. For to the uninitiated, Hubbard’s theology would resemble pure science fiction, complete with galactic battles, interplanetary civilizations and tyrants who roam the universe.
Here, based on court records, church documents and Hubbard lectures that span the past four decades, is a rare look at portions of Scientology’s theology and the cosmological musings of the man who wrote it.
Central to Scientology is a belief in an immortal soul, or “thetan,” that passes from one body to the next through countless reincarnations spanning trillions of years. Collectively, thetans created the universe — all the stars and planets, every plant and animal. To function within their creation, thetans built bodies for themselves of wildly varying appearances, the human form being just one.
But each thetan is vulnerable to painful experiences that can diminish its powers and create emotional and physical problems in the individual it inhabits. The goal of Scientology is to purge these experiences from the thetan, making it again omnipotent and returning spiritual and bodily health to its host.
The painful experiences are called “engrams.” Hubbard said some happen by accident — from ancient planetary wars, for example — while others are intentionally inflicted by other thetans who have gone bad and want power. In Scientology, these engrams are called “implants.”
According to Hubbard, the bad thetans through the eons have electronically implanted other thetans with information intended to confuse them and make them forget the powers they inherently possess — kind of a brainwashing procedure.
While Hubbard was not always precise about the origins of the implants, he was very clear about the impact.
“Implants,” Hubbard said, “result in all varieties of illness, apathy, degradation, neurosis and insanity and are the principal cause of these in man.”
Hubbard identified numerous implants that he said have occurred through the ages and that are addressed during Scientology courses aimed at neutralizing their harmful effects.
Hubbard maintained, for example, that the concept of a Christian heaven is the product of two implants dating back more than 43 trillion years. Heaven, he said, is a “false dream” and a “very painful lie” intended to direct thetans toward a non-existent goal and convince them they have only one life.
In reality, Hubbard said, there is no heaven and there was no Christ.
“The (implanted) symbol of a crucified Christ is very apt indeed,” Hubbard said. “It’s the symbol of a thetan betrayed.”
Hubbard said that one of the worst implants happens after a person dies.
While Hubbard’s story of this implant may seem outlandish to some, he advanced it as a factual account of reincarnation.
“Of all the nasty, mean and vicious implants that have ever been invented, this one is it,” he declared during a lecture in the 1950s. “And it’s been going on for thousands of years.”
Hubbard said that when a person dies, his or her thetan goes to a “landing station” on Venus, where it is programmed with lies about its past life and its next life. The lies include a promise that it will be returned to Earth by being lovingly shunted into the body of a newborn baby.
Not so, said Hubbard, who described the thetan’s re-entry this way:
“What actually happens to you, you’re simply capsuled and dumped in the gulf of lower California. Splash. The hell with ya. And you’re on your own, man. If you can get out of that, and through that, and wander around through the cities and find some girl who looks like she is going to get married or have a baby or something like that, you’re all set. And if you can find the maternity ward to a hospital or something, you’re OK.
“And you just eventually just pick up a baby.”
But Hubbard offered his followers an easy way to outwit the implant:
Scientologists should simply select a location other than Venus to go “when they kick the bucket.”
Another notorious implant led Hubbard to construct an entire course for Scientologists who want to be rid of it.
Shrouded in mystery and kept in locked cabinets at select church locations, the course is called Operating Thetan III, billed by the church as “the final secret of the catastrophe which laid waste to this sector of the galaxy.” It is taught only to the most advanced church members, at fees ranging to $6,000.
Hubbard told his followers that while unlocking the secret, he “became very ill, almost lost this body and somehow or another brought it off and obtained the material and was able to live through it.”
Here’s what he said he learned:
Seventy-five million years ago a tyrant named Xenu (pronounced Zee-new) ruled the Galactic Confederation, an alliance of 76 planets, including Earth, then called Teegeeack.
To control overpopulation and solidify his power, Xenu instructed his loyal officers to capture beings of all shapes and sizes from the various planets, freeze them in a compound of alcohol and glycol and fly them by the billions to Earth in planes resembling DC-8s. Some of the beings were captured after they were duped into showing up for a phony tax investigation.
The beings were deposited or chained near 10 volcanoes scattered around the planet. After hydrogen bombs were dropped on them, their thetans were captured by Xenu’s forces and implanted with sexual perversion, religion and other notions to obscure their memory of what Xenu had done.
Soon after, a revolt erupted. Xenu was imprisoned in a wire cage within a mountain, where he remains today.
But the damage was done.
During the last 75 million years, these implanted thetans have affixed themselves by the thousands to people on Earth. Called “body thetans,” they overwhelm the main thetan who resides within a person, causing confusion and internal conflict.
In the Operating Thetan III course, Scientologists are taught to scan their bodies for “pressure points,” indicating the presence of these bad thetans. Using techniques prescribed by Hubbard, church members make telepathic contact with these thetans and remind them of Xenu’s treachery. With that, Hubbard said, the thetans detach themselves
Hubbard first unveiled his Scientology theories during a series of often breathless lectures he delivered in Wichita, Kan., Phoenix and Philadelphia in 1952.
His talks were sprinkled with tales of interplanetary adventures he said he had experienced during earlier lives.
There was the time, for instance, that Hubbard said he was resting in a peaceful valley on a barren planet in some remote galaxy, and decided to spruce up the place. He said he “fixed up a lake” and “managed to coax into existence a few vines.”
Then, “all of a sudden — zoop boom — and there was a spaceship,” Hubbard recalled, saying “I got pretty mad about the whole thing.”
“I remember bringing a thunderstorm,” Hubbard said. “Moved it over the ship…. And then (I) let them have it.”
Hubbard told associates that he had been many people before being born as Lafayette Ronald Hubbard on March 13, 1911, in Tilden, Neb. One of them was Cecil Rhodes, the British-born diamond king of southern Africa. Another, according to a former aide, was a marshal to Joan of Arc.
After Hubbard’s death in 1986, a Scientology publication described him as “the original musician,” who 3 million years ago invented music while going by the name “Arpen Polo.” The publication noted that “he wrote his first song a bit after the first tick of time.”
Hubbard realized that his accounts of past lives, implants and extraterrestrial creatures might sound suspect to outsiders. So he counseled his disciples to keep mum.
“Don’t start walking around and telling people about space opera because they’re not going to believe you,” he said, “and they’re going to say, ‘Well, that’s just Hubbard.’ ”
Part 1:5 (Sunday, 24 June 1990, page A36:1)
Above L Ron Hubbard using the A Model of Mathisons Electropsychometer with projector features.
Deep in hiding, Hubbard kept tight grip on the church.
Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard often said that man’s most basic drive is that of survival. And when it came to his own, he used whatever was necessary — false identities, cover stories, deception.
There is no better illustration of this than the way he secretly controlled the Church of Scientology while hiding from a world he viewed as increasingly hostile.
Hubbard was last seen publicly in February 1980, in the desert community of Hemet, a few miles from a high-security compound that houses the church’s movie and recording studio. His sudden departure fueled wild and intense speculation.
The church said Hubbard went into seclusion to continue his Scientology research and to resurrect his science fiction-writing career. But former aides have said he dropped from sight to avoid subpoenas and government tax agents probing allegations that he was skimming church funds.
Publications throughout the world ran stories about Hubbard’s disappearance. “Mystery of the Vanished Ruler” was the headline in Time magazine.
In 1982, Hubbard’s estranged son filed a probate petition trying to wrest control of the Scientology empire. He argued that his father was either dead or mentally incompetent and that his riches were being plundered by Scientology executives.
The suit was dismissed after Hubbard, through an attorney, submitted an affidavit with his fingerprints, saying that he was well and wanted to be left alone.
No doubt, Hubbard would have chuckled with satisfaction over the speculation surrounding his whereabouts. For he had always considered himself a shrewd strategist and a master of the intelligence game, endlessly calculating ways to outwit his foes.
Hubbard took with him only two people, a married couple named Pat and Anne Broeker.
Pat Broeker, Hubbard’s personal messenger at the time, had gone into hiding with him once before and knew how to ensure his security.
Broeker relished cloak-and-dagger operations. His nickname among Hubbard’s other messengers was “007.”
Anne had been one of Hubbard’s top aides for years. She was cool under pressure and able to defuse Hubbard’s volatile temper.
Hubbard and the Broekers spent their first several years together on the move. For months, they traveled the Pacific Northwest in a motor home. They lived in apartments in Newport Beach and the suburbs of Los Angeles.
Then, in the summer of 1983, they decided to settle down in a dusty ranch town called Creston, population 270, where the hot, arid climate would be kind to Hubbard’s bursitis.
About 30 miles inland from San Luis Obispo, it was a perfect spot for a man of notoriety to live in obscurity. In those parts, people don’t ask a lot of questions about someone else’s business.
Hubbard and the Broekers concocted an elaborate set of phony names and backgrounds to conceal their identities from the townsfolk. Pat and Anne Broeker went by the names Mike and Lisa Mitchell. Hubbard became Lisa’s father, Jack, who impressed the locals as a chatty old man, charismatic but sometimes gruff.
They purchased a 160-acre ranch known as the Whispering Winds for $700,000, using 30 cashier’s checks drawn on various California banks. Pat Broeker told the sellers, Ed and Sherry Shahan, that he had recently inherited millions of dollars and was looking to leave his home in Upstate New York to raise livestock in California.
At the time, the Shahans were suspicious. As Ed Shahan recalled, “They were having trouble deciding whose name to put the property in.”
In less than three years, Hubbard poured an estimated $3 million into the local economy as he redesigned the ranch to his exacting and elaborate specifications.
He launched one project after another, some of them seemingly senseless, according to local residents. He ordered the construction of a quarter-mile horse-racing track with an observation tower. The track reportedly was never used.
The 10-room ranch house was gutted and remodeled so many times that it went virtually uninhabited during Hubbard’s time there. He lived and worked in a luxurious 40-foot Bluebird motor home parked near the stables.
All this was done without work permits, which meant that Hubbard and his aides would not have to worry about nosy county inspectors.
Like Hubbard’s aides in earlier years, the hired help saw extreme sides of the man who was chauffeured around the property in a black Subaru pickup by Anne Broeker.
Fencing contractor Jim Froelicher of Paso Robles remembers asking him for advice on buying a camera. Several days later, Froelicher said, Hubbard presented him with a 35mm camera as a gift.
Longtime Creston resident Ed Lindquist, on the other hand, said painters dropped by the local tavern at lunch to talk about how the “old man” was acting eccentric. They said he had them paint the walls again and again because they “weren’t white enough,” according to Lindquist.
Scientology officials insist that Hubbard was in fine mental and physical health during his years in seclusion. Most of his days, they say, were spent reading, writing and enjoying the ranch’s beauty and livestock, which included llamas and buffalo.
But Hubbard was doing much more, according to former aides. Even in hiding, they say, he kept a close watch and a tight grip on the church he built — as he had for decades.
As early as 1966, Hubbard claimed to have relinquished managerial control of the church. But ex-Scientologists and several court rulings have held that this was a maneuver to shield Hubbard from potential legal actions and accountability for the group’s activities.
Over the years, efforts to conceal Hubbard’s ties to the church were extensive and extreme.
In 1980, for example, a massive shredding operation was undertaken at the church’s desert compound outside Palm Springs after Scientology officials received an erroneous tip of an imminent FBI raid, according to a former aide.
“Anything that indicated that L. Ron Hubbard controlled the church or was engaged in management was to be shredded,” recalled Hubbard’s former public relations officer, Laurel Sullivan.
For more than two days, Sullivan said, roughly 200 Scientologists crammed thousands of documents into a huge shredder nicknamed “Jaws.”
Documents too valuable to destroy, she added, were buried in the ground or under floorboards.
In his self-imposed exile, Hubbard continued to reign over Scientology with almost paranoid secrecy.
He relayed his orders in writing or on tape cassettes to Pat Broeker, who then passed them to a ranking Scientologist named David Miscavige, the man responsible for seeing that church executives complied.
Hubbard’s communiques travelled a circuitous route in the darkness of night, changing hands from Broeker to Miscavige at designated sites throughout Southern California. To mask the author’s identity, the missives were signed with codes that carried the weight of Hubbard’s signature.
Sometimes Broeker himself appeared from parts unknown to personally deliver Hubbard’s instructions to church executives.
From his secret seat of power in the oak-studded hills above San Luis Obispo, Hubbard also made sure that he would not be severed from the riches of his Scientology empire, high-level church defectors would later tell government investigators.
They alleged that Hubbard skimmed millions of dollars from church coffers while he was in hiding — carrying on a tradition that the Internal Revenue Service said he began practically at Scientology’s inception about 30 years ago. Hubbard and his aides had always denied the allegations, and accused the IRS of waging a campaign against the church and its founder.
While Hubbard was underground, the IRS launched a criminal probe of his finances. But the investigation would soon be without a target, and ultimately abandoned.
By late 1985, Hubbard’s directives to underlings had tapered off. At age 74, he no longer resembled the robust and natty man whose dated photographs fill Scientology’s promotional literature. Living in isolation, separated from his devoted followers, he had let himself go.
His thin gray hair, with streaks of the old red, hung without sheen to his shoulders. He had grown a stringy, unkempt beard and mustache.
His round face was now sunken and his ruddy complexion had turned pasty. He was an old man and he was nearing death.
On or about Jan. 17, 1986, Hubbard suffered a “cerebral vascular accident,” commonly known as a stroke. Caring for him was Gene Denk, a Scientologist doctor and Hubbard’s physician for eight years.
There was little Denk could do for Hubbard in those final days — the stroke was debilitating. He was bedridden and his speech was badly impaired.
One week later, at 8 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 24, Hubbard died.
Throughout the night, according to neighbor Robert Whaley, heavy traffic inexplicably moved in and out of the ranch. Whaley, a retired advertising executive, said that he was kept awake by headlights shining through his windows.
For more than 11 hours, Hubbard’s body remained in the motor home where he died. Scientology attorney Earle Cooley had ordered that Hubbard not be touched until he arrived by car from Los Angeles with another Scientology lawyer.
The next morning, Cooley telephoned Reis Chapel, a San Luis Obispo mortuary, and arranged to have the body cremated. With Cooley present, Hubbard was transported to the mortuary.
Once chapel officials learned who Hubbard was, however, they became concerned about the church’s rush to cremate him. They contacted the San Luis Obispo County coroner, who halted the cremation until the body could be examined and blood tests performed.
When then-Deputy Coroner Don Hines arrived, Cooley presented him with a certificate that Hubbard had signed just four days before his death. It stated that, for religious reasons, he wanted no autopsy.
Cooley also produced a will that Hubbard had signed the day before he died, directing that his body be promptly cremated and that his vast wealth be distributed according to the provisions of a confidential trust he had established. His once-ornate trademark signature was little more than a scrawl.
After the blood tests and examination revealed no foul play, coroner Hines approved the cremation. With Cooley’s consent, he also photographed the body and lifted fingerprints as a way to later confirm that it was the reclusive Hubbard and not a hoax.
Within hours, Hubbard’s ashes were scattered at sea by the Broekers and Miscavige.
Two days after Hubbard’s death, Pat Broeker stood before a standing-room-only crowd of Scientologists at the Hollywood Palladium. It was his first public appearance in six years, and he had just broken the news of Hubbard’s passing.
The cheers were deafening.
Broeker announced that Hubbard had made a conscious decision to “sever all ties” to this world so he could continue his Scientology research in spirit form — testimony to the power of the man and his teachings.
He “laid down in his bed and he left,” Broeker said. “And that was it.”
Hubbard left behind an organization that would continue to function as though he were still alive. His millions of words — the lifeblood of Scientology — have now been computerized for wisdom and instructions at the touch of a button.
In Scientology, he was — and always will be — the “Source.”
He surrounded himself with teen-age followers, whom he indoctrinated, treated like servants and cherished as though they were his own children.
He called them the “Commodore’s messengers.”
” ‘Messenger!’ ” he would boom in the morning. “And we’d pull him out of bed,” one recalled.
The youngsters, whose parents belonged to Hubbard’s Church of Scientology, would lay out his clothes, run his shower and help him dress.
He taught them how to sprinkle powder in his socks and gently slip them on so as not to pull the hairs on his legs.
They made sure the temperature in his room never varied from 72 degrees. They boiled water at night to keep the humidity just right. They would hand him a cigarette and follow in his footsteps with an ashtray.
When Hubbard’s bursitis acted up, a messenger would wrap his shoulders in a lumberjack shirt that had been warmed on a heater.
Long gone were those days when Hubbard was scratching out a living. Now, in the early 1970s, he fancied silk pants, ascots and nautical caps. It was evident that the red-haired author had enjoyed many a good meal.
It was a high honor for Scientologists to serve beside Hubbard, even if it meant performing such dreary tasks as ironing his clothes or ferrying his messages. But, for some, it was also disconcerting. The privileged few who worked at his side saw personality flaws and quirks not reflected in the staged photographs or in Hubbard’s biographies.
They came to know the man behind the mystique.
They said he could display the temperament of a spoiled child and the eccentricities of a reclusive Howard Hughes.
When upset, Hubbard was known to erupt like a volcano, spewing obscenities and insults.
Former Scientologist Adelle Hartwell once testified during a Florida hearing on Scientology that she saw Hubbard “throw fits.”
“I actually saw him take his hat off one day and stomp on it and cry like a baby.”
Hubbard had been hotheaded since his youth, when his red hair earned him the nickname “Brick.”
One of Hubbard’s classmates recalled a day in 11th Grade when the husky Hubbard, for no apparent reason, got into a fight with Gus Leger, the lanky assistant principal at Helena High School in Helena, Mont.
“Old Gus was up at the blackboard,” recalled Andrew Richardson. “He taught geometry. He was laying out this problem and Brick let loose with a piece of chalk and he missed him. Leger whirled and threw an eraser at Brick, who ducked, and it hit a girl right behind him in the face.”
Hubbard wrestled with the teacher, then stuffed him into a trash can, said Richardson.
“We all got to laughing and he (Leger) couldn’t get up,” Richardson said, chuckling at the memory.
Richardson said that, while the students helped their teacher, Hubbard stormed out and never returned. He left to be with his parents in the Far East, where his father was stationed with the Navy.
In later life, one thing that could throw the irascible Hubbard into a rage was the scent of soap in his clothes. “I was petrified of doing the laundry,” one former messenger said.
To protect themselves from a Hubbard tirade, the messengers rinsed his clothes in 13 separate buckets of water.
Doreen Gillham, who had who spent her teen years with Hubbard, never forgot what happened when a longtime aide offered him a freshly laundered shirt after he had taken a shower.
“He immediately grabbed the collar and put it up to his nose, then threw it down,” said Gillham, who died recently in a horseriding accident.
“He went to the closet and proceeded to sniff all the shirts. He would tear them off the hangers and throw them down. We’re talking 30 shirts on the floor.”
He let out a “long whine,” Gillham said, and then began screaming about the smell.
“I picked up a shirt off the floor, smelled it and said, ‘There is no soap on this shirt.’ I didn’t smell anything in any of them. He grudgingly put it on,” said Gillham, who added: “Deep down inside, I’m telling myself, ‘This guy is nuts!’ ”
Gillham said that Hubbard had become obsessed not only with soap smells but with dust, which aggravated his allergies. He demanded white-glove inspections but never seemed satisfied with the results.
No matter how clean the room, Gillham said, “he would insist that it be dusted over and over and over again.”
Gillham, formerly one of Hubbard’s most loyal and trusted messengers, said his behavior became increasingly erratic after he crashed a motorcycle in the Canary Islands in the early 1970s.
“He realized his own mortality,” she said. “He was in agony for months. He insisted, with a broken arm and broken ribs, that he was going to heal himself and it didn’t work.”
According to those who knew him well, Hubbard was neither affectionate nor much of a family man. He seemed closer to his handpicked messengers than to his own seven children, one of whom he later denied fathering.
“His kids rarely, if ever, got to see him,” Gillham said, until his wife Mary Sue “insisted on weekly Sunday night dinners.”
Hubbard expected his children to live up to the family name and do nothing that would reflect badly on him or the church. And for that reason, his son Quentin was a problem.
Quentin had once tried suicide with a drug overdose and was confused about his sexual orientation — a fact that was quietly discussed among his friends and at the highest levels of the church.
“He thought Quentin was an embarrassment,” said Laurel Sullivan, Hubbard’s former public relations officer, who had a falling out with the organization in 1981. “And he told me that several times.”
In 1976, Quentin parked on a deserted road in Las Vegas and piped the exhaust into his car. At the age of 22, he killed himself.
When Hubbard was told of the suicide, “he didn’t cry or anything,” according to a former aide. His first reaction, she said, was to express concern over the possibility of publicity that could be used to discredit Scientology.
Hubbard also had problems with another son, his namesake, L. Ron Hubbard Jr.
Hubbard feuded with his eldest son for more than 25 years, dating back to 1959 when L. Ron Hubbard Jr. split with Scientology because he said he was not making enough money to support his family. In the years that followed, he changed his name to Ronald DeWolfe and accused his father of everything from cavorting with mobsters to abusing drugs.
For his part, Hubbard accused his son of being crazy.
Although Hubbard cast himself as a humble servant to mankind, former assistants said he was not without ego. He craved adulation and coveted fame.
Sullivan, the former public relations officer, recalled how after an appearance he would ask: “How many minutes of applause did I get? How many times did they say, ‘Hip, hip, hurray!’? How many people showed up?
How many letters did I get?”
“If you remained in awe of him … he was great,” said Sullivan, who had a falling out with the church in 1981. “If you crossed him, or appeared to cross him, he would lash out at you, scream at you, accuse you of things.”
Gillham and other former aides said he would accuse even his most devout aides of trying to poison him if he did not like the taste of a meal that had been laboriously prepared for his table. “Somebody’s trying to kill me!” former aides said he would shout. “What have I done? All I’ve tried to do is help man.”
He envisioned global conspiracies designed to smash Scientology, and he ingrained this dark view in the minds of his followers through his many writings.
“Time and again since 1950,” Hubbard said in 1982, “the vested interests which pretend to run the world (for their own appetites and profit) have mounted full-scale attacks. With a running dog press and slavish government agencies the forces of evil have launched their lies and sought, by whatever twisted means, to check and destroy Scientology.”
“Our enemies on this planet are less than 12 men,” he announced in a 1967 tape-recorded message to his adherents. “They are members of the Bank of England and other higher financial circles. They own and control newspaper chains and they are oddly enough directors in all the mental health groups in the world which have sprung up.”
Chief among his suspects were psychiatry and government agencies that probed his organization, including Interpol the Paris-based international police agency, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the Internal Revenue Service and the FBI.
Former Scientologist Hartwell told the Florida hearing that she was present when Hubbard made a film about “bombing the FBI office.”
“I was in makeup and we had so much blood on those actors, which was made out of Karo syrup and food coloring,” Hartwell said. “And we couldn’t get enough on them to suit Hubbard. We had guys’ legs off, there were hands off, arms — I mean, it was a mess from the word go.”
Even before Scientology, Hubbard believed that unseen forces were against him.
“I watched him operate,” said “Dianetics” publisher Arthur Ceppos, who later split with Hubbard. “If he felt he was under attack, that’s when his paranoia showed.”
This siege mentality led Hubbard to author a series of church policies on how to combat suspected foes — writings that, more than any of his others, have worked to reinforce Scientology’s cultish image and undermine its quest for legitimacy.
He counseled his followers to discredit the opposition to “a point of total obliteration” and to remember that “the thousands of years of Jewish passivity earned them nothing but slaughter. So things do not run right because one is holy or good. Things run right because one makes them right.”
In this spirit, during the mid-1970s, Scientologists launched nasty smear campaigns and turned to criminality, burglarizing private and government offices.
Eventually, 11 top Scientologists were jailed, including Hubbard’s wife Mary Sue, who oversaw the sweeping operation. Hubbard was named as an unindicted co-conspirator.
At one point during this period, FBI agents raided church headquarters in Los Angeles and Washington. Hubbard and three trusted aides, fearing that his enemies had at long last gained the upper hand, ran for cover. They fled a Scientology compound near the town of Hemet and drove to Sparks, Nev., where they used false names and lived in a nondescript apartment for six months until things cooled off.=
“When the raids happened he never really knew what they (the FBI) had, “recalled Dede Reisdorf, one of those who accompanied Hubbard.
To disguise Hubbard’s appearance, Reisdorf said, she cut his red hair and dyed it brown. He often wore fake glasses, donned a phony mustache and pulled a hunter’s cap down over his ears.
“He got to a point,” Reisdorf said, “where he wouldn’t even walk in front of a window…. He was afraid of being seen by somebody. There was always somebody in a bush somewhere. A reporter or an FBI agent or an IRS agent.”
It was not the last time Hubbard would go into hiding. In 1980, on St. Valentine’s Day, Hubbard pulled another disappearing act. This time, he never returned.
The Making of L. Ron Hubbard Creating the Mystique
Hubbard’s image was crafted of truth, distorted by myth.
To his followers, L. Ron Hubbard was bigger than life. But it was an image largely of his own making.
A Los Angeles Superior Court judge put it bluntly while presiding over a Church of Scientology lawsuit in 1984. Scientology’s founder, he said, was “virtually a pathological liar” about his past.
Hubbard was an intelligent and well-read man, with diverse interests, experience and expertise. But that apparently was not enough to satisfy him. He transformed his frailties into strengths, his failures into successes. With a kernel of truth, he concocted elaborate stories about a life he seemingly wished was his.
There was his claim, for example, of being a nuclear physicist. This was an important one because he said he had used his knowledge of science to develop Scientology and dianetics.
Hubbard was, in fact, enrolled in one of the nation’s early classes in molecular and atomic physics at George Washington University, in Washington, D.C., where he unsuccessfully pursued a civil engineering degree. But he flunked the class.
Church of Scientology officials deny that Hubbard claimed to be a nuclear physicist and point to a taped lecture in which he admits earning “the worst grades” in the class. But they fail to mention contradictory statements Hubbard made when it suited his needs.
Perhaps Hubbard’s most fantastic — and easily disproved — claims center on his military service.
Hubbard bragged that he was a top-flight naval officer in World War II, who commanded a squadron of fighting ships, was wounded in combat and was highly decorated.
But Navy and Veterans Administration records obtained through the federal Freedom of Information Act reveal that his military performance was, at times, substandard.
The Navy documents variously describe him as a “garrulous” man who “tries to give impressions of his importance,” as being “not temperamentally fitted for independent command” and as “lacking in the essential qualities of judgment, leadership and cooperation. He acts without forethought as to probable results.”
Hubbard was relieved of command of two ships, including the PC 815, a submarine chaser docked along the Willamette River in Oregon.
According to Navy records, here is what happened:
Just hours after motoring the PC 815 into the Pacific for a test cruise, Hubbard said he encountered two Japanese submarines. He dropped 37 depth charges during the 55 consecutive hours he said he monitored the subs, and summoned additional ships and aircraft into the fight.
He claimed to have so severely crippled the submarines that the only trace remaining of either was a thin carpet of oil on the ocean’s surface.
“This vessel wishes no credit for itself,” Hubbard stated in a report of the incident. “It was built to hunt submarines. Its people were trained to hunt submarines.”
And no credit Hubbard got.
“An analysis of all reports convinces me that there was no submarine in the area,” wrote the commander of the Northwest Sea Frontier after an investigation.
Hubbard next continued down the coast, where he anchored off the Coronado Islands just south of San Diego. To test his ship’s guns, he ordered target practice directed at the uninhabited Mexican islands, prompting the government of that neutral country to complain to U.S. officials.
A Navy board of inquiry determined that Hubbard had “disregarded orders” both by conducting gunnery practice and by anchoring in Mexican waters.
A letter of admonition was placed in Hubbard’s military file which stated “that more drastic disciplinary action … would have been taken under normal and peacetime conditiions.
During his purportedly illustrious military career, Hubbard claimed to have been awarded at least 21 medals and decorations. But records state that he actually earned four during his Naval service: the American Defense Service Medal, the American Campaign Medal, the Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal and the World War II Victory Medal, which was given to all wartime servicemen.
One of the medals to which Hubbard staked claim was the Purple Heart, bestowed upon wounded servicemen. Hubbard maintained that he was “crippled” and “blinded” in the war.
Early biographies issued by Scientology say that he was “flown home in the late spring of 1942 in the secretary of the Navy’s private plane as the first U.S.-returned casualty from the Far East.”
Thomas Moulton, second in command on PC 815, said Hubbard once told of being machine-gunned across the back near the Dutch East Indies.
On another occasion, Moulton testified during the 1984 Scientology lawsuit, Hubbard said his eyes had been damaged by the flash of a large-caliber gun. Hubbard himself, in a tape-recorded lecture, said his eyes were injured when he had “a bomb go off in my face.”
These injury claims are significant because Hubbard said he cured himself through techniques that would later form the tenets of Scientology and Dianetics.
Military records, however, reveal that he was never wounded or injured in combat, and was never awarded a Purple Heart.
In seeking disability money, Hubbard told military doctors that he had been “lamed” not by a bullet but by a chronic hip infection that set in after his transfer from the warm tropics of the Pacific to the icy winters of the East Coast, where he attended a Navy-sponsored school of military government.
Moreover, his eye problems did not result from an exploding bomb or the blinding flash of a gun. Rather, Hubbard said in military records, he contracted conjunctivitis from exposure to “excessive tropical sunlight.”
The truth is that Hubbard spent the last seven months of his active duty in a military hospital in Oakland, for treatment of a duodenal ulcer he developed while in the service.
Hubbard did, however, receive a monthly, 40% disability check from the government through at least 1980.
Government records also contradict Hubbard’s claim that he had fully regained his health by 1947 with the power of his mind and the techniques of his future religion.
Late that year, he wrote the government about having “long periods of moroseness” and “suicidal inclinations.” That was followed by a letter in 1948 to the chief of naval operations in which he described himself as “an invalid.”
And, during a 1951 examination by the Veterans Administration, he was still complaining of eye problems and a “boring-like pain” in his stomach, which he said had given him “continuous trouble” for eight years, especially when “under nervous stress.”
Significantly, that examination occurred after the publication of “Dianetics,” which promised a cure for the very ailments that plagued the author himself then and throughout his life, including allergies, arthritis, ulcers and heart problems.
In Hubbard’s defense, Scientology officials accuse others of distorting and misrepresenting his military glories.
They say the Navy “covered up” Hubbard’s sinking of the submarines either to avoid frightening the civilian population or because the commander who investigated the incident had earlier denied the existence of subs along the West Coast.
Moreover, church officials charge that records released by the military are not only grossly incomplete but perhaps were falsified to conceal Hubbard’s secret activities as an intelligence officer.
To support their point, a church official gave the Times an authentic-looking Navy document that purports to confirm some of Hubbard’s wartime claims. After examining the document, though, a spokesman for the Naval Military Personnel Command Center said its contents are not supported by Hubbard’s personnel record.
He declined further comment.
Hubbard’s biographical claims were not confined to the events of his adult life.
He claimed, for example, that as a youth he traveled extensively throughout Asia, studying at the feet of holy men who first kindled in him a burning fascination with the spirit of man.
“My basic ordination for religious work,” Hubbard once wrote, “was received from Mayo in the Western Hills of China when I was made a lama priest after a year as a neophyte.”
Hubbard did, in fact, tour China while his father was stationed in Guam with the Navy. However, a diary of that period makes no mention of his spiritual awakening. Rather, it portrays him as an intolerant young Westerner with little understanding of an unfamiliar culture or race.
He described the lama temples he toured as “very odd and heathenish.”
After visiting the Great Wall of China, Hubbard remarked: “If China turned it into a rolly coaster it could make millions of dollars every year.”
He described the “yellow races” as “simple and one-tracked.” Wrote Hubbard:
“The trouble with China is there are too many chinks here.”
Hubbard also claimed that he spent many of his childhood years on a large cattle ranch in Montana, where he grew up.
“Long days were spent riding, breaking broncos, hunting coyote and taking his first steps as an explorer,” according to a Hubbard-approved biography issued by the church.
But Hubbard’s aunt laughed when asked whether he had been a pint-sized cowboy.
“We didn’t have a ranch,” said Margaret Roberts, 87, of Helena, Mont. “Just several acres (with) a barn on it…. We had one cow (and) four or five horses.”
Hubbard’s biographical claims took center stage during the 1984 Superior Court lawsuit in which the church accused a former member of stealing the Scientology founder’s private papers. Ex-member Gerald Armstrong said he took the documents as protection against possible church harassment.
Judge Paul G. Breckenridge Jr. found in Armstrong’s favor and, in his ruling, issued a harsh assessment of the church’s revered leader.
“The evidence portrays a man who has been virtually a pathological liar when it comes to his history, background and achievements….”
“At the same time,” Breckenridge continued, “it appears that he is charismatic and highly capable of motivating, organizing, controlling, manipulating and inspiring his adherents.”
Hubbard, the judge said, was “a very complex person.”
The church and Hubbard’s widow, Mary Sue, have appealed Breckenridge’s decision, saying that it was based on “irrelevant, distorted and, in many instances, invented testimony” of embittered former Scientologists.
“Any controversy about him (Hubbard) is like a speck of dust on his shoes compared to the millions of people who loved and respected him,” a Scientology spokesman said. “What he has accomplished in the brief span of one lifetime will have impact on every man, woman and child for 10,000 years.”
(Sunday, 24 June 1990, page A38:1) Part 1: Chapter Two:
From a life haunted by emotional and financial troubles, L. Ron Hubbard brought forth Scientology. He achieved godlike status among his followers, and his death has not deterred the church’s efforts to reach deeper into society.
It was a triumph of galactic proportions: Science fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard had discarded the body that bound him to the physical universe and was off to the next phase of his spiritual exploration — “on a planet a galaxy away.”
“Hip, hip, hurray!” thousands of Scientologists thundered inside the Hollywood Palladium, where they had just been told of this remarkable feat.
“Hip, hip, hurray! Hip, hip, hurray!” they continued to chant, gazing at a large photograph of Hubbard, creator of their religion and author of the best-selling “Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health.”
Earlier that day, the Church of Scientology had summoned the faithful throughout Los Angeles to a “big and exciting event” at the Palladium.
They were told nothing more, just to be there.
As evening fell, thousands arrived, most decked out in the spit-and-polish mock Navy uniforms that are symbolic of the organization’s paramilitary structure.
The excited assemblage was about to learn that their beloved leader, a man who dubbed himself “The Commodore,” had died. Yet, death was never mentioned.
Instead, the Scientologists were told that Hubbard had finished his spiritual research on this planet, charting a precise path for man to achieve immortality. And now it was on to bigger challenges somewhere beyond the stars.
His body had “become an impediment to the work he now must do outside of its confines,” the awe-struck crowd was informed. “The fact that he … willingly discarded the body after it was no longer useful to him signifies his ultimate success: the conquest of life that he embarked upon half a century ago.”
The death certificate would show that Lafayette Ronald Hubbard, 74, who had not been seen publicly for nearly six years, died on Jan. 24, 1986, of a stroke on his ranch outside San Luis Obispo.
But to Scientologists, the man they affectionately called “Ron” had ascended.
The glorification of L. Ron Hubbard that brisk January night was not surprising. Over more than three decades he had skillfully transformed himself from a writer of pulp fiction to a writer of “sacred scriptures.”
Along the way, he made a fortune and achieved his dream of fame.
“I have high hopes of smashing my name into history so violently that it will take a legendary form, even if all the books are destroyed,”
Hubbard wrote to the first of his three wives in 1938, more than a decade before he created Scientology.
“That goal,” he said, “is the real goal as far as I am concerned.”
From the ground up, Hubbard built an international empire that started as a collection of mental therapy centers and became one of the world’s most controversial and secretive religions.
The intensity, combativeness and salesmanship that distinguish Scientology from other religions can be traced directly to Hubbard. For, even in death, the man and his creation are inseparable.
He wrote millions of words in scores of books instructing his followers on everything from how to market Scientology to how to fend off critics. His prolific and sometimes rambling discourses constitute the gospel of Scientology, its structure and its soul. Deviations are punishable.
Through his writings, Hubbard fortified his clannish organization with a powerful intolerance of criticism and a fierce will to endure and prosper. He wrote a Code of Honor that urged his followers to “never desert a group to which you owe your support” and “never fear to hurt another in a just cause.”
He transmitted to his followers his suspicious view of the world — one populated, he insisted, by madmen bent on Scientology’s destruction.
His flaring temper and searing intensity are deeply branded into the church and reflected in the behavior of his faithful, who shout at adversaries and even at each other. As one former high-ranking member put it: “He made swearing cool.”
Hubbard’s followers say his teachings have helped thousands kick drugs and allowed countless others to lead fuller lives through courses that improve communication skills, build self-confidence and increase an individual’s ability to take control of his or her life.
He was, they say, “the greatest humanitarian in history.”
But there was another side to this imaginative and intelligent man. And to understand Scientology, one must begin with L. Ron Hubbard.
In the late 1940s, Hubbard was broke and in debt. A struggling writer of science fiction and fantasy, he was forced to sell his typewriter for $28.50 to get by.
“I can still see Ron three-steps-at-a-time running up the stairs in around 1949 in order to borrow $30 from me to get out of town because he had a wife after him for alimony,” recalled his former literary agent, Forrest J. Ackerman.
At one point, Hubbard was reduced to begging the Veterans Administration to let him keep a $51 overpayment of benefits. “I am nearly penniless,” wrote Hubbard, a former Navy lieutenant.
Hubbard was mentally troubled, too. In late 1947, he asked the Veterans Administration to help him get psychiatric treatment.
“Toward the end of my (military) service,” Hubbard wrote to the VA, “I avoided out of pride any mental examinations, hoping that time would balance a mind which I had every reason to suppose was seriously affected.
“I cannot account for nor rise above long periods of moroseness and suicidal inclinations, and have newly come to realize that I must first triumph above this before I can hope to rehabilitate myself at all.”
In his most private moments, Hubbard wrote bizarre statements to himself in notebooks that would surface four decades later in Los Angeles Superior Court.
“All men are your slaves,” he wrote in one.
“You can be merciless whenever your will is crossed and you have the right to be merciless,” he wrote in another.
Hubbard was troubled, restless and adrift in those little known years of his life. But he never lost confidence in his ability as a writer. He had made a living with words in the past and he could do it again.
Before the financial and emotional problems that consumed him in the 1940s, Hubbard had achieved moderate success writing for a variety of dime-store pulp magazines. He specialized in shoot’em-up adventures, Westerns, mysteries, war stories and science fiction.
His output, if not the writing itself, was spectacular. Using such pseudonyms as Winchester Remington Colt and Rene LaFayette, he sometimes filled up entire issues virtually by himself. Hubbard’s life then was like a page from one of his adventure stories. He panned for gold in Puerto Rico and charted waterways in Alaska. He was a master sailor and glider pilot, with a reported penchant for eye-catching maneuvers.
Although Hubbard’s health and writing career foundered after the war, he remained a virtual factory of ideas. And his biggest was about to be born.
Hubbard had long been fascinated with mental phenomena and the mysteries of life.
He was an expert in hypnotism. During a 1948 gathering of science fiction buffs in Los Angeles, he hypnotized many of those in attendance, convincing one young man that he was cradling a tiny kangaroo in his hands.
Hubbard sometimes spoke of having visions.
His former literary agent, Ackerman, said Hubbard once told of dying on an operating table. And here, according to Ackerman, is what Hubbard said followed:
“He arose in spirit form and looked at the body he no longer inhabited….
In the distance he saw a great ornate gate…. The gate opened of its own accord and he drifted through. There, spread out, was an intellectual smorgasbord, the answers to everything that ever puzzled the mind of man. He was absorbing all this fantabulous information…. Then he felt like a long umbilical cord pulling him back. And a voice was saying,
‘No, not yet.’ ”
Hubbard, according to Ackerman, said he returned to life and feverishly wrote his recollections. He said Hubbard later tried to sell the manuscript but failed, claiming that “whoever read it
(a) went insane, or
(b) committed suicide.”
Hubbard’s intense curiosity about the mind’s power led him into a friendship in 1946 with rocket fuel scientist John Whiteside Parsons.
Parsons was a protege of British satanist Aleister Crowley and leader of a black magic group modeled after Crowley’s infamous occult lodge in England.
Hubbard also admired Crowley, and in a 1952 lecture described him as “my very good friend.”
Parsons and Hubbard lived in an aging mansion on South Orange Grove Avenue in Pasadena. The estate was home to an odd mix of Bohemian artists, writers, scientists and occultists. A small domed temple supported by six stone columns stood in the back yard.
Hubbard met his second wife, Sara Northrup, at the mansion. Although she was Parsons’ lover at the time, Hubbard was undeterred. He married Northrup before divorcing his first wife.
Long before the 1960s counterculture, some residents of the estate smoked marijuana and embraced a philosophy of promiscuous, ritualistic sex.
“The neighbors began protesting when the rituals called for a naked pregnant woman to jump nine times through fire in the yard,” recalled science fiction author L. Sprague de Camp, who knew both Hubbard and Parsons.
Crowley biographers have written that Parsons and Hubbard practiced “sex magic.” As the biographers tell it, a robed Hubbard chanted incantations while Parsons and his wife-to-be, Cameron, engaged in sexual intercourse intended to produce a child with superior intellect and powers. The ceremony was said to span 11 consecutive nights.
Hubbard and Parsons finally had a falling out over a sailboat sales venture that ended in a court dispute between the two.
In later years, Hubbard tried to distance himself from his embarrassing association with Parsons, who was a founder of a government rocket project at California Institute of Technology that later evolved into the famed Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Parsons died in 1952 when a chemical explosion ripped through his garage lab.
Hubbard insisted that he had been working undercover for Naval Intelligence to break up black magic in America and to investigate links between the occultists and prominent scientists at the Parsons mansion.
Hubbard said the mission was so successful that the house was razed and the black magic group was dispersed.
But Parsons’ widow, Cameron, disputed Hubbard’s account in a brief interview with The Times. She said the two men “liked each other very much” and “felt they were ushering in a force that was going to change things.”
In early 1950, Hubbard published an intriguing article in a 25-cent magazine called Astounding Science Fiction. In it, he said that he had uncovered the source of man’s problems.
The article grew into a book, written in one draft in just 30 days and entitled “Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health.” It would become the most important book of Hubbard’s life.
The book’s introduction declared that Hubbard had invented a new “mental science,” a feat more important perhaps than “the invention of the wheel, the control of fire, the development of mathematics.”
Hubbard himself said he had uncovered the source of, and the cure for, virtually every ailment known to man. Dianetics, he said, could restore withered limbs, mend broken bones, erase the wrinkles of age and dramatically increase intelligence.
Not surprisingly, the nation’s mental health professionals were unimpressed.
Famed psychoanalyst Rollo May voiced the sentiments of many when he wrote in the New York Times that “books like this do harm by their grandiose promises to troubled persons and by their oversimplification of human psychological problems.”
But “Dianetics” was an instant bestseller when it hit the stands in May, 1950, and made Hubbard an overnight celebrity. Arthur Ceppos, who published the book, said Hubbard spent his first royalties on a luxury Lincoln.
Hubbard had tapped the public’s growing fascination with psychotherapy, then largely accessible only to the affluent. “Dianetics,” in fact, was popularly dubbed “the poor man’s psychotherapy” because it could be practiced among friends for free.
In the book, Hubbard claimed to have discovered the previously unknown “reactive mind,” a depository for emotionally or physically painful events in a person’s life. These traumatic experiences, called “engrams,” cause a variety of psychosomatic illnesses, including migraine headaches, ulcers, allergies, arthritis, poor vision and the common cold, Hubbard said.
The goal of dianetics, Hubbard said, is to purge these painful experiences and create a “clear” individual who is able to realize his or her full potential.
Catapulted from obscurity, Hubbard decided in the summer of 1950 to prove in a big way that his new “science” was for real.
He appeared before a crowd of thousands at the Shrine Auditorium to unveil the “world’s first clear,” a person he said had achieved a perfect memory. Journalists from numerous newspapers and magazines were there to document the event.
He placed on display one Sonya Bianca, a young Boston physics major. But when Hubbard allowed the audience to question her, she performed dismally.
Someone, for example, told Hubbard to turn his back while the girl was asked to describe the color of his tie. There was silence. The world’s first clear drew a blank.
“It was a tremendous embarrassment for Hubbard and his friends at the time,” recalled Arthur Jean Cox, a science fiction buff who attended the presentation.
More problems were on the way for the man whose book promised miracles but whose own life would move from one crisis to the next until his death.
He became embroiled, for instance, in a nasty divorce and child custody battle that raised embarrassing questions about his mental stability.
His wife, Sara Northrup Hubbard, accused him of subjecting her to “scientific torture experiments” and of suffering from “paranoid schizophrenia” — allegations that she would later retract in a signed statement but that would find their way into government files and continue to haunt Hubbard.
She said in her suit that Hubbard had deprived her of sleep, beaten her and suggested that she kill herself, “as divorce would hurt his reputation.”
During the legal proceedings, Sara placed in the court record a letter she had received from Hubbard’s first wife.
“Ron is not normal,” it said. “I had hoped you could straighten him out. Your charges probably sound fantastic to the average person — but I’ve been through it — the beatings, threats on my life, all the sadistic traits which you charge — 12 years of it.”
At one point in the marital dispute with Sara, Hubbard spirited their 1-year-old daughter, Alexis, to Cuba. From there, he wrote to Sara:
“I have been in the Cuban military hospital, and am being transferred to to the United States as a classified scientist immune from interference of all kinds…. My right side is paralyzed and getting more so.
“I hope my heart lasts. I may live a long time and again I may not. But Dianetics will last ten thousand years — for the Army and Navy have it now.”
Hubbard, who had earlier accused his wife of infidelity and said she suffered brain damage, closed his letter by threatening to cut his infant daughter from his will.
“Alexis will get a fortune unless she goes to you, as she then would get nothing,” he wrote.
He also wrote a letter to the FBI at the height of the Red Scare accusing Sara of possibly being a Communist, along with others whom he said had infiltrated his dianetics movement.
The FBI, after interviewing Hubbard, dismissed him as a “mental case.”
In one seven-page missive to the Department of Justice in 1951, he linked Sara to alleged physical assaults on him. He said that on two separate occasions he was punched in his sleep by unidentified intruders.
And then came the third attack.
“I was in my apartment on February 23rd, about two or three o’clock in the morning when the apartment was entered, I was knocked out, had a needle thrust into my heart to give it a jet of air to produce ‘coronary thrombosis’ and was given an electric shock with a 110 volt current. This is all very blurred to me. I had no witnesses. But only one person had another key to that apartment and that was Sara.”
After months of sniping at each other — and a counter divorce suit by Hubbard in which he accused his wife of “gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty” — the couple ended their stormy marriage, with Sara obtaining custody of the child. In later years, Hubbard would deny fathering the girl and, as threatened, did not leave her a cent.
Not only was Hubbard’s domestic life a shambles in 1951, his once-thriving self-help movement was crumbling as public interest in his theories waned.
The foundations Hubbard had established to teach dianetics were in financial ruin and his book had disappeared from The New York Times bestseller list.
But the resilient self-promoter came up with something new. He called it Scientology, and his metamorphosis from pop therapist to religious leader was under way.
Scientology essentially gave a new twist to the Dianetics notion of painful experiences that lodge in the “reactive mind.” In Scientology, Hubbard held that memories of such experiences also collect in a person’s soul and date back to past lives.
For many of Hubbard’s early followers, Scientology was not believable, and they broke with him. But others would soon take their place, conferring upon Hubbard an almost saintly status.
But as Hubbard’s renown and prosperity grew in the 1960s, so, too, did the questions surrounding his finances and teachings. He was accused by various governments — including the U.S. — of quackery, of brainwashing, of bilking the gullible through high-pressure sales techniques.
In 1967, Hubbard took several hundred of his followers to sea to escape the spreading hostility. But they found only temporary safe harbor from what they believed had become an international conspiracy to persecute them.
Their three ships, led by a converted cattle ferry dubbed the “Apollo,” were bounced from port to port in the Mediterranean and Caribbean by governments that wrongly suspected the American skipper and his secretive, clean-cut crew of being CIA operatives.
While anchored at the Portuguese island of Madeira, they were stoned by townsfolk carrying torches and chanting anti-CIA slogans.
“They (were) throwing Molotov cocktails onto the boat but they weren’t lit,” a crew member recalled. “Fortunately, this was not an experienced mob.”
The years at sea were a watershed for Hubbard and Scientology. He instituted a Navy-style command structure that is evident today in the military dress and snap-to behavior of the organization’s staff members.
Hubbard named himself the “Commodore,” and subordinates followed his orders like Annapolis midshipmen.
As former Scientology ship officer Hana Eltringham Whitfield put it: “Scientologists on the whole thought that Hubbard was like a god, that he could command the waves to do what he wanted, that he was totally in control of his life and consequences of his actions.”
(Sunday, 24 June 1990, page A1:1)Part 1: Chapter One:
Scientology inspired shirts or L Ron Hubbard inspired clothing from pictures and images to the concepts of Scientologists terminology by LRH. Here we see a new line of Scientology Shirts by the Billboardbabes.
Scientology have some special terminology
Suppressive Person or SP is one. Here on a Shirt from Billboardbabes with the text SP & Free.
The Billboard babes appears to consist of the twitter profiles: @UltioetVeritas @KatLaRue7 @randomname7700
Potential Trouble Source PTS
Scientology Shirt by the billboardbabes. The Scientollogy themes are Human Trafficking, Fraud, where is Shelly Miscavige and the famous actions of Disconnection. Design by @azhlynne.