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{{Short description|American writer and Scientology founder (1911–1986)}} | |||
{{Infobox Celebrity | |||
{{pp-semi-indef}} | |||
| name = Lafayette Ronald Hubbard | |||
{{pp-move}} | |||
| bgcolour = #f0de31 | |||
{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2024}} | |||
| image = L Ron Hubbard.jpg | |||
{{Use American English|date=July 2023}} | |||
| image_size = 140px | |||
{{Infobox person | |||
| caption = L. Ron Hubbard | |||
| name = L. Ron Hubbard | |||
| birth_date = {{birth date|1911|3|13}} | |||
| other_names = LRH | |||
| birth_place = ], <br>{{USA}} | |||
| image = L. Ron Hubbard in 1950.jpg | |||
| death_date = {{death date and age|1986|1|24|1911|3|13}} | |||
| landscape = | |||
| death_place = ], <br>{{USA}} | |||
| caption = Hubbard in 1950 | |||
| occupation = ] Author<br>Founder, ] | |||
| birth_name = Lafayette Ronald Hubbard | |||
| hair color = ] | |||
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1911|3|13|mf=y}} | |||
| spouse = ]<br>]<br>] | |||
| |
| birth_place = ], U.S. | ||
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1986|1|24|1911|3|13|mf=y}} | |||
| networth = > $200,000,000 in 1982<ref name="200mil">{{cite news | first = Richard | last = Behar | authorlink = Richard Behar | title = The prophet and profits of Scientology | url = | work = ] | publisher = ] | date = ] | accessdate = | quote = Altogether, FORBES can total up at least $200 million gathered in Hubbard's name through 1982. There may well have been much more.}}</ref> | |||
| death_place = ], U.S. | |||
| spouse = ]<br>]<br>] | |||
| education = ] (dropped out) | |||
| children = 7 | |||
| occupation = {{flatlist| | |||
| website = | |||
* Author | |||
| footnotes = | |||
}} | }} | ||
| known_for = Inventor of ] | |||
'''Lafayette Ronald Hubbard''' (], ] – ], ]), better known as '''L. Ron Hubbard''', was the creator of ], and founder of the ]. He was also an ] author in numerous ] ] genres<ref name="Pulpateer">{{cite web||url=http://www.lronhubbard.org/eng/Literary/page76.htm |title=Twilight of the pulps |publisher=Church of Scientology International |accessdate=2006-07-26 }}</ref><ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref> as well as a prolific writer of ]<ref></ref><ref></ref> works. | |||
| notable_works = {{plainlist| | |||
* '']'' (1950) | |||
* '']'' (1982) | |||
}} | |||
| criminal_charge = {{plainlist| | |||
* ] (<!-- in -->1948) | |||
* Fraud ('']'', 1978) | |||
}} | |||
| criminal_penalty = Fine of ]35,000 and four years in prison (unserved) | |||
| spouse = {{plainlist| | |||
* {{marriage|]|1933|1947|end=divorce}} | |||
* {{marriage|]|1946|1951|end=divorce}} | |||
* {{marriage|]|1952}} | |||
}} | |||
| children = 7, including ], ] and ] | |||
| signature = L. Ron Hubbard Signature.svg | |||
| signature_alt = | |||
| relations = ] (great-grandson) | |||
| module = {{Infobox military person | |||
| embed = yes | |||
| branch = ] | |||
| serviceyears = {{plainlist| | |||
* 1941–1945 (Active) | |||
* 1945–1950 (Reserve) | |||
}} | |||
| rank = ] | |||
| commands = {{USS|YP-422}} and {{USS|PC-815}} | |||
| battles = {{flatlist|* World War II | |||
**]}} | |||
| awards = {{Indented plainlist| | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
}} | |||
}} | |||
}} | |||
{{L. Ron Hubbard life sidebar}} | |||
{{Scientology sidebar}} | |||
'''Lafayette Ronald Hubbard''' (March 13, 1911 – January 24, 1986) was an American author and the founder of ]. A prolific writer of ] and ] in his early career, in 1950 he authored '']'' and established organizations to promote and practice ] techniques. Hubbard created ] in 1952 after losing the intellectual rights to his literature on Dianetics in bankruptcy. He would lead the ]{{Spaced en dash}}variously described as a ],<ref>{{Cite book |last=Kent |first=Stephen A. |author-link=Stephen A. Kent |title=Misunderstanding Cults: Searching for Objectivity in a Controversial Field |title-link=Misunderstanding Cults |publisher=] |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-8020-8188-9 |editor-last=Zablocki |editor-first=Benjamin |editor-link=Benjamin Zablocki |pages=349–358 |language=en |chapter=Brainwashing Programs in The Family/Children of God and Scientology |editor-last2=Robbins |editor-first2=Thomas |editor-link2=Thomas Robbins (sociologist)}}</ref> a ], or a business{{Spaced en dash}}until his death in 1986. | |||
Hubbard was a highly controversial public figure during his lifetime. Many details of his life remain disputed, with official and unofficial biographies depicting Hubbard in radically different ways. Official Scientology biographies present him in ] terms as "larger than life, attracted to people, liked by people, dynamic, charismatic and immensely capable in two dozen fields"<ref name="ltl"> from www.scientology.org biography.</ref><ref name="LRHsite"> (accessed 4/15/06)</ref>. In contrast, unofficial biographies (some of which are by former Scientologists) paint a much less flattering picture which often contradicts official Church accounts<ref>Corydon, Bent '''' (free online version) also by Barricade Books; Revised edition (25 July, 1992) ISBN 0-942637-57-7</ref><ref name="Blue Sky">{{cite book | last = Atack | first = Jon | authorlink = Jon Atack | year = 1990 | url = http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Library/Shelf/atack/index.html | title = A Piece of Blue Sky | publisher = Carol Publishing Group | location = New York, NY|id = ISBN 0-8184-0499-X}}</ref>. One of Hubbard's unofficial biographers, ], describes him as "one of the most successful and colourful confidence tricksters of the twentieth century" and comments that "every biography of Hubbard published by the church is interwoven with lies, half-truths and ludicrous embellishments."<ref name="Bare-faced">Miller, Russell. '''' (free online version). Michael Joseph (1987) ISBN 0-7181-2764-1</ref> | |||
Born in ], in 1911, Hubbard spent much of his childhood in ]. While his father was posted to the U.S. naval base on ] in the late 1920s, Hubbard traveled to Asia and the South Pacific. In 1930, Hubbard enrolled at ] to study civil engineering but dropped out in his second year. He began his career as an author of pulp fiction and married ], who shared his interest in aviation. | |||
==Parents and early life== | |||
Hubbard was an officer in the Navy during ], where he briefly commanded two ships but was removed from command both times. The last few months of his active service were spent in a hospital, being treated for a variety of complaints. In 1953, the first churches of Scientology were founded by Hubbard. In 1954 a Scientology church in Los Angeles was founded, which became the Church of Scientology International. Hubbard added organizational management strategies, principles of ], a theory of communication and prevention strategies for healthy living to the teachings of Scientology.<ref>{{Cite journal | doi=10.1525/nr.2017.20.4.5 | title=Scientology: From the Edges to the Core | date=2017 | last1=Dericquebourg | first1=Régis | journal=Nova Religio | volume=20 | issue=4 | pages=5–12 |doi-access=free | issn=1092-6690 }}</ref> As Scientology came under increasing media attention and ] in a number of countries during the late 1960s and early 1970s, Hubbard spent much of his time at sea as "]" of the ], a private, quasi-] Scientologist fleet. | |||
L. Ron Hubbard was born in 1911 in ] to Ledora May Hubbard (née Waterbury) and Harry Ross Hubbard. His father was born Henry August Wilson in ], but was ]ed as an infant and adopted by the Hubbards, a farming family from ]. Harry joined the ] in ], leaving the service in ], then re-enlisted in ] when the United States ]. He served in the Navy until 1946, reaching the rank of ] in ].<ref name="Bare-faced" /><!-- p. 70 --> Ledora was a ] who had trained to become a ] teacher and married Harry in 1909. | |||
Hubbard returned to the United States in 1975 and went into seclusion in the California desert after an ] of ]. In 1978, Hubbard was convicted of fraud after he was tried '']'' by France. In the same year, 11 high-ranking members of Scientology were indicted on 28 charges for their role in the Church's ], a systematic program of espionage against the United States government. One of the indicted was Hubbard's wife ]; he himself was named an ]. Hubbard spent the remaining years of his life in seclusion, attended to by a small group of ]. | |||
The Hubbards moved first to ] and then to ], the state capital. Church biographies have stated that during this period Hubbard became the protegé of "Old Tom, a ] Indian medicine man ... passe on much of the tribal lore to his young friend" and that at the age of four, he was "honored with the status of blood brother of the Blackfeet in a ceremony that is still recalled by tribal elders."<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.scientology.org/html/en_US/l-ron-hubbard/chronicle/index.html | title = L. Ron Hubbard - A Chronicle - 1911-1917 | accessdate = 2007-05-12 | publisher = ]}}</ref> Hubbard's interest in the Blackfeet took literary form in his 1937 novel, "Buckskin Brigades", a "novel of one man's courageous struggle to save the Blackfoot Nation from destruction by the Northwestern fur traders".<ref>L. Ron Hubbard, ''Buckskin Brigades'',1937 republished 1977, ISBN 0-91797201-5</ref> In 1985, members of Blackfeet Nation, Montana, acknowledged L. Ron Hubbard's "seventieth anniversary of . . . becoming a blood brother of the Blackfeet Nation".{{Fact|date=October 2007}} Contemporary records do not record the existence of "Old Tom". The white Blackfeet historian Hugh Dempsey has commented that the act of ]hood was "never done among the Blackfeet", and Blackfeet Nation officials have disavowed attempts to "re-establish" Hubbard as a "blood brother" of the Blackfeet.<ref name="LATstaking">{{cite web | url = http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Library/Shelf/la90/la90-1e.html | title = Staking a Claim to Blood Brotherhood | accessdate = 2007-05-12 | author = Joel Sappell | coauthors = Robert W. Welkos | date = ] | work = The Scientology Story | publisher = ] | pages = A38:5}}</ref> Former vice president of the tribe's executive committee, John Yellow Kidney has also said of the letter claiming to re-establish Hubbard as a blood brother, "You should not give it (the document) very much credibility, I don't."<ref name="LATstaking"/> | |||
Following his 1986 death, Scientology leaders announced that Hubbard's body had become an impediment to his work and that he had decided to "drop his body" to continue his research on another plane of existence. The Church of Scientology describes Hubbard in ] terms, though many of his autobiographical statements were fictitious. Sociologist ] has observed that Hubbard "likely presented a ] known as ]."<ref>Lane, J., & Kent, S. A. (2008). "". Trans. as Politiques de rage et Narcissisme Malin. ''Criminologie'', 41(2), 117-55.</ref> | |||
Harry's naval career led to the family moving several more times, first to ], then to ] followed by ], ] and finally to ]. During this period L. Ron Hubbard joined the ] and became an ] at the age of 13. Church biographies routinely state that he was "the nation's youngest Eagle Scout."<ref name="chronicle01">{{cite web | url = http://www.scientology.org/en_US/l-ron-hubbard/chronicle/pg001.html | title = L. Ron Hubbard - A Chronicle - 1918-1921 | accessdate = 2007-05-12 | publisher = ]}}</ref> which is based on a March 25, 1930, report of the "Evening Star"}<ref>Evening Star, 25 March 1930, title "Oratory Contest Winners in six schools chosen - Victor at Woodward is Ronald Hubbard", excerpt "Ronald Hubbard, 19 years old, at one time the youngest Eagle Scout in America, was the winner of the contest at the Woodward School for Boys..."</ref> and Hubbards Boy Scout Diary of 25 March 1924{{Fact} According to the Boy Scouts of America, their documents at the time were only kept in alphabetical order with no reference to their ages — thus there was no way of telling who was the youngest.<ref name="Bare-faced" /><!-- p. 25 --> | |||
==Life== | |||
Between ] and ], Hubbard traveled twice to the ] to visit his parents during his father's posting to the ] base on ]. Church biographies published from the ] to the ] stated that with "the financial support of his wealthy grandfather" Hubbard journeyed throughout ], "studying with holy men" in northern ], ] and ].<ref name="certainty">"L. Ron Hubbard," Certainty, vol. 3 no. 2, Hubbard Association of Scientologists International, 1956</ref><ref name="mit">"L. Ron Hubbard - Explorer of Two Realms", in Hubbard, ''Mission into Time'', Advanced Organization Saint Hill Denmark, 1973</ref> Hubbard said that on several occasions he visited India.<ref>See ''inter alia'' Hubbard, "Case Analysis - Rock Hunting - Q&A Period", lecture of 4 August 1958: "I got over to Asia and India..."; Hubbard, "Universes," lecture of 6 April 1954: "But in the interim I was in India..."; Hubbard, "Mechanics of the Mind," lecture of 10 January 1953: "I struggled along in north China, India and was back in the States and then back out there again."</ref> However, the Church of Scientology's current official account makes no mention of India or Tibet,<ref>. Accessed 28 Jan 2007</ref> and according to ] "a flight change at ] airport in 1959 seems to have been his only direct contact with the land of ]ntic philosophy."<ref name="Blue Sky" /><!-- p. 57 --> | |||
===Before Dianetics=== | |||
{{main|Life of L. Ron Hubbard from 1911 to 1950}} | |||
{{see also|Scientology and psychiatry# Hubbard's early encounters with psychiatry}} | |||
Lafayette Ronald Hubbard was born on March 13, 1911,<ref name="Hall">Hall, Timothy L. ''American religious leaders'', p. 175. New York: Infobase Publishing, 2003. {{ISBN|978-0-8160-4534-1}}</ref> the only child of Ledora May Waterbury (1885–1959), who had trained as a teacher, and Harry Ross Hubbard (1886–1975), a low-ranking United States Navy officer.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=11}}{{sfn|Christensen|2004|p=236}} Like many military families of the era, the Hubbards repeatedly relocated around the United States and overseas.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=23}} After moving to ], they settled in Helena in 1913.{{sfn|Christensen|2004|p=237}} Hubbard's father rejoined the Navy in April 1917, during ], while his mother worked as a clerk for the state government.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=19}} After his father was posted to Guam, Hubbard and his mother traveled there with brief stop-overs in a couple of Chinese ports.{{sfn|Atack|1990|pp=53–54}}{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=31}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Lewis |first=James R. |title=Scientology |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2009 |isbn=978-0195331493 |location=New York, NY}}</ref> In high school, Hubbard contributed to the school paper,{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=34}}<ref>{{Cite book |editor-last=Clarke |editor-first=Peter |title=Encyclopedia of New Religious Movements |publisher=Routledge |year=2004 |isbn=9781134499700 |page=281}}</ref> but was dropped from enrollment due to failing grades.<ref name="ReferenceA">{{Cite web |last=Ortega |first=Tony |author-link=Tony Ortega |date=February 24, 2015 |title=New government release contains a surprise: L. Ron Hubbard flunked out of high school, too! |url=https://tonyortega.org/2015/02/24/new-government-release-contains-a-surprise-l-ron-hubbard-flunked-out-of-high-school-too/}}</ref> After he failed the ] entrance examination,<ref>{{Cite web |last=Wakefield |first=Margery |title=Understanding Scientology / Chapter 2: L. Ron Hubbard – Messiah? Or Madman? |url=http://www.religio.de/books/wakefield/us-02.html |access-date=July 25, 2016}}</ref> Hubbard was enrolled in a Virginia Preparatory School to prepare him for a second attempt.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=45}} However, after complaining of eye strain, Hubbard was diagnosed with ], precluding any future enrollment in the Naval Academy.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=46}} As an adult, Hubbard would privately write to himself that his eyes had gone bad when he "used them as an excuse to escape the naval academy".{{sfn|Wright|2013|pp=53–54}} | |||
Hubbard was sent to the Woodward School in D.C., as graduates qualified for admission to ] without having to take the entrance exam. Hubbard graduated in June 1930 and entered GWU.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=47}}<ref name="ReferenceA"/>{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=59}}{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=47}} Academically, Hubbard did poorly and was repeatedly warned about bad grades,<ref name="ReferenceA"/> but he contributed to the student newspaper and was active in the glider club.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=47}} In 1932, Hubbard organized a student trip to the Caribbean, but amid multiple misfortunes and insufficient funding, the passengers took to burning Hubbard in effigy and the trip was canceled by the ship's owners. Hubbard did not return to GWU the following year.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=63}} | |||
] | |||
{{multiple image|perrow = 1|total_width=250 | |||
Hubbard sometimes displayed attitudes that were at odds with the picture his followers try to present of him. For instance, during his visit to China at the age of seventeen, he made diary entries such as: "As a ] can not live up to a thing, he always drags it down."<ref name="Bare-faced" /><!-- p. 41 --> and "They smell of all the baths they didnt {{sic}} take. The trouble with China is, there are too many chinks here."<ref name="Bare-faced" /><!--p. 42--><ref>, 17-year old L. Ron Hubbard, Journal entries in 1928</ref> Similarly, Hubbard described the Tibetan Buddhist temples as "miserably cold and very shabby . . . The people worshiping have voices like bull-frogs and beat a drum and play a brass horn to accompany their singing (?)"<ref name="Bare-faced"/><!--p. 42--> and called them "very odd and heathenish".<ref name="MBTR"/> He also wrote about ] people in ''Scientology: Fundamentals of Thought'' : "Unlike the yellow and brown people, the white does not usually believe he can get attention from matter or objects. The yellow and brown believe for the most part ... that rocks, trees, walls, etc., can give them attention"<ref>Hubbard, L. Ron, ''Scientology: Fundamentals of Thought''. Copenhagen: New Era Publications, 1997. ISBN 1900944979, p. 24</ref> and "...so we see the African tribesman, with his complete contempt for the truth, and his emphasis on brutality and savagery..."<ref>Hubbard, L. Ron, ''Scientology: Fundamentals of Thought''. Copenhagen: New Era Publications, 1997. ISBN 1900944979, p. 77</ref> Interestingly, these sentences have been rewritten in the 2007 edition of the book. | |||
| image1 = Center building at Saint Elizabeths, National Photo Company, circa 1909-1932.jpg | |||
| image2 = Chestnut Lodge Postcard 1909.jpg | |||
| footer = Hubbard spoke of interactions with psychiatrists at both St. Elizabeth's psychiatric hospital in D.C. (top) and nearby Chestnut Lodge Sanitarium (bottom).}} | |||
For much of the 1920s and 1930s, Hubbard lived in Washington D.C., and he would later claim to have interacted with multiple ]s in the city.<ref>1922–1927,1929–1932</ref> Hubbard described encounters in 1923 and 1930 with navy psychiatrist Joseph Thompson.<ref>The Purpose of Human Evaluation (3) (1951)</ref><ref name="AtackOrigin">{{Cite web |last1=Atack |first1=Jon |title=Possible origins for Dianetics and Scientology |url=https://www.spaink.net/cos/essays/atack_origin.html |quote="Through his friendship I attended many lectures given at Naval hospitals and generally became conversant with ] as it had been exported from Austria by Freud" LRH's autobiographical notes for Peter Tompkins. Exhibit 500-I in CSI v. Armstrong, pp.7-8}}</ref> Thompson was controversial within the American psychiatric community for his support of ], the practice of ] by those without medical degrees. Hubbard also recalled interacting with ], supervisor of the D.C. psychiatric hospital ].<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.carolineletkeman.org/c/archives/5182 |via=carolineletkeman.org |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211205233336/http://www.carolineletkeman.org/c/archives/5182 |archive-date=December 5, 2021 |title=Lecture: The Purpose of Human Evaluation (1) |author=L. Ron Hubbard |date=August 13, 1951}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.carolineletkeman.org/c/archives/7398 |via=carolineletkeman.org |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211206000935/http://www.carolineletkeman.org/c/archives/7398 |archive-date=December 6, 2021 |title=Lecture: Know to Sex Scale: The Mind and the Tone Scale |author=L. Ron Hubbard |date=June 4, 1954}}</ref><ref name="Hubbard, L. R. 1952">Hubbard, L. R. (February 6, 1952). Dianetics: The Modern Miracle. LRH Recorded Lectures</ref> According to Hubbard, both White and Thompson had regarded his athleticism and lack of interest in psychology as signs of a good prognosis.<ref>"The… it was an interesting thing, for instance, to William Allen White. And Commander Thompson. Both of them, where I was concerned, that I wasn't very interested in sitting around figuring about this stuff and didn't seem to be terribly interested in the insane." - Lecture: "The Mind and the Tone Scale", 1954</ref> Hubbard later claimed to have been trained by both Thompson and White.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.carolineletkeman.org/c/archives/5169 | title=Letter: Scientology executive John Galusha to FBI |date=June 12, 1954 |website=Refund and Reparation | access-date=July 26, 2023 | archive-date=November 29, 2021 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211129201027/http://www.carolineletkeman.org/c/archives/5169 | url-status=dead }}</ref> Hubbard also discussed his interactions at ], a D.C.-area facility specializing in ], repeatedly complaining that their staff misdiagnosed an unnamed individual with the condition: | |||
{{External media | |||
|video1= on schizophrenia and his interactions at Chestnut Lodge | |||
}} | |||
{{blockquote|There's a place by the name of Walnut Lodge... They don't see anything humorous in that, by the way... They sent three people to see me and every one of them was under treatment—and this was their staff! But anyway, very good people there, I'm sure... Didn't happen to meet any. Have some fine patients though! Anyway, they treat only schizophrenia. And so they take only schizophrenics. Now how do they get only schizophrenics? Well, anybody sent to Walnut Lodge is a classified schizophrenic. And they take somebody who is a ] unclassified or a more modern definition, a ] and they take him from ] and they take him over to Walnut Lodge and he goes onto the books as a schizophrenic. Why? Because Walnut Lodge takes only schizophrenics.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://carolineletkeman.org/dsp/1952/12/04/lecture-the-logics-methods-of-thinking-02/ |title = Lecture: The Logics Methods of Thinking (2) – Decoding Scientology Propaganda}}</ref>}} | |||
====Pre-war fiction==== | |||
While such attitudes might not be especially surprising for a white teenager born in ], they are vastly at odds with the stories he would later tell and his followers would repeat: "Among other wonders, Ron told of watching monks meditate for weeks on end, contemplating higher truths ... he took advantage of this unique opportunity to study Far Eastern culture. ... he befriended and learned ... a thoroughly insightful Beijing magician who represented the last of the line of Chinese magicians from the court of ]. ... Old Mayo was also well versed in China’s ancient wisdom that had been handed down from generation to generation. Ron passed many evenings in the company of such wise men, eagerly absorbing their words ... he closely examined the surrounding culture. In addition to the local Tartar tribes, he spent time with nomadic bandits originally from ] ... hese sojourns in Asia and the Pacific islands had a profound effect, giving Ron a subjective understanding of ] ... the world itself was his classroom, and he studied in it voraciously, recording what he saw and learned in his ever-present diaries, which he carefully preserved for future reference."<ref name="WiS98">{{cite book | author = Compiled by staff of the Church of Scientology International | year = 1998 | title = What is Scientology? | edition=1998 | publisher = Bridge Publications, Inc. | location = Los Angeles, California | id = ISBN 1-57318-122-6}}</ref><!--p.30-32--><ref>{{cite web| url=http://lron.hubbard.org/pg003.html |title=1923-1929: On the road to discovery |work=L. Ron Hubbard: Shaping the 21st Century with Solutions for a Better World |pages=1-2 |publisher=Church of Scientology International |accessdate=2006-06-18 }}</ref> Hubbard said that he was made a lama priest himself by Old Mayo.<ref name="MBTR"/> Hubbard's "ever-present diaries" were introduced into evidence in ]; they make no mention of Old Mayo the Beijing magician or nomad bandits and no reflection on Eastern philosophy.<ref name="Blue Sky"/><!--Part 2, Ch. 2: Hubbard in the East--> Similarly, L. Ron Hubbard expressed support for creating ]: "Having viewed slum clearance projects in most major cities of the world may I state that you have conceived and created in the Johannesburg townships what is probably the most impressive and adequate resettlement activity in existence."<ref>L. Ron Hubbard in a letter to ] dated ], ], in reference to the "Promotion of Black Self-Government Act" of (1958), reprinted in K.T.C. Kotzé, ''Inquiry Into the Effects and Practices of Scientology'', p. 59, Pretoria 1973; online copy of the Kotzé report available as and </ref> | |||
{{main|Written works of L. Ron Hubbard|Excalibur (L. Ron Hubbard)}} | |||
] | |||
In 1933, Hubbard renewed a relationship with a fellow glider pilot, ]{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=59}} and the two were quickly married on April 13.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=61}} | |||
While in Guam<ref name="aapsa" /> Hubbard was befriended by Commander ] (1874-1943), who had recently returned from Vienna and studies with ], and was stationed as a member of the Naval Medical Corps.<ref name="aapsa">, ''The Psychoanalytic Roots of Scientology'' by Silas L. Warner, M.D. Lightly edited by Ann-Louise S. Silver, M.D. The American Academy of Psychoanalysis, Presented at the winter meeting, New York City December 12, 1993</ref> Through the course of their friendship, the commander spent many an afternoon teaching Ron what he knew of the human mind. <ref name="chronicle01" /> Thompson is an important figure in official Church accounts of Hubbard's life and was referenced in many of Hubbard's works in support of his assertions of possessing expertise in Freudian ].<ref>See ''inter alia'' Hubbard, "Special Effect Cases, Anatomy Of - Q&A period", lecture of 23 July 1958: "I have made people feel better by using straight Freudian analysis the way I got it from Commander Thompson who imported it to the US Navy"; Hubbard, "Universes," lecture of 6 April 1954: "I was fortunate enough to be trained to some degree by Commander Thompson, who had himself studied with Sigmund Freud"; Hubbard, "The Story of Dianetics and Scientology", lecture of 18 October 1958: "When I was about twelve years old ... I met one of the great men of Freudian analysis - a Commander Thompson ... he started shoving my nose into an education in the field of the mind."</ref> | |||
The following year, she gave birth to a son who was named ], later nicknamed "Nibs".{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=64}} A second child, Katherine May, was born two years later.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=70}} The Hubbards lived for a while in ], but were chronically short of money. In the spring of 1936, they moved to ]. They lived there for a time with Hubbard's aunts and grandmother before finding a place of their own at nearby ]. According to one of his friends at the time, ], the Hubbards were "in fairly dire straits for money" but sustained themselves on the income from Hubbard's writing.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=74}}{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=62}} | |||
Hubbard began a writing career and tried to write for mainstream publications. Hubbard soon found his niche in the ], becoming a prolific and prominent writer in the medium. From 1934 until 1940, Hubbard produced hundreds of short stories and novels.<ref>{{Cite web |title=About L. Ron Hubbard — Master Storyteller |url=http://www.galaxypress.com/l-ron-hubbard |access-date=February 8, 2011 |publisher=Galaxy Press |url-status=deviated |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110711070539/http://www.galaxypress.com/l-ron-hubbard |archive-date=July 11, 2011 }}</ref> Hubbard is remembered for his "prodigious output" across a variety of genres, including adventure fiction, aviation, travel, mysteries, westerns, romance, and science fiction.<ref name="Frenschkowski">{{Cite journal |last=Frenschkowski |first=Marco |date=July 1999 |title=L. Ron Hubbard and Scientology: An annotated bibliographical survey of primary and selected secondary literature |url=https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/144316914.pdf|via=]|doi=10.17192/mjr.1999.4.3760|publisher=]|journal=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210427171605/https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/144316914.pdf|archive-date=April 27, 2021 |volume=4 |issue=1 |page=15 |url-status=live|access-date=May 13, 2015 |doi-access=free }}</ref> His first full-length novel, '']'', was published in 1937.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Staff |date=July 30, 1937 |title=Books Published Today |page=17 |work=] }}</ref> The novel told the story of "Yellow Hair", a white man adopted into the Blackfeet tribe, with promotional material claiming the author had been a "bloodbrother" of the Blackfeet. '']'' praised the book, writing "Mr. Hubbard has reversed a time-honored formula and has given a thriller to which, at the end of every chapter or so, another paleface bites the dust."<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wMAfAQAAMAAJ | title=The New York Times Book Review | date=July 1937 }}</ref> | |||
==Education== | |||
After studies at Swavely Preparatory School in Manassas, Virginia, and graduating from Woodward School for Boys in 1930, Hubbard enrolled at ] in September of 1930, where he began studying a major in ]. There he became one of eight assistant editors of the University newspaper ''"The University Hatchet"''<ref>"The University Hatchet" of George Washington University, Vol. 28 , No. 33, May 24, 1932, lists L. Ron Hubbard as "Assistant Editor"</ref><ref></ref> and was a member of several of the university's clubs and societies, including the Twentieth Marine Corps Reserve and the George Washington College Company.<ref name=bio77>7 April 1977 by Liz Gablehouse, Church of Scientology</ref> His grades were poor, and university records show that he attended for only two semesters after which he was placed on academic probation "for deficiency in scholarship" in September of 1931, leaving the university without a degree and "entitled to a statement of honorable dismissal." | |||
] | |||
Observers have questioned assertions that Hubbard and the Church of Scientology later made about his study at George Washington University. According to the Church's official account, "Here he studies engineering and atomic and molecular physics and embarks upon a personal search for answers to the human dilemma. His first experiment concerning the structure and function of the mind is carried out while at the university."<ref name="chronicle1930-1933" /> One of his classes was indeed among the nation's first schools offering curriculum in molecular and atomic physics, however he failed the course. Critics<ref name="SoS"> by Paulette Cooper, Actually his grades were appallingly low.{16} Although he did do well in his engineering and English courses, the man who frequently calls himself a nuclear physicist got a D in one physics course, an E in another, and in the atomic and molecular physics courses that he most often emphasizes (to the degree of thanking his instructors for it), he received an F.{17} With those grades, along with similar ones in mathematics, it is not surprising that Hubbard was placed on probation after his first year in college and didn't return for his second -- and of course never received the degrees that he claims he has.{18} </ref> and government reports<ref name="ARnuc"> BOARD OF INQUIRY INTO SCIENTOLOGY, The Anderson Report, 1963. One of the many claims made by Hubbard about himself, and oft repeated by his followers, is that he is a nuclear physicist, and his boast is that he was even one of the first nuclear physicists who, in 1932, were studying on lines which finally led to the atomic bomb.</ref> cite his poor performance when evaluating claims to have been a "nuclear physicist". The Church denies that he ever made that claim<ref name="BIO77P3">SO ED 879 INT Hubbard's Scientology Biography, circa 1977 Page 3 "Altogether he spent nearly a year at Oak Knoll, during which time he synthesized what he had learned of Eastern philosophy, his understanding of nuclear physics and his experiences among men. He says, 'I set out to find from nuclear physics and a knowledge of the physical universe, things entirely lacking in Asian philosophy.'"</ref><ref name="MBTR">{{cite news | first=Joel | last=Sappell | coauthors= Welkos, Robert W. | url=http://www.latimes.com/la-scientology062490,0,7104164,full.story | title=The Mind Behind The Religion | work=] | page=A1:1|date=] | accessdate=2006-07-30}}</ref> Hubbard asserted expertise in dealing with the problems posed by the effects of ] on the ] in the book "All About Radiation" (co-authored by Hubbard in 1957).<ref>Hubbard, ''All About Radiation''. Bridge Publications, 1990. ISBN 0884040623</ref> | |||
On New Year's Day, 1938, Hubbard reportedly underwent a dental procedure and reacted to the anesthetic gas used in the procedure.{{sfn|Wright|2013|p=29}} According to his account, this triggered a revelatory ]. Allegedly inspired by this experience, Hubbard composed a manuscript, which was never published, with working titles of ''The One Command'' and ''Excalibur''.<ref>{{Cite web |date=January 24, 2013 |title='Going Clear': A New Book Delves Into Scientology |url=https://www.npr.org/2013/01/24/170010096/going-clear-a-new-book-delves-into-scientology |publisher=NPR}}</ref><ref name="lermanet.com">{{Cite web |title=The History of Excalibur |url=http://www.lermanet.com/excalibur/ |website=lermanet.com}}</ref> Hubbard sent telegrams to several book publishers, but nobody bought the manuscript.<ref name="Burks">{{Cite web |last=Burks |first=Arthur J. |date=December 1961 |title=Yes, There Was A Book Called "Excalibur" By L. Ron Hubbard |url=http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Cowen/essays/burks.html |website=The Aberee |via=]}}</ref> Hubbard wrote to his wife: | |||
After leaving George Washington University, Hubbard worked as a writer and aviator.<ref>The Pilot, July 1934 issue, about Hubbard</ref><ref>The Sportsman Pilot, articles of L. Ron Hubbard, Issue January 1932, Issue May 1933, Issue October 1933</ref> | |||
In June 1932 Hubbard headed the "Caribbean Motion Picture Expedition", a two-and-a-half-month, 5,000-mile voyage aboard a chartered 200-foot, four-masted schooner called "Doris Hamlin" with over fifty fellow college students. Its purpose was to collect floral and reptile specimens for the University of Michigan and to film recreations of pirate activity and haunts. The voyage was a disappointment, with only three of the sixteen planned ports of call visited. Hubbard later called it "a two-bit expedition and a financial bust".<ref name="Blue Sky" /><ref name="chronicle1930-1933">"", Church of Scientology International. Accessed 18 April 2007</ref> | |||
{{blockquote|Sooner or later ''Excalibur'' will be published... I have high hopes of smashing my name into history so violently that it will take a legendary form even if all books are destroyed. That goal is the real goal as far as I am concerned.<ref name="Letter-1938">Letter from L. Ron Hubbard, October 1938, quoted in ], p. 81</ref>}} | |||
Hubbard's first wife was ] whom he married in 1933, and fathered two children; ], known as Ronald DeWolf, (1934 – 1991) and Katherine May (born in ]). They lived in ] and, during the late ], in ]. In a ] interview for ] that he later retracted, DeWolf said, "according to him and my mother", he was the result of a failed abortion and recalls at six years old seeing his father performing an abortion on his mother with a coat hanger. In the same interview, he said "Scientology is a power-and-money-and-intelligence-gathering game" and described his father as "only interested in money, sex, booze, and drugs."<ref>{{cite journal | |||
| year = 1983 | |||
| month = June | |||
| title = '''Inside The Church of Scientology: An Exclusive Interview with L. Ron Hubbard, Jr.''' | |||
| journal = Penthouse | |||
| accessdate = 2007-06-26 | |||
}}</ref> Later, in a sworn affidavit, DeWolf stated that he had | |||
"weaved" stories about his father's harassment of others, that the charge he had made about drugs was false, and that the Penthouse story was an example of statements that he deeply regretted and that had caused his father and him much pain.<ref name="retractn"></ref> | |||
Hubbard found greater success after being taken under the supervision of editor ], who published many of Hubbard's short stories and serialized ] in his magazines '']'' and '']''.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=86}}<ref name="Stableford">{{Cite book |last=Stableford |first=Brian |title=Historical Dictionary of Science Fiction Literature |publisher=Scarecrow Press |year=2004 |isbn=978-0-8108-4938-9 |location=Lanham, MD |page=164}}</ref> Hubbard's novel '']'' told the story of a low-ranking British army officer who rises to become dictator of the United Kingdom.<ref name="sf-encyclopedia.com">{{Cite web | url=https://sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/hubbard_l_ron | title=SFE: Hubbard, L Ron }}</ref> In July 1940, Campbell magazine ''Unknown'' published a psychological horror by Hubbard titled '']'' about an ethnologist who becomes paranoid that demons are out to get him—the work was well-received, drawing praise from ], ], and others. In November and December 1940, ''Unknown'' serialized Hubbard's novel '']'' about a pulp fiction writer whose friend becomes trapped inside one of his stories.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Kent |first1=Stephen A. |last2=Raine |first2=Susan |title=Scientology in Popular Culture: Influences and Struggles for Legitimacy |location=Santa Barbara, California |publisher=ABC-CLIO |year=2017 |isbn=978-1-4408-3249-9 }}</ref> | |||
Hubbard was accepted as a member of the ] on 19 February 1940 and carried one of its flags<ref name="ECflag"> Members may request to fly the flag on expeditions they conduct, it is returned to the club afterward.</ref> in May 1940 for his "Alaskan Radio Experimental Expedition". <ref></ref> In 1961 he carried the Explorers Club flag for his 'Ocean Archaeological Expedition' and in 1966 Hubbard was awarded custody of the Explorers Club flag for the 'Hubbard Geological Survey Expedition'.{{Fact|date=October 2007}} | |||
====Military career==== | |||
In December 1940 Hubbard was licensed by the United States Department of Commerce to "Master of Steam and Motor Vessels", valid first in the Pacific Ocean only and - from March 1941 on - in "Any Ocean."{{Fact|date=October 2007}} In the preface for his 1951 book '']'', Hubbard thanks "my instructors in atomic and molecular phenomena, mathematics and the humanities at George Washington University and at ]". Hubbard attended a four-month course in military government at the Naval Training School, located at Princeton during the ].<ref name="Bare-faced" /> This training was preparation of Naval and Marine officers for administrative duties in Japan during the Allied occupation, which Hubbard did not participate in. | |||
{{Main|Military career of L. Ron Hubbard}} | |||
] | |||
In 1941, Hubbard applied to join the ]. His application was accepted, and he was commissioned as a ] in the ] on July 19, 1941. By November, he was posted to New York for training as an intelligence officer.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=97}} The day after ], Hubbard was posted to the ] and departed the US bound for Australia. But while in Australia awaiting transport to the Philippines, Hubbard was suddenly ordered back to the United States after being accused by the US Naval Attaché to Australia of sending blockade-runner '']'' "three thousand miles out of her way".<ref name="Ron The War Hero, Chris Owen">Ron The War Hero, Chris Owen</ref><ref>Hubbard would that "for the next two or three years I'd run into officers, and they would say 'Hubbard? Hubbard? Hubbard? Are you the Hubbard that was in Australia?' And I'd say 'Yes.' And they's say 'Oh!' Kind of, you know, horrified, like they didn't know whether they should quite talk to me or not, you know? Terrible man." {{citation |title=The Key Words (Buttons) of Scientology Clearing (a lecture given on July 21, 1958).}}</ref> | |||
{{multiple image|perrow = 1|total_width=250 | |||
==Early fiction career== | |||
| image1 = Yp422 large.jpg | |||
| image2 = Uss pc-815 1.jpg | |||
| footer = Hubbard's first command was a yard patrol boat in Massachusetts (top), while his second was a West Coast sub-chaser (bottom). In both cases, Hubbard was relieved of command. | |||
}} | |||
In June 1942, Hubbard was given command of a patrol boat at the ], but he was relieved after the yard commandant wrote that Hubbard was "not temperamentally fitted for independent command".{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=74}} In 1943, Hubbard was given command of a submarine chaser, but only five hours into the shakedown cruise, Hubbard believed he had detected an enemy submarine. Hubbard and crew spent the next 68 hours engaged in combat. An investigation concluded that Hubbard had likely mistaken a "known magnetic deposit" for an enemy sub.<ref>"Battle Report – Submission of", A16-3(3)/PC815, Vice Adm. Frank Jack Fletcher, Commander NW Sea Frontier, June 8, 1943; </ref>{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=105}}{{r|mystique}} The following month, Hubbard unwittingly fired upon Mexican territory and was relieved of command.<ref name="mystique">{{Cite news |last1=Sappell |first1=Joel |last2=Welkos |first2=Robert W. |title=The Mind Behind the Religion : Chapter Two : Creating the Mystique : Hubbard's image was crafted of truth, distorted by myth. |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-06-24-mn-1012-story.html |access-date=July 25, 2022 |work=Los Angeles Times |date=June 24, 1990}}</ref> In 1944, Hubbard served aboard the {{USS|Algol|AKA-54|6}} before being transferred. The night before his departure, Hubbard reported the discovery of an attempted sabotage.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=81}}{{sfn|Miller|1987|pp=108–109}} | |||
In June 1942, Navy records indicate that Hubbard suffered "active conjunctivitis" and later "urethral discharges".{{Efn|Owen argues that Hubbard likely suffered from venereal disease, writing: "Sulfa drugs were used in treatment but in excess could cause bloody urine, something which Hubbard's shipmate Thomas Moulton saw him passing on at least one occasion. Hubbard himself later complained about the amount of sulfa he had been fed in the Navy. Former Scientology spokesman Robert Vaughn Young claims that Hubbard's private papers refer to him having caught gonorrhoea from a girlfriend named Fern, which forced him to secretly take sulfa."{{r|cowen}} }} After being relieved of command of the sub-chaser, Hubbard began reporting sick, citing a variety of ailments, including ulcers, malaria, and back pains. In July 1943, Hubbard was admitted to the San Diego naval hospital for observation—he would remain there for months.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=107}} Years later, Hubbard would privately write to himself: "Your stomach trouble you used as an excuse to keep the Navy from punishing you."{{sfn|Wright|2013|pp=53–54}} On April 9, 1945, Hubbard again reported sick and was re-admitted to ], Oakland.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=110}}{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=112}} He was discharged from the hospital on December 4, 1945.<ref name="cowen">{{Cite book |url=https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Cowen/warhero/crippled.htm |via=] |isbn=9781909269897 |first=Chris |last=Owen |date=2019 |title=Ron The War Hero: The True Story of L Ron Hubbard's Calamitous Military Career |chapter=Crippled and blinded|publisher=Silvertail Books }}</ref> | |||
Hubbard published stories, novellas in aviation, sports, ]s and even a screenplay "The Secret of Treasure Island".<ref name=bio77 /><ref name"IMDB"> Internet Movie Database</ref><ref name="Pulpateer"/> Literature critics have cited ''Final Blackout'', set in a war-ravaged future Europe, and ''Fear'', a psychological horror story, as the best examples of Hubbard's pulp fiction.<ref>N G Christakos, "Three By Thirteen: The Karl Edward Wagner Lists" in ''Black Prometheus: A Critical Study of Karl Edward Wagner'', ed. Benjamin Szumskyj, Gothic Press 2007</ref> Among his published stories were ''Sea Fangs'', ''The Carnival of Death'', ''Man-Killers of the Air'', and ''The Squad that Never Came Back''; using pseudonyms like Rene Lafayette, Legionnaire 148, Lieutenant Scott Morgan, Morgan de Wolf, Michael de Wolf, Michael Keith, Kurt von Rachen, Captain Charles Gordon, Legionnaire 14830, Elron, Bernard Hubbel, Captain B.A. Northrup, Joe Blitz and ] ] ].<ref name="Blue Sky">{{cite book | last = Atack | first = Jon | authorlink = Jon Atack | year = 1990 | title = A Piece of Blue Sky | publisher = Carol Publishing Group | location = New York, NY | id = ISBN 0-8184-0499-X}}</ref><!--page 63-65--> He became a well-known author in the ] and ] genres; he also published ] and adventure stories. His agent was well known science fiction agent and guru ]. | |||
====After the war==== | |||
Hubbard's ] novel ''Typewriter in the Sky'', published in 1940 in two installments in ]'s '']'' magazine, provides an amusing insight into the New York writing scene within which Hubbard worked. The novel is centered around a character named Horace Hackett, who is a hyper-productive, multi-genre ] desperately trying to finish his latest ] to an ever-approaching deadline while (unknown to him) his friend Mike de Wolf is trapped inside the potboiler's action. Two of Horace's author friends, in Hubbard's novel, are named Winchester Remington Colt and Rene Lafayette after Hubbard's own pseudonyms. | |||
{{main|Scientology and the occult|Affirmations (L. Ron Hubbard)|L. Ron Hubbard and psychiatry}} | |||
] | |||
After Hubbard chose to stay in California rather than return to his family in Washington state,{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=125}} he moved into the ] mansion of ], a rocket propulsion engineer and a leading follower of the English ] ].<ref name="Wright2011">{{Cite magazine |last=Wright |first=Lawrence |author-link=Lawrence Wright |date=February 14, 2011 |url=http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2011/02/14/110214fa_fact_wright?currentPage=all |title=The Apostate: Paul Haggis vs. the Church of Scientology |magazine=The New Yorker |access-date=February 8, 2011}}</ref>{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=113}} Hubbard befriended Parsons and soon became sexually involved with Parsons's 21-year-old girlfriend, ].{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=117}}<ref>Parson letter to Crowley: " is a gentleman; he has red hair, green eyes, is honest and intelligent, and we have become great friends. He moved in with me about two months ago, and although Betty and I are still friendly, she has transferred her sexual affection to Ron. Although he has no formal training in Magick, he has an extraordinary amount of experience and understanding in the field. From some of his experiences I deduced that he is in direct touch with some higher intelligence, possibly his ]. He describes his Angel as a beautiful winged woman with red hair whom he calls the Empress and who has guided him through his life and saved him many times. He is the most ] person I have ever met and is in complete accord with our own principles." as quoted in Symonds, John. ''The Great Beast: the life and magick of Aleister Crowley'', p. 392. London: Macdonald and Co., 1971. {{ISBN|0-356-03631-6}}</ref> Hubbard and Parsons collaborated on "]", a ] ritual intended to summon an incarnation of ], the supreme Goddess in Crowley's pantheon.<ref name="Urban">{{Cite book |last=Urban |first=Hugh B. |author-link=Hugh Urban |title=Magia sexualis: sex, magic, and liberation in modern Western esotericism |page=137 |publisher=University of California Press |year=2006 |isbn=978-0-520-24776-5}}</ref> | |||
During this period, Hubbard authored a document which has been called the "]", a series of statements relating to various physical, sexual, psychological and social issues that he was encountering in his life. The Affirmations appear to have been intended to be used as a form of self-hypnosis with the intention of resolving the author's psychological problems and instilling a positive mental attitude.<ref>"Your eyes are getting progressively better. They became bad when you used them as an excuse to escape the naval academy. You have no reason to keep them bad.", "Your stomach trouble you used as an excuse to keep the Navy from punishing you. You are free of the Navy.", "You can tell all the romantic tales you wish. ... But you know which ones were lies ... You have enough real experience to make anecdotes forever. Stick to your true adventures.", "Masturbation does not injure or make insane. Your parents were in error. Everyone masturbates." -- Hubbard's ]</ref>{{sfn|Wright|2013|pp=53–54}} | |||
== World War II == | |||
{{main|L. Ron Hubbard and the military}} | |||
{{multiple image|perrow = 2|total_width=250 | |||
From the summer of 1941 to late 1945, during ], Hubbard served in the United States Navy. Based on the representations of his experience overseas and as a writer,<ref> of interviewing officer that Hubbard be commissioned a Lt. Jg.</ref> he was able to skip the initial officer rank of ] and was commissioned a ] for service in the ]. He was unsuccessful there, and after some difficulty with other assignments found himself in charge of a 173 foot<ref name="navsource"> from </ref> submarine chaser. In May 1943, while taking the ] on her ] to San Diego, Hubbard attacked what he believed to be two enemy submarines, ten miles off the coast of Oregon. The "battle" took two days and involved at least four other US vessels plus two blimps, summoned for reinforcements and resupply.<ref name="Bare-faced" /><!-- p. 102-105 --> After reviewing instrument data, battle reports, interviews with the various captains and taking into account the fact that Japanese submarines didn't regularly operate there, Admiral ], Commander Northwest Sea Frontier concluded; "An analysis of all reports convinces me that there was no submarine in the area. ... The Commanding Officers of all ships except the ''PC-815'' state they had no evidence of a submarine and do not think a submarine was in the area."<ref>"Battle Report - Submission of.", A16-3(3)/PC815, Vice Adm. Frank Jack Fletcher, Commander NW Sea Frontier, 8 June 1943; </ref><ref name="Bare-faced" /><!-- p. 105 --> In June 1943, Hubbard was relieved of command after anchoring ''PC-815'' off the ], which is Mexican territory. He further erred by conducting gunnery practice there. An official complaint from Mexican authorities, coupled with his failure to return to base as ordered, led to a Board of Investigation. It determined that Hubbard had disregarded orders, admonished him by letter to include in his records and transferred him to other duties. Having been the third leadership position lost in his tenure, the following assignment was one where he was not given command authority.<ref name="Bare-faced" /><!-- p. 106-107 --> His service ended with an honorable discharge after resigning his commission in 1950. In all he had one promotion and six decorations to show for his service, however he would claim to have accomplished much more than that in the decades which followed. It would also come out that he was relieved of command twice, and was also the subject of negative reports from his superiors on several occasions. <ref name="Bare-faced" /><!-- p. 98-99 --><ref name="Blue Sky" /><!--p. 74--><ref name="MBTR" /> | |||
| image1 = L Ron and Sara Hubbard June 1946.jpg | |||
| image2 = Sara Northrup.jpg | |||
| footer = Hubbard and Northrup aboard the schooner Blue Water II in June 1946 (left). The Church of Scientology has republished this photograph with Northrup (pictured right) airbrushed out. | |||
}} | |||
Parsons, Hubbard and Sara invested nearly their entire savings — the vast majority contributed by Parsons and Sara — in a plan for Hubbard and Sara to buy yachts on the East Coast and sail them to the West Coast to sell. Hubbard had a different idea, writing to the U.S. Navy requesting permission to undertake a world cruise.{{sfn|Pendle|2005|p=268}} Parsons attempted to recover his money by obtaining an injunction to prevent Hubbard and Sara leaving the country or disposing of the remnants of his assets, but ultimately only received a $2,900 promissory note from Hubbard. Parsons returned home "shattered" and was forced to sell his mansion.{{sfn|Pendle|2005|p=270}}{{sfn|Pendle|2005|p=269}} | |||
== Post war activities == | |||
]'' featuring Hubbard's "The Masters of Sleep".]] | |||
While convalescing after the war, Hubbard met ], an aeronautics professor at ] and an associate of the British ] ].<ref name="strange"/> Hubbard and Parsons were allegedly engaged in the practice of ritual ] in 1946, including an extended set of sex magic rituals called the ], intended to summon a goddess or "moonchild." The Church says Hubbard was a working as an ] agent on a mission to end Parsons' supposed magical activities and to "rescue" a girl Parsons was "using" for supposedly magical purposes. In a 1952 lecture series, Hubbard recommended a book of Crowley's and referred to him as "Mad Old Boy"<ref>Philadelphia Doctorate Lectures, '''Lecture #40 titled "Games/Goals"''', 12 December 1952: About "Limitations on self and others"</ref><ref>'''Lecture #45 titled "Development of Scientology: Characteristics of a Living Science"''', 13 December 1952: About "Life Science"</ref> and as "my very good friend".<ref>L. Ron Hubbard, "Conditions of Space/Time/Energy" Philadelphia Doctorate Course cassette tape #18 5212C05</ref> Hubbard later married the girl he said that he rescued from Parsons, ].<ref>, Sunday Times, December 28, 1969 (Article starts with "Scientology has sent us the following information:")</ref> Hubbard also described Parsons as his friend in his Scientology lectures rather than a person he was investigating. Crowley recorded in his notes that he considered Hubbard a "lout" who made off with Parsons' money and girlfriend in an "ordinary confidence trick."<ref name="Bare-faced" /><!-- p. 126 --><ref name="Blue Sky" /><!-- p. 98-99 --> | |||
]" was reprinted in '']'' in 1950 after its original publication in a 1949 Hubbard collection.]] | |||
] became Hubbard's second wife in August 1946.<ref> L.A. Times Article, 2 May 1951</ref> It was an act of ], as Hubbard had abandoned, but not divorced, his first wife and children as soon as he left the Navy (he divorced his first wife more than a year after he had remarried).<ref name="Blue Sky" /><!-- p. 101 --> Both women allege Hubbard ] them. He is also alleged to have once kidnapped Sara's infant, Alexis, taking her to ]. Later, he disowned Alexis, claiming she was actually ]' child.<ref>{{cite book | author=Miller, Russell | authorlink=Russell Miller| title=Bare-faced Messiah, The True Story of L. Ron Hubbard | publisher=Henry Holt & Co | location=New York | edition=First American Edition | year=1987 | id=ISBN 0-8050-0654-0 | pages = 305-306 | url = http://www.clambake.org/archive/books/bfm/bfmconte.htm |chapter=18. Messengers of God | chapterurl=http://www.clambake.org/archive/books/bfm/bfm18.htm}}</ref> Sara filed for divorce in late 1950, citing that Hubbard was, unknown to her, still legally bound to his first wife at the time of their marriage. Her divorce papers also accused Hubbard of kidnapping their baby daughter Alexis, and of conducting "systematic torture, beatings, strangulations and scientific torture experiments."<ref name="SFGate01">Lattin, Don. , '']'', ] ]</ref> | |||
On August 10, 1946, Hubbard married Sara, though he was still married to his first wife Polly.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=134}} Hubbard resumed his fiction writing to supplement his small disability allowance.{{sfn|Streeter|2008|p=210}} In August 1947, Hubbard returned to the pages of ''Astounding'' with a serialized novel "The End is Not Yet", about a young nuclear physicist who tries to stop a world takeover by building a new philosophical system.<ref>Miller, 134</ref> In October 1947, the magazine began serializing '']'', the first in a series about the "Soldiers of Light", supremely skilled, extremely long-lived physicians. In February and March 1950, Campbell's ''Astounding'' serialized the Hubbard novel '']'' about a young engineer on an interstellar trading starship who learns that months aboard ship amounts to centuries on Earth, making the ship his only remaining home after his first voyage.<ref name="Stableford" /> During his time in California, Hubbard began acting as a sort of amateur stage hypnotist or "]".<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://tonyortega.org/2015/01/30/another-secret-lives-leak-l-ron-hubbard-enjoyed-humiliating-people-under-hypnosis/ |title=Another Secret Lives leak: L. Ron Hubbard enjoyed humiliating people under hypnosis |first=Tony |last=Ortega |date=January 30, 2015}}</ref>{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=231}} | |||
Hubbard repeatedly wrote to the ] (VA) asking for an increase in his war pension.{{sfn|Miller|1987|pp=125, 128, 131}} Finally, in October 1947, he wrote to request psychiatric treatment: | |||
Hubbard returned to writing fiction briefly for a few years, his best-remembered work from this period being the '']'' series for Campbell's '']'' magazine. It was in the pages of this magazine that the first article on Dianetics appeared; while some fiction works appeared after that (including "Masters of Sleep," which promotes Dianetics and features as a villain "a mad psychiatrist, Doctor Dyhard, who persists in rejecting Dianetics after all his abler colleagues have accepted it {{interp|and}} believes in prefrontal lobotomies for everyone")<ref>{{cite journal | last = Frenschkowski | first = Marco | year = 1999 | month = July | title = L. Ron Hubbard and Scientology: An annotated bibliographical survey of primary and selected secondary literature | journal = Marburg Journal of Religion | volume = 4 | issue = 1 | url = http://web.uni-marburg.de/religionswissenschaft/journal/mjr/frenschkowski.html | accessdate = 2007-02-22 }}</ref><ref>]. "".</ref> most of Hubbard's output thereafter was related to Dianetics or Scientology. Hubbard did not make a major return to non-Dianetics fiction until the 1980s. | |||
{{blockquote|After trying and failing for two years to regain my equilibrium in civil life, I am utterly unable to approach anything like my own competence. My last physician informed me that it might be very helpful if I were to be examined and perhaps treated psychiatrically or even by a psychoanalyst. Toward the end of my service 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. ... I cannot, myself, afford such treatment.<br /> Would you please help me?<ref>Hubbard, L. Ron, letter to Veterans Administration, October 15, 1947; quoted in ], p. 137</ref>}} | |||
In 1948 Hubbard was working as a "Special Officer" for the Metropolitan Detective Agency, licensed by the Los Angeles Police Department. According to Scientology, he performed the duties of an armed security guard:<ref>, lronhubbard.org</ref> "The guarding of particular properties, e.g., banks and warehouses, and the patrolling of a general neighborhood on behalf of local merchants. In the latter, the Special Officer’s duties were virtually the same as the regular officer, although he had no powers of arrest beyond the "citizen’s arrest."<ref>, lronhubbard.org</ref> | |||
The VA eventually did increase his pension,{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=139}} but his money problems continued. In the summer of 1948, Hubbard was arrested by the San Luis Obispo sheriff on a charge of petty theft for passing a fraudulent check.{{sfn|Miller|1987|page=142}} Beginning in June 1948, the nationally-syndicated wire service ] ran a story on an American Legion-sponsored psychiatric ward in Savannah, Georgia, which sought to keep mentally-ill war veterans out of jail.<ref>e.g. The Herald-News (Passaic, New Jersey) June 10, 1948, Ventura County Star-Free Press June 23, 1948, Spokane Chronicle (Spokane, Washington) September 29, 1948</ref><ref>{{multiref2 |1={{Cite news |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-atlanta-journal-dont-put-the-insane/130026022/ |title=Don't put the Insane in Jail, part 1 of 2 |first=Ash |last=Gerecht |newspaper=The Atlanta Journal |date=May 23, 1948}} |2={{Cite news |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-atlanta-journal-dont-put-the-insane/130027904/ |title=Don't put the Insane in Jail, part 2 of 2 |first=Ash |last=Gerecht |newspaper=The Atlanta Journal |date=May 23, 1948}} }}</ref> In late 1948, Hubbard and his second wife Sara moved from California to Savannah, Georgia, where he would later claim to have worked as a volunteer in a psychiatric clinic.{{sfn|Miller|1987|page=143}} Hubbard claimed he had "processed an awful lot of Negroes"<ref>PDC43</ref> and wrote of having observed a psychiatrist using the threat of institutionalization in a state hospital to solicit funds from a patient's husband.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://carolineletkeman.org/dsp/2010/04/28/article-todays-terrorism/ |title = Article: Today's Terrorism – Decoding Scientology Propaganda|quote="I well recall a conversation I had with a Dr. Center in Savannah, Georgia, in 1949. It well expresses the arrogance and complete contempt for law and order of the psychiatrist. A man had just called to inquire after his wife who was "under treatment" in Center's hospital. Center asked him, "Do you have the money...? That's right, thirty thousand... well you better get it or I'll have to send your dear wife to the state institution and you know what will happen then!" I was there doing work on charity patients the local psychiatrists wouldn't touch. Center had forgotten I was in the room."}}</ref><ref>Abraham Hyman Center per </ref> In letters to friends sent from Savannah, Hubbard began to make the first public mentions of what was to become Dianetics.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=143}} | |||
==Dianetics== | |||
{{main|Dianetics}} | |||
Beginning in late 1949, Hubbard sought to publicize ], the ] technique. Unable to elicit interest from mainstream publishers or medical professionals,<ref>http://www.ronthephilosopher.org/phlspher/page14.htm</ref> Hubbard turned to the legendary | |||
science fiction editor ], who had for years published Hubbard's science fiction. The first article on Dianetics was published in '']''. The science fiction community was divided about the merits of Hubbard's offering. Campbell's star author ] criticized Dianetics' unscientific aspects, and veteran author ] described Dianetics as "a lunatic revision of ] psychology" that "had the look of a wonderfully rewarding scam."<ref name="Bare-faced"/><!--p.152-153--> But Campbell and novelist ] enthusiastically embraced Dianetics: Campbell became Hubbard's treasurer, and van Vogt—convinced his wife's health had been transformed for the better by ]—interrupted his writing career to run the first Los Angeles Dianetics center.<ref name="Bare-faced"/><!--p.166--> | |||
===In the Dianetics era=== | |||
In April 1950, Hubbard and several others established the Hubbard Dianetic Research Foundation in ] to coordinate work related for the forthcoming publication of a book on Dianetics. The book, entitled '']'', was published in May 1950 by ], whose head was also on the Board of Directors of the Hubbard Dianetic Research Foundation.<ref name="Blue Sky" /><!--p. 107-9 --> With ''Dianetics,'' Hubbard introduced the concept of "]," a two-person question-and-answer therapy that focused on painful memories. According to Hubbard, dianetic auditing could eliminate emotional problems, cure physical illnesses, and increase intelligence. In his introduction to ''Dianetics'', Hubbard declared that "the creation of dianetics is a milestone for man comparable to his discovery of fire and superior to his inventions of the wheel and arch." | |||
{{main|Life of L. Ron Hubbard from 1950 to 1953}} | |||
Inspired by science-fiction of his friend ], Hubbard announced plans to write a book which would claim to "make supermen".<ref name="OrtegaSupermen">{{Cite news |last=Ortega |first=Tony |author-link=Tony Ortega |date=November 8, 2014 |title=The Heinlein Letters: What L. Ron Hubbard's close friends really thought of him |work=The Underground Bunker |url=https://tonyortega.org/2014/11/08/the-heinlein-letters-what-l-ron-hubbards-close-friends-really-thought-of-him/ |access-date=January 14, 2020|quote=Letter to Heinlein: "Well, you didn't specify in your book what actual reformation took place in the society to make supermen. Got to thinking about it other day. The system is ]. It makes ]."}}</ref> Hubbard announced to the public that there existed a superhuman condition which he called the state of ]. He claimed people in that state would have a perfectly functioning mind with an improved ] (IQ) and photographic memory.{{sfn|Streeter|2008|pp=210–211}} The "Clear" would be cured of physical ailments ranging from poor eyesight to the common cold, which Hubbard asserted were purely ].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Miller |first=Timothy |url=https://archive.org/details/americasalternat00mill |title=America's Alternative Religions |publisher=State University of New York Press |year=1995 |isbn=978-0-7914-2398-1 |location=Albany |pages= |oclc=30476551 |url-access=registration}}</ref>{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=108}}<ref>{{Cite news |title=The TIME Vault: December 22, 1952 |url=https://time.com/vault/issue/1952-12-22/page/36/ |access-date=July 25, 2016}}</ref> | |||
], to finish writing ''Dianetics''. The ] is now on the ]. Hubbard's son Nibs later claimed the number '666' had special significance for his father.]] | |||
''Dianetics'' sold 150,000 copies within a year of publication.<ref name="Blue Sky"/><!-- p. 113 --> Upon becoming more widely available, Dianetics became an object of critical scrutiny by the press and the medical establishment. In September 1950, '']'' published a cautionary statement on the topic by the ] that read in part, "the association calls attention to the fact that these claims are not supported by empirical evidence," and went on to recommend against use of "the techniques peculiar to Dianetics" until such time it had been validated by scientific testing. ''],'' in an August 1951 assessment of Dianetics,<ref></ref> dryly noted "one looks in vain in ''Dianetics'' for the modesty usually associated with announcement of a medical or scientific discovery," and stated that the book had become "the basis for a new cult." The article observed "in a study of L. Ron Hubbard's text, one is impressed from the very beginning by a tendency to generalization and authoritative declarations unsupported by evidence or facts." ''Consumer Reports'' warned its readers against the "possibility of serious harm resulting from the abuse of intimacies and confidences associated with the relationship between auditor and patient," an especially serious risk, they concluded, "in a cult without professional traditions." | |||
To promote his upcoming book, Hubbard enlisted his longtime-editor John Campbell, who had a fascination with ].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Luckhurst |first=Roger |title=Science Fiction |publisher=Polity |year=2005 |isbn=978-0-7456-2893-6 |location=Malden, MA |page=74}}</ref> Campbell invited Hubbard and Sara to move into a New Jersey cottage. Campbell, in turn, recruited an acquaintance, medical doctor ], to help promote the book. Campbell wrote Winter to extol Hubbard, claiming that Hubbard had worked with nearly 1000 cases and cured every single one.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=149|ps=: "With cooperation from some institutions, some psychiatrists, has worked on all types of cases. Institutionalized schizophrenics, apathies, manics, depressives, perverts, stuttering, neuroses—in all, nearly 1000 cases. But just a brief sampling of each type; he doesn't have proper statistics in the usual sense. But he has one statistic. He has cured every patient he worked with. He has cured ulcers, arthritis, asthma."}} The birth of Hubbard's second daughter Alexis Valerie, delivered by Winter on March 8, 1950, came in the middle of the preparations to launch Dianetics.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Bare-Faced Messiah: Chapter 9 |url=https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Library/Shelf/miller/bfm09.htm |website=www.cs.cmu.edu |access-date=September 18, 2023}}</ref> | |||
The Hubbard Dianetic Research Foundation was incorporated in ]. Branch offices were opened in five other US cities before the end of 1950 (though most folded within a year). Hubbard soon abandoned the Foundation, denouncing a number of his former associates as ] to the FBI.<ref>{{cite web | first = Jamie | last = Doward | title = Lure of the celebrity sect | url = http://observer.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,6903,1217884,00.html | work = Special reports | publisher = ] | date = ] | accessdate = 2007-10-19 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book | author=Miller, Russell | authorlink=Russell Miller| title=Bare-faced Messiah, The True Story of L. Ron Hubbard | publisher=Henry Holt & Co | location=New York | edition=First American Edition | year=1987 | id=ISBN 0-8050-0654-0 | url = http://www.clambake.org/archive/books/bfm/bfmconte.htm |chapter=10. Commies, Kidnaps and Chaos | chapterurl=http://www.clambake.org/archive/books/bfm/bfm10.htm}}</ref> | |||
The basic content of Dianetics was a retelling of Psychoanalytic theory geared for a mass market English-speaking audience. Like Freud, Hubbard taught that the brain recorded memories (or "engrams") which were stored in the unconscious mind (which Hubbard restyled "the ]"). Past memories could be triggered later in life, causing psychological, emotional, or even physical problems. By sharing their memories with a friendly listener (or "]"), a person could overcome their past pain and thus cure themselves. Through Dianetics, Hubbard claimed that most illnesses were psychosomatic and caused by ], including arthritis, dermatitis, allergies, asthma, coronary difficulties, eye trouble, bursitis, ulcers, sinusitis and migraine headaches. He further claimed that dianetic therapy could treat these illnesses, and also included cancer and diabetes as conditions that Dianetic research was focused on.<ref>{{Cite journal |title=Rethinking Scientology A Thorough Analysis of L. Ron Hubbard's Formulation of Therapy and Religion in Dianetics and Scientology, 1950–1986 |journal=Alternative Spirituality and Religion Review |date=June 24, 2016 |last=Christensen |first=Dorthe Refslund |doi=10.5840/asrr201662323 }}</ref> | |||
==Scientology== | |||
] | |||
{{main|Scientology}} | |||
In mid-1952, Hubbard expanded Dianetics into an "applied religious philosophy" which he called ]. That year, Hubbard also married his third wife, ], to whom he remained married until his death (though separated by the early 70s). With Mary Sue, Hubbard fathered four more children— Diana, ], Suzette and Arthur —over the next six years. | |||
] | |||
], born in 1954, was groomed to one day replace him as head of the Scientology organization.<ref name="Blue Sky">pp. 213-214</ref> Quentin was uninterested in his father's plans and had preferred to become a pilot. He was also deeply depressed, allegedly because he was homosexual and Hubbard was ].<ref>{{cite news | title = Secret Lives: L. Ron Hubbard | publisher = Channel 4 (England) | date = 1997-11-19 | url = http://www.xenutv.com/int/secretlives.htm | accessdate = 2007-02-22}}</ref> Quentin unsuccessfully attempted suicide in 1974, then in 1976 died under circumstances that might have been a suicide or murder.<ref></ref><ref></ref><ref>, by Monica Pignotti</ref> | |||
Accompanied by an article in ''Astounding's'' May 1950 issue, '']'' was released on May 9.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=107}} Although Dianetics was poorly received by the press and the scientific and medical professions, the book was an immediate commercial success and sparked "a nationwide cult of incredible proportions".<ref name="Newsweek-Dianetics" />{{sfn|Gardner|1986|p=265}} Five hundred Dianetic auditing groups were set up across the United States,<ref name="Newsweek-Dianetics">Staff (August 21, 1950). "Dianetics book review; Best Seller". ''Newsweek''</ref> and Hubbard established the "Hubbard Dianetic Research Foundation".{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=152}} Financial controls were lax, and Hubbard himself took large sums with no explanation of what he was doing with it.{{Sfn|O'Brien|1966|p=27}} | |||
On February 10, 1953 Hubbard was awarded an ] ] by ], California, "in recognition of his outstanding work and contributions in the fields of Dianetics and Scientology."<ref name="Now Religion">{{cite book | last = Malko | first = George | origyear = 1970 | edition = First Delta printing | year = 1971 | month = October | title = ] | publisher = Dell Publishing | location = New York }}</ref> (This non-accredited body was closed by the California state courts some 30 years later <ref>"", talkorigins.org, May 31, 2002. Retrieved January 7, 2007. Sequoia University was issued a permanent injunction in 1984 by a Los Angeles judge and ordered to "cease operation until the school could comply with state education laws." The school offered degrees in osteopathic medicine, religious studies, hydrotherapy and physical sciences</ref> after it was investigated by California authorities on the grounds of being a mail-order "]."<ref>) John B. Bear and Mariah P. Bear, ''Bears' Guide to Earning College Degrees Nontraditionally'', p.331. Ten Speed Press, 2003.</ref>) In December of that year, Hubbard declared Scientology a religion and the first ] was founded in ]. He moved to ] at about the same time, and during the remainder of the 1950s he supervised the growing organization from an office in ]. In 1959, he bought ] near the ] town of ], a ] manor house owned by the ] of ]. This became the world headquarters of Scientology. Hubbard says he conducted years of intensive research into the nature of human existence; to describe his findings, he developed an elaborate vocabulary with many newly coined terms.<ref name="glossary"></ref> He codified a set of ] and an "applied religious philosophy" that promised to improve the condition of the human ], which he called the "]."<ref></ref> The bulk of Scientology focuses on the "rehabilitation" of the thetan. | |||
Dianetics lost public credibility on August 10 when a presentation by Hubbard before an audience of 6,000 at the ] in Los Angeles failed disastrously.{{sfn|Whitehead|1987|p=67}} He introduced a woman named Sonya Bianca and told the audience that as a result of undergoing Dianetic therapy she now possessed perfect recall, only for her to forget the color of Hubbard's necktie. A large part of the audience walked out, and the debacle was publicized by popular science writer ].{{sfn|Gardner|1986|p=270}}<ref name="ReferenceB">{{Cite web | url=https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Library/Shelf/gardner/index.html | title=Martin Gardner Evaluates Dianetics }}</ref> On September 3, psychologist ] publicly derided ''Dianetics'' as a "mixture of some oversimplified truths, half truths and plain absurdities"; Fromm criticized the writing as "propagandistic" and likened it to the quack field of patent medicines.<ref>{{Cite web |quote=But perhaps the most unfortunate element in Dianetics is the way it is written. The mixture of some oversimplified truths, half truths and plain absurdities, the propagandistic technique of impressing the reader with the greatness, infallibility and newness of the author's system, the promise of unheard of results attained by the simple means of following ''Dianetics'' is a technique which has had most unfortunate results in the fields of patent medicines and politics; applied to psychology and psychiatry it will not be less harmful. |url=https://opus4.kobv.de/opus4-Fromm/files/547/1950b-eng.pdf |first=Erich |last=Fromm |author-link=Erich Fromm |title="Dianetics" – For Seekers of Prefabricated Happiness |website=opus4.kobv.de}}</ref> By late-1950, Hubbard's foundations were in financial crisis. Hubbard's publisher Arthur Ceppos, his longtime promoter Joseph Campbell, and medical doctor-turned-Dianetics endorser Joseph Winter all resigned under acrimonious circumstances.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=115}}{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=181}} | |||
Hubbard's followers believed his "technology" gave them access to their past lives, the traumas of which led to failures in the present unless they were audited. By this time, Hubbard had introduced a biofeedback device to the auditing process, which he called a "Hubbard Electropsychometer" or "]." It was invented in the 1940s by a ] and Dianetics enthusiast named ]. This machine is used by Scientologists in auditing to evaluate "mental masses" surrounding the thetan. These "masses" are said to impede the thetan from realizing its full potential. | |||
In late-1950, Hubbard began an affair with employee Barbara Klowden, prompting Sara to start her own affair with Miles Hollister. On February 23, 1951, Sara and her lover consulted with a psychiatrist about Hubbard, who advised that Sara was in grave danger and Hubbard should be institutionalized. The trio telephoned Jack Maloney, the head of the Hubbard's foundation in ], to request funding for the hospitalization. Maloney informed Hubbard of the plans to institutionalize him.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.spaink.net/cos/LRH-bio/sara.htm|title = Sara Northrup Hubbard – Complaint for Divorce}}</ref><ref>Hubbard's letter to the Attorney General dated May 1951: "Feb. 25 she flew to San Francisco and my general manager Jack Maloney in New Jersey received a phone call from her and Miles Hollister and a psychiatrist named ] in San Francisco that I had gone insane and that they needed money to incarcerate me quickly."</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://scientology-research.org/letter-l-ron-hubbard-to-the-attorney-general-may-14-1951/|title=Letter: L. Ron Hubbard to the Attorney General |date=May 14, 1951 |first=L. Ron |last=Hubbard |website=scientology-research.org}}</ref> That night, | |||
Hubbard also said a good deal of physical disease was ], and one who, like himself, had attained the enlightened state of "clear" and become an "]" would be relatively disease free. According to biographers, Hubbard went to great lengths to suppress his recourse to modern medicine, attributing symptoms to attacks by malicious forces, both spiritual and earthly. Hubbard insisted humanity was imperiled by such forces, which were the result of negative memories (or "engrams") stored in the unconscious or "reactive" mind, some carried by the immortal thetans for billions of years. Thus, Hubbard asserts, the only possibility for spiritual salvation was a concerted effort to "clear the planet," that is, to bring the benefits of Scientology to all people everywhere, and attack all forces, social and spiritual, hostile to the interests of the movement. | |||
Hubbard and two trusted aides kidnapped Hubbard's one-year-old daughter Alexis and wife Sara and attempted unsuccessfully to find a doctor to examine Sara and declare her insane.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=117}} He let Sara go but took Alexis to ]. Hubbard denounced Sara and her lover to the ], portraying them in a letter as ] infiltrators. An agent annotated his correspondence with Hubbard with the comment, "Appears mental".<ref name="Methvin" /> | |||
On April 12, Sara's story was published in the press, leading to headlines such as "Ron Hubbard Insane, Says His Wife".<ref>Staff (April 24, 1951). "Ron Hubbard Insane, Says His Wife". '']''</ref> Hubbard's first wife evidently saw the headlines and wrote to Sara on May 2 offering her support. "Ron is not normal... 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 you charge—twelve years of it."<ref>Bent Corydon, ''L. Ron Hubbard: Madman or Messiah?'', pp. 281–282 (Lyle Stuart, 1987)</ref> In June, Sara finally secured the return of her daughter by agreeing to a settlement in which she signed a statement, written by Hubbard, declaring that she had been misrepresented in the press and that she had always believed he was a "fine and brilliant man".<ref>Quoted in ], p. 192</ref> | |||
Church members were expected to pay fixed donation rates for courses, auditing, books and E-meters, all of which proved very lucrative for the Church, which paid emoluments directly to Hubbard and his family.<ref name="Blue Sky"/><!--p. 142--> In a case fought by the Founding Church of Scientology of Washington, D.C. over its tax-exempt status (revoked in 1958 because of these emoluments) the findings of fact in the case included that Hubbard had personally received over $108,000 from the Church and affiliates over a four-year period, over and above the percentage of ] (usually 10%) he received from Church-affiliated organizations.<ref name="Foster Report">''Enquiry into the Practice and Effects of Scientology'', Report by Sir John Foster, K.B.E., Q.C., M.P., Published by Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London December 1971. Cited at http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Cowen/audit/fosthome.html .</ref><!--para 118--> However, Hubbard denied such emoluments many times in writing, proclaiming he never received any money from the Church.<ref name="Blue Sky"/><!--p. 204--> | |||
{{Location map+|USA|width=250|float = right|caption=During the Dianetics and Scientology era, Hubbard regularly relocated across the country, living in Elizabeth, New Jersey (1950); Los Angeles (1950–51), Wichita (1951–52), Phoenix (1952–53), Philadelphia (December 1952), Camden, New Jersey (1953–55); and D.C. (1955–59). In 1959, after losing tax-exemption in the US, Hubbard relocated to England.|places= | |||
L. Ron Hubbard's philosophy, Scientology, and the Church of Scientology that he founded are controversial. Some documents written by Hubbard himself suggest he regarded Scientology as a business, not a religion. In one letter dated ] ], he says calling Scientology a religion solves "a problem of practical business," and status as a religion achieves something "more equitable...with what we've got to sell." In a 1962 official policy letter, he said "Scientology 1970 is being planned on a religious organization basis throughout the world. This will not upset in any way the usual activities of any organization. It is entirely a matter for accountants and solicitors."<ref>Hubbard Communications Office Policy Letter, HCOPL, 29 October 1962, as cited in {{cite journal | last = Beit-Hallahmi | first = Benjamin | authorlink = Benjamin Beit-Hallahmi | year = 2003 | month = September | title = Scientology: Religion or racket? | journal = Marburg Journal of Religion | volume = 8 | issue = 1 | url = http://web.uni-marburg.de/religionswissenschaft/journal/mjr/beit.html | accessdate = 2007-01-07}}</ref> A Reader's Digest article of May 1980 quoted Hubbard as saying in the 1940s "Writing for a penny a word is ridiculous. If a man really wants to make a million dollars, the best way would be to start his own religion."<ref></ref><ref></ref> | |||
{{Location map~|USA|marksize=7|lat_deg=40.663 |lon_deg= -74.214 | label = Jersey|position=top}} | |||
{{Location map~|USA|marksize=7|lat_deg=34.05|lon_deg= -118.25|label=Los<br /> Angeles|position=bottom}} | |||
{{Location map~|USA|marksize=7|lat_deg=37.688889|lon_deg=-97.336111|position=right|label=Wichita}} | |||
{{Location map~|USA|marksize=7|lat_deg=33.448333 |lon_deg= -112.073889|label=Phoenix|position=right}} | |||
{{Location map~|USA|marksize=7|lat_deg=39.952778 |lon_deg= -75.163611|label=Philadelphia|position=left}} | |||
{{Location map~|USA|marksize=7|lat_deg=38.904722 |lon_deg= -77.016389|label=D.C.|position=bottom}} | |||
{{Location map~|USA|marksize=7|lat_deg=39.94|lon_deg= -75.105|<!--label=Camden|-->position=bottom}} | |||
}} | |||
The Dianetics craze "burned itself out as quickly as it caught fire",<ref name="ReferenceB"/> and the movement appeared to be on the edge of total collapse. However, it was temporarily saved by Don Purcell, a millionaire who agreed to support a new Foundation in ]. In August 1951, Hubbard published '']''. In that book, Hubbard introduced such concepts as the immortal soul (or "Thetan") and past-life regressions (or "Whole Track Auditing"). The Wichita Foundation underwrote the costs of printing the book, but it recorded poor sales when first published, with only 1,250 copies of the first edition being printed.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=122}} The Wichita Foundation became financially nonviable after a court ruled that it was liable for the unpaid debts of its defunct predecessor in ]. The ruling prompted Purcell and the other directors of the Wichita Foundation to file for voluntary bankruptcy in February 1952.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=199}} Hubbard resigned immediately and accused Purcell of having been bribed by the ] to destroy Dianetics.{{Sfn|Streissguth|1995|p=71}} Hubbard emptied the Wichita foundation's bank accounts, in part through forgery.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=elFdBCldOz4&t=1962s |title=1982 CW Scientology Hearings - Ron DeWolf - Day 1 |at=1962 seconds |via=YouTube |date=May 5, 1982}}</ref> | |||
According to ''The Visual Encyclopedia of Science Fiction'', ed. Brian Ash, Harmony Books, 1977:{{quotation|... began making statements to the effect that any writer who really wished to make money should stop writing and develop religion, or devise a new psychiatric method. ]'s version (''Time Out'', UK, No 332) is that Hubbard is reputed to have told ], "I'm going to invent a religion that's going to make me a fortune. I'm tired of writing for a penny a word." ], a chronicler of science fiction, has reported that he himself heard Hubbard make a similar statement, but there is no first-hand evidence."}} Though Hubbard himself was also quoted driving his people toward financial results:{{quotation|"Make sure that lots of bodies move through the shop," implored Hubbard in one of his bulletins to officials. "Make money. Make more money. Make others produce so as to make money . . . However you get them in or why, just do it."|L. Ron Hubbard<ref name="TIME3-2"> 1991 Page 3, Time Magazine. Psychiatrists say these sessions can produce a drugged-like, mind-controlled euphoria that keeps customers coming back for more. To pay their fees, newcomers can earn commissions by recruiting new members, become auditors themselves (Miscavige did so at age 12), or join the church staff and receive free counseling in exchange for what their written contracts describe as a "billion years" of labor. "Make sure that lots of bodies move through the shop," implored Hubbard in one of his bulletins to officials. "Make money. Make more money. Make others produce so as to make money . . . However you get them in or why, just do it."</ref>}} | |||
===Pivot to Scientology=== | |||
{{see also|Scientology controversy}} | |||
{{main|Life of L. Ron Hubbard from 1950 to 1953}} | |||
{{seealso|L. Ron Hubbard and starting a religion for money}} | |||
] in 1957.]] | |||
Having lost the rights to Dianetics, Hubbard created Scientology. At a convention in Wichita, Hubbard announced that he had discovered a new science beyond Dianetics which he called "Scientology". Whereas the goal of Dianetics had been to reach a superhuman state of "Clear", Scientology promised a chance to achieve god-like powers in a state called ]. Hubbard introduced a device called an "electropsychometer" (or ]), which called for users to hold two metal cans<ref>Initially, the user held emptied soup or juice cans with the paper labels removed. Later versions of electrodes had abandoned food cans, however Hubbard continued to use the term "cans" to refer to the handheld metal electrodes.</ref> in their hands to measure changes in skin conductivity due to variance in sweat or grip. In 1906, Swiss psychoanalyst ] had famously used such a device in a study of word association.{{Sfn|Urban|2012|page=49}}{{sfn|Peterson|Jung|1907}} Rather than a mundane biofeedback device, Hubbard presented the e-meter as having "an almost mystical power to reveal an individual's innermost thoughts".{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=204}}<ref>{{Cite news |url=http://www.newspapers.com/image/236566795/ |title=One Man's Lake County |first=Ormund |last=Powers |date=October 23, 1952 |newspaper=] |via=]}}</ref> | |||
Hubbard married a staff member, 20-year-old ], and the pair moved to ].{{Sfn|Miller|1987|p=202}} Hubbard was joined by his 18-year-old son Nibs, who had become a Scientology staff member and "professor".{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=207}}{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=232}} Scientology was organized in a different way from the decentralized Dianetics movement — The Hubbard Association of Scientologists (HAS) was the only official Scientology organization. Branches or "orgs" were organized as franchises, rather like a ] chain. Each franchise holder was required to pay ten percent of income to Hubbard's central organization.{{sfn|Tucker|1989|p=304}} In July, Hubbard published "What to Audit" (later re-titled '']''), which taught everyone has subconscious traumatic memories of their past lives as clams, sloths, and cavemen which cause neuroses and health problems. In November 1952, Hubbard published ''Scientology 8-80'', followed up in December with ''Scientology 8-8008'', which argued that the physical universe is the creation of the mind.{{r|malko|page=103|quote="In Scientology 8-8008 he summarized all this as follows: 'It is now considered that the origin of MEST lies with ''theta'' itself, and that MEST, as we know the physical universe, is a product of ''theta''." Put another way, colloquially, all matter, energy, space, and time are, well, a figment of our imagination. ''It'' is all here because we are thinking ''it''.'"}} | |||
==Legal difficulties and life on the high seas== | |||
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] across the English-speaking world during the mid-1960s, with the ], ], ], the ]n state of ] and the ] province of ] all holding public inquiries into Scientology's activities.<ref></ref> Hubbard left this unwanted attention behind in 1966, when he moved to ], following ]'s ]. Attempting to ingratiate himself with the white minority government, he offered to invest large sums in Rhodesia's economy, then hit by UN sanctions, but was asked to leave the country. In 1967, L. Ron Hubbard further distanced himself from the controversy attached to Scientology by resigning as executive director of the church and appointing himself "]" of a small fleet of Scientologist-crewed ships that spent the next eight years cruising the ]. Here, Hubbard formed the religious order known as the "Sea Organization" or "]," with titles and uniforms. The Sea Org subsequently became the management group within Hubbard's Scientology empire. | |||
|quote="I'm going to send him back a letter. Uh... so... uh... you say you have some connection with the ] out there and you're very worried about this.<br /> Who do you think I am?" | |||
|source=Hubbard in December 1952.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://tonyortega.org/2018/01/28/sunday-scientology-sermon-l-ron-hubbard-on-freeing-kids-from-their-bodies/ |title=Sunday Scientology sermon: L. Ron Hubbard on freeing kids from their bodies |first=Tony |last=Ortega |date=January 28, 2018}}</ref> | |||
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In December, Hubbard gave a seventy-hour series of lectures in ] that was attended by 38 people in which he delved into ].{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=210}} In the lectures, Hubbard connects rituals and the practice of Scientology to the ]al practices of ],{{Sfn|Urban|2012}} recommending Crowley's book '']''.<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Melton|first1=J. Gordon|title=Studies in Contemporary Religion: The Church of Scientology|date=2000|publisher=Signature Books|location=United States|isbn=978-1-56085-139-4|page=|edition=1|url=https://archive.org/details/churchofscientol00meltrich/page/67|access-date=May 15, 2015|quote=In an off-the-cuff remark during the Philadelphia Lectures in 1952 (PDC Lecture 18), Hubbard referred to “my friend Aleister Crowley.” This reference would have to be one of literary allusion, as Crowley and Hubbard never met. He obviously had read some of Crowley's writings and makes reference to one of the more famous passages in Crowley's vast writings and his idea that the essence of the magical act was the intention with which it was accomplished. Crowley went on to illustrate magic with a mundane example, an author's intention in writing a book.|url-access=registration}}</ref> During the Philadelphia course, Hubbard joked that he was "the prince of darkness", which was met with laughter from the audience.<ref>{{Cite book |title=My Billion Year Contract: Memoir of a Former Scientologist |first=Nancy |last=Many |year=2009 |publisher=BookBaby |isbn=9780982590409 |ol=25424752M |page=203}}</ref> On December 16, 1952, Hubbard was arrested in the middle of a lecture for failing to return $9,000 withdrawn from the Wichita Foundation. He eventually settled the debt by paying $1,000 and returning a car belonging to Wichita financier Don Purcell.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=135}} | |||
In April 1953, Hubbard proposed setting up a chain of "Spiritual Guidance Centers" as part of what he called "the religion angle".{{sfn|Streeter|2008|p=215}}{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=213}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Westbrook |first=Donald A. |title=Among the Scientologists: History, Theology, and Praxis |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2018 |location=Oxford |page=84|quote=We don't want a clinic. We want one in operation but not in name. Perhaps we could call it a Spiritual Guidance Center. Think up its name, will you. And we could put in nice desks and our boys in neat blue with diplomas on the walls and 1. knock psychotherapy into history and 2. make enough money to shine up my operating scope and 3. keep the HAS solvent. It is a problem of practical business. I await your reaction on the religion angle. In my opinion, we couldn't get worse public opinion than we have had or have less customers with what we've got to sell.}}</ref><ref>L Ron Hubbard letter to Helen O'Brien dated April 10, 1953</ref> On December 18, 1953, Hubbard incorporated the Church of Scientology in ].<ref>Also incorporated were Church of American Science and Church of Spiritual Engineering</ref><ref name="Williams">Williams, Ian. ''The Alms Trade: Charities, Past, Present and Future'', p. 127. New York: Cosimo, 2007. {{ISBN|978-1-60206-753-0}}</ref> The religious transformation was explained as a way to protect Scientologists from charges of practicing medicine without a license.<ref>"here is little doubt but what this stroke will remove Scientology from the target area of overt and covert attacks by the medical profession, who see their pills, scalpels, and appendix-studded incomes threatened ... can avoid the recent fiasco in which a Pasadena practitioner is reported to have spent 10 days in that city's torture chamber for "practicing medicine without a license.", Staff (April 1954). "Three Churches Are Given Charters in New Jersey". ''The Aberree'', volume 1, issue 1, p. 4</ref> The idea may not have been new; Hubbard has been quoted as telling a science fiction convention in 1948: "Writing for a penny a word is ridiculous. If a man really wants to make a million dollars, the best way would be to start his own religion."<ref name="Methvin">Methvin, Eugene H. (May 1990). "Scientology: Anatomy of a Frightening Cult". '']''. pp. 16.</ref><ref>Lawrence, Sara. (April 18, 2006) . ''The Independent''. Retrieved February 17, 2011.</ref><ref>Staff. (April 5, 1976). . '']''. Retrieved February 17, 2011.</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Underdown |first=James |date=2018 |title='I Was There...': Harlan Ellison Witnesses the Birth of Scientology |journal=] |volume=42 |issue=6 |page=10 |author-link1=James Underdown}}</ref> | |||
He was attended by "Commodore's Messengers," teenage girls dressed in white ] who waited on him hand and foot, bathing and dressing him and even catching the ash from his cigarettes.<ref name="Blue Sky"/><!-- p.245 --> He had frequent screaming tantrums and instituted brutal punishments such as incarceration in the ship's filthy chain-locker for days or weeks at a time and "overboarding," in which errant crew members were blindfolded, bound and thrown overboard, dropping up to 40 ft. into the cold sea,<ref name="Blue Sky"/><!-- p.180-1 --> hoping not to hit the side of the ship with its sharp ] on the way down.<ref name="Blue Sky"/><!-- p.187 --><ref>Wakefield, Margery. ''Understanding Scientology'', Chapter 9. at ]'s ] site.</ref> Some of these punishments, such as imprisonment in the chain-locker, were applied to children as well as to adults.<ref name="Blue Sky"/><!-- p.180-1 --> | |||
A letter<ref name="expanded92">In ''L. Ron Hubbard: Messiah or Madman?'' Corydon, expanded 1992 paperback edition, page 59</ref> Hubbard wrote to his third wife, Mary Sue, when he was in Las Palmas around 1967: "I’m drinking lots of rum and popping pinks and greys...". The author of an unauthorized Hubbard biography also says that "John McMasters told me that on the flagship ''Apollo'' in the late sixties he witnessed Hubbard's drug supply. 'It was the largest drug chest I had ever seen. He had everything!'". This was confirmed by Gerald Armstrong through Virginia Downsborough who said in 1967 he returned to Las Palmas totally debilitated from drugs.<ref>in "Bare-Faced Messiah" copyright (c) 1987 by Russell Miller, p. 266</ref> <blockquote>''We found him a hotel in Las Palmas and the next day I went back to see if he was all right, because he did not seem to be too well. When I went in to his room, there were drugs of all kinds everywhere. He seemed to be taking about sixty thousand different pills. I was appalled, particularly after listening to all his tirades against drugs and the medical profession. There was something very wrong with him... My main concern was to try and get him off all the pills he was on and persuade him that there was still plenty for him to do.''</blockquote> He was existing almost totally on a diet of drugs. For three weeks Hubbard was bedridden, while she weaned him off his habit."<ref name="Blue Sky">Interview with Virginia Downsborough, Santa Barbara, October 1986, copyright (c) 1990 by ], p. 171</ref> His drug use appears to pre-date the ] accounts. <ref> "Messiah or Madman" copyright (c) 1987, 1992 by Bent Corydon p. 59</ref> A letter written by Hubbard to his ex wife was given special attention in the Church of Scientology v. Armstrong case,<blockquote> ''I do love you, even if I used to be an opium addict.''</blockquote> | |||
===In the Church of Scientology era=== | |||
In 1977, Scientology offices on both coasts of the United States were raided by ] agents seeking evidence of ], a church-run espionage network. Hubbard's wife ] and a dozen other senior Scientology officials were convicted in 1979 of conspiracy against the ], while Hubbard himself was named by federal prosecutors as an "unindicted co-conspirator."<ref name="Burglaries and Lies">{{cite news|author=Robert W. Welkos|coauthors=Joel Sappell|url=http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-scientologysidec062490,0,7034344.story |title=Burglaries and Lies Paved a Path to Prison |work=Los Angeles Times |date= 24 June, 1990|accessdate=2006-05-22}}</ref> At this time the ] also had evidence that he had skimmed millions of dollars from Church accounts and secreted the funds to destinations overseas.<ref name="TIME3"> 1991 Page 3, Time Magazine. During the early 1970s, the IRS conducted its own auditing sessions and proved that Hubbard was skimming millions of dollars from the church, laundering the money through dummy corporations in Panama and stashing it in Swiss bank accounts.</ref> Facing intense media interest and many subpoenas, he secretly retired to a ranch in tiny Creston, California, north of ]. | |||
{{main|Life of L. Ron Hubbard from 1953 to 1967}} | |||
{{seealso|Scientology controversies#"Attack the Attacker" policy|Scientology and psychiatry#Psychiatry as evil}} | |||
By 1954, the IRS recognized the Church of Scientology of California as a tax-exempt organization and by 1966, the Washington, D.C. ] received tax-exempt status nationwide. The Church of Scientology became a highly profitable enterprise for Hubbard,{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=142}} as he was paid a percentage of the Church's gross income. By 1957 he was being paid about $250,000 ({{Inflation|US|250000|1957|fmt=eq|cursign=US$ }}).{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=227}} His family grew, too, with Mary Sue giving birth to three more children—] on January 6, 1954;{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=214}} Suzette on February 13, 1955;{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=221}} and Arthur on June 6, 1958.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=230}} | |||
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In 1978, as part of a case against three French Scientologists Hubbard was convicted for "making fraudulent promises" and given a four year prison sentence and a 35,000₣ fine by a French court.<ref>{{cite web | first = Lucy | last = Morgan | title = Abroad: Critics public and private keep pressure on Scientology | url = http://www.sptimes.com/News/32999/Worldandnation/Abroad__Critics_publi.html | work = | publisher = ] | date = ] | accessdate = 2007-10-30 }}</ref> Hubbard - who had not been defended in the trial at all and had not been in the country during the whole time - did not appear for the appeal. The case was then appealed by one of the convicts - in 1980 - with fraud charges against the appellant being dropped and Scientology recognized as a religion. The court indicated that those who had also been convicted could be pardoned, if they appealed. Another defendant made an appeal in 1981 and the fraud charges were canceled by judgment on November 9, 1981. Hubbard himself did not take any action and the fine was never enforced.<ref>Reuters wire service, printed in Sunday Star (Toronto), 2 March 1980, also in International Herald Tribune, 3 March 1980:"The Paris Court of Appeal has recognized the U.S.-based Church of Scientology as a religion and cleared a former leader of the movement's French branch of fraud. ... The court's president indicated that the three others, who were sentenced in their absence, might be acquitted if they appealed."</ref><ref>Judgment of 9 Nov 1981, 13eme Chambre Correctionnelle du TGI de Paris, p. 171, "...l'intention de tromper pour obtenir la remise n'etant alors pas etablie. Auusi bien sa relaxe s'impose." - ".. the intention to deceive being not then established. Therefore her discharge is imperative." (typo in original French)</ref> | |||
|quote="The purpose of the suit is to harass and discourage rather than to win. The law can be used very easily to harass" | |||
|source=L. Ron Hubbard<ref>quoted in ], p. 139</ref> | |||
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Hubbard was notorious for his policies of attacking his perceived enemies. Nibs recalled that Hubbard "only knew how to do one thing and that was to destroy people."<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=elFdBCldOz4&t=2070s |title=1982 CW Scientology Hearings - Ron DeWolf - Day 1 |at=2070 seconds |via=YouTube |date=May 5, 1982}}</ref> Hubbard told Scientologists to "Don't ever defend, always attack", encouraging them to find or manufacture evidence and to file harassing lawsuits against enemies.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=239}} Any individual breaking away from Scientology and setting up his own group was to be shut down.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=139}} Most of the formerly independent Scientology and Dianetics groups were either driven out of business or were absorbed into Hubbard's organizations. Hubbard finally achieved victory over Don Purcell in 1954 when the latter, worn out by constant litigation, handed the copyrights of Dianetics back to Hubbard.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=138}} | |||
After dealing with Purcell, Hubbard turned his attention to attacking psychiatrists, who he blamed for the backlash against Dianetics and Scientology.<ref name="ortega20160221">{{Cite web|url=http://tonyortega.org/2016/02/21/when-scientology-was-in-trouble-in-1955-l-ron-hubbard-told-prosecutor-he-was-a-psychologist/|title=When Scientology was in trouble in 1955, L. Ron Hubbard told prosecutor he was a 'psychologist' |date=February 21, 2016 |website=tonyortega.org}}</ref> In 1955, Hubbard authored a text titled: '']'' which purported to be a secret manual linking Psychiatry and Communism written by a ] chief.<ref name="they-never-said-it">{{Cite book |title=They Never Said It : A Book of Fake Quotes, Misquotes, and Misleading Attributions |author=Paul F. Boller |publisher=Oxford University Press, USA |year=1989 |page=5 |isbn=978-0-19-505541-2 |url=https://archive.org/details/theyneversaiditb00boll |url-access=registration |quote=brain washing hubbard 1936.}}</ref><ref>The purported author is ]</ref> Hubbard founded the "National Academy of American Psychology" which sought to issue a "loyalty oath" to psychologists and psychiatrists. Those who opposed the oath were to be labelled "Subversive psychiatrists", while those who merely refused to sign the oath would be labelled "Potentially Subversive".<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Cowen/audit/ar28.html|title=THE ANDERSON REPORT: CHAPTER 28|website=www.cs.cmu.edu}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://tonyortega.org/2017/04/18/dox-scientology-founder-l-ron-hubbards-nutty-scheme-to-strong-arm-americas-psychologists/#more-39348|title=DOX: Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard's nutty scheme to strong-arm America's psychologists « The Underground Bunker |website=tonyortega.org}}</ref> Hubbard denounced psychiatric abuses, writing that psychoanalysis had been "superseded by tyrannous sadism, practiced by unprincipled men". Wrote Hubbard: | |||
Hubbard's refusal to talk to British immigration officials about this conviction is said to have later caused the British ] to re-affirm an earlier decision to bar him from the UK.<ref>{{cite news |title= Scientology leader is ordered: Stay away|work= ]|date= ]}}</ref> In 1989 however the then Home Office Minister of State, ], confirmed in writing that from 1980 until the date of his death, Hubbard had been free to apply for entry to the United Kingdom under the ordinary immigration rules and that any ban had been lifted on 16 July 1980.<ref>Home Office, Letter of Tim Renton, 24 Feb 1989: "I can indeed confirm that the ban on Scientologists entering this country ... was removed on 16 July 1980."</ref><ref>The Sunday Times, 13 July 1980 "Ministers to lift ban on Scientology," by Michael Jones and John Whale</ref> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
Today men who call themselves analysts are merrily ], ], ], burying them underneath mounds of ice, ], ] and generally conducting themselves much as their patients would were they given the chance. | |||
</blockquote> | |||
In 1956, Hubbard released '']'', which teaches that life is a game and divides people into pieces, players, and game-makers. <!-- {{see also|The Pawns of Null-A}}--> | |||
The accuracy of Hubbard's self-representations was challenged in court in a 1984 custody case of a Scientologist and his former wife about two of their children. The judgment of the ] of London (Family Division) quotes the single judge, Latey, that Scientology is "dangerous, immoral, sinister and corrupt" and "has its real objective money and power for Mr. Hubbard."<ref name="Blue Sky" /><!-- p. 342 --> | |||
The following year, Hubbard published '']'', which falsely claimed that radiation poisoning and even cancer can be cured by vitamins. In 1958, amid widespread interest in the ] case, Hubbard authored '']'', a collection of ]s.<ref>The LRH Study Tapes 1972</ref> | |||
In 1958, the U.S. ] withdrew the Washington, D.C., Church of Scientology's ] after it found that Hubbard and his family were profiting unreasonably from Scientology's ostensibly non-profit income.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=142}} In the spring of 1959, Hubbard purchased ], an 18th-century ] formerly owned by the ]. The house became Hubbard's permanent residence and an international training center for Scientologists.{{Sfn|Streissguth|1995|p=74}} | |||
The 1965 ], an inquiry on Hubbard and Scientology held in Australia, presented Hubbard as a man who made "pretentious and completely misleading pronouncements on scientific matters of which he is ignorant" based on knowledge that was "fragmentary and inaccurate and sometimes positively incorrect." | |||
That year Hubbard learned his son Nibs had resigned from the organization, citing financial difficulties. Hubbard regarded the departure as a betrayal.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=236}} Hubbard introduced "]",{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=239}} a structured interrogation using the e-meter, to identify those he termed "]" and "]s". Members of the Church of Scientology were interrogated with the aid of E-meters and were asked questions such as "Have you ever practiced homosexuality?" and "Have you ever had unkind thoughts about L. Ron Hubbard?"{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=150}} | |||
All that he writes and says is either accepted by his followers or, at the very least, it is not rejected. They are taught that they are entitled to question his pronouncements, but they are conditioned to the belief that whatever he says is right.<ref> 1965 Anderson Report biography of Hubbard</ref> </blockquote> A later finding in the report addresses his assertion of medical knowledge and ability by saying:<blockquote>Hubbard's claims to have found the only known cure for atomic radiation effects is not only unsubstantiated, but, in view of its obvious military value, hardly likely to have been left uninvestigated by military authorities if it was of any value whatever.<ref> 1965 Anderson Report evaluation of Hubbard as a physician </ref></blockquote> | |||
Since its inception, Hubbard marketed Dianetics and Scientology through ]. On January 4, 1963, US ] agents raided American offices of the Church of Scientology, seizing over a hundred E-meters as illegal ]s, thousands of pills being marketed as "radiation cures", and tons of literature that they accused of making false medical claims.{{sfnm|1a1=Barrett|1y=2001|1p=461|2a1=Lewis|2y=2009a|2pp=6–7|3a1=Melton|3y=2009|3p=24|4a1=Urban|4y=2011|4p=63|5a1=Bigliardi|5y=2016|5pp=667–668|6a1=Thomas|6y=2021|6p=47}}{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=228}}{{sfn|Wright|2013|p=90}}<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://tonyortega.org/2019/07/11/scientology-and-the-fda-the-conspiracy-that-never-was/ |title=Scientology and the FDA: The conspiracy that never was |first=Chris |last=Owen |date=July 11, 2019 |website=The Underground Bunker}}</ref> | |||
"Fair Game" was introduced by Hubbard, and incites Scientologists to use criminal behavior, deception and exploitation of the legal system to resist "]s", i.e. people or groups that "actively seeks to suppress or damage Scientology or a Scientologist by Suppressive Acts." He defined it "Fair Game" as: | |||
In November 1963 ], the government opened an inquiry into the Church, which was accused of ], blackmail, extortion and damaging the mental health of its members.{{Sfn|Wallis|1977|p=215}}{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=250}} ], published in October 1965, condemned every aspect of Scientology and Hubbard himself.{{sfn|Miller|1987|pp=252–253}} The report led to Scientology being banned in Victoria,{{Sfn|Wallis|1977|p=193}} ] and ],{{Sfn|Wallis|1977|p=196}} and led to more negative publicity around the world. Public perceptions of Scientology changed from "relatively harmless, if cranky" to an "evil, dangerous" group that performs hypnosis and brainwashing.{{Sfn|Wallis|1977|p=215}} Scientology attracted increasingly unfavorable publicity across the English-speaking world.{{Sfn|Wallis|1977|p=192}} | |||
Hubbard took major new initiatives in the face of these challenges. By 1965, "Ethics Technology" was introduced to tighten internal discipline within Scientology. It required Scientologists to "]" from any organization or individual—including family members—deemed to be disruptive or "suppressive".{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=155}} Scientologists were also required to write "Knowledge Reports" on each other, reporting transgressions or misapplications of Scientology methods. Hubbard promulgated a long list of punishable "Misdemeanors", "Crimes", and "High Crimes".{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=156}} At the start of March 1966, Hubbard created the ] (GO), a new agency within the Church of Scientology that was headed by his wife Mary Sue.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=161}} It dealt with Scientology's external affairs, including public relations, legal actions and the gathering of intelligence on perceived threats.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=165}} | |||
:''ENEMY — SP Order. Fair game. May be deprived of property or injured by any means by any Scientologist without any discipline of the Scientologist. May be tricked, sued or lied to or destroyed''.<ref>HCO POLICY LETTER OF 18 OCTOBER 1967, Issue IV </ref> | |||
As Scientology faced increasingly negative media attention, the GO retaliated with hundreds of writs for libel and slander; it issued more than forty on a single day.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=189}} Hubbard ordered his staff to find "lurid, blood sex crime actual evidence {{sic}} on attackers".{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=160}} The "]" policy was codified in 1967, which was applicable to anyone deemed an "enemy" of Scientology: "May be deprived of property or injured by any means by any Scientologist without any discipline of the Scientologist. May be tricked, sued or lied to or destroyed."<ref>Hubbard, L. Ron. "Penalties for Lower Conditions". HCO Policy Letter of October 18, 1967, Issue IV. Quoted in ], pp. 175–176</ref>{{Sfn|Wallis|1977|p=144–145}} | |||
{{External media|video1=, May 1966}} | |||
Use of the term "Fair Game" was canceled in 1968, with Hubbard stating that "The practice of declaring people FAIR GAME will cease. FAIR GAME may not appear on any Ethics Order. It causes bad public relations. This P/L does not cancel any policy on the treatment or handling of an SP."<ref>Hubbard, HCOPL 21 October 1968, Cancellation of Fair Game</ref> The practice was continued, as Hubbard noted that his statement did not cancel the "fair game treatment" of Suppressive People as can be seen in the case of ]. | |||
Newspapers and politicians in the UK pressed the British government for action against Scientology. In April 1966, hoping to form a remote "safe haven" for Scientology, Hubbard traveled to the southern African country ] (now ]). Despite his attempts to curry favour with the local government, Rhodesia promptly refused to renew Hubbard's visa, compelling him to leave the country.{{r|reitman|pages=80–81}} Finally, at the end of 1966, Hubbard acquired his own fleet of three ships.<ref name="Wright2011" /> In July 1968, the British ] announced that foreign Scientologists would no longer be permitted to enter the UK and Hubbard himself was excluded from the country as an "]".{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=183}}<ref>]</ref> Further inquiries were launched in Canada, New Zealand and South Africa.{{Sfn|Wallis|1977|p=196}} | |||
===In the Sea Org era=== | |||
Hubbard said in a 1976 affidavit that Fair Game was never intended to authorise harassment, stating that: "There was never any attempt or intent on my part by the writing of these policies (or any others for that fact), to authorise illegal or harassment type acts against anyone. | |||
{{main|Life of L. Ron Hubbard from 1967 to 1975}} | |||
As soon as it became apparent to me that the concept of 'Fair Game' as described above was being misinterpreted by the uninformed, to mean the granting of a licence to Scientologists for acts in violation of the law and/or other standards of decency, these policies were cancelled."<ref>Hubbard, affidavit of 22 March 1976, quoted in David V Barrett, The New Believers: A Survey of Sects, Cults and Alternative Religions, p. 464 (Octopus Publishing Group, 2003)</ref> | |||
{{seealso|Xenu|Space opera in Scientology}} | |||
He returned to the United States in the mid-1970s and lived for a while in ].<ref name="Blue Sky"/><!-- p.209-13 --> | |||
] | |||
Hubbard purchased a ship in ] and founded the "]", a private navy of elite Scientologists. Hubbard set out to take command of the ship. Enroute, he wrote OT III, the esoteric story of Xenu.<ref name="miller266">{{Harvnb|Miller|1987|p=266}}</ref><ref>OT III says "In December 1967 I knew someone had to take the plunge", but the material was publicized well before this.</ref> In a letter to his wife ],<ref name="corydon"/>{{rp|58–59, 332–333}} Hubbard said that, in order to assist his research, he was drinking alcohol and taking ]s and ]s.<ref>"I'm drinking lots of rum and popping pinks and greys" -Correspondence to Mary Sue Hubbard as quoted in Corydon p. 59</ref> In OT III, Hubbard wrote of alleged secrets of an immense disaster that had occurred "on this planet, and on the other seventy-five planets which form this Confederacy, seventy-five million years ago".<ref>Hubbard, L. Ron. "Ron's Journal '67", quoted in ], p. 173.</ref> It teaches that Xenu, the leader of the Galactic Confederacy, had shipped billions of people to Earth and blown them up with ]s, following which their traumatized spirits were stuck together at "implant stations", brainwashed with false memories and eventually became contained within human beings.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=32}} | |||
When Hubbard established the Sea Org he publicly declared that he had relinquished his management responsibilities over the Church of Scientology. In fact, he received daily ] messages from Scientology organizations around the world reporting their statistics and income. The Church of Scientology sent him $15,000 a week along with millions of dollars that were transferred to bank accounts.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=299}} Church of Scientology couriers arrived regularly, conveying luxury food for Hubbard and his family or cash that had been smuggled from England to avoid currency export restrictions.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=290}}{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=300}} Hubbard's fleet began sailing from port to port in the Mediterranean Sea and eastern North Atlantic, rarely staying anywhere for longer than six weeks, as Hubbard claimed he was being pursued by enemies whose interference could lead to global chaos or nuclear war.<ref name="Miller-297">Quoted in ], p. 297</ref> | |||
==Later life== | |||
{{External media|video1=, 1967 interview with Hubbard}} | |||
During the 1980s, Hubbard returned to science fiction, publishing | |||
Though Scientologists around the world were presented with a glamorous picture of life in the Sea Org and many applied to join Hubbard aboard the fleet, the reality was rather different.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=177}} Most of those joining had no nautical experience at all.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=177}} Mechanical difficulties and blunders by the crews led to a series of embarrassing incidents and near-disasters. Following one incident in which the rudder of the ''Royal Scotman'' was damaged during a storm, Hubbard ordered the ship's entire crew to be reduced to a "condition of liability" and wear gray rags tied to their arms.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=285}} The ship itself was treated the same way, with dirty tarpaulins tied around its funnel to symbolize its lower status. According to those aboard, conditions were appalling; the crew was worked to the point of exhaustion, given meager rations and forbidden to wash or change their clothes for several weeks.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=286}} Hubbard maintained a harsh disciplinary regime aboard the fleet, punishing mistakes by confining people in the ''Royal Scotman''{{'s}} bilge tanks without toilet facilities and with food provided in buckets.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=180}} At other times erring crew members or students were ] with Hubbard looking on and, occasionally, filming.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=186}} One member of the Sea Org recalled Hubbard punishing a little boy by confining him to the ship's chain locker.<ref> | |||
'']'' and '']'', the latter being an enormous book, published as a ten volume series. He also wrote an unpublished ] called ''Revolt in the Stars'', which dramatizes Scientology's ] teachings.<ref></ref>Hubbard's later ] sold well and received mixed reviews, but some press reports describe how sales of Hubbard's books were inflated by Scientologists purchasing large numbers of copies in order to manipulate the bestseller charts.<ref>{{cite web |url = http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-scientology062890,1,737186,full.story?coll=la-news-comment&ctrack=5&cset=true |title = Costly Strategy Continues to Turn Out Bestsellers |accessdate = 2007-07-30 |last = Welkos |first = Robert W. |coauthors = Sappell, Joel |date = ] |work = The Scientology Story |publisher = ]}}</ref><ref>McIntyre, Mike (], ]). . ''San Diego Union'', p. 1.</ref> While claiming to be entirely divorced from the Scientology management, Hubbard continued to draw income from the Scientology enterprises; '']'' magazine estimated his 1982 Scientology-related income as at least US $200 million.<ref name="200mil"/> | |||
"He put this 4-and-a-half year old little boy - Derek Greene - into the chain locker for two days and two nights. It's a closed metal container, it's wet, it's full of water and seaweed, it smells bad. But Derek was sitting up, on the chain, in this place, on his own, in the dark, for two days and two nights. He was not allowed to go to the potty. I mean he had to go in the chain locker on his own, soil himself. He was given food. And I never went near it, the chain locker while he was in there, but people heard him crying. That is sheer, total brutality. That is child abuse."</ref> | |||
Aboard ship, Hubbard began dispatching teams of Sea Org members to search for historic evidence of his past lives; In 1973, he published ''Mission into Time'' about those searches.<ref name="Mission">Hubbard, L. Ron. ''Mission into Time'', p. 7. Copenhagen: AOSH DK Publications Department A/S, 1973. {{ISBN|87-87347-56-3}}</ref> Now having his own paramilitary force, orders to use ] (killing someone with a .45 pistol) on specific individuals were published.<ref>On March 6, 1968, Hubbard issued an internal memo titled "Racket Exposed", in which he denounced twelve people as "Enemies of mankind, the planet and all life", and ordered that "Any ] member contacting any of them is to use Auditing Process R2-45."{{harvnb|Wallis|1977|p=154}} The memo was subsequently reproduced, with another name added, in the Church of Scientology's internal journal, ''The Auditor''.</ref><ref>{{Cite magazine |magazine=] |title=Racket Exposed |issue=35 |year=1968 |quote= are hereby declared Suppressive Persons ... 3. They are declared Enemies of mankind, the planet and all life. 4. They are fair game. 5. No amnesty may ever cover them. 6. If they ever come to a Qual Division they are to be run on reverse processes. 7. Any Sea Organization member contacting any of them is to use Auditing Process R2-45.}}</ref> From about 1970, Hubbard was attended aboard ship by the children of Sea Org members, organized as the ] (CMO). They were mainly young girls dressed in ] and ]s, who were responsible for running errands for Hubbard such as lighting his cigarettes, dressing him or relaying his verbal commands to other members of the crew.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=301}}{{r|indulged}} In addition to his wife Mary Sue, he was accompanied by all four of his children by her, who were all members of the Sea Org and shared its rigors.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=236}} | |||
Hubbard died at his ranch on ] ], aged 74, reportedly from a ]. Scientology attorneys arrived to claim his body, which they sought to have ] immediately per his will. They were blocked by the ] ], who ordered a drug toxicology test of a blood sample from Hubbard's corpse. The examination revealed a trace amount of the drug ] (brand name Vistaril).<ref> Image of Hubbard's toxicology report</ref><ref>Supplementary Coroner Report, 30 Jan 1986</ref><ref>Letter of Sheriff-Coroner E. Williams, 4 Nov 1987</ref> ] is an antihistamine and mild sedative sometimes used for symptomatic treatment of anxiety, ] or as an adjunct in non-related diseases in which anxiety is apparent. It is also useful as an anti-emetic (to prevent nausea), and in treating allergic ] such as chronic ] and ] and contact ].<ref>http://www.pfizer.com/pfizer/download/uspi_vistaril.pdf; VISTARIL® (hydroxyzine pamoate) Capsules and Oral Suspension; Pfizer; accessed 2007-04-11</ref> After the blood was taken, Hubbard's remains were cremated. | |||
After his prior failure in Rhodesia, Hubbard again tried to establish a safe haven in a friendly country, this time Greece.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=310}} The fleet stayed at the Greek island of ] for several months in 1968–1969. Hubbard, recently expelled from Britain, renamed the ships after Greek gods—the '']'' was rechristened ''Apollo''—and he praised the ].{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=290}} Despite Hubbard's hopes, in March 1969 Hubbard and his ships were ordered to leave.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=296}} | |||
The Church of Scientology announced Hubbard had deliberately ] to do "higher level spiritual research," unencumbered by mortal confines, and was now living "on a planet a galaxy away."<ref>"The Making of L. Ron Hubbard," ''Los Angeles Times'', June 24, 1990, pg. A40</ref> In May 1987, ], one of Hubbard's former personal assistants, assumed the position of Chairman of the ] (RTC), a corporation that owns the trademarked names and symbols of Dianetics and Scientology. Although Religious Technology Center is a separate corporation from the Church of Scientology International, Miscavige is the ] leader of the religion. ] is the President of Church of Scientology International.<ref></ref> | |||
] came into use in 1969. Given Hubbard's private affinity for Crowley and antipathy to Christianity; it has been suggested that the cross may have been inspired by Crowley's Rose Cross or might be a "crossed-out cross" (an anti-Christian symbol).]] | |||
==Personality== | |||
The practice of prominently displaying the cross in Scientology centers was instituted in 1969 following hostile press coverage where Scientology's status as a legitimate religion was being questioned.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Hubbard |first1=L. Ron |author-link=L. Ron Hubbard |title=An Encyclopedia of Scientology Policy |date=1999 |publisher=Church of Scientology of California |location=Los Angeles |isbn=0-88404-031-3 |page=196 |url=https://static1.squarespace.com/static/561e8f6ce4b04a0fe6bb0102/t/562a71dce4b0448e77d94ef9/1445622236968/OEC6_txt.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190922161023/https://static1.squarespace.com/static/561e8f6ce4b04a0fe6bb0102/t/562a71dce4b0448e77d94ef9/1445622236968/OEC6_txt.pdf |archive-date=September 22, 2019 |chapter=HCO Policy Letter of February 1969: Religion |quote=Any staff who are trained at any level as auditors (but not in AOs) are to be clothed in the traditioned ministerial black suit, black vest white collar silver cross for ordinary org wear.}}</ref> In October 1969, '']'' published an exposé by Australian journalist Alex Mitchell detailing Hubbard's occult experiences with Parsons and Aleister Crowley's teachings.<ref name="Ortega 2013">{{Cite web |last1=Ortega |first1=Tony |author-link=Tony Ortega |title=Blood Relation, Blood Ritual: A Hubbard Family Occult Mystery |url=https://tonyortega.org/2013/09/28/10468/ |website=The Underground Bunker |date=September 28, 2013 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last1=Mitchell |first1=Alexander |title=Scientology: Revealed for the first time / The odd beginning of Ron Hubbard's career |url=http://www.lermanet.com/scientologynews/crowley-hubbard-666.htm |publisher=The Sunday Times |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190309231340/http://www.lermanet.com/scientologynews/crowley-hubbard-666.htm |archive-date=March 9, 2019 |date=October 5, 1969 }}</ref> The Church responded with a statement, claiming without evidence Hubbard was sent in by the US Government to "break up Black Magic in America" and succeeded.<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Library/Shelf/miller/bfm07.htm | title=Bare-Faced Messiah: Chapter 7|quote=December 1969: "Hubbard broke up black magic in America . . . because he was well known as a writer and philosopher and had friends among the physicists, he was sent in to handle the situation . He went to live at the house and investigated the black magic rites and the general situation and found them very bad . . . Hubbard's mission was successful far beyond anyone's expectations. The house was torn down. Hubbard rescued a girl they were using. The black magic group was dispersed and never recovered."}}</ref> | |||
Like most aspects of Hubbard and his life, there is wide disagreement on his personality. He is called "mankind's greatest friend" by his followers<ref name="LRHAPROFILE"> Quote: "<nowiki></nowiki>an can recover to himself some of the happiness, some of the sincerity, some of the love and kindness with which he was created."</ref>, but this depiction of Hubbard contrasts sharply with those of most journalists and biographers, and of others who knew him outside the context of Scientology. | |||
In mid-1972, Hubbard again tried to find a safe haven, this time in ], establishing contacts with the country's ] and training senior policemen and intelligence agents in techniques for detecting subversives.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=311}} The program ended in failure when it became caught up in internal Moroccan politics, and Hubbard left the country hastily in December 1972.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=312}} After French prosecutors charged Hubbard with fraud and customs violations, Hubbard risked extradition to France.{{r|corydon|page=94}} In response, at the end of 1972, Hubbard left the Sea Org fleet temporarily, living incognito in ], New York.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=314}} Hubbard's health deteriorated significantly during this period, as he was an overweight ], suffered from ] and had a prominent growth on his forehead.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=316}} In September 1973 when the threat of extradition had abated, Hubbard left New York, returning to his flagship.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=318}} | |||
===The public face=== | |||
Hubbard suffered serious injuries in a motorcycle accident on the island of ] in December 1973. In 1974, Hubbard established the ], a punishment program for Sea Org members who displeased him.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=206}} Hubbard's son Quentin reportedly found it difficult to adjust and attempted suicide in mid-1974.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=325}} Also in 1974, L. Ron Hubbard confessed to two top executives<ref>Bill Franks and David Mayo</ref> that "People do not because of , they leave because ".<ref>"A person does not ] due to Overts or Witholds. He blows only due to ARC BKs."</ref> Hubbard warned "If any of this information ever became public, I would lose all control of the orgs and eventually Scientology as a whole."<ref> with Bill Franks, June 2010</ref> | |||
====Philosopher and humanitarian==== | |||
The Church of Scientology describes Hubbard as a philosopher and humanitarian, and cite his programs for drug addiction and criminal rehabilitation as examples<ref name="LRHAPROFILE"/>. {{quotation|The first principle of my own philosophy is that wisdom is meant for anyone who wishes to reach for it. It is the servant of commoner and king alike and should never be regarded with awe.| L. Ron Hubbard}} | |||
], the FBI raided the ] in D.C. and seized thousands of documents revealing the scope of the Church's espionage operations.]] | |||
====Charmer==== | |||
Throughout this period, Hubbard was heavily involved in directing the activities of the Guardian's Office (GO), the legal bureau/intelligence agency.<ref>Beresford, David (February 7, 1980). "Snow White's dirty tricks". London: ''The Guardian''</ref> In 1973, he instigated the "]" and directed the GO to remove negative reports about Scientology from government files and track down their sources.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=317–318}} The GO carried out covert campaigns on his behalf such as ], designed to convince authorities that Hubbard had no legal liability for the actions of the church. Hubbard was kept informed of these operations, including as the theft of medical records from a hospital, harassment of psychiatrists, and infiltrations of organizations such as the ], ], ], ], and ].<ref>{{Cite news |last=Marshall |first=John |date=January 24, 1980 |title=The Scientology Papers: Hubbard still gave orders, records show |newspaper=Globe and Mail |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/386965976 |id={{ProQuest|386965976}} |url-access=subscription |via=]}}</ref>{{Sfn|Streissguth|1995|p=75}} ], a freelance journalist and Scientology critic, was subjected to at least at least 19 lawsuits, framed for sending bomb threats, and was urged to climb onto a dangerous 33rd-floor ledge by a roommate later believed to be a Guardian's Office agent.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.skeptictank.org/gs/sci591.htm|title=Files show spy reported woman's intimate words|last=Marshall|first=John|date=January 25, 1980|work=Globe and Mail|access-date=July 14, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190714201707/http://www.skeptictank.org/gs/sci591.htm |archive-date=July 14, 2019}}</ref><ref name=UML>{{Cite book |last1=Ortega |first1=Tony |title=The Unbreakable Miss Lovely |title-link=The Unbreakable Miss Lovely |date=2015 |publisher=Silvertail Books |location=London |isbn=9781511639378 |author-link=Tony Ortega}}</ref>{{r|UML|p=129–136,167–168,286,376}}<ref name="Breeze">{{Cite news |last =Staff | title =Redondo couple, N.Y. writer named in Scientology lawsuit | work =Daily Breeze|date =November 1, 1982 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.xenutv.com/hearings/cooper.htm | title=The 1982 Clearwater Hearings: Day 4 | date=May 8, 1982 | author=Paulette Cooper | access-date=February 12, 2007 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20070103160959/http://www.xenutv.com/hearings/cooper.htm <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archive-date = January 3, 2007}}</ref> | |||
Hubbard was known to be very sociable and charming, and a gifted hypnotist. In a 1948 demonstration of hypnotism at a gathering of science fiction buffs in Los Angeles, Hubbard successfully convinced one person he was cradling a baby kangaroo.<ref name="MBTR"/> At the beginning of a 1968 interview with him by '']'', a series produced by ] in England, Hubbard is described as a "charmer"<ref name="SHRINKING">{{cite video | people = World in Action | title = The Shrinking World of L. Ron Hubbard | medium = Television Interview | publisher = Granada Television (England) | location = North Africa | date = 1968 }}</ref>. | |||
=== |
===In hiding=== | ||
{{Main|Life of L. Ron Hubbard from 1975 to 1986}} | |||
====Ambitious and self-actualizing==== | |||
{{Location map+|USA|width=250|float = right|caption=In his final decade, Hubbard hid throughout the United States, moving from Florida to D.C., then to Southern California.|places= | |||
{{Location map~|USA|marksize=7|lat_deg=29.19 |lon_deg= -81.089444 | label = Daytona Beach|position=left}} | |||
{{Location map~|USA|marksize=7|lat_deg=38.904722 |lon_deg= -77.016389|label=D.C.|position=right}} | |||
{{Location map~|USA|marksize=7|lat_deg=39.554444|lon_deg=-119.735556|position=right|label=Sparks}} | |||
{{Location map~|USA|marksize=7|lat_deg=34.007778 |lon_deg= -118.400833||position=left}} | |||
{{Location map~|USA|marksize=7|lat_deg=33.7475 |lon_deg= -116.971944|}} | |||
{{Location map~|USA|marksize=7|lat_deg=33.616667 |lon_deg= -117.8975|position=bottom}} | |||
{{Location map~|USA|marksize=7|lat_deg=34.05|lon_deg= -118.25|position=right|label=Southern California}} | |||
}} | |||
{{Location map+|USA California Southern|width=250|float = right|caption=Multiple locations where Hubbard was in hiding in Southern California.|places= | |||
{{quotation|"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. That goal, is the real goal as far as I am concerned."| Hubbard, 1938 letter to Margaret "Polly" Grubb<ref name="MBTR"/>}} | |||
{{Location map~|USA California Southern|marksize=7|lat_deg=34.007778 |lon_deg= -118.400833|label=Culver<br />City|position=left}} | |||
{{Location map~|USA California Southern|marksize=7|lat_deg=33.7475 |lon_deg= -116.971944|label=Hemet}} | |||
{{Location map~|USA California Southern|marksize=7|lat_deg=33.616667 |lon_deg= -117.8975|label=Newport Beach|position=bottom}} | |||
{{Location map~|USA California Southern|marksize=7|lat_deg=34.05|lon_deg= -118.25|label=Creston|position=right}} | |||
}} | |||
After suffering a heart attack, Hubbard decided to relocate back to the United States.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=334}} In October 1975, Hubbard moved into a hotel suite in ] while the ] in ], was secretly acquired as the location for the Sea Org "land base".{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=334}} According to a former member of the Sea Organization pseudonymously named "Heidi Forrester", in late 1975 she met with a man fitting Hubbard's description who apparently performed a Crowleyite sex magick ritual called ] using her.{{r|corydon|page=126-7|quote="a heavy-set older man. He had reddish grey hair, slightly long in the back. He was wearing a white shirt, black pants, black tie, and black shoes, highly polished... He lay on top of me. As far as I can tell he had no erection. However, using his hand in some way he managed to get his penis inside me. Then for the next hour he did absolutely nothing at all. I mean nothing!"}} | |||
On June 11, 1976, the FBI apprehended two Guardian's Office agents inside the US Courthouse in D.C., prompting Hubbard to move cross country to a safe house in California, and later a nearby ranch. On October 28, 1976, Las Vegas police discovered Hubbard's son ] unconscious in his car with a hose connected to the tailpipe.<ref>]. Report of Investigation, Case #1003–76.</ref> L. Ron Hubbard was furious at the news, shouting, "That stupid fucking kid! Look what he's done to me!"{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=344}}<ref name="indulged">{{Cite news |last1=Sappell |first1=Joel |last2=Robert W. Welkos |date=June 24, 1990 |title=The Mind Behind the Religion : Life With L. Ron Hubbard : Aides indulged his eccentricities and egotism |work=Los Angeles Times |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-06-24-mn-1015-story.html |access-date=February 19, 2011}}</ref> Scientologists were told that Quentin had died from ].{{Sfn|Atack|1990|p=214}} | |||
This period in his life found him writing entries in his journal like "All men are your slaves," and "You can be merciless whenever your will is crossed and you have the right to be merciless."<ref name="MBTR"/> | |||
On July 8, 1977, the FBI carried out simultaneous raids on Guardian's Office locations in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C.<ref>{{Cite news |title=Federal Agents Raid Scientology Church: Offices in Two Cities Are Searched for Allegedly Stolen I.R.S. Files |first=Anthony |last=Marro |newspaper=] |date=July 9, 1977 |url=http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/flash/us/20100226_SCIENTOLOGY_TIMELINE/1977raid.pdf}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1978/07/06/fbi-raid-on-la-scientologists-upheld/87a4e31b-104e-4e76-8b4e-6a4b76abc310/ |title=FBI Raid on L.A. Scientologists Upheld |first=Timothy S. |last=Robinson |date=July 6, 1978 |newspaper=Washington Post}}</ref> They retrieved ] equipment, burglary tools and some 90,000 pages of incriminating documents.<ref>{{Cite news |title=Scientology Raid Yielded Alleged Burglary Tools |first=Timothy S. |last=Robinson |date=July 14, 1977 |newspaper=The Washington post |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1977/07/14/scientology-raid-yielded-alleged-burglary-tools/a5ede310-9c3e-4c37-a3ba-fad95cffaea7/}}</ref> On July 15, a week after the raid, Hubbard fled with Pat Broeker to ]. On August 18, 1978, Hubbard suffered from a ] and fell into a coma, but recovered.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=256}}<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Library/Shelf/miller/timeline.htm |title = Bare-Faced Messiah: Timeline}}</ref> Hubbard summoned his personal auditor, ], to heal him.<ref name="ReferenceC">{{Cite web | url=https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Library/Shelf/miller/interviews/mayo.htm | title=Interview with David Mayo }}</ref> | |||
====Abusive husband==== | |||
Hubbard married his second wife, Sara Northrup, on Aug. 10, 1946, without revealing his existing marriage and children.<ref name="SFGate01"/> This became a reason for her later divorce from Hubbard. During those legal proceedings, Northrup alleged abuse by Hubbard and also produced a letter she received from Margaret Grubb during the proceedings recounting her treatment by him.<ref name="MBTR"/> It reads, in part, {{cquote|Ron is not normal... 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.}}<div style="text-align: right; direction: ltr; margin-left: 1em;">- Margaret Grubb<ref name="MBTR"/></div> | |||
{{multiple image|perrow = 1|total_width=250 | |||
====Recluse==== | |||
| image1 = Scientology-Trementina-rotated-and-cropped.png | |||
With the eventual success of Scientology came money, legal trouble, and self-imposed isolation. Money gave him the means to hide from authorities by living at sea and then later at a private ranch in California, all the while keeping only the most trusted members near him. The reclusive and wealthy Hubbard was then able to portray himself as the man currently celebrated by Scientologists, while hiding aspects of his actual personality which starkly contrasted with this image.<ref name="MBTR">The few who worked at his side saw personality flaws and quirks not reflected in the staged photographs or in Hubbard's biographies.</ref> Several of those trusted to be near him say Hubbard was prone to emotional fits when he became upset.<ref name="MBTR">When upset, Hubbard was known to erupt like a volcano, spewing obscenities and insults.</ref> {{Cquote|I actually saw him take his hat off one day and stomp on it and cry like a baby.}}<div style="text-align: right; direction: ltr; margin-left: 1em;">-Former Scientologist Adelle Hartwell.<ref name="MBTR"/></div> | |||
| image2 = Church of Spiritual Technology ranch Creston.jpg | |||
| image3 = Kool logo.png | |||
| footer = The distinctive logo designed by Hubbard has been constructed at Trementina (top) and at the ranch in Creston (middle) where Hubbard ultimately died. The logo is speculated to derive from the ] logo, Hubbard's preferred brand.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.villagevoice.com/scientologys-secret-vaults-a-rare-interview-with-a-former-member-of-hush-hush-cst/|title=Scientology's Secret Vaults: A Rare Interview With a Former Member of Hush-Hush "CST"|first=Tony|last=Ortega|date=February 6, 2012|website=The Village Voice}}</ref>}} | |||
In August 1979, Hubbard saw his wife for the last time.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=258}} Hubbard was facing a possible indictment for his role in ], a campaign of attacks against journalist ]. In February 1980, Hubbard disappeared into deep cover in the company of two trusted messengers, Pat and Annie Broeker.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=259}}{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=364}} For the first few years of the 1980s, Hubbard and the Broekers toured the Pacific Northwest in a ], later residing in Southern California.<ref name="SW-Deep">Sappell, Joel; Welkos, Robert W. (June 24, 1990). " ''Los Angeles Times'', retrieved February 8, 2011.</ref> Hubbard returned to Science-Fiction, writing '']'' (1982) and '']'', a ten-volume series published between 1985 and 1987.<ref name="Queen">Queen, Edward L.; Prothero, Stephen R.; Shattuck, Gardiner H. ''Encyclopedia of American religious history'', Volume 1, p. 493. New York: Infobase Publishing, 2009. {{ISBN|978-0-8160-6660-5}}</ref> | |||
===''"...(M)oroseness and suicidal inclinations..."''=== | |||
During the late 1940s, Hubbard was financially destitute<ref name="MBTR"/>, and suffered from feelings of depression as well as suicidal thoughts, according to a letter he wrote requesting assistance from Veterans Affairs.<ref name="Time2"> Page 2, Time Magazine. The founder of this enterprise was part storyteller, part flimflam man. Born in Nebraska in 1911, Hubbard served in the Navy during World War II and soon afterward complained to the Veterans Administration about his "suicidal inclinations" and his "seriously affected" mind.</ref> {{Quotation|"Toward the end of my (military) service, 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."| Hubbard 1947<ref name="MBTR"/>}} | |||
].]] | |||
== Writing career == | |||
In OT VIII, dated 1980, Hubbard explains the document is intended for circulation only after his death. In the document, Hubbard denounces the historic Jesus as "a lover of young boys" given to "uncontrollable bursts of temper".<ref name="ReferenceA2">{{Cite web|url=https://tonyortega.org/2014/06/24/up-the-bridge-we-finally-reach-ot-8-but-was-its-first-version-really-a-hoax/|title=UP THE BRIDGE: We finally reach 'OT 8' — but was its first version really a hoax? – The Underground Bunker|website=tonyortega.org}}</ref> Hubbard explains that "My mission could be said to fulfill the Biblical promise represented by this brief anti-Christ period."<ref name="cs.cmu.edu">{{Cite web|url=https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Library/Shelf/wakefield/christians.html|title=What Christians Need to Know about Scientology|website=] |first=Margery |last=Wakefield |year=1991}}</ref> This was corroborated by a 1983 interview where Hubbard's son Nibs explained that his father believed he was the Anti-Christ.<ref name="Ortega121617">{{Cite web |url=https://tonyortega.org/2017/12/16/l-ron-hubbards-son-was-troubled-but-dont-discount-him-entirely-few-knew-his-father-better/ |title=L. Ron Hubbard's son was troubled, but don't discount him entirely: few knew his father better |first=Tony |last=Ortega |date=December 16, 2017}}</ref><ref name="urban2006">{{Cite journal |last=Urban |first=Hugh B |author-link=Hugh Urban |year=2006 |title=Fair Game: Secrecy, Security, and the Church of Scientology in Cold War America |journal=] |volume=2 |issue=74}}</ref> | |||
{{main|L. Ron Hubbard bibliography|Scientology bibliography}} | |||
{{ external media | |||
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| video1 = Nibs Hubbard testimony<br /> and | |||
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}} In December 1985, Hubbard allegedly attempted suicide by custom ].<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://tonyortega.org/2016/07/11/scientology-founder-l-ron-hubbards-caretaker-and-friend-steve-sarge-pfauth-1945-2016/ |title = Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard's caretaker and friend, Steve 'Sarge' Pfauth, 1945–2016 | the Underground Bunker}}</ref> On January 17, 1986, Hubbard suffered a stroke; he died a week later.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.xenu-directory.net/news/images/lrh-death-coroners-report-complete.pdf#page=1 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151123210135/http://www.xenu-directory.net/news/images/lrh-death-coroners-report-complete.pdf#page=1 |archive-date=November 23, 2015 |title=L. Ron Hubbard's death certificate and other documents |url-status=usurped |access-date=June 15, 2012}}</ref> His body was cremated and the ashes were scattered at sea.<ref>{{Cite news |last1=Lindsey |first1=Robert |last2=Times |first2=Special To the New York |date=January 29, 1986 |title=L. Ron Hubbard Dies of Stroke; Founder of Church of Scientology |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1986/01/29/obituaries/l-ron-hubbard-dies-of-stroke-founder-of-church-of-scientology.html |access-date=June 20, 2023 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref>{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=375}} | |||
==Sources and doctrines== | |||
His fame increased greatly after the introduction of Dianetics and Scientology, and he has continued to be a popular subject since the time of his death. L. Ron Hubbard has been depicted in novels, motion pictures, television cartoons, video games and other cultural forms. Hubbard turns up in a fellow pulp author's fiction as early as ]'s 1942 murder mystery ''Rocket to the Morgue'' which features cameos by members and friends of the "Mañana Literary Society of Southern California," in which Hubbard makes a dual appearance as D. Vance Wimpole and Rene Lafayette (one of his pen names).<ref name="strange">{{cite book | last = Pendle | first = George | authorlink = George Pendle | title = Strange Angel: The Otherworldly Life of Rocket Scientist John Whiteside Parsons | year = 2005 | publisher = ] | isbn = 978-0-15-100997-8 | pages = pg.253 | chapter = }}</ref> In ]'s ] International, a robot appeared named ]. In later issues, L-Ron's full programming code, "L-Ron H*bb*rd" was revealed. <ref name="DC"> JLA members</ref> L-Ron is still a minor character in the ]. One of the Pets in Chuck Rosenthal's The Heart of Mars (2007) is called ElronHubbard. | |||
{{multiple image|perrow = 1|total_width=250 | |||
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| image2 = Aleister Crowley as Osiris (cropped).jpg | |||
| footer = Hubbard drew upon a diverse set of teachings to create his doctrine, incorporating elements from the psychoanalysis of ] (top) and the occult teachings of ] (bottom) among many other sources. | |||
}} | |||
Hubbard has been described as an "eclectic and ingenious" religious innovator who cobbled together ideas from a diverse array of sources and traditions.<ref>Urban (2012): "An eclectic and ingenious religious entrepreneur, Hubbard assembled a wide array of philosophical, occult, spiritual and science fiction elements, cobbling them together into a unique, new and surprisingly successful synthesis. In Hubbard's religious ], occult elements drawn from Crowley were indeed one important element, but neither more nor less important than the many others drawn from pop psychology, Eastern religions, science fiction and a host of goods available in the 1950s spiritual marketplace."</ref> Hubbard explicitly cited Freud's psychoanalysis as a source for Dianetics and Scientology, renaming some terms.<ref>e.g. Freud's "unconscious mind" became Hubbard's "reactive mind".</ref><ref name="AtackOrigin"/> Hubbard's wife Sara recalled him discussing biologist ], who had coined the term "]" which became ].<ref name="AtackOrigin"/> Hubbard incorporated the 1920s psychoanalytic theory of ] and taught his followers to maintain ].<ref>The first edition of Dianetics featured a dust jacket advertisement for psychoanalyst ]'s book on "the trauma of birth and pre-natal conditioning".</ref><ref name="AtackOrigin"/> Hubbard explicitly credited ] pioneer ] who coined the phrase "]", and taught that the 'one command' given to all life is to "survive" and later authored a book called ''Science of Survival''.{{r|AtackOrigin}} | |||
Hubbard was an unusually prolific author and lecturer. Because the majority of Hubbard's writings of the 1950s through to the 1970s were aimed exclusively at Scientologists, the Church of Scientology founded its own companies to publish his works - ] for the US and Canadian market and ], based in ], for the rest of the world. New volumes of his transcribed lectures continue to be produced; that series alone will ultimately total a projected 110 large volumes. Hubbard also wrote a number of works of fiction during the 1930s and 1980s, which are published by the Scientology-owned ]. All three of these publishing companies are subordinate to ], another Scientology corporation. | |||
Hubbard cited author ] as an influence; after two years observing patients at St. Elizabeth's psychiatric hospital in D.C. in collaboration with superintendent William Alanson White, Korzybski published a tome titled ''Science and Sanity'' outlining a doctrine he called "]".<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9M50DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA62|title=Among the Scientologists: History, Theology, and Praxis|first=Donald A.|last=Westbrook|date=November 1, 2018|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-066498-5 |via=Google Books}}</ref> After Korzybski founded an "Institute" to promote his teachings and began offering seminars, his ideas were incorporated into the science-fiction of Hubbard-associates ] and ], who envisioned futures where research into General Semantics had transformed some individuals into superhumans; Hubbard cited this fiction in a letter announcing the central principles of Dianetics: a book that promises to "make supermen".<ref name="OrtegaSupermen"/> | |||
Hubbard was awarded the 1994 ] in Literature for "his crackling Good Book, ''Dianetics,'' which is highly profitable to mankind — or to a portion thereof."<ref>http://improbable.com/ig-pastwinners.html#ig1994</ref> In 2006, ] declared Hubbard the world's most published and most translated author, having published 1,084 fiction and non-fiction works that have been translated into 71 languages.<ref>http://www.voxmagazine.com/stories/2006/12/07/guinness-gracious/ Guinness Gracious; Vox - Columbia Missourian; Sean Ludwig; | |||
December 7, 2006; accessed 2007-02-11 | |||
</ref><ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.thebookstandard.com/bookstandard/news/author/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1001476331 | title = Guinness World Records: L. Ron Hubbard Is the Most Translated Author | accessdate = 2007-02-12 | last = Maul | first = Kimberly | date = ] | work = ]}}</ref> | |||
Through his exposure to both psychoanalysts and occultists, Hubbard drew inspiration from Eastern religions. Hubbard cited psychiatrist Joseph Thompson as teaching him the adage "If it's not true for you, it's not true", a ] which was later incorporated into Scientology.<ref>Wright: "One of Thompson's maxims was 'If it's not true for you, it's not true.' He told young Hubbard that the statement had come from Gautama Siddhartha, the Buddha. It made an impression on Hubbard." (Wright 2013, p.22)</ref><ref>Archived at {{cbignore}} and the {{cbignore}}: {{Cite web| url = https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=laGfzYjotbs| title = LRH Birthday event Hubbard talks about Snake Thompson | website=YouTube| date = September 9, 2014 }}{{cbignore}}</ref> Reincarnation, originally a ] doctrine, entered Western occultism through the works of Blavatsky and numerous others. Fifteen years after Blavatsky followers unveiled "]", Hubbard announced "]". | |||
A selection of Hubbard's best-known titles are below; ] is available in a separate article. | |||
Hubbard's son Nibs said that Aleister Crowley was his father's most important source of inspiration, and scholar Hugh Urban has written extensively about the ].<ref>"Black magic is the inner core of Scientology" ].</ref> Nibs Hubbard said in an interview in 1983:{{r|penthouse}} {{blockquote|What a lot of people don't realize is that Scientology is black magic that is just spread out over a long time period. To perform black magic generally takes a few hours or, at most, a few weeks. But in Scientology it's stretched out over a lifetime, and so you don't see it.}} Like Crowley, Hubbard identified himself with diabolical figures from the Book of Revelation. Just as Aleister Crowley taught a soul could temporarily leave its body through ], Hubbard taught a thetan could journey outside the body by "going exterior".{{sfn|Urban|2012|p=107}} | |||
===Fiction=== | |||
*''Buckskin Brigades'' (1937), ISBN 0-88404-280-4 | |||
*''Final Blackout'' (1940), ISBN 0-88404-340-1 | |||
*'']'' (1951), ISBN 0-88404-599-4 | |||
*''Typewriter in the Sky'' (1951), ISBN 0-88404-933-7 | |||
*''Ole Doc Methuselah'' (1953), ISBN 0-88404-653-2 | |||
*'']'' (1982), ISBN 0-312-06978-2 | |||
*'']'' (1985-87), 10 vols. | |||
===Dianetics and Scientology === | |||
*''],'' New York 1950, ISBN 0-88404-416-5 | |||
*''Child Dianetics. Dianetic Processing for Children,'' Wichita, Kansas 1951, ISBN 0-88404-421-1 | |||
*'']'' Parts of transcripts and notes from a series of lectures given in Los Angeles, California in November 1950, ISBN 088404-422-X | |||
*''Scientology 8-80,'' Phoenix, Arizona 1952, ISBN 0-88404-428-9 | |||
*''],'' Phoenix, Arizona 1954, ISBN 0-88404-417-3 | |||
*'']'' Phoenix, Arizona 1955, ISBN 1-4031-0538-3 | |||
*''Scientology: The Fundamentals of Thought'' Washington, DC 1956, ISBN 0-88404-503-X | |||
*''The Problems of Work'' Washington, DC 1956, ISBN 0-88404-377-0 | |||
*''Have You Lived Before This Life?,'' East Grinstead, Sussex 1960, ISBN 0-88404-447-5 | |||
*''Scientology: A New Slant on Life,'' East Grinstead, Sussex 1965, ISBN 1-57318-037-8 | |||
*'''' Los Angeles 1976, ISBN 0-88404-039-9 | |||
*''Research and Discovery Series,'' a chronological series collecting Hubbard's lectures. Vol 1, Copenhagen 1980, ISBN 0-88404-073-9 | |||
*''The Way to Happiness,'' Los Angeles 1981, ISBN 0-88404-411-4 | |||
Hubbard also taught extensively about hypnosis and recommended a 1949 book on the subject.<ref>Hypnotism Comes of Age (1949) by ]</ref><ref name="AtackOrigin"/> Hubbard told of hypnotic ], privately teaching human religions are the product of such implants. The use of ] was an extant practice in occult circles prior to Dianetics.<ref>How We Remember Our Past Lives (1946)</ref> Hubbard incorporated a range of ] techniques into Scientology auditing and courses.{{sfn|Hassan|Scheflin|2024|pp=759–761}} They are employed as a means to create dependency and obedience in his followers.{{sfn|Hassan|Scheflin|2024|pp=759–761}} Crowley and Hubbard both placed emphasis on a Goddess figure, variously called ], Hathor, or Diana—a name Hubbard gave to a ship and a daughter; the term Dianetics may have been inspired by the Goddess.<ref name="AtackOccult"/> Crowley taught a sex magic ritual called karezza or ] which Hubbard is believed to have practiced.<ref name="AtackOccult">{{Cite web |url=https://www.spaink.net/cos/essays/atack_occult.html |title=Hubbard and the Occult |first=Jon |last=Atack |author-link=Jon Atack |via=]}}</ref> | |||
==Notes== | |||
{{reflist|2}} | |||
The e-meter was constructed by inventor Volney Mathison, who introduced it to Hubbard. Similar devices had been in use by psychiatrists and law enforcement for decades. Hubbard likened his own teachings about ] and ] to the early 20th-century fiction genre ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://tonyortega.org/source-code-actual-things-l-ron-hubbard-said-on-this-date-in-history/|title = SOURCE CODE: Actual things L. Ron Hubbard said on this date in history | the Underground Bunker|quote=Now, all this sounds very Space Opera-ish and that sort of thing, and I'm sorry for it, but I am not one to quibble about the truth. }}</ref> Hubbard drew upon US Navy traditions in creating the Sea Org, and he once said the ] had been inspired by the ].{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=323|loc="I once asked him why he chose young girls as messengers ... He said it was an idea he had picked up from Nazi Germany. He said Hitler was a madman, but nevertheless a genius in his own right and the Nazi Youth was one of the smartest ideas he ever had. With young people you had a blank slate and you could write anything you wanted on it and it would be your writing. That was his idea, to take young people and mould them into little Hubbards. He said he had girls because women were more loyal than men."}} | |||
==External links== | |||
{{Portal|Scientology|Scientology e meter blue.jpg}} | |||
{{wikiquote}} | |||
{{commons}} | |||
===Official Biographical sites=== | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* 6 commonly asked questions by the media | |||
* Various fictional genres by L. Ron Hubbard | |||
* A contest founded by L. Ron Hubbard to encourage upcoming fiction and fantasy writers | |||
==False biographical claims== | |||
===Unofficial Biographies (Online)=== | |||
] (a decoration given to all US servicemen wounded in action).]] | |||
* by ] <!--not "Brent"--> | |||
{{main|Pseudobiography of L. Ron Hubbard}} | |||
* by ] Contains biographical material in addition to other topics. | |||
Throughout his life, Hubbard made grossly exaggerated or outright false claims about himself. His estranged son Nibs reported that "Ninety-nine percent of what my father ever wrote or said about himself" was false. An acquaintance who knew Hubbard in Pasadena recalled recognizing Hubbard's epic autobiographical tales as being adapted from the writings of others.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Library/Shelf/miller/interviews/himmel.htm |title=The Bare-Faced Messiah Interviews : Interview with Nieson Himmel, Los Angeles, 14 August 1986 |via=]|quote="He claimed he was in England, in the "Royal Museum", going down this hall, and three scientists came walking out of an office, spotted him, grabbed him and took him into office and started measuring his skull, saying this was a perfect example of whatever it was and then pushing him out without a word. I said, "gee, that's a hell of a great story, except I think I read that in George Bernard Shaw." Another time he told a story of being in the Aleutians in command of a destroyer and came near some ice foes and a polar bear jumped onto the ship chasing everyone around. It's another good story that Cory Ford wrote in his book about the Aleutians."}}</ref> In October 1984, an American judge issued a ruling, writing of Hubbard that "the evidence portrays a man who has been virtually a ] when it comes to his history, background and achievements."{{sfn|Miller|1987|pp=370–71}} In his private "Affirmations", Hubbard wrote to himself: {{blockquote|You can tell all the romantic tales you wish... you know which ones were lies... You are gallant and dashing and need tell no lies at all. You have enough real experience to make anecdotes forever. Stick to your true adventures. Or if you wish, as you will, tell adventures which happened to others – People accept them better.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://mncriticalthinking.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Affirmations.pdf |title=Appendix 2: The Affirmations of L. Ron Hubbard |website=] |year=2016}}</ref>}} | |||
* by ] | |||
Hubbard described his grandfather as a "wealthy Western cattleman", but contemporary records show that Hubbard's grandfather, Lafayette Waterbury, was a ], not a rancher, and was not wealthy. Hubbard claimed to be a "]" of the Native American ] tribe, but Hubbard lived over a hundred miles from the Blackfeet reservation and the tribe did not practice blood brotherhood.<ref name="SW-Staking">{{Cite news |last1=Sappell |first1=Joel |last2=Welkos |first2=Robert |date=June 24, 1990 |title=The Making of L. Ron Hubbard: Staking a Claim to Blood Brotherhood |work=Los Angeles Times |at=A38:5 |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-06-24-mn-1013-story.html}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last1=McDowell |first1=Michael |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=K0_dHrRY3gIC&q=l.+ron+hubbard+blackfeet+blood+brother&pg=PA275 |title=World Religions at your Fingertips |last2=Brown |first2=Nathan Robert |publisher=Penguin |year=2009 |isbn=9781592578467 |access-date=January 8, 2016 |page=275 |ol=23831136M}}</ref>{{sfn|Christensen|2004|p=237}} Hubbard claimed to have been the youngest Eagle Scout in Boy Scouts history, but in fact the organization kept no records of the ages of Eagle Scouts.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=50}} | |||
===Further mention of Hubbard=== | |||
Hubbard claimed to have traveled to Manchuria, but his diary did not record it.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=57}} Hubbard claimed to be a graduate engineer, but in fact he earned poor grades at university, was placed on probation in September 1931 and dropped out altogether in the fall of 1932.{{r|malko|page=31}}{{Sfn|Wallis|1977|p=18}}{{r|malko|page=31}} Hubbard used the title "Doctor", but his only doctorate was from a ]. Hubbard claimed to have been crippled and blinded in combat, but records show he was never wounded and never received a ] (a decoration given to all US servicemen wounded in action). Hubbard's Navy service records indicate that he received only four campaign medals rather than the twenty-one claimed by Church biographies.{{r|mystique}} | |||
*] . (critical material on Hubbard and Scientology) | |||
* for Hubbard via The Smoking Gun | |||
* {{nndb name|id=545/000026467|name=L. Ron Hubbard}} | |||
* (''Slate'' magazine, ], ]) | |||
* | |||
*{{imdb name|id=0399196|name=L. Ron Hubbard}} | |||
* {{isfdb name|id=L._Ron_Hubbard|name=L. Ron Hubbard}} | |||
* | |||
* at the ] | |||
{{LRH}} | |||
{{Scientologyfooter}} | |||
==Legacy== | |||
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Hubbard was survived by his wife Mary Sue and all of his children except his second son Quentin. His will provided a ] to support Mary Sue; her children Arthur, Diana and Suzette; and Katherine, the daughter of his first wife Polly.<ref> (February 7, 1986). "Hubbard Left Most of Estate to Scientology Church; Executor Appointed". The Associated Press.</ref> He disinherited two of his other children.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=356}} L. Ron Hubbard, Jr. had become estranged, changed his name to "]" and, in 1982, sued unsuccessfully for control of his father's estate.{{sfn|Lamont|1986|p=154}} Alexis Valerie, Hubbard's daughter by his second wife Sara, had attempted to contact her father in 1971. She was rebuffed with the implied claim that her real father was Jack Parsons rather than Hubbard, and that her mother had been a Nazi spy during the war.{{sfn|Miller|1987|p=306}} Both later accepted settlements when litigation was threatened.{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=356}} In 2001, Diana and Suzette were reported to still be Church members, while Arthur had left and become an artist. Hubbard's great-grandson, ], is a noted ].<ref>Lattin, Don (February 12, 2001). . ''San Francisco Chronicle'', retrieved February 12, 2011.</ref> | |||
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Opinions are divided about Hubbard's literary legacy. One sociologist argued that even at Hubbard's peak in the late 1930s, he was regarded as merely "a passable, familiar author but not one of the best", while by the late-1970s "the subculture wishes it could forget him" and fans gave him a worse rating than any other of the "Golden Age" writers.<ref>]. "Science and Religion: The Case of Scientology", in Bromley, David G.; Hammond, Phillip E. (eds). ''The Future of new religious movements'', p. 63. Macon, GA: Mercer University Press, 1987. {{ISBN|978-0-86554-238-9}}</ref> '']'' argues that while Hubbard could not be considered a peer of the "prime movers" like Asimov, Heinlein, and Sprague de Camp, Hubbard could be classed with Van Vogt as "rogue members of the early Campbell pantheon".<ref name="sf-encyclopedia.com"/> Hubbard received various posthumous awards, having a street named after in him in Los Angeles and recognition of his birthday in Utah and New Jersey.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Times |first=Los Angeles |title=How Scientology got L.A. to name street after L. Ron Hubbard |website=] |date=March 31, 2015 |url=http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-street-scientology-hubbard-20150330-story.html |access-date=July 25, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Tribune |first=Pamela Manson The Salt Lake |title=West Valley City recognizes L. Ron Hubbard Day |url=http://archive.sltrib.com/story.php?ref=/sltrib/news/51206472-78/proclamation-hubbard-scientology-proclamations.html.csp |access-date=July 25, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=N.J. approves more than 100 school religious holidays |date=April 11, 2016 |url=http://www.nj.com/education/2016/04/nj_approves_list_of_school_religious_holidays_1.html |access-date=July 25, 2016}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=N.J. Now Has More Than 100 School Religious Holidays You May Not Know About |date=April 12, 2016 |url=http://patch.com/new-jersey/tomsriver/nj-approves-more-100-school-religious-holidays-you-may-not-know |access-date=July 25, 2016}}</ref> | |||
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Hubbard's teachings led to numerous offshoots and splinter groups. In 1966, two former Scientologists founded the ] which mixed Hubbard's teachings with Satanism. In 1969, a group led by former Scientologists ] and ] was arrested and later convicted for their role in a series of high-profile murders. In 1971, former Scientologist ] founded EST, a notable ]. In 1998, ] drew upon Hubbard's writings and Erhard's techinques to create the large group awareness training ESP, a forerunner to the group ]. Raniere offered students a chance to reach a superhuman state called "Unified" and taught Hubbard's doctrine of "suppressive persons"; Raniere was ultimately sentenced to 120 years for a pattern of crimes, including the sexual exploitation of a child, sex trafficking of women, and conspiracy to commit forced labor.<ref name="NYT Convicted">{{Cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/19/nyregion/nxivm-trial-raniere.html|title=Nxivm's Keith Raniere Convicted in Trial Exposing Sex Cult's Inner Workings|last=Moynihan|first=Colin|date=June 19, 2019|work=The New York Times}}</ref><ref name="Department of Justice">{{Cite web |date=October 27, 2020 |title=NXIVM Leader Keith Raniere Sentenced to 120 Years in Prison for Racketeering and Sex Trafficking Offenses |url=https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/nxivm-leader-keith-raniere-sentenced-120-years-prison-racketeering-and-sex-trafficking |access-date=July 2, 2021 |work=Department of Justice |language=en}}</ref> In 2010, the ] began introducing its followers to Hubbard's teachings, with leader ] proclaiming "I thank God for Mr. L. Ron Hubbard!"<ref>{{Cite magazine |url=https://newrepublic.com/article/108205/scientology-joins-forces-with-nation-of-islam |title=Thetans and Bowties : The Mothership of All Alliances: Scientology and the Nation of Islam |date=October 5, 2012 |first=Eliza |last=Gray |magazine=The New Republic}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I0kKMnpI9_M&t=211s | title=Minister Farrakhan talks about the Church of Scientology and Dianetics | website=YouTube | date=October 10, 2021 }}</ref> | |||
] | |||
] | |||
===In Scientology=== | |||
] | |||
After his death, Scientology leaders announced that Hubbard's body had become an impediment to his work and that he had decided to "drop his body" to continue his research.<ref name="PETRO">{{Cite book |last=Petrowsky |first=Marc |title=Sects, Cults, and Spiritual Communities: A Sociological Analysis |publisher=Praeger |year=1998 |isbn=978-0-275-95860-2 |location=Westport, Conn |page=144}}</ref>{{sfn|Atack|1990|p=354}} The copyrights of his works and much of his estate were willed to the Church of Scientology.{{r|reitman-rs}} According to the church, Hubbard's entire corpus of Scientology and Dianetics texts are etched onto steel tablets in a ], on top of which a Hubbard-designed logo has been bulldozed, intended to be ].<ref name="Gallagher">{{Cite book |last1=Gallagher |first1=Eugene V. |title=African Diaspora Traditions and Other American Innovations |last2=Ashcraft |first2=Michael |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |year=2006 |isbn=978-0-275-98717-6 |series=Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America |volume=5 |location=Westport, Conn. |page=172}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=35°31'28.6"N 104°34'20.2"W |url=https://www.google.com/maps?q=35%C2%B031%2728.56%22N+104%C2%B034%2720.20%22W&hl=en&ie=UTF8&ll=35.525643,-104.570575&spn=0.005772,0.013937&sll=35.508509,-104.552636&sspn=0.011546,0.027874&t=h&z=17 |website=Google maps}}</ref> | |||
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Hubbard's presence pervades Scientology, and his birthday is celebrated annually.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://tonyortega.substack.com/p/scientology-founder-l-ron-hubbards|title=Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard's 112th birthday: What's your favorite tall tale of his?|first=Tony|last=Ortega|date=March 13, 2023}}</ref> Every Church of Scientology maintains an office reserved for Hubbard, with a desk, chair and writing equipment, ready to be used.{{r|reitman-rs}} Hubbard is regarded as the ultimate source of Scientology, and is often referred to as simply "Source", and he has no successor.<ref>per ]</ref>{{sfn|Rothstein|2007|p=24}} Scientology has been described as "a movement focused on the figure of Hubbard".<ref>per ]</ref> Hubbard is presented as "the master of a multitude of disciplines" who performed extraordinary feats as a photographer, composer, scientist, therapist, explorer, navigator, philosopher, poet, artist, humanitarian, adventurer, soldier, scout, musician and many other fields of endeavor.{{sfn|Rothstein|2007|p=21}} Busts and portraits of Hubbard are commonplace throughout Scientology organizations, and meetings involve a round of applause to Hubbard's portrait.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Westbrook |first=Donald A. |title=Handbook of Scientology |publisher=Brill |year=2017 |isbn=9789004330542 |editor-last=Lewis |editor-first=James R. |editor-link=James R. Lewis (scholar) |series=Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion |chapter=Researching Scientology and Scientologists in the United States: Methods and Conclusions |editor-last2=Hellesoy |editor-first2=Kjersti}}</ref>{{rp|29–30}}<ref>My Scientology Movie, at 59:00</ref> In 2009, the ] found that 25,000 Americans identified as Scientologists.<ref>{{Cite news |date=November 1, 2009 |title=Defections, court fights test Scientology |agency=Associated Press |url=https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna33574688 |access-date=February 14, 2011}}</ref> | |||
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] | |||
Scientology's sacred texts are inextricably linked to L. Ron Hubbard. According to Scientology's official doctrine, "Hubbard is the sole author or narrator of each and every one of the religion's sacred books; indeed he is considered to be the single orchestrating genrius behind everything Scientological." Scientologists consider everything Hubbard ever said in verbal or written terms as "scripture".{{Sfn|Rothstein|2007|p=19}} | |||
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===In popular culture=== | |||
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{{see also|Scientology in popular culture}} | |||
] | |||
{{external media | |||
] | |||
|video1= | |||
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|video2= clip from South Park, 2005 | |||
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|video3=, Cracked, 2012 | |||
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|video4=, ''The Eric Andre Show'', December 5, 2013 | |||
|video5=, satirizing the 1990 music video | |||
|video6= in ] episode Aeon, July 25, 2019 | |||
}} | |||
In the mid-1980s, the church began to promote Dianetics with a radio and television advertising blitz that was "virtually unprecedented in book circles".<ref name="bestsellerlist">The Scientology Story (Los Angeles Times series) by Joel Sappell and Robert W. Welkos | |||
Part 5: The Making of a Best-Selling Author, June 28, 1990 </ref> In March 1988, Dianetics topped the best-seller lists nationwide through an organized campaign of mass bookbuying. Booksellers reported patrons buying hundreds of copies at once and later receiving ostensibly-new books from the publisher with store price stickers already attached.<ref name="bestsellerlist"/> Hubbard's number of followers peaked in the early 1990s with roughly 100,000 scientologists worldwide.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://lamag.com/featured/scientology-foreign-recruitment|title=Scientology Is Looking Abroad for New Stars and Vulnerable Recruits|first=Hailey|last=Eber|date=May 10, 2019|website=LAmag - Culture, Food, Fashion, News & Los Angeles}}</ref> | |||
On November 21, 1997, the ] network aired an episode of X-Files spinoff '']'' titled "]" which satirized Lafayette Ronald Hubbard's biography in an brief opening narration about a character named "] ] Goopta" who dreamt of becoming a neuroscientist only to discover that "his own brain could not comprehend basic biology".<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nuDzAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA350 |title=Back to Frank Black |first=Adam |last=Chamberlain |year=2012 |publisher=Fourth Horseman Press |isbn=9780988392281 |page=350 }}</ref> The character switches to philosophy, but "while reading Kirkegaard's ']', he became sick and nearly died"; After writing an entire book in a "single, feverish night" that changed the course of human history, the character began lecturing to standing room only crowds, "for he shrewdly refrained from providing chairs". In a satire of both Hubbard and George Santayana, the character explains that painful memories must be exterminated, saying "]". The character establishes an institute where patients are called 'doctors' and founds a religious order called Selfosophy staffed by an elite paramilitary inspired by the US Postal Service. We are told the character died of cancer or "molted his earthly encumbrance to pursue his Selfosophical research in another dimension".<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eiTmC84jAXMC&pg=PA259 |title=Citazioni pericolose: il cinema come critica letteraria |language=it |trans-title=Dangerous Quotes: Cinema as Literary Criticism |first=Alessandro |last=Zaccuri |year=2000 |publisher=Fazi Editore |isbn=8881121417 |page=259}}</ref> | |||
On February 8, 1998, Fox comedy '']'' broadcast "]", satirizing Hubbard and Scientology when the family joins a group called the Movementarians ruled over by a figure called "The Leader" who physically resembles L. Ron Hubbard. The Movementarians' use of a 10-trillion-year commitment for its members alludes to the billion-year contract and both groups make extensive ].<ref>{{Cite news|last=Hunt |first=Martin |title=Celebrity Critics of Scientology, Simpsons (TV show) |work=] |url=http://www.factnet.org/Scientology/celebcrit.html#simpsons |access-date=October 24, 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120113051815/http://www.factnet.org/Scientology/celebcrit.html |archive-date=January 13, 2012 }}</ref> | |||
{{multiple image|perrow = 1|total_width=250 | |||
| image1 = L._Ron_Hubbard_footage_excerpted_in_We_Stand_Tall_music_video_and_satirized_by_SNL.png | |||
| image2 = Bobby Moynihan satirizes L. Ron Hubbard in Saturday Night Live 2015 sketch Church of Neurotology.png | |||
| footer = In 2015, ''Saturday Night Live'' satirized Hubbard, with cast member ] (bottom) using similar costumes and staging as shown in historic footage of Hubbard (top). A caption reads "Died of Pink Eye", referencing Hubbard's wartime diagnosis of conjunctivitis. | |||
}} | |||
In 2000, Hubbard's novel was adapted into a ], starring long-time Scientology celebrity ]. In 2001, a film titled '']'' parodied Scientology and Hubbard.<ref>{{Cite news | url = http://www.sptimes.com/News/082401/news_pf/Floridian/Real_problems_with_a_.shtml | title = Real problems with a fictional movie | author = Steve Persall | publisher = ] | date = August 24, 2001}}</ref> In 2005, animated comedy '']'' aired the episode "]" in which protagonist Stan is believed to be the reincarnation of Hubbard. The episode broadcast the great secret behind the church—a condensed version of the ] story while an on-screen caption reads "This is what Scientologists actually believe".<ref name="arp">{{Cite book|editor-last=Arp|editor-first=Robert|others=William Irwin (Series Editor)|title=]|publisher=Blackwell Publishing (The Blackwell Philosophy & Pop Culture Series)|date=December 11, 2006|pages=27, 59, 60, 118, 120, 132, 137, 138, 140, 224|isbn=978-1-4051-6160-2}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://southpark.cc.com/episodes/a3esfi/south-park-trapped-in-the-closet-season-9-ep-12 |title=Trapped in the Closet |date=November 16, 2005 |website=]}}</ref> Prior to the episode, the story was almost completely unknown in mainstream culture.<ref>{{Cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1kiKDQAAQBAJ&pg=PA64 | title=A Queer and Pleasant Danger: A Memoir | isbn=9780807001653 | last1=Bornstein | first1=Kate | date=September 20, 2023 | publisher=Beacon Press }}</ref> | |||
]'s 2012 film '']'' features a religious leader named Lancaster Dodd, played by ], who is based on Hubbard and shares a physical resemblance to him.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Yamato |first=Jen |url=http://www.film.com/movies/will-scientologists-declare-war-on-paul-thomas-andersons-the-master#fbid=Sh0pkd5XnLJ |title=Will Scientologists Declare War on Paul Thomas Anderson's The Master? |publisher=] |work=Film.com |date=June 10, 2010 |access-date=June 2, 2011}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Brown |first=Lane |title=So This New Paul Thomas Anderson Movie Is Definitely About Scientology, Right? |publisher=New York Media Holdings |work=NYMag.com |date=December 3, 2010 |url=https://nymag.com/daily/entertainment/2009/12/so_this_new_paul_thomas_anders.html |access-date=June 5, 2011}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Brown |first=Lane |title=Universal Passes on Paul Thomas Anderson's Scientology Movie |publisher=New York Media Holdings |work=NYMag.com |date=March 17, 2010 |url=https://nymag.com/daily/entertainment/2010/03/why_does_paul_thomas_andersons.html |access-date=June 5, 2011}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2011/apr/26/scientology-hollywood-film-studio |title=Church of Scientology snaps up Hollywood film studio |last=Pilkington |first=Ed |work=] |publisher=] |date=April 26, 2011 |access-date=June 12, 2011}}</ref> The film depicts a Navy washout with psychological issues who is unable to hold down steady employment after the war. Facing potential legal troubles, he flees California by stowing away on a ship captained by self-proclaimed nuclear physicist and philosopher Lancaster Dodd, leader of a movement called "The Cause".<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/scientology-influence-master/story?id=17203467 | title=How Did Scientology Influence 'The Master'? | website=] }}</ref> | |||
On December 5, 2013, ] aired a comedy sketch titled "Black Scientologists" where ] character proclaims "Not a lot of people know this, but L. Ron Hubbard was a black man. His real name was L. Ron Hoyabembe!", while revealing an artist's conception of Hubbard wearing an ]. | |||
In April 2015, following the recent release of '']'', '']'' aired a music video featuring the "Church of ]", a parody of Scientology's 1990 music video "]". ] played a Hubbard-lookalike in the video.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://tonyortega.org/2015/04/05/saturday-night-lives-genius-spoof-of-scientology-last-night-lyrics-and-images/|title=Saturday Night Live's genius spoof of Scientology: Lyrics and images « The Underground Bunker|website=tonyortega.org}}</ref> From 2018 to 2019, the show '']'' dramatized the life of Jack Parsons. In the season 2 finale, actor Daniel Abeles played Hubbard.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://tonyortega.org/2019/07/31/strange-angel-goes-there-includes-scientology-founder-l-ron-hubbard-at-season-end/ |title='Strange Angel' goes there, teases Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard at season end |date=July 31, 2019 |first=Tony |last=Ortega |author-link=Tony Ortega |website=The Underground Bunker}}</ref> | |||
According to Hugh B. Urban in the book ''Handbook of Scientology'', the nature of popular media accounts of Scientology is largely due to its culture of secrecy. An example of Scientology being "America's most secretive religion" is the documentary '']''. Urban states, "However, while these popular accounts are often sensational and not particularly balanced, they do highlight the fact that secrecy has in fact been a pervasive aspect of the church from its inception."{{r|urban2017|p=279}} | |||
== Select works == | |||
{{see also|L. Ron Hubbard bibliography|Bibliography of Scientology}} | |||
Hubbard was a prolific writer and lecturer across a wide variety of genres. His works of fiction include several hundred short stories and many novels.<ref name="Gallagher" /> According to the Church of Scientology, Hubbard produced some 65 million words on Dianetics and Scientology, contained in about 500,000 pages of written material, 3,000 recorded lectures and 100 films.<ref name="Gallagher" /> | |||
; Early Fiction | |||
* '']'' (1937) recounts the story of a white man adopted by the Blackfeet tribe. | |||
* '']'' (1939) features a man, cursed by an ], who instead of sleeping must now enter an Arabian Nights-like world ruled over by an evil-genie queen. | |||
* '']'' (1940) is the story of an accident-prone pilot who seemingly cannot be killed | |||
* '']'' (1940) tells the story of a low-ranking British army officer who rises to the role of dictator. | |||
* '']'' (1951), a psychological thriller, follows a professor who, after an episode of missing time, becomes paranoid that demons are haunting him. | |||
* '']'' (1951) features protagonist Mike de Wolf who finds himself inside a story being written by friend Horace Hackett. | |||
; Dianetics and Scientology | |||
* '']'' (1950) introduced concepts like ], ], and the ]. | |||
* '']'' (1951) introduced concepts like the ], the ], and ]. | |||
* ''What to Audit'' (1952), later re-titled '']'' linked traumatic incidents throughout evolutionary history to modern health problems, for example, jaw trouble was said to result from unresolved trauma from having been a clam. | |||
* ''Scientology 8-80'' and ''Scientology 8-8008'' (1952) embraced the ], teaching that the ]. | |||
* '']'' (1956) argued life is a game, describing some people as "pieces", others as "players", and an elite few as "game makers". | |||
* '']'' (1957) claimed radiation poisoning and cancer could be cured with vitamins. | |||
* ''Introduction to Scientology Ethics'' (1968) codified an authoritarian set of ]. | |||
* ''Mission Into Time'' (1973) chronicled Hubbard's 1968 trip in the Mediterranean where he sought to find physical evidence of his past lives. | |||
; Late fiction | |||
* '']'' (1979), a screenplay version of the Xenu story | |||
* '']'' (1982), a novel set in the year 3000 when humanity has become an endangered species, it tells the story of tribesman Johnny Goodboy Tyler who leads humanity in rebellion against the Psychlos, an evil alien race. | |||
* '']'' (1985–87), a ten-book series, posthumously published, about an invasion of Earth by aliens called the Voltarian. | |||
== See also == | |||
{{Portal|Biography}} | |||
* ] | |||
* ], creator of Mormonism | |||
* ], creator of Theosophy | |||
* ], creator of Christian Science | |||
* ], creator of the Nation of Islam | |||
== Notes == | |||
{{Notelist}} | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist|refs= | |||
<ref name="corydon">{{Cite book |title=L. Ron Hubbard, Messiah or Madman? |title-link=L. Ron Hubbard, Messiah or Madman? |first=Bent |last=Corydon |author-link=Bent Corydon |year=1987 |publisher=] |isbn=0818404442 }} ()</ref> | |||
<ref name="malko">{{Cite book |first=George |last=Malko |title=Scientology: The Now Religion |title-link=Scientology: The Now Religion |year=1970 |publisher=] |ol=5444962M}}</ref> | |||
<ref name="penthouse">{{Cite magazine |ref=penthouse |title=Scientology Through the Eyes of L. Ron Hubbard, Jr. |url=https://penthouse.com/legacy/scientology/ |first=Allan |last=Sonnenschein |magazine=] |date=June 1983 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230801075709/https://penthouse.com/legacy/scientology/ |archive-date=August 1, 2023}} ()</ref> | |||
<ref name="reitman">{{Cite book |last=Reitman |first=Janet |author-link=Janet Reitman |title=Inside Scientology: The Story of America's Most Secretive Religion |title-link=Inside Scientology: The Story of America's Most Secretive Religion |date=2011 |isbn=9780618883028 |ol=24881847M |oclc=651912263 |publisher=] }}</ref> | |||
<ref name=reitman-rs>{{Cite magazine |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-news/inside-scientology-103288/ |title=Inside Scientology |date=February 23, 2006 |first=Janet |last=Reitman |author-link=Janet Reitman |magazine=] |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090430200426/http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/9363363/inside_scientology/print |archive-date=April 30, 2009}}</ref> | |||
<ref name="urban2017">{{Cite book |last=Urban |first=Hugh B. |author-link=Hugh Urban |title=Handbook of Scientology |publisher=Brill |year=2017 |isbn=9789004330542 |editor-last=Lewis |editor-first=James R. |editor-link=James R. Lewis (scholar) |editor-last2=Hellesoy |editor-first2=Kjersti |series=Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion |chapter='Secrets, secrets, SECRETS!' Concealment, Surveillance, and Information-Control in the Church of Scientology |pages=279–299 |doi=10.1163/9789004330542_012}}</ref> | |||
}} | |||
== Works cited == | |||
{{refbegin|30em}} | |||
* {{Cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/pieceofblueskysc00atac/ |title=A Piece of Blue Sky: Scientology, Dianetics and L. Ron Hubbard Exposed |first=Jon |last=Atack |author-link=Jon Atack |date=1990 |publisher=] |isbn=081840499X |ol=9429654M}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Barrett |first=David V. |title=The New Believers: A Survey of Sects, Cults and Alternative Religions |publisher=Cassell and Co |year=2001 |isbn=978-0304355921 |location=London |ol=3999281M}} | |||
* {{Cite journal |last=Bigliardi |first=Stefano |title=New Religious Movements, Technology, and Science: The Conceptualization of the E-Meter in Scientology Teachings |journal=Zygon |year=2016 |volume=51 |issue=3 |pages=661–683 |doi=10.1111/zygo.12281 }} | |||
* {{Cite book |title=Scientology |title-link=Scientology (Lewis book) |year=2009 |editor-first=James R. |editor-last=Lewis |editor-link=James R. Lewis (scholar) |isbn=9780199852321 |ol=16943235M |publisher=] |chapter=Making Sense of Scientology: Prophetic, Contractual Religion |pages=83–102 |first=David G. |last=Bromley |author-link=David G. Bromley |doi=10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195331493.003.0005}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Christensen |first=Dorthe Refslund |chapter=Inventing L. Ron Hubbard: On the Construction and Maintenance of the Hagiographic Mythology of Scientology's Founder |pages=227–258 |title=Controversial New Religions |title-link=Controversial New Religions |publisher=] |year=2004 |editor1-last=Lewis |editor1-first=James R. |editor1-link=James R. Lewis (scholar) |edition=1st |language=en |editor-last2=Petersen |editor-first2=Jasper Aagaard |doi=10.1093/019515682X.003.0011 |isbn=9780195156836 |oclc=53398162}} | |||
* Evans, Christopher. ''Cults of Unreason''. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1974. {{ISBN|0-374-13324-7}}, {{OCLC|863421}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Gardner |first=Martin |author-link=Martin Gardner |title=Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science |title-link=Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science |publisher=Dover Publications |year=1986 |isbn=978-0-486-20394-2 |oclc=18598918 |ol=22475247M}} | |||
*{{Cite book |last1=Hassan |first1=Steven A.|author-link1=Steven Hassan|last2=Scheflin |first2=Alan W.|editor-last1=Linden|editor-last2=De Benedittis|editor-last3=Sugarman|editor-last4=Varga|editor-first1=Julie H.|editor-first2=Giuseppe|editor-first3=Laurence I.|editor-first4=Katalin|chapter=Understanding the Dark Side of Hypnosis as a Form of Undue Influence Exerted in Authoritarian Cults: Implications for Practice, Policy, and Education|title=The Routledge International Handbook of Clinical Hypnosis |date=2024 |publisher=] |location=Abingdon/New York |isbn=978-1-032-31140-1 |pages=755–772 |url=https://www.routledge.com/The-Routledge-International-Handbook-of-Clinical-Hypnosis/Linden-DeBenedittis-Sugarman-Varga/p/book/9781032311401}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Lamont |first=Stewart |title-link=Religion Inc. |title=Religion Inc.: The Church of Scientology |publisher=Harrap |year=1986 |isbn=978-0-245-54334-0 |oclc=23079677 |ol=2080316M}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Lewis |first=James R. |chapter=Introduction |title=Scientology |year=2009a |editor-last=Lewis |editor-first=James R. |editor-link=James R. Lewis (scholar) |location=Oxford and New York |publisher=Oxford University Press |pages=3–14 |isbn=978-0-19-5331-49-3 }} | |||
* ]. ''''. Taylor & Francis; 1992. {{ISBN|978-0-8153-1140-9}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Melton |first=Gordon|author-link=J. Gordon Melton|editor-last=Lewis|editor-first=James R.|editor-link=James R. Lewis (scholar) | |||
|url=https://oxford.universitypressscholarship.com/view/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195331493.001.0001/acprof-9780195331493 |title=Scientology |publisher=]|location=New York/Oxford|access-date=November 23, 2020 |isbn=978-0-1953-3149-3 |date=March 19, 2009}} | |||
* {{Cite book |title=Bare-faced Messiah : The True Story of L. Ron Hubbard |title-link=Bare-faced Messiah |first=Russell |last=Miller |author-link=Russell Miller |ol=26305813M |isbn=0805006540 |oclc=17481843 |date=1987 |publisher=] }} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=O'Brien |first=Helen |title=Dianetics in Limbo: A Documentary About Immortality |publisher=Whitmore Publishing |year=1966 |oclc=4797460}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Pendle |first=George |author-link=George Pendle |title=Strange Angel: The Otherworldly Life of Rocket Scientist John Whiteside Parsons |publisher=Harcourt |year=2005 |isbn=015100997X |oclc=55149255 |ol=7362552M}} | |||
* {{Cite journal|doi= 10.1093/brain/30.2.153|issn=0006-8950|volume=30|issue=2|pages=153–218|last1=Peterson|first1=Frederick|author-link1=Frederick Peterson|last2= Jung|first2= C. G.|author-link2=Carl Jung|url=https://www.mpi.nl/publications/item2368472/psycho-physical-investigations-galvanometer-and-pneumograph-normal-and|via=]|title=Psycho-physical Investigations with the Galvanometer and Pneumograph in Normal and Insane Individuals|journal=]|publisher=]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200313040559/https://pure.mpg.de/rest/items/item_2368472_2/component/file_2368471/content|archive-date=March 13, 2020|url-status=live|date=July 1907|hdl=11858/00-001M-0000-002C-1710-9|hdl-access=free}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Rolph |first=Cecil Hewitt |title-link=Believe What You Like |title=Believe What You Like: What Happened Between the Scientologists and the National Association for Mental Health |year=1973 |publisher=Deutsch |isbn=978-0-233-96375-4 |oclc=815558}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Rothstein |first=Mikael |author-link=Mikael Rothstein |chapter=Scientology, scripture and sacred tradition |editor1-last=Lewis |editor1-first=James R. |editor1-link=James R. Lewis (scholar) |editor2-last=Hammer |editor2-first=Olav |editor2-link=Olav Hammer |title=The Invention of Sacred Tradition |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2007 |pages=18–37 |isbn=978-0-521-86479-4 |oclc=154706390 |doi=10.1017/CBO9780511488450.002}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Streeter |first=Michael |title=Behind closed doors: the power and influence of secret societies |publisher=New Holland Publishers |year=2008 |isbn=9781845379377 |oclc=231589690 |ol=25446794M}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Streissguth |first=Thomas |title=Charismatic cult leaders |publisher=The Oliver Press |year=1995 |isbn=978-1-881508-18-2 |oclc=30892074}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Thomas |first=Aled |year=2021 |title=Free Zone Scientology: Contesting the Boundaries of a New Religion |location=London |publisher=Bloomsbury |isbn=978-1-350-18254-7 }} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Tucker |first=Ruth A. |title=Another Gospel: Cults, Alternative Religions, and the New Age Movement |title-link=Another Gospel |year=1989 |publisher=] |isbn=0310259371 |ol=9824980M}} | |||
* {{Cite book|last=Urban|first=Hugh B. |author-link=Hugh Urban |title=The Church of Scientology: A History of a New Religion |title-link=The Church of Scientology: A History of a New Religion |publisher=] |year=2011 |isbn=9780691146089}} | |||
* {{Cite book |year=2012 |title=Aleister Crowley and Western Esotericism |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford and New York |last=Urban |first=Hugh B. |author-link=Hugh Urban |editor-last=Bogdan |editor-first=Henrik |pages=335–68 |isbn=978-0-19-986309-9 |oclc=820009842 |chapter=The Occult Roots of Scientology? L. Ron Hubbard, Aleister Crowley, and the Origins of a Controversial New Religion |editor2-last=Starr |editor2-first=Martin P.}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Wallis |first=Roy |author-link=Roy Wallis |title=The Road to Total Freedom: A Sociological Analysis of Scientology |title-link=The Road to Total Freedom |year=1977 |publisher=] |isbn=0231042000 |ol=4596322M}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Whitehead |first=Harriet |title=Renunciation and reformulation: a study of conversion in an American sect |publisher=Cornell University Press |year=1987 |isbn=978-0-8014-1849-5 |oclc=14002616 |ol=2722663M}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Winter |first=Joseph A |author-link=Joseph A. Winter |title=A Doctor's Report on Dianetics: Theory and Therapy |title-link=A Doctor's Report on Dianetics |publisher=] |year=1951 |oclc=1572759 |isbn=0517564211}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Wright |first=Lawrence |author-link=Lawrence Wright |title=Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood and the Prison of Belief |publisher=] |year=2013 |isbn=9780307700667 |ol=25424776M |title-link=Going Clear (book)}} | |||
{{refend}} | |||
== Further reading == | |||
* {{Cite magazine |first=Richard |last=Behar |author-link=Richard Behar |url=https://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,156952,00.html |title=Scientology: The Thriving Cult of Greed and Power |magazine=] |date=May 6, 1991 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140525200902/https://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,156952,00.html |archive-date=May 25, 2014 }} | |||
==External links== | |||
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{{Sister project links|d=Q216896|q=L. Ron Hubbard |c=L. Ron Hubbard|b=L. Ron Hubbard|s=Author:Lafayette Ronald Hubbard|n=no|v=no|voy=no|wikt=no|m=no|mw=no|species=no}} | |||
* {{Official website}} | |||
* | |||
* . Critical material on Hubbard and Scientology | |||
* for Hubbard via ''The Smoking Gun'' | |||
* Frenschkowski, Marco, , '']'', Vol. 1. No. 1. July 1999, {{ISSN|1612-2941}} | |||
* {{IMDb name|id=0399196|name=L. Ron Hubbard}} | |||
* {{ISFDB name|id=L._Ron_Hubbard|name=L. Ron Hubbard}} | |||
* at '']'' | |||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181004041054/http://sf-encyclopedia.uk/fe.php?nm=hubbard_l_ron |date=October 4, 2018 }} at the '']'' | |||
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Latest revision as of 19:02, 26 December 2024
American writer and Scientology founder (1911–1986)
L. Ron Hubbard | |
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Hubbard in 1950 | |
Born | Lafayette Ronald Hubbard (1911-03-13)March 13, 1911 Tilden, Nebraska, U.S. |
Died | January 24, 1986(1986-01-24) (aged 74) Creston, California, U.S. |
Other names | LRH |
Education | George Washington University (dropped out) |
Occupation |
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Known for | Inventor of Scientology |
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Criminal penalty | Fine of ₣35,000 and four years in prison (unserved) |
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Children | 7, including Ronald, Diana and Quentin |
Relatives | Jamie DeWolf (great-grandson) |
Military career | |
Service | United States Navy |
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Rank | Lieutenant |
Commands | USS YP-422 and USS PC-815 |
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Lafayette Ronald Hubbard (March 13, 1911 – January 24, 1986) was an American author and the founder of Scientology. A prolific writer of pulp science fiction and fantasy novels in his early career, in 1950 he authored Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health and established organizations to promote and practice Dianetics techniques. Hubbard created Scientology in 1952 after losing the intellectual rights to his literature on Dianetics in bankruptcy. He would lead the Church of Scientology – variously described as a cult, a new religious movement, or a business – until his death in 1986.
Born in Tilden, Nebraska, in 1911, Hubbard spent much of his childhood in Helena, Montana. While his father was posted to the U.S. naval base on Guam in the late 1920s, Hubbard traveled to Asia and the South Pacific. In 1930, Hubbard enrolled at George Washington University to study civil engineering but dropped out in his second year. He began his career as an author of pulp fiction and married Margaret Grubb, who shared his interest in aviation.
Hubbard was an officer in the Navy during World War II, where he briefly commanded two ships but was removed from command both times. The last few months of his active service were spent in a hospital, being treated for a variety of complaints. In 1953, the first churches of Scientology were founded by Hubbard. In 1954 a Scientology church in Los Angeles was founded, which became the Church of Scientology International. Hubbard added organizational management strategies, principles of pedagogy, a theory of communication and prevention strategies for healthy living to the teachings of Scientology. As Scientology came under increasing media attention and legal pressure in a number of countries during the late 1960s and early 1970s, Hubbard spent much of his time at sea as "commodore" of the Sea Organization, a private, quasi-paramilitary Scientologist fleet.
Hubbard returned to the United States in 1975 and went into seclusion in the California desert after an unsuccessful attempt to take over the town of Clearwater, Florida. In 1978, Hubbard was convicted of fraud after he was tried in absentia by France. In the same year, 11 high-ranking members of Scientology were indicted on 28 charges for their role in the Church's Snow White Program, a systematic program of espionage against the United States government. One of the indicted was Hubbard's wife Mary Sue Hubbard; he himself was named an unindicted co-conspirator. Hubbard spent the remaining years of his life in seclusion, attended to by a small group of Scientology officials.
Following his 1986 death, Scientology leaders announced that Hubbard's body had become an impediment to his work and that he had decided to "drop his body" to continue his research on another plane of existence. The Church of Scientology describes Hubbard in hagiographic terms, though many of his autobiographical statements were fictitious. Sociologist Stephen Kent has observed that Hubbard "likely presented a personality disorder known as malignant narcissism."
Life
Before Dianetics
Main article: Life of L. Ron Hubbard from 1911 to 1950 See also: Scientology and psychiatry § Hubbard's early encounters with psychiatryLafayette Ronald Hubbard was born on March 13, 1911, the only child of Ledora May Waterbury (1885–1959), who had trained as a teacher, and Harry Ross Hubbard (1886–1975), a low-ranking United States Navy officer. Like many military families of the era, the Hubbards repeatedly relocated around the United States and overseas. After moving to Kalispell, Montana, they settled in Helena in 1913. Hubbard's father rejoined the Navy in April 1917, during World War I, while his mother worked as a clerk for the state government. After his father was posted to Guam, Hubbard and his mother traveled there with brief stop-overs in a couple of Chinese ports. In high school, Hubbard contributed to the school paper, but was dropped from enrollment due to failing grades. After he failed the Naval Academy entrance examination, Hubbard was enrolled in a Virginia Preparatory School to prepare him for a second attempt. However, after complaining of eye strain, Hubbard was diagnosed with myopia, precluding any future enrollment in the Naval Academy. As an adult, Hubbard would privately write to himself that his eyes had gone bad when he "used them as an excuse to escape the naval academy".
Hubbard was sent to the Woodward School in D.C., as graduates qualified for admission to George Washington University without having to take the entrance exam. Hubbard graduated in June 1930 and entered GWU. Academically, Hubbard did poorly and was repeatedly warned about bad grades, but he contributed to the student newspaper and was active in the glider club. In 1932, Hubbard organized a student trip to the Caribbean, but amid multiple misfortunes and insufficient funding, the passengers took to burning Hubbard in effigy and the trip was canceled by the ship's owners. Hubbard did not return to GWU the following year.
Hubbard spoke of interactions with psychiatrists at both St. Elizabeth's psychiatric hospital in D.C. (top) and nearby Chestnut Lodge Sanitarium (bottom).For much of the 1920s and 1930s, Hubbard lived in Washington D.C., and he would later claim to have interacted with multiple psychiatrists in the city. Hubbard described encounters in 1923 and 1930 with navy psychiatrist Joseph Thompson. Thompson was controversial within the American psychiatric community for his support of lay analysis, the practice of psychoanalysis by those without medical degrees. Hubbard also recalled interacting with William Alanson White, supervisor of the D.C. psychiatric hospital St. Elizabeth's. According to Hubbard, both White and Thompson had regarded his athleticism and lack of interest in psychology as signs of a good prognosis. Hubbard later claimed to have been trained by both Thompson and White. Hubbard also discussed his interactions at Chestnut Lodge, a D.C.-area facility specializing in schizophrenia, repeatedly complaining that their staff misdiagnosed an unnamed individual with the condition:
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Hubbard lecture on schizophrenia and his interactions at Chestnut Lodge |
There's a place by the name of Walnut Lodge... They don't see anything humorous in that, by the way... They sent three people to see me and every one of them was under treatment—and this was their staff! But anyway, very good people there, I'm sure... Didn't happen to meet any. Have some fine patients though! Anyway, they treat only schizophrenia. And so they take only schizophrenics. Now how do they get only schizophrenics? Well, anybody sent to Walnut Lodge is a classified schizophrenic. And they take somebody who is a dementia praecox unclassified or a more modern definition, a mania-depressive and they take him from Saint Elizabeth's and they take him over to Walnut Lodge and he goes onto the books as a schizophrenic. Why? Because Walnut Lodge takes only schizophrenics.
Pre-war fiction
Main articles: Written works of L. Ron Hubbard and Excalibur (L. Ron Hubbard)In 1933, Hubbard renewed a relationship with a fellow glider pilot, Margaret "Polly" Grubb and the two were quickly married on April 13. The following year, she gave birth to a son who was named Lafayette Ronald Hubbard, Jr., later nicknamed "Nibs". A second child, Katherine May, was born two years later. The Hubbards lived for a while in Laytonsville, Maryland, but were chronically short of money. In the spring of 1936, they moved to Bremerton, Washington. They lived there for a time with Hubbard's aunts and grandmother before finding a place of their own at nearby South Colby. According to one of his friends at the time, Robert MacDonald Ford, the Hubbards were "in fairly dire straits for money" but sustained themselves on the income from Hubbard's writing.
Hubbard began a writing career and tried to write for mainstream publications. Hubbard soon found his niche in the pulp fiction magazines, becoming a prolific and prominent writer in the medium. From 1934 until 1940, Hubbard produced hundreds of short stories and novels. Hubbard is remembered for his "prodigious output" across a variety of genres, including adventure fiction, aviation, travel, mysteries, westerns, romance, and science fiction. His first full-length novel, Buckskin Brigades, was published in 1937. The novel told the story of "Yellow Hair", a white man adopted into the Blackfeet tribe, with promotional material claiming the author had been a "bloodbrother" of the Blackfeet. The New York Times Book Review praised the book, writing "Mr. Hubbard has reversed a time-honored formula and has given a thriller to which, at the end of every chapter or so, another paleface bites the dust."
On New Year's Day, 1938, Hubbard reportedly underwent a dental procedure and reacted to the anesthetic gas used in the procedure. According to his account, this triggered a revelatory near-death experience. Allegedly inspired by this experience, Hubbard composed a manuscript, which was never published, with working titles of The One Command and Excalibur. Hubbard sent telegrams to several book publishers, but nobody bought the manuscript. Hubbard wrote to his wife:
Sooner or later Excalibur will be published... I have high hopes of smashing my name into history so violently that it will take a legendary form even if all books are destroyed. That goal is the real goal as far as I am concerned.
Hubbard found greater success after being taken under the supervision of editor John W. Campbell, who published many of Hubbard's short stories and serialized novelettes in his magazines Unknown and Astounding Science Fiction. Hubbard's novel Final Blackout told the story of a low-ranking British army officer who rises to become dictator of the United Kingdom. In July 1940, Campbell magazine Unknown published a psychological horror by Hubbard titled Fear about an ethnologist who becomes paranoid that demons are out to get him—the work was well-received, drawing praise from Ray Bradbury, Isaac Asimov, and others. In November and December 1940, Unknown serialized Hubbard's novel Typewriter in the Sky about a pulp fiction writer whose friend becomes trapped inside one of his stories.
Military career
Main article: Military career of L. Ron HubbardIn 1941, Hubbard applied to join the United States Navy. His application was accepted, and he was commissioned as a lieutenant junior grade in the United States Naval Reserve on July 19, 1941. By November, he was posted to New York for training as an intelligence officer. The day after Pearl Harbor, Hubbard was posted to the Philippines and departed the US bound for Australia. But while in Australia awaiting transport to the Philippines, Hubbard was suddenly ordered back to the United States after being accused by the US Naval Attaché to Australia of sending blockade-runner Don Isidro "three thousand miles out of her way".
Hubbard's first command was a yard patrol boat in Massachusetts (top), while his second was a West Coast sub-chaser (bottom). In both cases, Hubbard was relieved of command.In June 1942, Hubbard was given command of a patrol boat at the Boston Navy Yard, but he was relieved after the yard commandant wrote that Hubbard was "not temperamentally fitted for independent command". In 1943, Hubbard was given command of a submarine chaser, but only five hours into the shakedown cruise, Hubbard believed he had detected an enemy submarine. Hubbard and crew spent the next 68 hours engaged in combat. An investigation concluded that Hubbard had likely mistaken a "known magnetic deposit" for an enemy sub. The following month, Hubbard unwittingly fired upon Mexican territory and was relieved of command. In 1944, Hubbard served aboard the USS Algol before being transferred. The night before his departure, Hubbard reported the discovery of an attempted sabotage.
In June 1942, Navy records indicate that Hubbard suffered "active conjunctivitis" and later "urethral discharges". After being relieved of command of the sub-chaser, Hubbard began reporting sick, citing a variety of ailments, including ulcers, malaria, and back pains. In July 1943, Hubbard was admitted to the San Diego naval hospital for observation—he would remain there for months. Years later, Hubbard would privately write to himself: "Your stomach trouble you used as an excuse to keep the Navy from punishing you." On April 9, 1945, Hubbard again reported sick and was re-admitted to Oak Knoll Naval Hospital, Oakland. He was discharged from the hospital on December 4, 1945.
After the war
Main articles: Scientology and the occult, Affirmations (L. Ron Hubbard), and L. Ron Hubbard and psychiatryAfter Hubbard chose to stay in California rather than return to his family in Washington state, he moved into the Pasadena mansion of John "Jack" Whiteside Parsons, a rocket propulsion engineer and a leading follower of the English occultist Aleister Crowley. Hubbard befriended Parsons and soon became sexually involved with Parsons's 21-year-old girlfriend, Sara "Betty" Northrup. Hubbard and Parsons collaborated on "Babalon Working", a sex magic ritual intended to summon an incarnation of Babalon, the supreme Goddess in Crowley's pantheon.
During this period, Hubbard authored a document which has been called the "Affirmations", a series of statements relating to various physical, sexual, psychological and social issues that he was encountering in his life. The Affirmations appear to have been intended to be used as a form of self-hypnosis with the intention of resolving the author's psychological problems and instilling a positive mental attitude.
Hubbard and Northrup aboard the schooner Blue Water II in June 1946 (left). The Church of Scientology has republished this photograph with Northrup (pictured right) airbrushed out.Parsons, Hubbard and Sara invested nearly their entire savings — the vast majority contributed by Parsons and Sara — in a plan for Hubbard and Sara to buy yachts on the East Coast and sail them to the West Coast to sell. Hubbard had a different idea, writing to the U.S. Navy requesting permission to undertake a world cruise. Parsons attempted to recover his money by obtaining an injunction to prevent Hubbard and Sara leaving the country or disposing of the remnants of his assets, but ultimately only received a $2,900 promissory note from Hubbard. Parsons returned home "shattered" and was forced to sell his mansion.
On August 10, 1946, Hubbard married Sara, though he was still married to his first wife Polly. Hubbard resumed his fiction writing to supplement his small disability allowance. In August 1947, Hubbard returned to the pages of Astounding with a serialized novel "The End is Not Yet", about a young nuclear physicist who tries to stop a world takeover by building a new philosophical system. In October 1947, the magazine began serializing Ole Doc Methuselah, the first in a series about the "Soldiers of Light", supremely skilled, extremely long-lived physicians. In February and March 1950, Campbell's Astounding serialized the Hubbard novel To the Stars about a young engineer on an interstellar trading starship who learns that months aboard ship amounts to centuries on Earth, making the ship his only remaining home after his first voyage. During his time in California, Hubbard began acting as a sort of amateur stage hypnotist or "swami".
Hubbard repeatedly wrote to the Veterans Administration (VA) asking for an increase in his war pension. Finally, in October 1947, he wrote to request psychiatric treatment:
After trying and failing for two years to regain my equilibrium in civil life, I am utterly unable to approach anything like my own competence. My last physician informed me that it might be very helpful if I were to be examined and perhaps treated psychiatrically or even by a psychoanalyst. Toward the end of my service 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. ... I cannot, myself, afford such treatment.
Would you please help me?
The VA eventually did increase his pension, but his money problems continued. In the summer of 1948, Hubbard was arrested by the San Luis Obispo sheriff on a charge of petty theft for passing a fraudulent check. Beginning in June 1948, the nationally-syndicated wire service United Press ran a story on an American Legion-sponsored psychiatric ward in Savannah, Georgia, which sought to keep mentally-ill war veterans out of jail. In late 1948, Hubbard and his second wife Sara moved from California to Savannah, Georgia, where he would later claim to have worked as a volunteer in a psychiatric clinic. Hubbard claimed he had "processed an awful lot of Negroes" and wrote of having observed a psychiatrist using the threat of institutionalization in a state hospital to solicit funds from a patient's husband. In letters to friends sent from Savannah, Hubbard began to make the first public mentions of what was to become Dianetics.
In the Dianetics era
Main article: Life of L. Ron Hubbard from 1950 to 1953Inspired by science-fiction of his friend Robert Heinlein, Hubbard announced plans to write a book which would claim to "make supermen". Hubbard announced to the public that there existed a superhuman condition which he called the state of "Clear". He claimed people in that state would have a perfectly functioning mind with an improved intelligence quotient (IQ) and photographic memory. The "Clear" would be cured of physical ailments ranging from poor eyesight to the common cold, which Hubbard asserted were purely psychosomatic.
To promote his upcoming book, Hubbard enlisted his longtime-editor John Campbell, who had a fascination with fringe psychologies and psychic powers. Campbell invited Hubbard and Sara to move into a New Jersey cottage. Campbell, in turn, recruited an acquaintance, medical doctor Joseph Winter, to help promote the book. Campbell wrote Winter to extol Hubbard, claiming that Hubbard had worked with nearly 1000 cases and cured every single one. The birth of Hubbard's second daughter Alexis Valerie, delivered by Winter on March 8, 1950, came in the middle of the preparations to launch Dianetics.
The basic content of Dianetics was a retelling of Psychoanalytic theory geared for a mass market English-speaking audience. Like Freud, Hubbard taught that the brain recorded memories (or "engrams") which were stored in the unconscious mind (which Hubbard restyled "the reactive mind"). Past memories could be triggered later in life, causing psychological, emotional, or even physical problems. By sharing their memories with a friendly listener (or "auditor"), a person could overcome their past pain and thus cure themselves. Through Dianetics, Hubbard claimed that most illnesses were psychosomatic and caused by engrams, including arthritis, dermatitis, allergies, asthma, coronary difficulties, eye trouble, bursitis, ulcers, sinusitis and migraine headaches. He further claimed that dianetic therapy could treat these illnesses, and also included cancer and diabetes as conditions that Dianetic research was focused on.
Accompanied by an article in Astounding's May 1950 issue, Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health was released on May 9. Although Dianetics was poorly received by the press and the scientific and medical professions, the book was an immediate commercial success and sparked "a nationwide cult of incredible proportions". Five hundred Dianetic auditing groups were set up across the United States, and Hubbard established the "Hubbard Dianetic Research Foundation". Financial controls were lax, and Hubbard himself took large sums with no explanation of what he was doing with it.
Dianetics lost public credibility on August 10 when a presentation by Hubbard before an audience of 6,000 at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles failed disastrously. He introduced a woman named Sonya Bianca and told the audience that as a result of undergoing Dianetic therapy she now possessed perfect recall, only for her to forget the color of Hubbard's necktie. A large part of the audience walked out, and the debacle was publicized by popular science writer Martin Gardner. On September 3, psychologist Erich Fromm publicly derided Dianetics as a "mixture of some oversimplified truths, half truths and plain absurdities"; Fromm criticized the writing as "propagandistic" and likened it to the quack field of patent medicines. By late-1950, Hubbard's foundations were in financial crisis. Hubbard's publisher Arthur Ceppos, his longtime promoter Joseph Campbell, and medical doctor-turned-Dianetics endorser Joseph Winter all resigned under acrimonious circumstances.
In late-1950, Hubbard began an affair with employee Barbara Klowden, prompting Sara to start her own affair with Miles Hollister. On February 23, 1951, Sara and her lover consulted with a psychiatrist about Hubbard, who advised that Sara was in grave danger and Hubbard should be institutionalized. The trio telephoned Jack Maloney, the head of the Hubbard's foundation in Elizabeth, New Jersey, to request funding for the hospitalization. Maloney informed Hubbard of the plans to institutionalize him. That night, Hubbard and two trusted aides kidnapped Hubbard's one-year-old daughter Alexis and wife Sara and attempted unsuccessfully to find a doctor to examine Sara and declare her insane. He let Sara go but took Alexis to Cuba. Hubbard denounced Sara and her lover to the FBI, portraying them in a letter as communist infiltrators. An agent annotated his correspondence with Hubbard with the comment, "Appears mental".
On April 12, Sara's story was published in the press, leading to headlines such as "Ron Hubbard Insane, Says His Wife". Hubbard's first wife evidently saw the headlines and wrote to Sara on May 2 offering her support. "Ron is not normal... 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 you charge—twelve years of it." In June, Sara finally secured the return of her daughter by agreeing to a settlement in which she signed a statement, written by Hubbard, declaring that she had been misrepresented in the press and that she had always believed he was a "fine and brilliant man".
JerseyLosAngelesWichitaPhoenixPhiladelphiaD.C.class=notpageimage| During the Dianetics and Scientology era, Hubbard regularly relocated across the country, living in Elizabeth, New Jersey (1950); Los Angeles (1950–51), Wichita (1951–52), Phoenix (1952–53), Philadelphia (December 1952), Camden, New Jersey (1953–55); and D.C. (1955–59). In 1959, after losing tax-exemption in the US, Hubbard relocated to England.
The Dianetics craze "burned itself out as quickly as it caught fire", and the movement appeared to be on the edge of total collapse. However, it was temporarily saved by Don Purcell, a millionaire who agreed to support a new Foundation in Wichita, Kansas. In August 1951, Hubbard published Science of Survival. In that book, Hubbard introduced such concepts as the immortal soul (or "Thetan") and past-life regressions (or "Whole Track Auditing"). The Wichita Foundation underwrote the costs of printing the book, but it recorded poor sales when first published, with only 1,250 copies of the first edition being printed. The Wichita Foundation became financially nonviable after a court ruled that it was liable for the unpaid debts of its defunct predecessor in Elizabeth, New Jersey. The ruling prompted Purcell and the other directors of the Wichita Foundation to file for voluntary bankruptcy in February 1952. Hubbard resigned immediately and accused Purcell of having been bribed by the American Medical Association to destroy Dianetics. Hubbard emptied the Wichita foundation's bank accounts, in part through forgery.
Pivot to Scientology
Main article: Life of L. Ron Hubbard from 1950 to 1953 See also: L. Ron Hubbard and starting a religion for moneyHaving lost the rights to Dianetics, Hubbard created Scientology. At a convention in Wichita, Hubbard announced that he had discovered a new science beyond Dianetics which he called "Scientology". Whereas the goal of Dianetics had been to reach a superhuman state of "Clear", Scientology promised a chance to achieve god-like powers in a state called Operating Thetan. Hubbard introduced a device called an "electropsychometer" (or e-meter), which called for users to hold two metal cans in their hands to measure changes in skin conductivity due to variance in sweat or grip. In 1906, Swiss psychoanalyst Carl Jung had famously used such a device in a study of word association. Rather than a mundane biofeedback device, Hubbard presented the e-meter as having "an almost mystical power to reveal an individual's innermost thoughts".
Hubbard married a staff member, 20-year-old Mary Sue Whipp, and the pair moved to Phoenix, Arizona. Hubbard was joined by his 18-year-old son Nibs, who had become a Scientology staff member and "professor". Scientology was organized in a different way from the decentralized Dianetics movement — The Hubbard Association of Scientologists (HAS) was the only official Scientology organization. Branches or "orgs" were organized as franchises, rather like a fast food restaurant chain. Each franchise holder was required to pay ten percent of income to Hubbard's central organization. In July, Hubbard published "What to Audit" (later re-titled Scientology: A History of Man), which taught everyone has subconscious traumatic memories of their past lives as clams, sloths, and cavemen which cause neuroses and health problems. In November 1952, Hubbard published Scientology 8-80, followed up in December with Scientology 8-8008, which argued that the physical universe is the creation of the mind.
Hubbard in December 1952."I'm going to send him back a letter. Uh... so... uh... you say you have some connection with the Prince of Darkness out there and you're very worried about this.
Who do you think I am?"
In December, Hubbard gave a seventy-hour series of lectures in Philadelphia that was attended by 38 people in which he delved into the occult. In the lectures, Hubbard connects rituals and the practice of Scientology to the magickal practices of Aleister Crowley, recommending Crowley's book The Master Therion. During the Philadelphia course, Hubbard joked that he was "the prince of darkness", which was met with laughter from the audience. On December 16, 1952, Hubbard was arrested in the middle of a lecture for failing to return $9,000 withdrawn from the Wichita Foundation. He eventually settled the debt by paying $1,000 and returning a car belonging to Wichita financier Don Purcell.
In April 1953, Hubbard proposed setting up a chain of "Spiritual Guidance Centers" as part of what he called "the religion angle". On December 18, 1953, Hubbard incorporated the Church of Scientology in Camden, New Jersey. The religious transformation was explained as a way to protect Scientologists from charges of practicing medicine without a license. The idea may not have been new; Hubbard has been quoted as telling a science fiction convention in 1948: "Writing for a penny a word is ridiculous. If a man really wants to make a million dollars, the best way would be to start his own religion."
In the Church of Scientology era
Main article: Life of L. Ron Hubbard from 1953 to 1967 See also: Scientology controversies § "Attack the Attacker" policy, and Scientology and psychiatry § Psychiatry as evilBy 1954, the IRS recognized the Church of Scientology of California as a tax-exempt organization and by 1966, the Washington, D.C. Founding Church of Scientology received tax-exempt status nationwide. The Church of Scientology became a highly profitable enterprise for Hubbard, as he was paid a percentage of the Church's gross income. By 1957 he was being paid about $250,000 (equivalent to US$2,712,085 in 2023). His family grew, too, with Mary Sue giving birth to three more children—Quentin on January 6, 1954; Suzette on February 13, 1955; and Arthur on June 6, 1958.
L. Ron Hubbard"The purpose of the suit is to harass and discourage rather than to win. The law can be used very easily to harass"
Hubbard was notorious for his policies of attacking his perceived enemies. Nibs recalled that Hubbard "only knew how to do one thing and that was to destroy people." Hubbard told Scientologists to "Don't ever defend, always attack", encouraging them to find or manufacture evidence and to file harassing lawsuits against enemies. Any individual breaking away from Scientology and setting up his own group was to be shut down. Most of the formerly independent Scientology and Dianetics groups were either driven out of business or were absorbed into Hubbard's organizations. Hubbard finally achieved victory over Don Purcell in 1954 when the latter, worn out by constant litigation, handed the copyrights of Dianetics back to Hubbard.
After dealing with Purcell, Hubbard turned his attention to attacking psychiatrists, who he blamed for the backlash against Dianetics and Scientology. In 1955, Hubbard authored a text titled: Brain-Washing: A Synthesis of the Russian Textbook on Psychopolitics which purported to be a secret manual linking Psychiatry and Communism written by a Soviet secret police chief. Hubbard founded the "National Academy of American Psychology" which sought to issue a "loyalty oath" to psychologists and psychiatrists. Those who opposed the oath were to be labelled "Subversive psychiatrists", while those who merely refused to sign the oath would be labelled "Potentially Subversive". Hubbard denounced psychiatric abuses, writing that psychoanalysis had been "superseded by tyrannous sadism, practiced by unprincipled men". Wrote Hubbard:
Today men who call themselves analysts are merrily sawing out patients' brains, shocking them with murderous drugs, striking them with high voltages, burying them underneath mounds of ice, placing them in restraints, 'sterilizing' them sexually and generally conducting themselves much as their patients would were they given the chance.
In 1956, Hubbard released Fundamentals of Thought, which teaches that life is a game and divides people into pieces, players, and game-makers. The following year, Hubbard published All About Radiation, which falsely claimed that radiation poisoning and even cancer can be cured by vitamins. In 1958, amid widespread interest in the Bridey Murphy case, Hubbard authored Have You Lived Before This Life?, a collection of past life regressions.
In 1958, the U.S. Internal Revenue Service withdrew the Washington, D.C., Church of Scientology's tax exemption after it found that Hubbard and his family were profiting unreasonably from Scientology's ostensibly non-profit income. In the spring of 1959, Hubbard purchased Saint Hill Manor, an 18th-century English country house formerly owned by the Maharaja of Jaipur. The house became Hubbard's permanent residence and an international training center for Scientologists.
That year Hubbard learned his son Nibs had resigned from the organization, citing financial difficulties. Hubbard regarded the departure as a betrayal. Hubbard introduced "security checking", a structured interrogation using the e-meter, to identify those he termed "potential trouble sources" and "suppressive persons". Members of the Church of Scientology were interrogated with the aid of E-meters and were asked questions such as "Have you ever practiced homosexuality?" and "Have you ever had unkind thoughts about L. Ron Hubbard?"
Since its inception, Hubbard marketed Dianetics and Scientology through false medical claims. On January 4, 1963, US Food and Drug Administration agents raided American offices of the Church of Scientology, seizing over a hundred E-meters as illegal medical devices, thousands of pills being marketed as "radiation cures", and tons of literature that they accused of making false medical claims. In November 1963 Victoria, Australia, the government opened an inquiry into the Church, which was accused of brainwashing, blackmail, extortion and damaging the mental health of its members. Its report, published in October 1965, condemned every aspect of Scientology and Hubbard himself. The report led to Scientology being banned in Victoria, Western Australia and South Australia, and led to more negative publicity around the world. Public perceptions of Scientology changed from "relatively harmless, if cranky" to an "evil, dangerous" group that performs hypnosis and brainwashing. Scientology attracted increasingly unfavorable publicity across the English-speaking world.
Hubbard took major new initiatives in the face of these challenges. By 1965, "Ethics Technology" was introduced to tighten internal discipline within Scientology. It required Scientologists to "disconnect" from any organization or individual—including family members—deemed to be disruptive or "suppressive". Scientologists were also required to write "Knowledge Reports" on each other, reporting transgressions or misapplications of Scientology methods. Hubbard promulgated a long list of punishable "Misdemeanors", "Crimes", and "High Crimes". At the start of March 1966, Hubbard created the Guardian's Office (GO), a new agency within the Church of Scientology that was headed by his wife Mary Sue. It dealt with Scientology's external affairs, including public relations, legal actions and the gathering of intelligence on perceived threats. As Scientology faced increasingly negative media attention, the GO retaliated with hundreds of writs for libel and slander; it issued more than forty on a single day. Hubbard ordered his staff to find "lurid, blood sex crime actual evidence [sic] on attackers". The "fair game" policy was codified in 1967, which was applicable to anyone deemed an "enemy" of Scientology: "May be deprived of property or injured by any means by any Scientologist without any discipline of the Scientologist. May be tricked, sued or lied to or destroyed."
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L. Ron Hubbard Interview in Rhodesia, May 1966 |
Newspapers and politicians in the UK pressed the British government for action against Scientology. In April 1966, hoping to form a remote "safe haven" for Scientology, Hubbard traveled to the southern African country Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe). Despite his attempts to curry favour with the local government, Rhodesia promptly refused to renew Hubbard's visa, compelling him to leave the country. Finally, at the end of 1966, Hubbard acquired his own fleet of three ships. In July 1968, the British Minister of Health announced that foreign Scientologists would no longer be permitted to enter the UK and Hubbard himself was excluded from the country as an "undesirable alien". Further inquiries were launched in Canada, New Zealand and South Africa.
In the Sea Org era
Main article: Life of L. Ron Hubbard from 1967 to 1975 See also: Xenu and Space opera in ScientologyHubbard purchased a ship in Las Palmas and founded the "Sea Org", a private navy of elite Scientologists. Hubbard set out to take command of the ship. Enroute, he wrote OT III, the esoteric story of Xenu. In a letter to his wife Mary Sue, Hubbard said that, in order to assist his research, he was drinking alcohol and taking stimulants and depressants. In OT III, Hubbard wrote of alleged secrets of an immense disaster that had occurred "on this planet, and on the other seventy-five planets which form this Confederacy, seventy-five million years ago". It teaches that Xenu, the leader of the Galactic Confederacy, had shipped billions of people to Earth and blown them up with hydrogen bombs, following which their traumatized spirits were stuck together at "implant stations", brainwashed with false memories and eventually became contained within human beings.
When Hubbard established the Sea Org he publicly declared that he had relinquished his management responsibilities over the Church of Scientology. In fact, he received daily telex messages from Scientology organizations around the world reporting their statistics and income. The Church of Scientology sent him $15,000 a week along with millions of dollars that were transferred to bank accounts. Church of Scientology couriers arrived regularly, conveying luxury food for Hubbard and his family or cash that had been smuggled from England to avoid currency export restrictions. Hubbard's fleet began sailing from port to port in the Mediterranean Sea and eastern North Atlantic, rarely staying anywhere for longer than six weeks, as Hubbard claimed he was being pursued by enemies whose interference could lead to global chaos or nuclear war.
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"The Shrinking World of L. Ron Hubbard", 1967 interview with Hubbard |
Though Scientologists around the world were presented with a glamorous picture of life in the Sea Org and many applied to join Hubbard aboard the fleet, the reality was rather different. Most of those joining had no nautical experience at all. Mechanical difficulties and blunders by the crews led to a series of embarrassing incidents and near-disasters. Following one incident in which the rudder of the Royal Scotman was damaged during a storm, Hubbard ordered the ship's entire crew to be reduced to a "condition of liability" and wear gray rags tied to their arms. The ship itself was treated the same way, with dirty tarpaulins tied around its funnel to symbolize its lower status. According to those aboard, conditions were appalling; the crew was worked to the point of exhaustion, given meager rations and forbidden to wash or change their clothes for several weeks. Hubbard maintained a harsh disciplinary regime aboard the fleet, punishing mistakes by confining people in the Royal Scotman's bilge tanks without toilet facilities and with food provided in buckets. At other times erring crew members or students were thrown overboard with Hubbard looking on and, occasionally, filming. One member of the Sea Org recalled Hubbard punishing a little boy by confining him to the ship's chain locker.
Aboard ship, Hubbard began dispatching teams of Sea Org members to search for historic evidence of his past lives; In 1973, he published Mission into Time about those searches. Now having his own paramilitary force, orders to use R2-45 (killing someone with a .45 pistol) on specific individuals were published. From about 1970, Hubbard was attended aboard ship by the children of Sea Org members, organized as the Commodore's Messenger Organization (CMO). They were mainly young girls dressed in hot pants and halter tops, who were responsible for running errands for Hubbard such as lighting his cigarettes, dressing him or relaying his verbal commands to other members of the crew. In addition to his wife Mary Sue, he was accompanied by all four of his children by her, who were all members of the Sea Org and shared its rigors.
After his prior failure in Rhodesia, Hubbard again tried to establish a safe haven in a friendly country, this time Greece. The fleet stayed at the Greek island of Corfu for several months in 1968–1969. Hubbard, recently expelled from Britain, renamed the ships after Greek gods—the Royal Scotman was rechristened Apollo—and he praised the recently established military dictatorship. Despite Hubbard's hopes, in March 1969 Hubbard and his ships were ordered to leave.
The practice of prominently displaying the cross in Scientology centers was instituted in 1969 following hostile press coverage where Scientology's status as a legitimate religion was being questioned. In October 1969, The Sunday Times published an exposé by Australian journalist Alex Mitchell detailing Hubbard's occult experiences with Parsons and Aleister Crowley's teachings. The Church responded with a statement, claiming without evidence Hubbard was sent in by the US Government to "break up Black Magic in America" and succeeded.
In mid-1972, Hubbard again tried to find a safe haven, this time in Morocco, establishing contacts with the country's secret police and training senior policemen and intelligence agents in techniques for detecting subversives. The program ended in failure when it became caught up in internal Moroccan politics, and Hubbard left the country hastily in December 1972. After French prosecutors charged Hubbard with fraud and customs violations, Hubbard risked extradition to France. In response, at the end of 1972, Hubbard left the Sea Org fleet temporarily, living incognito in Queens, New York. Hubbard's health deteriorated significantly during this period, as he was an overweight chain-smoker, suffered from bursitis and had a prominent growth on his forehead. In September 1973 when the threat of extradition had abated, Hubbard left New York, returning to his flagship.
Hubbard suffered serious injuries in a motorcycle accident on the island of Tenerife in December 1973. In 1974, Hubbard established the Rehabilitation Project Force, a punishment program for Sea Org members who displeased him. Hubbard's son Quentin reportedly found it difficult to adjust and attempted suicide in mid-1974. Also in 1974, L. Ron Hubbard confessed to two top executives that "People do not because of , they leave because ". Hubbard warned "If any of this information ever became public, I would lose all control of the orgs and eventually Scientology as a whole."
Throughout this period, Hubbard was heavily involved in directing the activities of the Guardian's Office (GO), the legal bureau/intelligence agency. In 1973, he instigated the "Snow White Program" and directed the GO to remove negative reports about Scientology from government files and track down their sources. The GO carried out covert campaigns on his behalf such as Operation Bulldozer Leak, designed to convince authorities that Hubbard had no legal liability for the actions of the church. Hubbard was kept informed of these operations, including as the theft of medical records from a hospital, harassment of psychiatrists, and infiltrations of organizations such as the Better Business Bureau, American Medical Association, American Psychiatric Association, U.S. Department of Justice, and Internal Revenue Service. Paulette Cooper, a freelance journalist and Scientology critic, was subjected to at least at least 19 lawsuits, framed for sending bomb threats, and was urged to climb onto a dangerous 33rd-floor ledge by a roommate later believed to be a Guardian's Office agent.
In hiding
Main article: Life of L. Ron Hubbard from 1975 to 1986 Daytona BeachD.C.SparksSouthern Californiaclass=notpageimage| In his final decade, Hubbard hid throughout the United States, moving from Florida to D.C., then to Southern California. CulverCityHemetNewport BeachCrestonclass=notpageimage| Multiple locations where Hubbard was in hiding in Southern California.
After suffering a heart attack, Hubbard decided to relocate back to the United States. In October 1975, Hubbard moved into a hotel suite in Daytona Beach while the Fort Harrison Hotel in Clearwater, Florida, was secretly acquired as the location for the Sea Org "land base". According to a former member of the Sea Organization pseudonymously named "Heidi Forrester", in late 1975 she met with a man fitting Hubbard's description who apparently performed a Crowleyite sex magick ritual called Dianism using her.
On June 11, 1976, the FBI apprehended two Guardian's Office agents inside the US Courthouse in D.C., prompting Hubbard to move cross country to a safe house in California, and later a nearby ranch. On October 28, 1976, Las Vegas police discovered Hubbard's son Quentin Hubbard unconscious in his car with a hose connected to the tailpipe. L. Ron Hubbard was furious at the news, shouting, "That stupid fucking kid! Look what he's done to me!" Scientologists were told that Quentin had died from encephalitis.
On July 8, 1977, the FBI carried out simultaneous raids on Guardian's Office locations in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C. They retrieved wiretap equipment, burglary tools and some 90,000 pages of incriminating documents. On July 15, a week after the raid, Hubbard fled with Pat Broeker to Sparks, Nevada. On August 18, 1978, Hubbard suffered from a pulmonary embolism and fell into a coma, but recovered. Hubbard summoned his personal auditor, David Mayo, to heal him.
The distinctive logo designed by Hubbard has been constructed at Trementina (top) and at the ranch in Creston (middle) where Hubbard ultimately died. The logo is speculated to derive from the Kool cigarettes logo, Hubbard's preferred brand.In August 1979, Hubbard saw his wife for the last time. Hubbard was facing a possible indictment for his role in Operation Freakout, a campaign of attacks against journalist Paulette Cooper. In February 1980, Hubbard disappeared into deep cover in the company of two trusted messengers, Pat and Annie Broeker. For the first few years of the 1980s, Hubbard and the Broekers toured the Pacific Northwest in a recreational vehicle, later residing in Southern California. Hubbard returned to Science-Fiction, writing Battlefield Earth (1982) and Mission Earth, a ten-volume series published between 1985 and 1987.
In OT VIII, dated 1980, Hubbard explains the document is intended for circulation only after his death. In the document, Hubbard denounces the historic Jesus as "a lover of young boys" given to "uncontrollable bursts of temper". Hubbard explains that "My mission could be said to fulfill the Biblical promise represented by this brief anti-Christ period." This was corroborated by a 1983 interview where Hubbard's son Nibs explained that his father believed he was the Anti-Christ.
External videos | |
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Nibs Hubbard testimony Day 1 and Day 2 | |
Nibs Hubbard interviewed by Carol Randolph | |
Jamie DeWolf reads grandfather Nibs's memoir |
In December 1985, Hubbard allegedly attempted suicide by custom e-meter. On January 17, 1986, Hubbard suffered a stroke; he died a week later. His body was cremated and the ashes were scattered at sea.
Sources and doctrines
Hubbard drew upon a diverse set of teachings to create his doctrine, incorporating elements from the psychoanalysis of Sigmund Freud (top) and the occult teachings of Aleister Crowley (bottom) among many other sources.Hubbard has been described as an "eclectic and ingenious" religious innovator who cobbled together ideas from a diverse array of sources and traditions. Hubbard explicitly cited Freud's psychoanalysis as a source for Dianetics and Scientology, renaming some terms. Hubbard's wife Sara recalled him discussing biologist Richard Semon, who had coined the term "engram" which became a centerpiece of Dianetics. Hubbard incorporated the 1920s psychoanalytic theory of birth trauma and taught his followers to maintain total silence during the birth process. Hubbard explicitly credited Social Darwinism pioneer Herbert Spencer who coined the phrase "survival of the fittest", and taught that the 'one command' given to all life is to "survive" and later authored a book called Science of Survival.
Hubbard cited author Alfred Korzybski as an influence; after two years observing patients at St. Elizabeth's psychiatric hospital in D.C. in collaboration with superintendent William Alanson White, Korzybski published a tome titled Science and Sanity outlining a doctrine he called "General Semantics". After Korzybski founded an "Institute" to promote his teachings and began offering seminars, his ideas were incorporated into the science-fiction of Hubbard-associates Van Vogt and Heinlein, who envisioned futures where research into General Semantics had transformed some individuals into superhumans; Hubbard cited this fiction in a letter announcing the central principles of Dianetics: a book that promises to "make supermen".
Through his exposure to both psychoanalysts and occultists, Hubbard drew inspiration from Eastern religions. Hubbard cited psychiatrist Joseph Thompson as teaching him the adage "If it's not true for you, it's not true", a purportedly-Buddhist maxim which was later incorporated into Scientology. Reincarnation, originally a dharmic doctrine, entered Western occultism through the works of Blavatsky and numerous others. Fifteen years after Blavatsky followers unveiled "The Bridge to Freedom", Hubbard announced "The Bridge to Total Freedom".
Hubbard's son Nibs said that Aleister Crowley was his father's most important source of inspiration, and scholar Hugh Urban has written extensively about the occult roots of Scientology. Nibs Hubbard said in an interview in 1983:
What a lot of people don't realize is that Scientology is black magic that is just spread out over a long time period. To perform black magic generally takes a few hours or, at most, a few weeks. But in Scientology it's stretched out over a lifetime, and so you don't see it.
Like Crowley, Hubbard identified himself with diabolical figures from the Book of Revelation. Just as Aleister Crowley taught a soul could temporarily leave its body through astral projection, Hubbard taught a thetan could journey outside the body by "going exterior".
Hubbard also taught extensively about hypnosis and recommended a 1949 book on the subject. Hubbard told of hypnotic implants, privately teaching human religions are the product of such implants. The use of hypnosis or trance to remember past lives was an extant practice in occult circles prior to Dianetics. Hubbard incorporated a range of hypnotic techniques into Scientology auditing and courses. They are employed as a means to create dependency and obedience in his followers. Crowley and Hubbard both placed emphasis on a Goddess figure, variously called Babalon, Hathor, or Diana—a name Hubbard gave to a ship and a daughter; the term Dianetics may have been inspired by the Goddess. Crowley taught a sex magic ritual called karezza or Dianism which Hubbard is believed to have practiced.
The e-meter was constructed by inventor Volney Mathison, who introduced it to Hubbard. Similar devices had been in use by psychiatrists and law enforcement for decades. Hubbard likened his own teachings about interstellar empires and invader forces to the early 20th-century fiction genre Space Opera. Hubbard drew upon US Navy traditions in creating the Sea Org, and he once said the Commodore's Messenger Organization had been inspired by the Hitler Youth.
False biographical claims
Main article: Pseudobiography of L. Ron HubbardThroughout his life, Hubbard made grossly exaggerated or outright false claims about himself. His estranged son Nibs reported that "Ninety-nine percent of what my father ever wrote or said about himself" was false. An acquaintance who knew Hubbard in Pasadena recalled recognizing Hubbard's epic autobiographical tales as being adapted from the writings of others. In October 1984, an American judge issued a ruling, writing of Hubbard that "the evidence portrays a man who has been virtually a pathological liar when it comes to his history, background and achievements." In his private "Affirmations", Hubbard wrote to himself:
You can tell all the romantic tales you wish... you know which ones were lies... You are gallant and dashing and need tell no lies at all. You have enough real experience to make anecdotes forever. Stick to your true adventures. Or if you wish, as you will, tell adventures which happened to others – People accept them better.
Hubbard described his grandfather as a "wealthy Western cattleman", but contemporary records show that Hubbard's grandfather, Lafayette Waterbury, was a veterinarian, not a rancher, and was not wealthy. Hubbard claimed to be a "blood brother" of the Native American Blackfeet tribe, but Hubbard lived over a hundred miles from the Blackfeet reservation and the tribe did not practice blood brotherhood. Hubbard claimed to have been the youngest Eagle Scout in Boy Scouts history, but in fact the organization kept no records of the ages of Eagle Scouts.
Hubbard claimed to have traveled to Manchuria, but his diary did not record it. Hubbard claimed to be a graduate engineer, but in fact he earned poor grades at university, was placed on probation in September 1931 and dropped out altogether in the fall of 1932. Hubbard used the title "Doctor", but his only doctorate was from a diploma mill. Hubbard claimed to have been crippled and blinded in combat, but records show he was never wounded and never received a Purple Heart (a decoration given to all US servicemen wounded in action). Hubbard's Navy service records indicate that he received only four campaign medals rather than the twenty-one claimed by Church biographies.
Legacy
Hubbard was survived by his wife Mary Sue and all of his children except his second son Quentin. His will provided a trust fund to support Mary Sue; her children Arthur, Diana and Suzette; and Katherine, the daughter of his first wife Polly. He disinherited two of his other children. L. Ron Hubbard, Jr. had become estranged, changed his name to "Ronald DeWolf" and, in 1982, sued unsuccessfully for control of his father's estate. Alexis Valerie, Hubbard's daughter by his second wife Sara, had attempted to contact her father in 1971. She was rebuffed with the implied claim that her real father was Jack Parsons rather than Hubbard, and that her mother had been a Nazi spy during the war. Both later accepted settlements when litigation was threatened. In 2001, Diana and Suzette were reported to still be Church members, while Arthur had left and become an artist. Hubbard's great-grandson, Jamie DeWolf, is a noted slam poet.
Opinions are divided about Hubbard's literary legacy. One sociologist argued that even at Hubbard's peak in the late 1930s, he was regarded as merely "a passable, familiar author but not one of the best", while by the late-1970s "the subculture wishes it could forget him" and fans gave him a worse rating than any other of the "Golden Age" writers. The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction argues that while Hubbard could not be considered a peer of the "prime movers" like Asimov, Heinlein, and Sprague de Camp, Hubbard could be classed with Van Vogt as "rogue members of the early Campbell pantheon". Hubbard received various posthumous awards, having a street named after in him in Los Angeles and recognition of his birthday in Utah and New Jersey.
Hubbard's teachings led to numerous offshoots and splinter groups. In 1966, two former Scientologists founded the Process Church of the Final Judgment which mixed Hubbard's teachings with Satanism. In 1969, a group led by former Scientologists Charles Manson and Bruce M. Davis was arrested and later convicted for their role in a series of high-profile murders. In 1971, former Scientologist Werner Erhard founded EST, a notable large group awareness training. In 1998, Keith Raniere drew upon Hubbard's writings and Erhard's techinques to create the large group awareness training ESP, a forerunner to the group NXIVM. Raniere offered students a chance to reach a superhuman state called "Unified" and taught Hubbard's doctrine of "suppressive persons"; Raniere was ultimately sentenced to 120 years for a pattern of crimes, including the sexual exploitation of a child, sex trafficking of women, and conspiracy to commit forced labor. In 2010, the Nation of Islam began introducing its followers to Hubbard's teachings, with leader Louis Farrakhan proclaiming "I thank God for Mr. L. Ron Hubbard!"
In Scientology
After his death, Scientology leaders announced that Hubbard's body had become an impediment to his work and that he had decided to "drop his body" to continue his research. The copyrights of his works and much of his estate were willed to the Church of Scientology. According to the church, Hubbard's entire corpus of Scientology and Dianetics texts are etched onto steel tablets in a vault under a mountain, on top of which a Hubbard-designed logo has been bulldozed, intended to be visible from space.
Hubbard's presence pervades Scientology, and his birthday is celebrated annually. Every Church of Scientology maintains an office reserved for Hubbard, with a desk, chair and writing equipment, ready to be used. Hubbard is regarded as the ultimate source of Scientology, and is often referred to as simply "Source", and he has no successor. Scientology has been described as "a movement focused on the figure of Hubbard". Hubbard is presented as "the master of a multitude of disciplines" who performed extraordinary feats as a photographer, composer, scientist, therapist, explorer, navigator, philosopher, poet, artist, humanitarian, adventurer, soldier, scout, musician and many other fields of endeavor. Busts and portraits of Hubbard are commonplace throughout Scientology organizations, and meetings involve a round of applause to Hubbard's portrait. In 2009, the American Religious Identification Survey found that 25,000 Americans identified as Scientologists.
Scientology's sacred texts are inextricably linked to L. Ron Hubbard. According to Scientology's official doctrine, "Hubbard is the sole author or narrator of each and every one of the religion's sacred books; indeed he is considered to be the single orchestrating genrius behind everything Scientological." Scientologists consider everything Hubbard ever said in verbal or written terms as "scripture".
In popular culture
See also: Scientology in popular cultureExternal videos | |
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1980s advertisement for Dianetics | |
"This is What Scientologists Actually Believe" clip from South Park, 2005 | |
"How Ayn Rand and L. Ron Hubbard Came Up With Their Big Ideas", Cracked, 2012 | |
"Black Scientologists", The Eric Andre Show, December 5, 2013 | |
Neurotology Music Video - SNL, satirizing the 1990 music video We Stand Tall | |
"Hubbard meets Parsons" in Strange Angel episode Aeon, July 25, 2019 |
In the mid-1980s, the church began to promote Dianetics with a radio and television advertising blitz that was "virtually unprecedented in book circles". In March 1988, Dianetics topped the best-seller lists nationwide through an organized campaign of mass bookbuying. Booksellers reported patrons buying hundreds of copies at once and later receiving ostensibly-new books from the publisher with store price stickers already attached. Hubbard's number of followers peaked in the early 1990s with roughly 100,000 scientologists worldwide.
On November 21, 1997, the Fox network aired an episode of X-Files spinoff Millennium titled "Jose Chung's Doomsday Defense" which satirized Lafayette Ronald Hubbard's biography in an brief opening narration about a character named "Juggernaut Onan Goopta" who dreamt of becoming a neuroscientist only to discover that "his own brain could not comprehend basic biology". The character switches to philosophy, but "while reading Kirkegaard's 'The Sickness unto Death', he became sick and nearly died"; After writing an entire book in a "single, feverish night" that changed the course of human history, the character began lecturing to standing room only crowds, "for he shrewdly refrained from providing chairs". In a satire of both Hubbard and George Santayana, the character explains that painful memories must be exterminated, saying "those who cannot forget their past, are condemned to repeat it". The character establishes an institute where patients are called 'doctors' and founds a religious order called Selfosophy staffed by an elite paramilitary inspired by the US Postal Service. We are told the character died of cancer or "molted his earthly encumbrance to pursue his Selfosophical research in another dimension".
On February 8, 1998, Fox comedy The Simpsons broadcast "The Joy of Sect", satirizing Hubbard and Scientology when the family joins a group called the Movementarians ruled over by a figure called "The Leader" who physically resembles L. Ron Hubbard. The Movementarians' use of a 10-trillion-year commitment for its members alludes to the billion-year contract and both groups make extensive use of litigation.
In 2015, Saturday Night Live satirized Hubbard, with cast member Bobby Moynihan (bottom) using similar costumes and staging as shown in historic footage of Hubbard (top). A caption reads "Died of Pink Eye", referencing Hubbard's wartime diagnosis of conjunctivitis.In 2000, Hubbard's novel was adapted into a film called Battlefield Earth, starring long-time Scientology celebrity John Travolta. In 2001, a film titled The Profit parodied Scientology and Hubbard. In 2005, animated comedy South Park aired the episode "Trapped in the Closet" in which protagonist Stan is believed to be the reincarnation of Hubbard. The episode broadcast the great secret behind the church—a condensed version of the Xenu story while an on-screen caption reads "This is what Scientologists actually believe". Prior to the episode, the story was almost completely unknown in mainstream culture.
Paul Thomas Anderson's 2012 film The Master features a religious leader named Lancaster Dodd, played by Philip Seymour Hoffman, who is based on Hubbard and shares a physical resemblance to him. The film depicts a Navy washout with psychological issues who is unable to hold down steady employment after the war. Facing potential legal troubles, he flees California by stowing away on a ship captained by self-proclaimed nuclear physicist and philosopher Lancaster Dodd, leader of a movement called "The Cause".
On December 5, 2013, The Eric Andre Show aired a comedy sketch titled "Black Scientologists" where André's character proclaims "Not a lot of people know this, but L. Ron Hubbard was a black man. His real name was L. Ron Hoyabembe!", while revealing an artist's conception of Hubbard wearing an afro. In April 2015, following the recent release of Going Clear: Scientology and the Prison of Belief, Saturday Night Live aired a music video featuring the "Church of Neurotology", a parody of Scientology's 1990 music video "We Stand Tall". Bobby Moynihan played a Hubbard-lookalike in the video. From 2018 to 2019, the show Strange Angel dramatized the life of Jack Parsons. In the season 2 finale, actor Daniel Abeles played Hubbard.
According to Hugh B. Urban in the book Handbook of Scientology, the nature of popular media accounts of Scientology is largely due to its culture of secrecy. An example of Scientology being "America's most secretive religion" is the documentary The Secrets of Scientology. Urban states, "However, while these popular accounts are often sensational and not particularly balanced, they do highlight the fact that secrecy has in fact been a pervasive aspect of the church from its inception."
Select works
See also: L. Ron Hubbard bibliography and Bibliography of ScientologyHubbard was a prolific writer and lecturer across a wide variety of genres. His works of fiction include several hundred short stories and many novels. According to the Church of Scientology, Hubbard produced some 65 million words on Dianetics and Scientology, contained in about 500,000 pages of written material, 3,000 recorded lectures and 100 films.
- Early Fiction
- Buckskin Brigades (1937) recounts the story of a white man adopted by the Blackfeet tribe.
- Slaves of Sleep (1939) features a man, cursed by an evil genie, who instead of sleeping must now enter an Arabian Nights-like world ruled over by an evil-genie queen.
- Death's Deputy (1940) is the story of an accident-prone pilot who seemingly cannot be killed
- Final Blackout (1940) tells the story of a low-ranking British army officer who rises to the role of dictator.
- Fear (1951), a psychological thriller, follows a professor who, after an episode of missing time, becomes paranoid that demons are haunting him.
- Typewriter in the Sky (1951) features protagonist Mike de Wolf who finds himself inside a story being written by friend Horace Hackett.
- Dianetics and Scientology
- Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health (1950) introduced concepts like engram, reactive mind, and the State of Clear.
- Science of Survival (1951) introduced concepts like the tone scale, the thetan, and past lives.
- What to Audit (1952), later re-titled Scientology: A History of Man linked traumatic incidents throughout evolutionary history to modern health problems, for example, jaw trouble was said to result from unresolved trauma from having been a clam.
- Scientology 8-80 and Scientology 8-8008 (1952) embraced the magical worldview, teaching that the physical universe is a creation of the mind.
- Fundamentals of Thought (1956) argued life is a game, describing some people as "pieces", others as "players", and an elite few as "game makers".
- All About Radiation (1957) claimed radiation poisoning and cancer could be cured with vitamins.
- Introduction to Scientology Ethics (1968) codified an authoritarian set of ethics and justice procedures.
- Mission Into Time (1973) chronicled Hubbard's 1968 trip in the Mediterranean where he sought to find physical evidence of his past lives.
- Late fiction
- Revolt in the Stars (1979), a screenplay version of the Xenu story
- Battlefield Earth (1982), a novel set in the year 3000 when humanity has become an endangered species, it tells the story of tribesman Johnny Goodboy Tyler who leads humanity in rebellion against the Psychlos, an evil alien race.
- Mission Earth (1985–87), a ten-book series, posthumously published, about an invasion of Earth by aliens called the Voltarian.
See also
- Timeline of L. Ron Hubbard
- Joseph Smith, creator of Mormonism
- Helena Blavatsky, creator of Theosophy
- Mary Baker Eddy, creator of Christian Science
- Wallace Fard Muhammad, creator of the Nation of Islam
Notes
- Owen argues that Hubbard likely suffered from venereal disease, writing: "Sulfa drugs were used in treatment but in excess could cause bloody urine, something which Hubbard's shipmate Thomas Moulton saw him passing on at least one occasion. Hubbard himself later complained about the amount of sulfa he had been fed in the Navy. Former Scientology spokesman Robert Vaughn Young claims that Hubbard's private papers refer to him having caught gonorrhoea from a girlfriend named Fern, which forced him to secretly take sulfa."
References
- Kent, Stephen A. (2001). "Brainwashing Programs in The Family/Children of God and Scientology". In Zablocki, Benjamin; Robbins, Thomas (eds.). Misunderstanding Cults: Searching for Objectivity in a Controversial Field. University of Toronto Press. pp. 349–358. ISBN 978-0-8020-8188-9.
- Dericquebourg, Régis (2017). "Scientology: From the Edges to the Core". Nova Religio. 20 (4): 5–12. doi:10.1525/nr.2017.20.4.5. ISSN 1092-6690.
- Lane, J., & Kent, S. A. (2008). "Malignant narcissism, L. Ron Hubbard, and Scientology's policies of narcissistic rage". Trans. as Politiques de rage et Narcissisme Malin. Criminologie, 41(2), 117-55.
- Hall, Timothy L. American religious leaders, p. 175. New York: Infobase Publishing, 2003. ISBN 978-0-8160-4534-1
- Miller 1987, p. 11.
- Christensen 2004, p. 236.
- Miller 1987, p. 23.
- ^ Christensen 2004, p. 237.
- Miller 1987, p. 19.
- Atack 1990, pp. 53–54.
- Miller 1987, p. 31.
- Lewis, James R. (2009). Scientology. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195331493.
- Miller 1987, p. 34.
- Clarke, Peter, ed. (2004). Encyclopedia of New Religious Movements. Routledge. p. 281. ISBN 9781134499700.
- ^ Ortega, Tony (February 24, 2015). "New government release contains a surprise: L. Ron Hubbard flunked out of high school, too!".
- Wakefield, Margery. "Understanding Scientology / Chapter 2: L. Ron Hubbard – Messiah? Or Madman?". Retrieved July 25, 2016.
- Miller 1987, p. 45.
- Miller 1987, p. 46.
- ^ Wright 2013, pp. 53–54.
- ^ Miller 1987, p. 47.
- Atack 1990, p. 59.
- Atack 1990, p. 63.
- 1922–1927,1929–1932
- The Purpose of Human Evaluation (3) (1951)
- ^ Atack, Jon. "Possible origins for Dianetics and Scientology".
"Through his friendship I attended many lectures given at Naval hospitals and generally became conversant with psychoanalysis as it had been exported from Austria by Freud" LRH's autobiographical notes for Peter Tompkins. Exhibit 500-I in CSI v. Armstrong, pp.7-8
- L. Ron Hubbard (August 13, 1951). "Lecture: The Purpose of Human Evaluation (1)". Archived from the original on December 5, 2021 – via carolineletkeman.org.
- L. Ron Hubbard (June 4, 1954). "Lecture: Know to Sex Scale: The Mind and the Tone Scale". Archived from the original on December 6, 2021 – via carolineletkeman.org.
- Hubbard, L. R. (February 6, 1952). Dianetics: The Modern Miracle. LRH Recorded Lectures
- "The… it was an interesting thing, for instance, to William Allen White. And Commander Thompson. Both of them, where I was concerned, that I wasn't very interested in sitting around figuring about this stuff and didn't seem to be terribly interested in the insane." - Lecture: "The Mind and the Tone Scale", 1954
- "Letter: Scientology executive John Galusha to FBI". Refund and Reparation. June 12, 1954. Archived from the original on November 29, 2021. Retrieved July 26, 2023.
- "Lecture: The Logics Methods of Thinking (2) – Decoding Scientology Propaganda".
- Miller 1987, p. 59.
- Miller 1987, p. 61.
- Miller 1987, p. 64.
- Miller 1987, p. 70.
- Miller 1987, p. 74.
- Miller 1987, p. 62.
- "About L. Ron Hubbard — Master Storyteller". Galaxy Press. Archived from the original on July 11, 2011. Retrieved February 8, 2011.
- Frenschkowski, Marco (July 1999). "L. Ron Hubbard and Scientology: An annotated bibliographical survey of primary and selected secondary literature" (PDF). Marburg Journal of Religion. 4 (1). University of Marburg: 15. doi:10.17192/mjr.1999.4.3760. Archived (PDF) from the original on April 27, 2021. Retrieved May 13, 2015 – via CORE.
- Staff (July 30, 1937). "Books Published Today". The New York Times. p. 17.
- "The New York Times Book Review". July 1937.
- Wright 2013, p. 29.
- "'Going Clear': A New Book Delves Into Scientology". NPR. January 24, 2013.
- "The History of Excalibur". lermanet.com.
- Burks, Arthur J. (December 1961). "Yes, There Was A Book Called "Excalibur" By L. Ron Hubbard". The Aberee – via David S. Touretzky.
- Letter from L. Ron Hubbard, October 1938, quoted in Miller 1987, p. 81
- Miller 1987, p. 86.
- ^ Stableford, Brian (2004). Historical Dictionary of Science Fiction Literature. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press. p. 164. ISBN 978-0-8108-4938-9.
- ^ "SFE: Hubbard, L Ron".
- Kent, Stephen A.; Raine, Susan (2017). Scientology in Popular Culture: Influences and Struggles for Legitimacy. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-4408-3249-9.
- Miller 1987, p. 97.
- Ron The War Hero, Chris Owen
- Hubbard would later claim that "for the next two or three years I'd run into officers, and they would say 'Hubbard? Hubbard? Hubbard? Are you the Hubbard that was in Australia?' And I'd say 'Yes.' And they's say 'Oh!' Kind of, you know, horrified, like they didn't know whether they should quite talk to me or not, you know? Terrible man." The Key Words (Buttons) of Scientology Clearing (a lecture given on July 21, 1958).
- Atack 1990, p. 74.
- "Battle Report – Submission of", A16-3(3)/PC815, Vice Adm. Frank Jack Fletcher, Commander NW Sea Frontier, June 8, 1943; Image of document
- Miller 1987, p. 105.
- ^ Sappell, Joel; Welkos, Robert W. (June 24, 1990). "The Mind Behind the Religion : Chapter Two : Creating the Mystique : Hubbard's image was crafted of truth, distorted by myth". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 25, 2022.
- Atack 1990, p. 81.
- Miller 1987, pp. 108–109.
- ^ Owen, Chris (2019). "Crippled and blinded". Ron The War Hero: The True Story of L Ron Hubbard's Calamitous Military Career. Silvertail Books. ISBN 9781909269897 – via David S. Touretzky.
- Miller 1987, p. 107.
- Miller 1987, p. 110.
- Miller 1987, p. 112.
- Miller 1987, p. 125.
- ^ Wright, Lawrence (February 14, 2011). "The Apostate: Paul Haggis vs. the Church of Scientology". The New Yorker. Retrieved February 8, 2011.
- Miller 1987, p. 113.
- Miller 1987, p. 117.
- Parson letter to Crowley: " is a gentleman; he has red hair, green eyes, is honest and intelligent, and we have become great friends. He moved in with me about two months ago, and although Betty and I are still friendly, she has transferred her sexual affection to Ron. Although he has no formal training in Magick, he has an extraordinary amount of experience and understanding in the field. From some of his experiences I deduced that he is in direct touch with some higher intelligence, possibly his Guardian Angel. He describes his Angel as a beautiful winged woman with red hair whom he calls the Empress and who has guided him through his life and saved him many times. He is the most Thelemic person I have ever met and is in complete accord with our own principles." as quoted in Symonds, John. The Great Beast: the life and magick of Aleister Crowley, p. 392. London: Macdonald and Co., 1971. ISBN 0-356-03631-6
- Urban, Hugh B. (2006). Magia sexualis: sex, magic, and liberation in modern Western esotericism. University of California Press. p. 137. ISBN 978-0-520-24776-5.
- "Your eyes are getting progressively better. They became bad when you used them as an excuse to escape the naval academy. You have no reason to keep them bad.", "Your stomach trouble you used as an excuse to keep the Navy from punishing you. You are free of the Navy.", "You can tell all the romantic tales you wish. ... But you know which ones were lies ... You have enough real experience to make anecdotes forever. Stick to your true adventures.", "Masturbation does not injure or make insane. Your parents were in error. Everyone masturbates." -- Hubbard's Affirmations
- Pendle 2005, p. 268.
- Pendle 2005, p. 270.
- Pendle 2005, p. 269.
- Miller 1987, p. 134.
- Streeter 2008, p. 210.
- Miller, 134
- Ortega, Tony (January 30, 2015). "Another Secret Lives leak: L. Ron Hubbard enjoyed humiliating people under hypnosis".
- Miller 1987, p. 231.
- Miller 1987, pp. 125, 128, 131.
- Hubbard, L. Ron, letter to Veterans Administration, October 15, 1947; quoted in Miller 1987, p. 137
- Miller 1987, p. 139.
- Miller 1987, p. 142.
- e.g. The Herald-News (Passaic, New Jersey) June 10, 1948, Ventura County Star-Free Press June 23, 1948, Spokane Chronicle (Spokane, Washington) September 29, 1948
-
- Gerecht, Ash (May 23, 1948). "Don't put the Insane in Jail, part 1 of 2". The Atlanta Journal.
- Gerecht, Ash (May 23, 1948). "Don't put the Insane in Jail, part 2 of 2". The Atlanta Journal.
- ^ Miller 1987, p. 143.
- PDC43
- "Article: Today's Terrorism – Decoding Scientology Propaganda".
I well recall a conversation I had with a Dr. Center in Savannah, Georgia, in 1949. It well expresses the arrogance and complete contempt for law and order of the psychiatrist. A man had just called to inquire after his wife who was "under treatment" in Center's hospital. Center asked him, "Do you have the money...? That's right, thirty thousand... well you better get it or I'll have to send your dear wife to the state institution and you know what will happen then!" I was there doing work on charity patients the local psychiatrists wouldn't touch. Center had forgotten I was in the room.
- Abraham Hyman Center per Biographical Directory of Fellows & Members of the American Psychiatric Association, 1950
- ^ Ortega, Tony (November 8, 2014). "The Heinlein Letters: What L. Ron Hubbard's close friends really thought of him". The Underground Bunker. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
Letter to Heinlein: "Well, you didn't specify in your book what actual reformation took place in the society to make supermen. Got to thinking about it other day. The system is Excalibur. It makes nul A's."
- Streeter 2008, pp. 210–211.
- Miller, Timothy (1995). America's Alternative Religions. Albany: State University of New York Press. pp. 385–386. ISBN 978-0-7914-2398-1. OCLC 30476551.
- Atack 1990, p. 108.
- "The TIME Vault: December 22, 1952". Retrieved July 25, 2016.
- Luckhurst, Roger (2005). Science Fiction. Malden, MA: Polity. p. 74. ISBN 978-0-7456-2893-6.
- Miller 1987, p. 149: "With cooperation from some institutions, some psychiatrists, has worked on all types of cases. Institutionalized schizophrenics, apathies, manics, depressives, perverts, stuttering, neuroses—in all, nearly 1000 cases. But just a brief sampling of each type; he doesn't have proper statistics in the usual sense. But he has one statistic. He has cured every patient he worked with. He has cured ulcers, arthritis, asthma."
- "Bare-Faced Messiah: Chapter 9". www.cs.cmu.edu. Retrieved September 18, 2023.
- Christensen, Dorthe Refslund (June 24, 2016). "Rethinking Scientology A Thorough Analysis of L. Ron Hubbard's Formulation of Therapy and Religion in Dianetics and Scientology, 1950–1986". Alternative Spirituality and Religion Review. doi:10.5840/asrr201662323.
- Atack 1990, p. 107.
- ^ Staff (August 21, 1950). "Dianetics book review; Best Seller". Newsweek
- Gardner 1986, p. 265.
- Miller 1987, p. 152.
- O'Brien 1966, p. 27.
- Whitehead 1987, p. 67.
- Gardner 1986, p. 270.
- ^ "Martin Gardner Evaluates Dianetics".
- Fromm, Erich. ""Dianetics" – For Seekers of Prefabricated Happiness" (PDF). opus4.kobv.de.
But perhaps the most unfortunate element in Dianetics is the way it is written. The mixture of some oversimplified truths, half truths and plain absurdities, the propagandistic technique of impressing the reader with the greatness, infallibility and newness of the author's system, the promise of unheard of results attained by the simple means of following Dianetics is a technique which has had most unfortunate results in the fields of patent medicines and politics; applied to psychology and psychiatry it will not be less harmful.
- Atack 1990, p. 115.
- Miller 1987, p. 181.
- "Sara Northrup Hubbard – Complaint for Divorce".
- Hubbard's letter to the Attorney General dated May 1951: "Feb. 25 she flew to San Francisco and my general manager Jack Maloney in New Jersey received a phone call from her and Miles Hollister and a psychiatrist named Meyer Zelig in San Francisco that I had gone insane and that they needed money to incarcerate me quickly."
- Hubbard, L. Ron (May 14, 1951). "Letter: L. Ron Hubbard to the Attorney General". scientology-research.org.
- Atack 1990, p. 117.
- ^ Methvin, Eugene H. (May 1990). "Scientology: Anatomy of a Frightening Cult". Reader's Digest. pp. 16.
- Staff (April 24, 1951). "Ron Hubbard Insane, Says His Wife". San Francisco Chronicle
- Bent Corydon, L. Ron Hubbard: Madman or Messiah?, pp. 281–282 (Lyle Stuart, 1987)
- Quoted in Miller 1987, p. 192
- Atack 1990, p. 122.
- Miller 1987, p. 199.
- Streissguth 1995, p. 71.
- "1982 CW Scientology Hearings - Ron DeWolf - Day 1". May 5, 1982. 1962 seconds – via YouTube.
- Initially, the user held emptied soup or juice cans with the paper labels removed. Later versions of electrodes had abandoned food cans, however Hubbard continued to use the term "cans" to refer to the handheld metal electrodes.
- Urban 2012, p. 49.
- Peterson & Jung 1907.
- Miller 1987, p. 204.
- Powers, Ormund (October 23, 1952). "One Man's Lake County". Orlando Morning Sentinel – via Newspapers.com.
- Miller 1987, p. 202.
- Miller 1987, p. 207.
- Miller 1987, p. 232.
- Tucker 1989, p. 304.
- ^ Malko, George (1970). Scientology: The Now Religion. Delacorte Press. OL 5444962M.
- Ortega, Tony (January 28, 2018). "Sunday Scientology sermon: L. Ron Hubbard on freeing kids from their bodies".
- Miller 1987, p. 210.
- Urban 2012.
- Melton, J. Gordon (2000). Studies in Contemporary Religion: The Church of Scientology (1 ed.). United States: Signature Books. p. 67. ISBN 978-1-56085-139-4. Retrieved May 15, 2015.
In an off-the-cuff remark during the Philadelphia Lectures in 1952 (PDC Lecture 18), Hubbard referred to "my friend Aleister Crowley." This reference would have to be one of literary allusion, as Crowley and Hubbard never met. He obviously had read some of Crowley's writings and makes reference to one of the more famous passages in Crowley's vast writings and his idea that the essence of the magical act was the intention with which it was accomplished. Crowley went on to illustrate magic with a mundane example, an author's intention in writing a book.
- Many, Nancy (2009). My Billion Year Contract: Memoir of a Former Scientologist. BookBaby. p. 203. ISBN 9780982590409. OL 25424752M.
- Atack 1990, p. 135.
- Streeter 2008, p. 215.
- Miller 1987, p. 213.
- Westbrook, Donald A. (2018). Among the Scientologists: History, Theology, and Praxis. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 84.
We don't want a clinic. We want one in operation but not in name. Perhaps we could call it a Spiritual Guidance Center. Think up its name, will you. And we could put in nice desks and our boys in neat blue with diplomas on the walls and 1. knock psychotherapy into history and 2. make enough money to shine up my operating scope and 3. keep the HAS solvent. It is a problem of practical business. I await your reaction on the religion angle. In my opinion, we couldn't get worse public opinion than we have had or have less customers with what we've got to sell.
- L Ron Hubbard letter to Helen O'Brien dated April 10, 1953
- Also incorporated were Church of American Science and Church of Spiritual Engineering
- Williams, Ian. The Alms Trade: Charities, Past, Present and Future, p. 127. New York: Cosimo, 2007. ISBN 978-1-60206-753-0
- "here is little doubt but what this stroke will remove Scientology from the target area of overt and covert attacks by the medical profession, who see their pills, scalpels, and appendix-studded incomes threatened ... can avoid the recent fiasco in which a Pasadena practitioner is reported to have spent 10 days in that city's torture chamber for "practicing medicine without a license.", Staff (April 1954). "Three Churches Are Given Charters in New Jersey". The Aberree, volume 1, issue 1, p. 4
- Lawrence, Sara. (April 18, 2006) "The Secrets of Scientology". The Independent. Retrieved February 17, 2011.
- Staff. (April 5, 1976). "Religion: A Sci-Fi Faith". Time. Retrieved February 17, 2011.
- Underdown, James (2018). "'I Was There...': Harlan Ellison Witnesses the Birth of Scientology". Skeptical Inquirer. 42 (6): 10.
- ^ Atack 1990, p. 142.
- Miller 1987, p. 227.
- Miller 1987, p. 214.
- Miller 1987, p. 221.
- Miller 1987, p. 230.
- quoted in Atack 1990, p. 139
- "1982 CW Scientology Hearings - Ron DeWolf - Day 1". May 5, 1982. 2070 seconds – via YouTube.
- ^ Miller 1987, p. 239.
- Atack 1990, p. 139.
- Atack 1990, p. 138.
- "When Scientology was in trouble in 1955, L. Ron Hubbard told prosecutor he was a 'psychologist'". tonyortega.org. February 21, 2016.
- Paul F. Boller (1989). They Never Said It : A Book of Fake Quotes, Misquotes, and Misleading Attributions. Oxford University Press, USA. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-19-505541-2.
brain washing hubbard 1936.
- The purported author is Lavrentiy Beria
- "THE ANDERSON REPORT: CHAPTER 28". www.cs.cmu.edu.
- "DOX: Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard's nutty scheme to strong-arm America's psychologists « The Underground Bunker". tonyortega.org.
- The LRH Study Tapes 1972
- Streissguth 1995, p. 74.
- ^ Miller 1987, p. 236.
- Atack 1990, p. 150.
- Barrett 2001, p. 461; Lewis 2009a, pp. 6–7; Melton 2009, p. 24; Urban 2011, p. 63; Bigliardi 2016, pp. 667–668; Thomas 2021, p. 47.
- Miller 1987, p. 228.
- Wright 2013, p. 90.
- Owen, Chris (July 11, 2019). "Scientology and the FDA: The conspiracy that never was". The Underground Bunker.
- ^ Wallis 1977, p. 215.
- Miller 1987, p. 250.
- Miller 1987, pp. 252–253.
- Wallis 1977, p. 193.
- ^ Wallis 1977, p. 196.
- Wallis 1977, p. 192.
- Atack 1990, p. 155.
- Atack 1990, p. 156.
- Atack 1990, p. 161.
- Atack 1990, p. 165.
- Atack 1990, p. 189.
- Atack 1990, p. 160.
- Hubbard, L. Ron. "Penalties for Lower Conditions". HCO Policy Letter of October 18, 1967, Issue IV. Quoted in Atack 1990, pp. 175–176
- Wallis 1977, p. 144–145.
- Reitman, Janet (2011). Inside Scientology: The Story of America's Most Secretive Religion. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 9780618883028. OCLC 651912263. OL 24881847M.
- Atack 1990, p. 183.
- Kenneth Robinson
- Miller 1987, p. 266
- OT III says "In December 1967 I knew someone had to take the plunge", but the material was publicized well before this.
- ^ Corydon, Bent (1987). L. Ron Hubbard, Messiah or Madman?. Lyle Stuart. ISBN 0818404442. (alternative link)
- "I'm drinking lots of rum and popping pinks and greys" -Correspondence to Mary Sue Hubbard as quoted in Corydon p. 59
- Hubbard, L. Ron. "Ron's Journal '67", quoted in Atack 1990, p. 173.
- Atack 1990, p. 32.
- Miller 1987, p. 299.
- ^ Miller 1987, p. 290.
- Miller 1987, p. 300.
- Quoted in Miller 1987, p. 297
- ^ Atack 1990, p. 177.
- Miller 1987, p. 285.
- Miller 1987, p. 286.
- Atack 1990, p. 180.
- Atack 1990, p. 186.
- Secret Lives "He put this 4-and-a-half year old little boy - Derek Greene - into the chain locker for two days and two nights. It's a closed metal container, it's wet, it's full of water and seaweed, it smells bad. But Derek was sitting up, on the chain, in this place, on his own, in the dark, for two days and two nights. He was not allowed to go to the potty. I mean he had to go in the chain locker on his own, soil himself. He was given food. And I never went near it, the chain locker while he was in there, but people heard him crying. That is sheer, total brutality. That is child abuse."
- Hubbard, L. Ron. Mission into Time, p. 7. Copenhagen: AOSH DK Publications Department A/S, 1973. ISBN 87-87347-56-3
- On March 6, 1968, Hubbard issued an internal memo titled "Racket Exposed", in which he denounced twelve people as "Enemies of mankind, the planet and all life", and ordered that "Any Sea Org member contacting any of them is to use Auditing Process R2-45."Wallis 1977, p. 154 The memo was subsequently reproduced, with another name added, in the Church of Scientology's internal journal, The Auditor.
- "Racket Exposed". The Auditor. No. 35. 1968.
are hereby declared Suppressive Persons ... 3. They are declared Enemies of mankind, the planet and all life. 4. They are fair game. 5. No amnesty may ever cover them. 6. If they ever come to a Qual Division they are to be run on reverse processes. 7. Any Sea Organization member contacting any of them is to use Auditing Process R2-45.
- Miller 1987, p. 301.
- ^ Sappell, Joel; Robert W. Welkos (June 24, 1990). "The Mind Behind the Religion : Life With L. Ron Hubbard : Aides indulged his eccentricities and egotism". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 19, 2011.
- Miller 1987, p. 310.
- Miller 1987, p. 296.
- Hubbard, L. Ron (1999). "HCO Policy Letter of February 1969: Religion". An Encyclopedia of Scientology Policy (PDF). Los Angeles: Church of Scientology of California. p. 196. ISBN 0-88404-031-3. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 22, 2019.
Any staff who are trained at any level as auditors (but not in AOs) are to be clothed in the traditioned ministerial black suit, black vest white collar silver cross for ordinary org wear.
- Ortega, Tony (September 28, 2013). "Blood Relation, Blood Ritual: A Hubbard Family Occult Mystery". The Underground Bunker.
- Mitchell, Alexander (October 5, 1969). "Scientology: Revealed for the first time / The odd beginning of Ron Hubbard's career". The Sunday Times. Archived from the original on March 9, 2019.
- "Bare-Faced Messiah: Chapter 7".
December 1969: "Hubbard broke up black magic in America . . . because he was well known as a writer and philosopher and had friends among the physicists, he was sent in to handle the situation . He went to live at the house and investigated the black magic rites and the general situation and found them very bad . . . Hubbard's mission was successful far beyond anyone's expectations. The house was torn down. Hubbard rescued a girl they were using. The black magic group was dispersed and never recovered."
- Miller 1987, p. 311.
- Miller 1987, p. 312.
- Miller 1987, p. 314.
- Miller 1987, p. 316.
- Miller 1987, p. 318.
- Atack 1990, p. 206.
- Miller 1987, p. 325.
- Bill Franks and David Mayo
- "A person does not blow due to Overts or Witholds. He blows only due to ARC BKs."
- Interview with Bill Franks, June 2010
- Beresford, David (February 7, 1980). "Snow White's dirty tricks". London: The Guardian
- Miller 1987, p. 317–318.
- Marshall, John (January 24, 1980). "The Scientology Papers: Hubbard still gave orders, records show". Globe and Mail. ProQuest 386965976 – via ProQuest.
- Streissguth 1995, p. 75.
- Marshall, John (January 25, 1980). "Files show spy reported woman's intimate words". Globe and Mail. Archived from the original on July 14, 2019. Retrieved July 14, 2019.
- ^ Ortega, Tony (2015). The Unbreakable Miss Lovely. London: Silvertail Books. ISBN 9781511639378.
- Staff (November 1, 1982). "Redondo couple, N.Y. writer named in Scientology lawsuit". Daily Breeze.
- Paulette Cooper (May 8, 1982). "The 1982 Clearwater Hearings: Day 4". Archived from the original on January 3, 2007. Retrieved February 12, 2007.
- ^ Miller 1987, p. 334.
- Clark County Coroner. Report of Investigation, Case #1003–76.
- Miller 1987, p. 344.
- Atack 1990, p. 214.
- Marro, Anthony (July 9, 1977). "Federal Agents Raid Scientology Church: Offices in Two Cities Are Searched for Allegedly Stolen I.R.S. Files" (PDF). New York Times.
- Robinson, Timothy S. (July 6, 1978). "FBI Raid on L.A. Scientologists Upheld". Washington Post.
- Robinson, Timothy S. (July 14, 1977). "Scientology Raid Yielded Alleged Burglary Tools". The Washington post.
- Atack 1990, p. 256.
- "Bare-Faced Messiah: Timeline".
- "Interview with David Mayo".
- Ortega, Tony (February 6, 2012). "Scientology's Secret Vaults: A Rare Interview With a Former Member of Hush-Hush "CST"". The Village Voice.
- Atack 1990, p. 258.
- Atack 1990, p. 259.
- Miller 1987, p. 364.
- Sappell, Joel; Welkos, Robert W. (June 24, 1990). The Mind Behind the Religion : Chapter Four : The Final Days : Deep in hiding, Hubbard kept tight grip on the church." Los Angeles Times, retrieved February 8, 2011.
- Queen, Edward L.; Prothero, Stephen R.; Shattuck, Gardiner H. Encyclopedia of American religious history, Volume 1, p. 493. New York: Infobase Publishing, 2009. ISBN 978-0-8160-6660-5
- "UP THE BRIDGE: We finally reach 'OT 8' — but was its first version really a hoax? – The Underground Bunker". tonyortega.org.
- Wakefield, Margery (1991). "What Christians Need to Know about Scientology". David Touretzky.
- Ortega, Tony (December 16, 2017). "L. Ron Hubbard's son was troubled, but don't discount him entirely: few knew his father better".
- Urban, Hugh B (2006). "Fair Game: Secrecy, Security, and the Church of Scientology in Cold War America". Journal of the American Academy of Religion. 2 (74).
- "Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard's caretaker and friend, Steve 'Sarge' Pfauth, 1945–2016 | the Underground Bunker".
- "L. Ron Hubbard's death certificate and other documents" (PDF). Archived from the original on November 23, 2015. Retrieved June 15, 2012.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - Lindsey, Robert; Times, Special To the New York (January 29, 1986). "L. Ron Hubbard Dies of Stroke; Founder of Church of Scientology". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved June 20, 2023.
- Miller 1987, p. 375.
- Urban (2012): "An eclectic and ingenious religious entrepreneur, Hubbard assembled a wide array of philosophical, occult, spiritual and science fiction elements, cobbling them together into a unique, new and surprisingly successful synthesis. In Hubbard's religious bricolage, occult elements drawn from Crowley were indeed one important element, but neither more nor less important than the many others drawn from pop psychology, Eastern religions, science fiction and a host of goods available in the 1950s spiritual marketplace."
- e.g. Freud's "unconscious mind" became Hubbard's "reactive mind".
- The first edition of Dianetics featured a dust jacket advertisement for psychoanalyst Nandor Fodor's book on "the trauma of birth and pre-natal conditioning".
- Westbrook, Donald A. (November 1, 2018). Among the Scientologists: History, Theology, and Praxis. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-066498-5 – via Google Books.
- Wright: "One of Thompson's maxims was 'If it's not true for you, it's not true.' He told young Hubbard that the statement had come from Gautama Siddhartha, the Buddha. It made an impression on Hubbard." (Wright 2013, p.22)
- Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "LRH Birthday event Hubbard talks about Snake Thompson". YouTube. September 9, 2014.
- "Black magic is the inner core of Scientology" Penthouse interview, 1983.
- Sonnenschein, Allan (June 1983). "Scientology Through the Eyes of L. Ron Hubbard, Jr". Penthouse. Archived from the original on August 1, 2023. (alternative link)
- Urban 2012, p. 107.
- Hypnotism Comes of Age (1949) by Bernard Wolfe
- How We Remember Our Past Lives (1946)
- ^ Hassan & Scheflin 2024, pp. 759–761.
- ^ Atack, Jon. "Hubbard and the Occult" – via spaink.net.
- "SOURCE CODE: Actual things L. Ron Hubbard said on this date in history | the Underground Bunker".
Now, all this sounds very Space Opera-ish and that sort of thing, and I'm sorry for it, but I am not one to quibble about the truth.
- Miller 1987, p. 323, "I once asked him why he chose young girls as messengers ... He said it was an idea he had picked up from Nazi Germany. He said Hitler was a madman, but nevertheless a genius in his own right and the Nazi Youth was one of the smartest ideas he ever had. With young people you had a blank slate and you could write anything you wanted on it and it would be your writing. That was his idea, to take young people and mould them into little Hubbards. He said he had girls because women were more loyal than men.".
- "The Bare-Faced Messiah Interviews : Interview with Nieson Himmel, Los Angeles, 14 August 1986" – via David Touretzky.
He claimed he was in England, in the "Royal Museum", going down this hall, and three scientists came walking out of an office, spotted him, grabbed him and took him into office and started measuring his skull, saying this was a perfect example of whatever it was and then pushing him out without a word. I said, "gee, that's a hell of a great story, except I think I read that in George Bernard Shaw." Another time he told a story of being in the Aleutians in command of a destroyer and came near some ice foes and a polar bear jumped onto the ship chasing everyone around. It's another good story that Cory Ford wrote in his book about the Aleutians.
- Miller 1987, pp. 370–71.
- "Appendix 2: The Affirmations of L. Ron Hubbard" (PDF). mncriticalthinking.com. 2016.
- Sappell, Joel; Welkos, Robert (June 24, 1990). "The Making of L. Ron Hubbard: Staking a Claim to Blood Brotherhood". Los Angeles Times. A38:5.
- McDowell, Michael; Brown, Nathan Robert (2009). World Religions at your Fingertips. Penguin. p. 275. ISBN 9781592578467. OL 23831136M. Retrieved January 8, 2016.
- Atack 1990, p. 50.
- Atack 1990, p. 57.
- Wallis 1977, p. 18.
- (February 7, 1986). "Hubbard Left Most of Estate to Scientology Church; Executor Appointed". The Associated Press.
- ^ Atack 1990, p. 356.
- Lamont 1986, p. 154.
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- Lattin, Don (February 12, 2001). "Scientology Founder's Family Life Far From What He Preached". San Francisco Chronicle, retrieved February 12, 2011.
- Bainbridge, William Sims. "Science and Religion: The Case of Scientology", in Bromley, David G.; Hammond, Phillip E. (eds). The Future of new religious movements, p. 63. Macon, GA: Mercer University Press, 1987. ISBN 978-0-86554-238-9
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- Petrowsky, Marc (1998). Sects, Cults, and Spiritual Communities: A Sociological Analysis. Westport, Conn: Praeger. p. 144. ISBN 978-0-275-95860-2.
- Atack 1990, p. 354.
- ^ Reitman, Janet (February 23, 2006). "Inside Scientology". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on April 30, 2009.
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- "35°31'28.6"N 104°34'20.2"W". Google maps.
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- per Lonnie D. Kliever
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- per Mikael Rothstein
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- My Scientology Movie, at 59:00
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- Rothstein 2007, p. 19.
- ^ The Scientology Story (Los Angeles Times series) by Joel Sappell and Robert W. Welkos Part 5: The Making of a Best-Selling Author, June 28, 1990 archive
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- "Trapped in the Closet". South Park. November 16, 2005.
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Works cited
- Atack, Jon (1990). A Piece of Blue Sky: Scientology, Dianetics and L. Ron Hubbard Exposed. Lyle Stuart Books. ISBN 081840499X. OL 9429654M.
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Further reading
- Behar, Richard (May 6, 1991). "Scientology: The Thriving Cult of Greed and Power". Time. Archived from the original on May 25, 2014.
External links
- Official website
- Biographical documentation from The New Yorker
- Operation Clambake. Critical material on Hubbard and Scientology
- U.S. Government FBI Files for Hubbard via The Smoking Gun
- Frenschkowski, Marco, "L. Ron Hubbard and Scientology: An annotated bibliographical survey of primary and selected secondary literature", Marburg Journal of Religion, Vol. 1. No. 1. July 1999, ISSN 1612-2941
- L. Ron Hubbard at IMDb
- L. Ron Hubbard at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Hubbard, L Ron at The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction
- Hubbard, L Ron Archived October 4, 2018, at the Wayback Machine at the Encyclopedia of Fantasy
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