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Inside Scientology (Rolling Stone article)

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Home › Forum Online Discussion › Philosophy › Inside Scientology (Rolling Stone article)

  • This topic has 7 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 19 years, 2 months ago by spongebob.
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  • February 28, 2006 at 4:16 pm #11067
    Michael Winn
    Keymaster

    This is long, but good if you want the skinny on scientology, which is really the first american religion to codify a lot of teachings from the east, especially hinduism, but recast it in a techno-jargon.
    michael
    ————

    INSIDE SCIENTOLOGY
    UNLOCKING THE COMPLEX CODE OF AMERICA’S MOST MYSTERIOUS RELIGION
    By Janet Reitman
    Rolling Stone Magazine
    February 23, 2006

    http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/9363363/inside_scientology

    The faded little downtown area of Clearwater, Florida, has a beauty
    salon, a pizza parlor and one or two run-down bars, as well as a bunch
    of withered bungalows and some old storefronts that look as if they
    haven’t seen customers in years. There are few cars and almost no
    pedestrians. There are, however, buses — a fleet of gleaming white
    and blue ones that slowly crawl through town, stopping at regular
    intervals to discharge a small army of tightly organized, young,
    almost exclusively white men and women, all clad in uniform preppy
    attire: khaki, black or navy-blue trousers and crisp white, blue or
    yellow dress shirts. Some wear pagers on their belts; others carry
    briefcases. The men have short hair, and the women keep theirs pulled
    back or tucked under headbands that match their outfits. No one
    crosses against the light, and everybody calls everybody else “sir” —
    even when the “sir” is a woman. They move throughout the center of
    Clearwater in tight clusters, from corner to corner, building to
    building.

    This regimented mass represents the “Sea Organization,” the most
    dedicated and elite members of the Church of Scientology. For the past
    thirty years, Scientology has made the city of Clearwater its
    worldwide spiritual headquarters — its Mecca, or its Temple Square.
    There are 8,300 or so Scientologists living and working in Clearwater
    — more than in any other city in the world outside of Los Angeles.
    Scientologists own more than 200 businesses in Clearwater. Members of
    the church run schools and private tutoring programs, day-care centers
    and a drug-rehab clinic. They sit on the boards of the Rotary Club,
    the Chamber of Commerce and the Boy Scouts.

    In July 2004, The St. Petersburg Times dubbed Clearwater, a community
    of 108,000 people, “Scientology’s Town.” On the newspaper’s front page
    was a photograph of Scientology’s newest building, a vast, white,
    Mediterranean Revival-style edifice known within Scientology circles
    as the “Super Power” building. Occupying a full square block of
    downtown, this structure, which has been under construction since
    1998, is billed as the single largest Scientology church in the world.
    When it is finally completed — presumably in late 2006, at an
    estimated final cost of $50 million — it will have 889 rooms on six
    floors, an indoor sculpture garden and a large Scientology museum. The
    crowning touch will be a two-story, illuminated Scientology cross
    that, perched atop the building’s highest tower, will shine over the
    city of Clearwater like a beacon.

    * * * *

    Scientology — the term means “the study of truth,” in the words of
    its founder and spiritual messiah, the late science-fiction writer L.
    Ron Hubbard — calls itself “the world’s fastest-growing religion.”
    Born in 1954, the group now claims 10 million members in 159 countries
    and more than 6,000 Scientology churches, missions and outreach groups
    across the globe. Its holdings, which include real estate on several
    continents, are widely assumed to value in the billions of dollars.
    Its missionaries — known as “volunteer ministers” — take part in
    “cavalcades” throughout the developing world and have been found, en
    masse, at the site of disasters ranging from 9/11 to the Asian tsunami
    to Hurricane Katrina. Within the field of comparative religions, some
    academics see Scientology as one of the most significant new religious
    movements of the past century.

    Scientology is also America’s most controversial religion: widely
    derided, but little understood. It is rooted in elements of Buddhism,
    Hinduism and a number of Western philosophies, including aspects of
    Christianity. The French sociologist Regis Dericquebourg, an expert in
    comparative religions, explains Scientology’s belief system as one of
    “regressive utopia,” in which man seeks to return to a once-perfect
    state through a variety of meticulous, and rigorous, processes
    intended to put him in touch with his primordial spirit. These
    processes are highly controlled, and, at the advanced levels, highly
    secretive. Critics of the church point out that Scientology, unique
    among religions, withholds key aspects of its central theology from
    all but its most exalted followers. To those in the mainstream, this
    would be akin to the Catholic Church refusing to tell all but a select
    number of the faithful that Jesus Christ died for their sins.

    In June of last year, I set out to discover Scientology, an
    undertaking that would take nearly nine months. A closed faith that
    has often been hostile to journalistic inquiry, the church initially
    offered no help on this story; most of my research was done without
    its assistance and involved dozens of interviews with both current and
    former Scientologists, as well as academic researchers who have
    studied the group. Ultimately, however, the church decided to
    cooperate and gave me unprecedented access to its officials, social
    programs and key religious headquarters. What I found was a faith that
    is at once mainstream and marginal — a religious community known for
    its Hollywood members but run by a uniformed sect of believers who
    rarely, if ever, appear in the public eye. It is an insular society —
    one that exists, to a large degree, as something of a parallel
    universe to the secular world, with its own nomenclature and ethical
    code, and, most daunting to those who break its rules, its own
    rigorously enforced justice system.

    Scientologists, much like Mormons or Christian evangelicals, consider
    themselves to be on a mission. They frequently speak of “helping
    people,” and this mission is stressed in a number of church
    testaments. “Scientologists see themselves as possessors of doctrines
    and skills that can save the world, if not the galaxy,” says Stephen
    Kent, a professor of sociology at the University of Alberta, in
    Canada, who has extensively studied the group.

    Church officials boast that Scientology has grown more in the past
    five years than in the previous fifty. Some evidence, however,
    suggests otherwise. In 2001, a survey conducted by the City University
    of New York found only 55,000 people in the United States who claimed
    to be Scientologists. Worldwide, some observers believe a reasonable
    estimate of Scientology’s core practicing membership ranges between
    100,000 and 200,000, mostly in the U.S., Europe, South Africa and
    Australia. According to the church’s own course-completion lists —
    many of which are available in a church publication and on the
    Internet — only 6,126 people signed up for religious services at the
    Clearwater organization in 2004, down from a peak of 11,210 in 1989.
    According to Kristi Wachter, a San Francisco activist who maintains an
    online database devoted to Scientology’s numbers, this pattern is
    replicated at nearly all of Scientology’s key organizations and
    churches. To some observers, this suggests that Scientology may, in
    fact, be shrinking.

    But discerning what is true about the Church of Scientology is no easy
    task. Tax-exempt since 1993 (status granted by the IRS after a long
    legal battle), Scientology releases no information about its
    membership or its finances. Nor does it welcome analysis of its
    writings or practices. The church has a storied reputation for
    squelching its critics through litigation, and according to some
    reports, intimidation (a trait that may explain why the creators of
    South Park jokingly attributed every credit on its November 2005
    sendup of Scientology to the fictional John and Jane Smith; Paramount,
    reportedly under pressure, has agreed not to rerun the episode here or
    to air it in England). Nevertheless, Scientology’s critics comprise a
    sizable network of ex-members (or “apostates,” in church parlance),
    academics and independent free-speech and human-rights activists like
    Wachter, who have declared war on the group by posting a significant
    amount of previously unknown information on the Internet. This
    includes scans of controversial memos, photographs and legal briefs,
    as well as testimonials from disillusioned former members, including
    some high-ranking members of its Sea Organization. All paint the
    church in a negative, even abusive, light.

    When asked what, if anything, posted by the apostates is true, Mike
    Rinder, the fifty-year-old director of the Church of Scientology
    International’s legal and public-relations wing, known as the Office
    of Special Affairs, says bluntly, “It’s all bullshit, pretty much.”

    But he admits that Scientology has been on a campaign to raise its
    public profile. More than 23 million people visited the Scientology
    Web site last year, says Rinder, one of the highest-ranking officials
    in the church. In addition, the church claims that Scientology
    received 289,000 minutes of radio and TV coverage in 2005, many of
    them devoted to the actions of Tom Cruise, the most famous
    Scientologist in the world, who spent much of the spring and summer of
    2005 promoting Scientology and its beliefs to interviewers ranging
    from Oprah Winfrey to Matt Lauer.

    Shortly after Rolling Stone decided to embark on this story, Cruise
    called our offices to say that he would not participate. Several weeks
    later, the magazine was visited by Cruise’s sister, Lee Anne DeVette,
    an upper-level Scientologist who until recently also served as
    Cruise’s publicist, along with Mike Rinder. Both expressed their
    dissatisfaction with previous coverage of Scientology by major media
    outlets, and they warned against what they perceived to be the
    unreliability of the faith’s critics — “the wackos,” as Rinder
    described them. He then invited Rolling Stone to Los Angeles to show
    us “the real Scientology” — a trip that took five months to set up.

    A number of people who have spoken for the purposes of this article
    have done so for the very first time. Several, in speaking of their
    lives spent in the church, requested that their identities be
    protected through the change of names and other characteristics.
    Others insisted that not even a gender be attached to their comments.

    There will always be schisms in any religious group, as well as people
    who, upon leaving their faith, decide to “purge” themselves of their
    experiences. This is particularly true in the case of members of
    so-called new religions, which often demand total commitment from
    their members. Scientology is one of these religions. “We’re not
    playing some minor game in Scientology,” Hubbard wrote in a policy
    paper titled “Keeping Scientology Working,” which is required reading
    for every member. “The whole agonized future of this planet, every
    man, woman and child on it, and your own destiny for the next endless
    trillions of years depend on what you do here and now with and in
    Scientology. This is a deadly serious activity.”

    * * * *

    It is impossible to go anywhere in downtown Clearwater without being
    watched by security cameras. There are about 100 of them, set up on
    all of Scientology’s properties, which include several hotels, a
    former bank and a number of administrative buildings. Cameras face in,
    toward the buildings themselves, as well as out at the street.

    While some might find this disconcerting, Natalie Walet, 17, thinks
    it’s normal. “It’s just a point of security,” she says over coffee one
    evening at the downtown Starbucks. She notes that Scientology’s
    buildings have been marred with graffiti and are routinely picketed,
    which she sees as a sign of religious bigotry. “You have a church that
    a lot of people don’t like, and some people are assholes,” she says.
    That said, Natalie adds, most people in Clearwater have “very high
    standards and morals — they’re ethical people.”

    A pretty girl with a long black ponytail, Natalie was born and raised
    in Scientology. Both of her parents and her grandmother are church
    members, and her involvement in Scientology centers around Clearwater.
    But the church has other far-flung hubs, including the organizational
    headquarters in Los Angeles, home to the powerful Church of
    Scientology International; and Freewinds, the 440-foot cruise ship
    that docks in Curacao and is used as a training facility, meeting hall
    and vacation destination for elite Scientologists, including Cruise
    and John Travolta. There is also “Gold Base,” the exclusive desert
    compound housing the Religious Technology Center, or RTC, the
    financial hub of the church, located about eighty miles southeast of
    Los Angeles, home to David Miscavige, the charismatic
    forty-five-year-old who heads up the international church.

    Natalie’s everyday reality is one of total immersion in all things
    Hubbard. Scientology kids are raised in a very different manner than
    mainstream kids. Most of them, like Natalie, have been educated by
    special tutors, and enrolled, as Natalie was when she was younger, in
    private schools run by Scientologists that use a Hubbard-approved
    study technique. Most kids are also put “on course” — enrolled in
    classes at the church that teach both children and adults
    self-control, focus and communication skills. Natalie was put on
    course, upon her own insistence, when she was seven or eight years
    old. Between school and church, life was “kind of a bubble,” she says.

    It is a steamy night, and Natalie is dressed in a sleeveless black
    Empire-waist blouse and tight jeans; her short, bitten nails are
    painted red. She lights a Marlboro Menthol. Smoking is Natalie’s only
    vice. She neither drinks nor takes drugs of any sort — “once in a
    grand while I’ll take a Tylenol,” she says. “But only if my headache
    is really bad.” She admits this with embarrassment because
    Scientologists consider many illnesses to be psychosomatic and don’t
    believe in treating them with medicine, even aspirin.

    Like all Scientologists, Natalie considers her body to be simply a
    temporary vessel. She thinks of herself as an immortal being, or
    “thetan,” which means that she has lived trillions of years, and will
    continue to be reborn, again and again. Many Eastern religions have
    similar beliefs, and Natalie is quick to note that Scientology is
    “actually a very basic religion. It has a lot of the same moral
    beliefs as others.” What’s special about Scientology, Natalie says, is
    that it “bears a workable applied technology that you can use in your
    everyday life.”

    “Technology,” or “tech,” is what Scientologists call the theories,
    methods and principles espoused by L. Ron Hubbard — “LRH,” as Natalie
    calls him. To the devout, he is part prophet, part teacher, part
    savior — some Scientologists rank Hubbard’s importance as greater
    than Christ’s — and Hubbard’s word is considered the word. Hubbard
    was a prolific writer all his life; there are millions of words
    credited to him, roughly a quarter-million of them contained within
    Dianetics, the best-selling quasiscientific self-help book that is the
    most famous Scientology text.

    Published in 1950, Dianetics maintained that the source of mental and
    physical illness could be traced back to psychic scars called
    “engrams” that were rooted in early, even prenatal, experiences, and
    remained locked in a person’s subconscious, or “reactive mind.” To rid
    oneself of the reactive mind, a process known as going “Clear,”
    Dianetics, and later Scientology, preached a regressive-therapy
    technique called auditing, which involves re-experiencing incidents in
    one’s past life in order to erase their engrams.

    Natalie is a fan of auditing, something she’s been doing since she was
    a small child. Most auditing is done with a device called the
    electropsychometer, or E-meter. Often compared to lie detectors,
    E-meters measure the changes in small electrical currents in the body,
    in response to questions posed by an auditor. Scientologists believe
    the meter registers thoughts of the reactive mind and can root out
    unconscious lies. As Natalie explains it, the E-meter is “like a guide
    that helps the auditor to know what questions to ask.” Sometimes, she
    says, you might not remember certain events, and you might not know
    what is causing your problems. “But they’ll just dig it up until you
    go, ‘Holy shit, was that what was going on?'” She smiles. “And
    afterward, you feel so much better.”

    Natalie has just begun her path to Scientology enlightenment, known as
    the Bridge to Total Freedom. There are specific stages, or “grades,”
    of the Bridge, and the key to progressing “upward” is auditing:
    hundreds, if not thousands, of sessions that Scientologists believe
    can not only help them resolve their problems but also fix their
    ethical breaches, much as Catholics might do in confessing their sins.
    The ultimate goal in every auditing session is to have a “win,” or
    moment of revelation, which can take a few minutes, hours or even
    weeks — Scientologists are not allowed to leave an auditing session
    until their auditor is satisfied.

    So far, Natalie has gotten much of her auditing for free, through her
    parents, who have both worked for the church. But many Scientologists
    pay dearly for the service. Unique among religious faiths, Scientology
    charges for virtually all of its religious services. Auditing is
    purchased in 12.5-hour blocks, known as “intensives.” Each intensive
    can cost anywhere from $750 for introductory sessions to between
    $8,000 and $9,000 for advanced sessions. When asked about money,
    church officials can become defensive. “Do you want to know the real
    answer? If we could offer everything for free, we would do it,” says
    Rinder. Another official offers, “We don’t have 2,000 years of
    acquired wealth to fall back on.” But Scientology isn’t alone, church
    leaders insist. Mormons, for example, expect members to tithe a tenth
    of their earnings.

    Still, religious scholars note that this is an untraditional approach.
    “Among the things that have made this movement so controversial,” says
    S. Scott Bartchy, director of the Center for the Study of Religion at
    UCLA, “are its claims that its forms of therapy are ‘scientific’ and
    that the ‘truth’ will only be revealed to those who have the money to
    purchase advancement to the various levels leading to ‘being clear.’
    It is this unvarnished demand for money that has led many observers to
    opine that the entire operation looks more like a business than a
    religion.” Clearing the stages along the Bridge to Total Freedom is a
    process that can take years and cost tens and often hundreds of
    thousands of dollars — one veteran Scientologist told me she
    “donated” $250,000 in a twenty-year period. Other Scientologists can
    wind up spending family inheritances and mortgaging homes to pay the
    fees. Many, like Natalie’s parents, work for their local church so
    they can receive auditing and courses for free.

    Both of Natalie’s parents are Clear, she says. Her grandmother is
    what’s called an “Operating Thetan,” or “OT.” So is Tom Cruise, who is
    near the top of Scientology’s Bridge, at a level known as OT VII. OTs
    are Scientology’s elite — enlightened beings who are said to have
    total “control” over themselves and their environment. OTs can
    allegedly move inanimate objects with their minds, leave their bodies
    at will and telepathically communicate with, and control the behavior
    of, both animals and human beings. At the highest levels, they are
    allegedly liberated from the physical universe, to the point where
    they can psychically control what Scientologists call MEST: Matter,
    Energy, Space and Time.

    * * * *

    The most important, and highly anticipated, of the eight “OT levels”
    is OT III, also known as the Wall of Fire. It is here that
    Scientologists are told the secrets of the universe, and, some
    believe, the creation story behind the entire religion. It is
    knowledge so dangerous, they are told, any Scientologist learning this
    material before he is ready could die. When I ask Mike Rinder about
    this, he casts the warning in less-dire terms, explaining that, before
    he reached OT III — he is now OT V — he was told that looking at the
    material early was “spiritually not good for you.” But Hubbard, who
    told followers that he discovered these secrets while on a trip to
    North Africa in 1967, was more dramatic. “Somehow or other I brought
    it off, and obtained the material and was able to live through it,” he
    wrote. “I am very sure that I was the first one that ever did live
    through any attempt to attain that material.”

    Scientologists must be “invited” to do OT III. Beforehand, they are
    put through an intensive auditing process to verify that they are
    ready. They sign a waiver promising never to reveal the secrets of OT
    III, nor to hold Scientology responsible for any trauma or damage one
    might endure at this stage of auditing. Finally, they are given a
    manila folder, which they must read in a private, locked room.

    These materials, which the Church of Scientology has long struggled to
    keep secret, were published online by a former member in 1995 and have
    been widely circulated in the mainstream media, ranging from The New
    York Times to last year’s South Park episode. They assert that 75
    million years ago, an evil galactic warlord named Xenu controlled
    seventy-six planets in this corner of the galaxy, each of which was
    severely overpopulated. To solve this problem, Xenu rounded up 13.5
    trillion beings and then flew them to Earth, where they were dumped
    into volcanoes around the globe and vaporized with bombs. This
    scattered their radioactive souls, or thetans, until they were caught
    in electronic traps set up around the atmosphere and “implanted” with
    a number of false ideas — including the concepts of God, Christ and
    organized religion. Scientologists later learn that many of these
    entities attached themselves to human beings, where they remain to
    this day, creating not just the root of all of our emotional and
    physical problems but the root of all problems of the modern world.

    “Hubbard thought it was important to have a story about how things got
    going, similar to the way both Jews and Christians did in the early
    chapters of Genesis,” says UCLA’s Bartchy. “All religion lives from
    the sense either that something in life is terribly wrong or is
    profoundly missing. For the most part, Christianity has claimed that
    people have rebelled against God with the result that they are
    ‘sinners’ in need of restoration and that the world is a very unjust
    place in need of healing. What Hubbard seems to be saying is that
    human beings are really something else — thetans trapped in bodies in
    the material world — and that Scientology can both wake them up and
    save them from this bad situation.”

    The church considers OT III confidential material. But there are
    numerous science-fiction references in Scientology texts available to
    members of all levels. The official “Glossary for Scientology and
    Dianetics” includes an entry for “space opera,” a sci-fi genre that
    the glossary says “is not fiction and concerns actual incidents.”
    Scientology’s “Technical Dictionary” makes reference to a number of
    extraterrestrial “invader forces,” including one, the “Marcab
    Confederacy,” explained as a vast, interplanetary civilization more
    than 200,000 years old that “looks almost exact duplicate [sic] but is
    worse off than the current U.S. civilization.” Indeed, as even Rinder
    himself points out, Hubbard presented a rough outline of the Xenu
    story to his followers in a 1967 taped lecture, “RJ 67,” in which he
    noted that 75 million years ago a cataclysmic event happened in this
    sector of the galaxy that has caused negative effects for everyone
    since. This material is available to lower-level Scientologists. But
    the details of the story remain secret within Scientology.

    Rinder has fielded questions on Scientology’s beliefs for years. When
    I ask him whether there is any validity to the Xenu story, he gets
    red-faced, almost going into a tirade. “It is not a story, it is an
    auditing level,” he says, neither confirming nor denying that this
    theology exists. He says that OT material — and specifically the
    material on OT III — comprises “a small percent” of what Scientology
    is all about. But it is carefully guarded. Scientologists on the OT
    levels often carry their materials in locked briefcases and are told
    to store them in special secure locations in their homes. They are
    also strictly forbidden from discussing any facet of the materials,
    even with their families. “I’m not explaining it to you, and I could
    not explain it to you,” says Rinder heatedly. “You don’t have a hope
    of understanding it.”

    Those who have experienced OT III report that getting through it can
    be a harrowing experience. Tory Christman, a former high-ranking
    Scientologist who during her tenure in the faith reached the
    near-pinnacle of enlightenment, OT VII, says it took more than ten
    years before she was finally invited onto OT III. Once there,
    Christman was shocked. “You’ve jumped through all these hoops just to
    get to it, and then you open that packet, and the first thing you
    think is, ‘Come on,'” she says. “You’re surrounded by all these people
    who’re going, ‘Wow, isn’t it amazing, just getting the data? I can
    tell it’s really changed you.’ After a while, enough people say it and
    you’re like, ‘Wow. You know, I really feel it.'”

    Natalie has a long way to go before she reaches OT III. Although
    virtually everything about the OT levels is available on the Internet,
    “I don’t look at that stuff,” Natalie says. She believes it is mostly
    “entheta,” which are lies, or negative information about Scientology
    meant to undermine the faith. “You know, sometimes in school, kids
    would hear I’m a Scientologist and be like, ‘No way — are you an
    alien?'” Natalie says. “I don’t get mad about it. I just go, ‘OK, let
    me tell you what it really is.'”

    Natalie’s view of Scientology is the one church officials promote:
    that it is not a religion about “space aliens” but simply a set of
    beliefs that can help a person live a better life. And Natalie appears
    to be the poster child for Scientology as a formula for a
    well-adjusted adolescence. Articulate and poised, she is close to her
    family, has a wide circle of Scientologist and non-Scientologist
    friends and graduated from high school last spring as a straight-A
    student. “I’m not saying that everybody must be a Scientologist,” she
    says. “But what I am saying is that I see it work. I’ve learned so
    much about myself. LRH says, ‘What is true for you is what you observe
    to be true.’ So I’m not here to tell you that Scientology is the way,
    or that these are the answers. You decide what is true.”

    * * * *

    Truth is a relative concept when discussing the life of Lafayette
    Ronald Hubbard. He was born in 1911, and, according to his legend,
    lived a life of heroic acts and great scientific and spiritual
    accomplishment until his death, in 1986. Photos of Hubbard in robust
    middle age — often wearing an ascot — hang in every Scientology
    center. You can read Hubbard’s official biography on the Scientology
    Web site, which portrays the man Scientologists call the “Founder” as
    a great thinker, teacher, scientist, adventurer, ethnographer,
    photographer, sailor and war hero.

    The reality of Hubbard’s life is less exhilarating but in many ways
    more interesting. The son of a U.S. naval officer, he was by all
    accounts an unremarkable youth from Tilden, Nebraska, who flunked out
    of George Washington University after his sophomore year and later
    found moderate success as a penny-a-word writer of pulp fiction,
    publishing hundreds of stories in fantasy magazines like Astounding
    Science Fiction. As a lieutenant in the Navy, Hubbard served, briefly,
    in World War II, but never saw combat and was relieved of his command.
    He spent the last months of the war as an outpatient at a naval
    hospital in Oakland, California, where he received treatment for
    ulcers. Years later, Hubbard would claim to have been “crippled and
    blinded” in battle, and that, over a year or so of intense “scientific
    research,” he’d cured himself using techniques that would later become
    part of Dianetics.

    After the war, Hubbard made his way to Pasadena, California, a
    scientific boomtown of the 1940s, where he met John Whiteside Parsons,
    a society figure and a founder of CalTech’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
    A sci-fi buff, Parsons was also a follower of the English occultist
    Aleister Crowley. Parsons befriended Hubbard and invited him to move
    onto his estate. In one of the stranger chapters in Hubbard’s life,
    recorded in detail by several biographers, the soon-to-be founder of
    Dianetics became Parsons’ assistant — helping him with a variety of
    black-magic and sex rituals, including one in which Parsons attempted
    to conjure a literal “whore of Babalon [sic],” with Hubbard serving as
    apprentice.

    Charming and charismatic, Hubbard succeeded in wooing away Parsons’
    mistress, Sara Northrup, whom he would later marry. Soon afterward, he
    fell out with Parsons over a business venture. But having absorbed
    lessons learned at Parsons’ “lodge,” Hubbard set out to figure his
    next step. In his 1983 autobiography, Over My Shoulder: Reflections on
    a Science Fiction Era, the sci-fi writer Lloyd Eshbach describes
    meeting Hubbard in the late 1940s. “I’d like to start a religion,”
    Eshbach recalls Hubbard saying. “That’s where the money is.”

    Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health was published in May
    1950, and it soon became a runaway hit. Written as sort of a practical
    pop-psychology book, Dianetics promised that by practicing certain
    techniques, some of which seemed almost hypnotic, one could be free of
    sickness, anxiety, aggression and anti-social tendencies, and develop
    perfect memory and astounding intelligence. Hailed by the newspaper
    columnist Walter Winchell as a “new science” that “from all
    indications will prove to be as revolutionary for humanity as the
    first caveman’s discovery and utilization of fire,” Dianetics remained
    on the New York Times best-seller list for twenty-eight consecutive
    weeks.

    But a number of factors, including condemnation from the American
    Psychological Association, hurt book sales. Public support for
    Dianetics took a downturn, and by the end of 1952, Hubbard was facing
    financial ruin.

    Rather than admit defeat, Hubbard “improved” Dianetics and unveiled
    what he claimed was an even more sophisticated path to enlightenment:
    Scientology. This new technique was designed to restore, or enhance,
    the abilities of the individual, as opposed to simply getting rid of
    the reactive mind. In 1954, the first Church of Scientology was born,
    in Los Angeles. L. Ron Hubbard was now the founder of his own religion.

    From there, Hubbard set about spreading Scientology around the world,
    opening churches in England, Australia, New Zealand and elsewhere. In
    1955, a policy known as “Project Celebrity” was launched with the aim
    of recruiting stars in the arts, sports, business and government —
    those dubbed “Prime Communicators” — who could help disseminate the
    message. As incentive, these celebrities were given free courses;
    those who did outstanding work could be “awarded” an OT level, in
    honor of their service to the organization. Special churches — known
    as “celebrity centres” — were set up, allowing its members to
    practice Scientology away from the public eye. The most lavish of
    these is the neo-Gothic Celebrity Centre International, which is
    housed in a former chateau on Franklin Avenue, at the foot of the
    Hollywood Hills.

    Among the high-profile types who dabbled in Scientology was the writer
    William S. Burroughs, who would later attack the organizational
    structure as suppressive of independent thought. But other artists
    were less critical. John Travolta became a Scientologist in 1975 after
    reading Dianetics. “My career immediately took off,” he states in a
    personal “success story” published in the book What Is Scientology? “I
    landed a leading role on the TV show Welcome Back, Kotter and had a
    string of successful films.” Indeed, Travolta says, “Scientology put
    me into the big time.”

    In addition to Travolta, Scientology attracted musicians Chick Corea
    and Isaac Hayes, actresses Mimi Rogers and Kirstie Alley, and the
    influential acting coach Milton Katselas, who brought in a number of
    others, including actresses Anne Archer and Kelly Preston, who later
    became Travolta’s wife. And those celebrities begat others, including
    Tom Cruise, who was introduced by his then-wife, Rogers, and Jenna
    Elfman, introduced by her husband, actor Bodhi Elfman. Others, such as
    Juliette Lewis, Erika Christensen and Beck, were born into Scientology.

    But as Scientology raised its profile, so too did it find itself under
    increased scrutiny by the U.S. government, which raided Scientology’s
    offices a number of times in the late 1950s and early 1960s. In 1963,
    the Food and Drug Administration confiscated hundreds of E-meters from
    Scientology’s Washington, D.C., offices (the FDA accused the church of
    making false claims about its healing powers). Soon afterward, Hubbard
    moved his base of operation from the U.S. to England, but continued to
    face condemnation from a variety of Western governments. To avoid such
    scrutiny, Hubbard purchased a small fleet of ships in 1967, and,
    dubbing himself “Commodore,” headed for the high seas, which would
    serve as Scientology’s official home and, some maintain, tax shelter
    until the mid-1970s.

    Serving Hubbard at sea were a small group of devoted followers who
    comprised a private navy of sorts. They were known, collectively, as
    the “Sea Organization,” and dressed in full naval uniforms. Mike
    Rinder, who joined the Sea Org when he was eighteen, served on
    Hubbard’s lead ship, the Apollo, as a deckhand. He arrived in 1973,
    having endured years of discrimination in his native Australia
    (southeastern Australia banned Scientology from 1965 to 1982). “You
    couldn’t own Scientology books,” he says. “If you did, you had to hide
    them because if the police came and found them, they’d take them away.”

    On the Apollo, Rinder found Hubbard, a reputed recluse, to be totally
    accessible. He hosted weekly movie nights and often strolled across
    the ship talking with the crew. “What was most incredible about being
    with him was that he made you feel that you were important,” Rinder
    recalls. “He didn’t in any way promote himself or his own
    self-importance. He was very, very loving and had the widest range of
    knowledge and experience that you could possibly imagine — he’d
    studied everything.” Rinder marvels at Hubbard’s abilities: He knew
    how to cultivate plants, fix cars, shoot movies, mix music, fly an
    airplane, sail ships.

    At sea, Hubbard, who had officially resigned his post as the head of
    the Church of Scientology (leaving the day-to-day management of the
    church to lesser officials), worked on his writings and “discoveries.”
    Hubbard also began to obsess over the forces he saw opposing him,
    including journalists, whom Hubbard long distrusted and even banned
    from ever becoming Scientologists. Worse still were psychiatrists, a
    group that, coupled with the pharmaceutical-drug industry — in
    Hubbard’s words, a “front group” — operated “straight out of the
    terrorist textbooks,” as he wrote in a 1969 essay titled “Today’s
    Terrorism.” He accused psychiatrists of kidnapping, torturing and
    murdering with impunity. “A psychiatrist,” he wrote, “kills a young
    girl for sexual kicks, murders a dozen patients with an ice pick,
    castrates a hundred men.”

    To attack his enemies, Hubbard issued a policy known as “Fair Game,”
    which maintained that all who opposed Scientology could be “tricked,
    sued or lied to and destroyed.” This policy was enforced by
    Scientology’s quasisecret police force, known as the Guardian’s
    Office. By the 1970s, among its tasks was “Operation Snow White,” a
    series of covert activities that included bugging the Justice
    Department and stealing documents from the IRS. (Scientology officials
    say Fair Game was canceled decades ago.)

    The plan was discovered in FBI raids on Scientology’s Los Angeles and
    Washington, D.C., offices in 1977, which yielded wiretap equipment,
    burglary tools and about 90,000 pages of documents. Eleven Scientology
    officials, including Hubbard’s third wife, Mary Sue, went to federal
    prison for their role in the plot, which led to a 1982 “sweep” of the
    church’s upper management.

    By then, Hubbard, who was cited as an “unindicted co-conspirator” in
    Operation Snow White, had vanished from the public eye. For the next
    several years, rumors of his whereabouts circulated freely — he was
    at sea; he was on an island. In fact, Hubbard was on his isolated
    ranch, Whispering Wind, near the town of Creston, in the California
    desert. He was attended by a small number of Scientology officials,
    and his physician, Dr. Eugene Denk, who treated him for a number of
    conditions, including chronic pancreatitis. On January 17th, 1986,
    Hubbard suffered a crippling stroke. A week later, he died, in a 1982
    Blue Bird motor home on his property. He was seventy-four years old.

    Upon Hubbard’s death, his ambitious twenty-five-year-old aide, David
    Miscavige, who would soon succeed him as leader of the church,
    announced that Scientology’s founder had willingly “dropped” his
    healthy body and moved on to another dimension. In keeping with
    Hubbard’s wishes, his body was cremated within twenty-four hours.
    There was no autopsy. But the coroner’s report described the father of
    Scientology as in a state of decrepitude: unshaven, with long,
    thinning whitish-red hair and unkempt fingernails and toenails. In
    Hubbard’s system was the anti-anxiety drug hydroxyzine (Vistaril),
    which several of his assistants would later attest was only one of
    many psychiatric and pain medications Hubbard ingested over the years.

    These secrets were kept under wraps by Scientology officials. The
    church would later be named Hubbard’s successor in accordance with his
    will, which had been amended and signed just a day before his death.
    In it, Hubbard ceded the copyrights to all of his works, as well as a
    significant portion of his estate, making Scientology, not Hubbard’s
    wife and five children, his primary heir.

    Today, every church or Scientology organization has an office reserved
    for Hubbard. Usually found on the church’s ground floor, it is
    carefully maintained with books, desk, chair, pens, notepads, desk
    ornaments and other accouterments, as if the Founder might walk in at
    any moment.

    * * * *

    The imposing limestone-and-granite Church of Scientology in midtown
    Manhattan calls itself the “New York Org.” A stately building on West
    46th Street, northwest of Times Square, it is here that I come, on a
    hot July afternoon, to experience Scientology for myself.

    The first Scientologist I meet here is a kid named Emmett: a
    clear-eyed and enthusiastic young man in his early twenties whose job
    is to be a “body-router,” which means someone who brings people into
    the church. “Hi!” he says, accosting me as I stand near the center’s
    entrance. “Do you have a minute?” He waves a postcard-size flier in my
    face. “We’re showing a fifteen-minute film inside,” he says. “It’s
    about Dianetics. Ever heard of it?”

    He ushers me through a set of glass doors and into the church’s lobby,
    a glossy-marble space with the kind of lighting that bathes everything
    in a pinkish-golden glow. It is set up as a sort of museum, with a
    number of video-display panels, one of which offers an earnest
    testimonial by Tom Cruise. “The Aims of Scientology,” a document
    written by Hubbard, also hangs in the lobby, and it declares
    Scientology’s goals as “simple, but great,” including “a civilization
    without insanity, without criminals and without war; where the able
    can prosper and honest beings can have rights, and where man is free
    to rise to greater heights.”

    The New York Org claims to receive more than 500 phone calls per day,
    and nearly as many visitors in a week. But aside from its staff, I
    find the place to be almost entirely empty. Seated alone in a small
    auditorium, I watch the film, which turns out to be an infomercial
    featuring a cast of “real” people talking about how Dianetics changed
    their lives, curing them of ailments ranging from cancer to
    depression. Scientology is not mentioned once in the film. Nor is
    Hubbard. And neither are mentioned afterward, during an hour or so
    conversation I have with a motherly woman in her early fifties named
    Laurie. She is what is known as a “greeter,” and her role is to keep
    me in the church long enough for me to feel encouraged that, maybe,
    all of this is worth my time.

    Self-betterment is a powerful concept to use as a sales technique, and
    Laurie begins her pitch in the gentlest of ways. “Tell me about
    yourself,” she says. “What made you interested in Scientology?”

    “I guess I was just curious,” I tell Laurie.

    “Good!” she says with a smile. “We like curious!”

    In the next hour or so, Laurie asks me a number of questions: Am I
    married? Am I happy? What are my goals? Do I feel that I’m living up
    to my potential?

    A failure to live up to potential is one of the things known in
    Scientology as one’s “ruin.” In trying to get at mine, Laurie is warm
    and nonaggressive. And, to my amazement, I begin to open up to her.
    While we chat, she delivers a soft sell for Scientology’s
    “introductory package”: a four-hour seminar and twelve hours of
    Dianetics auditing, which is done without the E-meter. The cost: just
    fifty dollars. “You don’t have to do it,” Laurie says. “It’s just
    something I get the feeling might help you.” She pats my arm, squeezes
    it warmly.

    Then she gets down to business and presents me with the $100 Dianetics
    “starter” kit, which includes a large-type copy of Hubbard’s tome, a
    few CDs and some workbooks to practice the stuff at home. “It’s really
    such a good thing you came in,” Laurie adds reassuringly. “You’ll see.”

    On my next visit to the church, the following day, I see Laurie again.
    She spots me as soon as I walk in and rushes to greet me. “You’re
    back!” She gives me a hug. “I am so glad you decided to give this a
    try.” She then introduces me to a preppy-looking guy in his early
    thirties named Rurik, who, wasting no time on small talk, leads me to
    the church’s second floor and installs me in a room for my
    introductory seminar. As with the previous day’s film, I’m the only
    one there. Rurik starts his lecture with the claim that the mind
    really isn’t in the brain. “Close your eyes and think of a picture of
    a cat,” he tells me. I do. “Now, open your eyes and point to where you
    saw that picture.”

    I point to my eyes.

    Rurik grins. “See? When you’re asked to use your mind, you don’t point
    to the brain.”

    The brain, Rurik says, has absolutely no bearing on our thoughts or
    feelings. Nor, he adds, does the mind — its chief function is to
    serve as a memory bank of all we’ve experienced in trillions of years
    of lifetimes. Indeed, Scientology holds that the entire field of
    neurological and mental-health research — from Freud to the study of
    brain chemistry — is pseudoscience. In Scientology’s overview text,
    What Is Scientology?, psychiatry is described as a “hodgepodge of
    unproven theories that have never produced any result — except an
    ability to make the unmanageable and mutinous more docile and quiet,
    and turn the troubled into apathetic souls beyond the point of caring.”

    Most of the dedicated Scientologists I meet echo this opinion,
    including Kirstie Alley, who has been a Scientologist for more than
    twenty years and is the international spokesperson for Narconon, the
    church-supported anti-drug program. In an interview with Alley several
    weeks later, she calls Scientology the “anti-therapy.” “Therapy is
    based on some guy analyzing you, and what he thinks is going on with
    you,” she says. “And when he can’t quite figure it out, he makes up a
    disease and gets a drug for that. If that doesn’t work, he shocks you.
    And then surgery . . .” Scientology employs a holistic detoxification
    program known as the “purification rundown,” which involves heavy
    doses of vitamin supplements, primarily niacin, used in conjunction
    with exercise and long hours in a sauna. Though many doctors point out
    that none of this has ever been scientifically proven, and, indeed,
    might be harmful, Scientology claims that the “purif” cleanses the
    body of impurities. “I can get someone off heroin a hell of a lot
    faster than I can get somebody off a psych drug,” says Alley. “The guy
    on heroin’s not being told daily, ‘This is what you need for your
    disease, and you’re gonna have to take this the rest of your life.'”

    A few days later I arrive for my free Dianetics auditing sessions. I
    am put in a large, glass-enclosed room with a student auditor named
    David, who asks me to “relive” a moment of physical pain. “Don’t
    choose something that’s too stressful,” David suggests.

    Try as I might, I cannot relive much of anything — indeed, I can
    barely focus, given that I am surrounded in the room by a number of
    other pairs who are all being asked to do the same thing. After
    fifteen minutes, I give up.

    Jane, the registrar who is now handling my “case,” then whisks me away
    and, taking a look at my Oxford Capacity Analysis — a 200-item
    questionnaire that I filled out on my first day — tells me that she
    thinks I need something more personal. “I really want you to have a
    win,” she says.

    What Jane recommends is called Life Repair, basic Scientology
    counseling that she explains will “get to the root of what’s
    inhibiting you.” It is conducted in a private room, and involves one,
    but most likely two, 12.5-hour auditing “intensives,” using the
    E-meter, which will cost around $2,000. Coupled with the purif, which
    is recommended to anyone starting in Scientology, the total cost will
    be around $4,000. “And then you’ll be on the Bridge,” Jane says
    enthusiastically. “You’ll see. It’ll change your life.”

    At the intake level, Scientology comes across as good, practical
    self-help. Rather than playing on themes that might distance a
    potential member — the concept that I am a “thetan,” for example —
    members hit on topics that have universal appeal. Instead of claiming
    some heightened degree of enlightenment, they come across as fellow
    travelers: people who smoke too much, who have had bad marriages, who
    have had addictions they couldn’t handle but have somehow managed to
    land on their feet. Scientology, they explain, has been a form of
    “recovery.” As one woman I meet puts it, “Scientology works.”

    There are, however, a few things that seem jarring. Like the cost:
    $4,000 is a lot to spend for what Jane suggests are “basic” sessions.
    But perhaps even more alarming is the keen interest they take in my
    boyfriend. While Laurie inquired sympathetically about the dynamic of
    our relationship, Jane is suspicious, concerned with his views of the
    church and his attitude toward my being here. “If he’s not open,” she
    says, “that could be a problem.”

    And then there are Scientology’s rules. A fiercely doctrinaire
    religion, Scientology follows Hubbard’s edicts to the letter. Dissent
    or opposition to any of Hubbard’s views isn’t tolerated. Nor is
    debating certain church tenets — a practice Scientologists view as
    “counterintentioned.” Comporting oneself in any way that could be seen
    as contrary to church goals is considered subversive and is known as a
    “suppressive act.” One text that sheds enlightenment on both the
    mind-set of the founder and the inner workings of the church is
    Introduction to Scientology Ethics, which every Scientologist owns. In
    this book, the list of suppressive acts is six pages long and includes
    crimes ranging from murder to “squirreling,” or altering Hubbard’s
    teachings.

    Jane hands me a form and asks me to sign. The document absolves
    Scientology of liability if I am not wholly satisfied with its
    services, and also requires me to pledge that neither I nor my family
    has ever sued, attacked or publicly criticized Scientology. It also
    asks me to pledge that I will never sue the church myself.

    For the next several months, Jane and various other registrars call my
    cell phone, asking me to come back to the church and have a “win.” I
    never do.

    * * * *

    Somewhere in the vast California scrubland east of Los Angeles, west
    of Palm Springs and near the town of Hemet, is Gold Base, the heart of
    the Scientology empire. It has been described in some news reports as
    a “top-secret” facility, monitored by security cameras and protected
    by electric fences. Most Scientologists have never been to Gold.
    Within church circles, it is often spoken of in whispers: as INT Base,
    Scientology’s management headquarters and hangout for the likes of Tom
    Cruise and David Miscavige.

    Gold, a former resort, was purchased by the church in the mid-Eighties
    and sits at the foot of the San Jacinto Mountains. A simple metal gate
    announces its presence, behind which is a long driveway and, beyond
    that, a golf course. The 500-acre grounds include grassy meadows and a
    small lake where swans and ducks roam at will. There are no visible
    security cameras. But there are electric fences. “Of course we have
    fences,” says Tommy Davis, a senior church official who, with Rinder,
    accompanies me on a tour of the compound. “We have $60 million worth
    of equipment here.”

    Gold is the central dissemination facility for the church. It is best
    known as the home of Golden Era Productions, Scientology’s film, video
    and sound facilities. Scientology produces myriad promotional and
    training films here, teaching parishioners everything from auditing
    techniques to what goes on during a marriage-counseling session. It
    also makes CDs, produces events and prints its own packaging. Even its
    E-meters are made here, in a building where Scientologists work on a
    sort of corporate assembly line, producing roughly 200 of the devices
    per week.

    There is a Disney-esque quality to Gold Base. The focal point of the
    complex is a beige estate house, known as the Castle, which houses the
    film wing. The Tavern, a nearby stone carriage-house building, is used
    for visiting VIPs and is decorated in a King Arthur motif, complete
    with a sizable round table. There are winding paths and walkways made
    out of what appears to be fake flagstone. All of the buildings, save
    the Castle, are white, with blue-tiled roofs.

    Breaking up the uniformity is a startling sight: a three-mast
    rudderless clipper ship, the Star of California, built into a hill
    overlooking the campus. Some former Scientologists say this structure
    was built for Hubbard — though he’d “dropped his body” before it was
    finished — but Rinder explains it as just “an idea someone had to
    build a ship” as a place to house restrooms and a snack bar near the
    pool. It has a broad wooden deck, mermaid figurines and, at its
    gangplank, a fishing net adorned with plastic crabs.

    Despite these colorful landmarks, Gold is essentially an office park.
    Its buildings are furnished like a series of corporate suites,
    complete with bland gray or blue rugs. There’s virtually no artwork
    save a few Scientology posters inscribed with the words of L. Ron
    Hubbard, and, in the sound studio, framed headshots of various
    Scientologist celebrities, including Tommy Davis’ mother, Anne Archer.

    Davis, 33, helps run the Celebrity Centre in Hollywood and is the
    scion of one of California’s real estate dynasties. He freely admits
    to being a Hollywood rich kid. He dresses in Italian suits, drives a
    BMW and is addicted to his Blackberry. “I have enough money to never
    work a day in my life,” he says.

    But Davis, who calls L. Ron Hubbard “the coolest guy ever,” works for
    the church as a nonuniformed member of the Sea Organization, the
    Church of Scientology’s most powerful entity. Sea Org members staff
    all of the senior ecclesiastic positions in the church hierarchy, and
    the top members have exclusive authority over Scientology’s funds. In
    a nod to the group’s nautical beginnings, Sea Org members were
    required to wear naval-style uniforms, complete with epaulets for
    “officers,” until several years ago. Today, for all but those who
    serve on the Freewinds, the epaulets have been retired. At Gold, whose
    entire population, save the actors and directors of Scientology films,
    are Sea Org members, men and women dress in the style of deckhands:
    short-sleeve dress shirts over dark T-shirts and chinos.

    The church describes the Sea Org as a fraternal order — not a legal
    entity — requiring lifelong commitment. It is, in fact, an eternal
    commitment: Sea Org members sign contracts pledging 1 billion years of
    service to the church. Scientology’s publicity materials portray the
    Sea Org as similar to the U.S. Marines: “The toughest, most dedicated
    team this planet has ever known,” according to one recruiting
    brochure. “Against such a powerful team the opposition hasn’t got a
    chance.”

    Kim Fries, who works in Gold’s audiovisual editing department, has
    been in the Sea Org since she was fifteen. Now thirty-two, Fries says
    she couldn’t imagine living any other way. “What else are you going to
    do with your life?” she says, with a flick of her dark, wavy hair.

    The Sea Org has often been portrayed as isolated, almost monastic;
    members are rarely allowed to see films, watch TV or read mainstream
    magazines. “Are we devoted? Yes. Sequestered? No,” says Fries, who
    married a fellow Sea Org member. “I go out into the world, I talk to
    people out in the world, I definitely live a very full life. This
    isn’t a priesthood. I mean, if it were a priesthood, do you think I’d
    work here? It would just be so unhip.”

    Gold is seen as the place “every Sea Org member aspires to work,” says
    Rinder. There are expansive grounds to wander, a crystal-blue pool in
    which to swim; the dining hall is large and features low-fat and
    vegetarian entrees. A tiny shop sells cigarettes, juice, soft drinks
    and junk food.

    In my ten or so hours at Gold, I am aware of being taken on an
    elaborately orchestrated junket, in which every step of my day has
    been plotted and planned. I don’t blame the group for wanting to
    present its best face; at least half of my conversations with Rinder
    and Davis pertain in one way or another to what Scientology perceives
    as a smear campaign on the part of the mainstream media. A chief
    complaint is that reporters, eager for a story, take the words of
    lapsed members as gospel. Davis says Scientology gets little credit
    for the success of its social-betterment programs, which include
    Narconon and also literacy and educational programs. “Look around,”
    says Davis. “People are out here busting their butt every day to make
    a difference. And one guy who leaves because he wants to go to the
    movies gets to characterize the whole organization? That sucks.”

    Scientologists do not look kindly on critics, particularly those who
    were once devout. Apostasy, which in Scientology means speaking out
    against the church in any public forum, is considered to be the
    highest form of treason. This is one of the most serious “suppressive
    acts,” and those who apostatize are immediately branded as
    “Suppressive Persons,” or SPs. Scientologists are taught that SPs are
    evil — Hitler was an SP, says Rinder. Indeed, Hubbard believed that a
    full 2.5 percent of the population was “suppressive.” As he wrote in
    the Dianetics and Scientology Technical Dictionary, a suppressive
    person is someone who “goofs up or vilifies any effort to help anybody
    and particularly knife with violence anything calculated to make human
    beings more powerful or more intelligent.”

    Given this viewpoint, I wonder why anyone with connections to
    Scientology would critique them publicly. “Makes them famous,” Rinder
    says. “They do it for their fifteen minutes.”

    Scientology has been extremely effective at attacking its defectors,
    often destroying their credibility entirely, a policy that observers
    call “dead agenting.” Some of the church’s highest-profile critics say
    they have been on the receiving end of this policy. In the past six
    years, Tory Christman claims, the church has spread lies about her on
    the Internet, filed suit against her for violating an injunction for
    picketing on church property and attempted to get her fired from her
    job. Rinder dismisses Christman as a “wacko” and says her allegations
    are “absolute bullshit.”

    When Christman split from the church, her husband and most of her
    friends — all of them Scientologists — refused to talk to her again.
    Apostates are not just discredited from the church; they are also
    excommunicated, isolated from their loved ones who, under Scientology
    rules, must sever or “disconnect” from them. Scientology defines those
    associated with Suppressive People as “Potential Trouble Sources,” or
    PTS.

    Rinder says disconnection is a policy of last resort. “The first step
    is always to try to handle the situation,” he says. A “handling”
    generally refers to persuading a wayward member to return to the
    church in order to maintain contact with his family. The parent of
    someone who’s apostatized might call his child and ask him to “handle”
    a problem by essentially recanting. “They’ll ask them to make some
    amends, show they can be trusted. . . something to make up the
    damage,” says Davis. Those amends might range from volunteering in a
    literacy program to taking a public advocacy role — campaigning
    against psychiatry, for example.

    But some people, the officials admit, refuse to be handled. What
    happens to them? “Then I guess not believing in Scientology means more
    to them than not seeing their family,” Davis says.

    Excommunication is nothing new in organized religion. A number of
    sects have similar policies to Scientology’s: the Amish, the Mormon
    Fundamentalists, the Jehovah’s Witnesses. All have a rationale.
    Scientology’s rationale is very simple: “We are protecting the good of
    the religion and all the parishioners,” says Rinder.

    “It’s for the good of the group,” says Davis.

    “How are you going to judge what is and isn’t the worst tenets and
    violations of the Church of Scientology?” Rinder asks. “You aren’t a
    Scientologist.” Complaints about these policies, he adds, “come from
    people who aren’t Scientologists [anymore]. What do they give a shit
    for anymore? They left!”

    I spend a lot of time talking about the question of apostasy with
    Rinder and Davis. Both feel the church has been miscast. “Somewhere
    there is a concept that we hold strings over all these people and
    control them,” says Rinder. But provided you don’t denounce
    Scientology, it’s perfectly fine to leave the church, he says.
    “Whatever. What’s true for you is true for you.” Nothing will happen
    to those who lose their faith, he says, unless they “tell bald-faced
    lies to malign and libel the organization — unless they make it seem
    like something it isn’t.”

    * * * *

    Paul James is not this twenty-two-year-old man’s real name. He is the
    son of established Scientologists, blond and blue-eyed, with the easy
    smile and chiseled good looks of a young Matt Damon. He has had no
    contact with the church since he was seventeen. “I honestly don’t know
    how people can live psychotically happy all the time,” Paul tells me
    over coffee one afternoon at his small, tidy house outside Los
    Angeles. “Or thinking that they’re happy,” he adds with a grin. “I’m
    talking about that fake-happiness thing that people make themselves
    believe.”

    Like Natalie, Paul was educated by Scientology tutors, sent to
    Scientologist-run private schools and put “on course” at his church.
    Unlike her, he hated it. “I never found anything in Scientology that
    had to do with spiritual enlightenment,” he says. “As soon as common
    sense started hitting me” — around the age of ten — “it creeped me
    out.”

    Though there are a significant number of second-generation
    Scientologists who, like Natalie, are devoted to the church, there are
    also kids like Paul. This, says the University of Alberta’s Stephen
    Kent, is to be expected. One “unanticipated consequence” of the
    widespread conversions of young people to sects like Scientology in
    the 1960s and 1970s, Kent says, has been a “wave” of defections of
    these members’ adult children.

    A fundamental element of Scientology is that children are often
    regarded as small adults — “big thetans in little bodies,” as some
    parents call them. Paul’s parents worked eighteen-hour days for the
    church, he says, and generally left him and his older brother to their
    own devices. “My brother was baby-sitting me by himself when he was
    eleven years old,” Paul says. When his brother went off with his
    friends, “I’d get home from school and be wandering around the
    [apartment] complex.”

    Paul’s school was no more structured, he says. Students were
    encouraged to work at their own pace on subjects of their choosing,
    and, according to Paul, received little guidance from teachers, who
    are called “supervisors.” I found this to be true at the Delphi
    Academy in Lake View Terrace, California, part of a network of elite
    schools that use Hubbard’s study technology. Maggie Reinhart, Delphi’s
    director, says that this technique forces a student to take an active
    role in his education. A number of Scientology kids have thrived in
    this environment. Others, like Paul, felt lost. “I just kind of roamed
    from classroom to classroom and nobody cared,” he says. At Delphi, I
    saw teachers assisting certain students, but there was no generalized
    “teaching,” no class discussions.

    Discussion, as some academics like Kent note, isn’t encouraged in
    Scientology, nor in Scientology-oriented schools. It is seen as
    running counter to the teachings of Scientology, which are absolute.
    Thus, debate is relegated to those in the world of “Wogs” — what
    Scientologists call non-Scientologists. Or, as Hubbard described them,
    “common, ordinary, run-of-the-mill, garden-variety humanoid[s].”

    Paul met very few Wogs growing up, and those he did know often didn’t
    understand him. Scientology has its own unique lexicon. “It’s kind of
    like being a French Canadian,” Paul explains. “You speak one thing out
    in the world and another thing at home.”

    Many kids who’ve grown up in Scientology describe it as Natalie did:
    “a bubble” that exists in tandem with the mainstream world. “It’s
    impossible to understand it unless you’ve lived it,” says Paul.

    Even when you’ve lived it, as one young woman notes, it’s hard to
    fully understand. This twenty-two-year-old, whom we’ll call Sara, left
    Scientology in high school. After leaving, she and a friend who quit
    with her sat down with a dictionary. “We looked up all the words we
    used [because] we didn’t know if we were speaking English or not,” she
    says.

    Hubbard created Scientology’s language to be unique to its members. It
    includes words that are interpretations, or variations, of standard
    terms: “isness,” for example, which Scientology’s glossaries say, in
    essence, means “reality.” But there are also words that are wholly
    made up, such as “obnosis,” which means “observation of the obvious.”

    The chaotic world, as one might call it in the mainstream, is, in
    Scientology, “enturbulated,” which means “agitated and disturbed.” To
    correct, or solve, personal or societal problems requires the proper
    application of “ethics,” which in Scientology refers to one’s moral
    choices, as well as to a distinct moral system. Those who conduct
    themselves correctly have their ethics “in.” Those who misbehave are
    “out-ethics.” A person’s harmful or negative acts are known as
    “overts.” Covering them up is known as a “withhold.”

    All of these terms, and many more, are contained in a number of
    Scientology dictionaries, all written by Hubbard. Scientologists
    consider word comprehension and vocabulary skills to be essential
    parts of their faith.

    The Hubbard Study Technology is administered in schools through an
    organization called “Applied Scholastics”; it emphasizes looking up
    any unknown or “misunderstood” word in a dictionary, and never
    skipping past a word you don’t understand. This same study method is
    used in church, where adults of all ages and levels of advancement
    spend hours poring over dictionaries and course manuals.

    One key word is “gradient,” which is defined in the official
    Scientology and Dianetics glossary as “a gradual approach to
    something, taken step by step, level by level, each step or level
    being, of itself, easily surmountable so that, finally, quite
    complicated and difficult activities or high states of being can be
    achieved with relative ease.” This principle, the glossary notes, “is
    applied to both Scientology processing and training.”

    Another key belief is “communication.” One of Scientology’s basic
    courses is “Success Through Communication,” taught to young people and
    adults. It involves a series of drills, known as “training routines,”
    or “TRs.” One drill asks students to close their eyes and simply sit,
    sometimes for hours. Another asks them to stare at a partner,
    immobile. A third requires students to mock, joke with or otherwise
    verbally engage their partner. The partner must passively receive
    these comments without moving or saying a word.

    These drills, Scientologists say, help improve what they call their
    “confront,” which in Scientology’s lexicon means “the ability to be
    there comfortably and perceive.” A fourth drill requires students to
    pose a series of questions to one another, such as “Do fish swim?”
    Their partner may respond in any way they like, with the question
    being asked repeatedly until the partner answers correctly. Sara’s
    favorite drill involved an ashtray: “You tell it to stand up, sit
    down, and you ‘move’ the ashtray for hours. You’re supposed to be
    beaming your intention into the ashtray, and the supervisor is going
    to tell you if you’re intent enough.”

    At Delphi, students take a course called “Improving Conditions.”
    “Conditions” refers to key Hubbard principles. Charted on a scale,
    they relate to one’s relationship to oneself and to those within one’s
    organization, school or “group.” A Scientologist’s goal, it’s often
    noted, is to “improve conditions.”

    From highest to lowest, the Conditions are: Power, Power Change,
    Affluence, Normal, Emergency, Danger, Non-Existence, Liability, Doubt,
    Enemy, Treason and Confusion. Together, these conditions form the
    spine of the practical application of Scientology “ethics,” which is,
    many say, the true heart of the faith. “Ethics,” as a Scientological
    term, is defined as “rationality toward the greatest good for the
    greatest number of dynamics,” as well as “reason and the contemplation
    of optimum survival.”

    To survive, Scientology applies its philosophy, or “ethics tech,”
    across a broad social and societal scale. They do good works —
    indeed, as Rinder notes, “Scientologists are driven by a real concern
    for the well-being of others. They see the world around them and want
    to do something about it.”

    But the church’s drug-treatment and literacy programs and
    anti-psychiatry campaigns do more than just evangelize through
    charity; in fact, they exist largely to help prepare people to become
    Scientologists. Once a person is drug-free, psychiatrist-free and
    literate, he is qualified for auditing. And auditing is the
    centerpiece of Scientology. “It’s all about going up the Bridge,” says
    Paul.

    Paul began auditing when he was four. Rebellious by nature, he says it
    did very little for him. By the age of eleven or twelve, he says, “I
    was so out of control, my parents had no idea what to do with me.”

    Scientologists run a number of boarding schools around the country,
    including the prestigious Delphian School, in the Willamette Valley of
    Oregon, which counts Earthlink founder Sky Dayton among its graduates.
    Scientologists’ kids who caused trouble, or otherwise displeased their
    parents, have been sent to more restrictive private boarding schools.
    Paul was sent to Mace-Kingsley Ranch, located on 2,000 acres in New
    Mexico, which was closed in 2002.

    Paul arrived at Mace-Kingsley when he was thirteen, and stayed for
    three and a half years. As he tells it, he underwent what sounds like
    a typical “boot camp” experience, complete with hard labor, bad food,
    tough supervision — all with a high price tag, roughly $30,000 per
    year. The school enforced a rigid Scientology focus that many former
    students now say served as both a mechanism of control and a form of
    religious indoctrination.

    The process began for all new students with an IQ test and the
    Purification Rundown, which Paul says was given to kids as young as
    eight or nine years old. Then they were administered the Oxford
    Capacity Analysis, created by Scientologists in 1953. The test was
    designed to find out the student’s “tone,” or emotional state, in
    preparation for auditing. Students were audited daily at the ranch. By
    the age of sixteen, Paul says, he’d grown so used to the process, he’d
    figured out how to “trick” the E-meter: By remaining calm enough for
    no electrical charge to register, he was often able to hide most of
    his inner feelings from his auditors and his “case supervisor,” who
    oversaw his progress.

    But not always. “There are things they wanted to know, and they’d just
    keep asking until you finally told them,” he says. “They’d get me to
    tell them about lies, or things that were bad, right down to my
    thoughts — some of which were overts.” So were some of his deeds.
    Masturbation is an overt — strictly forbidden in Scientology, as
    Hubbard believed that it can slow one’s process to enlightenment.
    “It’s not evil, just out-ethics,” says Paul. “They’ll dig it up in
    session and tell you to stop because it’s slowing you down.”

    Another overt is homosexuality, which Hubbard believed was a form of
    sexual “deviance” best treated by therapy, or institutionalization.
    This view was espoused by many psychiatrists of Hubbard’s generation.
    Mainstream psychiatry has changed its view since the 1950s.
    Scientology as an institution takes no formal position on issues like
    gay marriage, but homosexuality, sexual promiscuity or any other form
    of “perversion” ranks low on Scientology’s “tone scale,” a register of
    human behavior Hubbard described in his 1951 book Science of Survival:
    Prediction of Human Behavior.

    This book, according to Mike Rinder, is perhaps the most important
    Scientology text after Dianetics. In it, Hubbard denounced virtually
    every sexual practice that doesn’t directly relate to marriage and
    children. “Such people should be taken from the society as rapidly as
    possible . . . for here is the level of the contagion of immortality
    and the destruction of ethics,” he wrote of homosexuals. “No social
    order will survive which does not remove these people from its midst.”

    In auditing, Scientologists are frequently asked about their sexual
    thoughts or practices, particularly in the special auditing sessions
    called “security checks.” This process requires a church member to
    write down any break with the ethical code. Security checks are
    administered to every Scientologist on the Bridge, and particularly to
    all OTs, who must be checked every six months “to make sure they’re
    using the tech correctly,” as church officials explain. In September,
    I received, through a source, a faxed copy of the standard
    security-check sheet for adults. Its questions include “Have you ever
    been involved in an abortion?” “Have you ever practiced sex with
    animals?” “Have you ever practiced sodomy?” “Have you ever slept with
    a member of a race of another color?” as well as “Have you ever had
    any unkind thoughts about L. Ron Hubbard?”

    Paul resisted his security checks — he says he sometimes fell asleep
    during the sessions. But Sara, who says she went through months of
    “sec checks” after deciding, at age fifteen, that she didn’t want to
    be a Scientologist any longer, says she was highly disturbed by the
    process. At first, she says, counselors at her church tried to “clear”
    her. She was forced to repeatedly look up words in the dictionary to
    make sure she misunderstood nothing about Scientology. Then they gave
    her a security check. “For months I’m going to the church every night
    after school, and I’m in this fucking basement for four hours a night,
    on the E-meter,” she says. “They’re asking me questions about sex —
    every personal question known to man.” If she tried to leave, Sara
    adds, the auditors would physically block her path and force her back
    in her chair. Officials say this forced auditing is for the subjects’
    own good, as it might be harmful if they were to leave a session
    before they were ready.

    “Scientology has a plausible explanation for everything they do —
    that’s the genius of it,” says Sara. “But make no mistakes:
    Scientology is brainwashing.”

    * * * *

    Jeffrey Aylor was thirteen when he joined the sea Organization. Raised
    in a Scientology family in Los Angeles, he was at church one day when
    a Sea Org recruiter approached him. “What are you doing with your
    life?” he asked the teen.

    Jeffrey had no idea what to say. “I’m thirteen, I’m not doing anything
    with my life,” Jeffrey said. The recruiter asked him if he wanted to
    “help” people. Jeffrey said, “Sure. What kid doesn’t want to help
    people?”

    Thus began Jeffrey’s immersion into the tightly wound world of the Sea
    Org, where he would spend the next seven years of his life. In that
    time, he would see fewer than ten movies, would rarely listen to music
    and never had sex. Though theoretically reading newspapers and
    magazines was allowed — USA Today is sold openly on Gold Base — in
    practice it was discouraged, along with surfing the Internet and
    watching TV. Indeed, all contact with the world at large was
    “entheta.” “I never considered myself a Scientologist until I joined
    the Sea Org,” Jeffrey says.

    Jeffrey’s indoctrination began with a boot camp known as the “Estates
    Project Force,” or EPF. There, he learned to march, salute and perform
    manual labor. Physical work is a key training technique for new
    recruits. Jeffrey’s sister, for instance, went through the EPF when
    she was twelve and was forced to crawl through ducts that were roach-
    and rat-infested. Like the TRs, this kind of work, Jeffrey explains,
    is meant to raise a person’s “confront,” enabling them to be more in
    control of their environment.

    After the EPF, Jeffrey was given a blue shirt, blue tie and dark-blue
    trousers, and sent to work as a receptionist at the American Saint
    Hill Organization for spiritual training, on Scientology’s expansive
    Hollywood campus. He was paid fifty dollars per week and worked an
    average of fifteen hours per day, including an hour or two of auditing
    and other training. Home was a large barracks-style room in a building
    where Jeffrey lived with about twenty other boys and men. In seven
    years, Jeffrey says, he saw his family just a handful of times. His
    only free time was the few hours he received on Sunday mornings to do
    his laundry. Hubbard believed strongly in productivity, which he saw
    as highly ethical behavior. “We reward production and up-statistics
    and penalize nonproduction and down-statistics,” he wrote in
    Introduction to Scientology Ethics.

    Eventually, Jeffrey found himself on “PTS watch,” monitoring Sea Org
    members who wanted to leave the order. According to church officials,
    Sea Org members can leave anytime they want. But in practice, the
    attitude is “the only reason you’d want to leave is because you’ve
    done something wrong,” says Jeffrey. This would call for a round of
    “sec checks,” which would continue throughout the “route out” process,
    which can take up to a year. During that time, former Sea Org members
    have asserted, they are subjected to so much pressure they often
    decide not to leave after all.

    To make sure no one would leave before their route-out was complete,
    Jeffrey would shadow them: “I’ve been assigned to go and sleep outside
    somebody’s door — all night, for as many nights as it takes — on the
    floor, against the door, so I could feel if they opened it. If they
    went to the bathroom, someone would stand right outside. Someone is
    always there.”

    Some wayward members have “disappeared” for long periods of time, sent
    to special Scientology facilities known as the “Rehabilitation Project
    Force.” Created by Hubbard in 1974, the RPF is described by the church
    as a voluntary rehabilitation program offering a “second chance” to
    Sea Org members who have become unproductive or have strayed from the
    church’s codes. It involves intensive physical labor (at church
    facilities) and auditing and study sessions to address the
    individual’s personal problems. The process is given a positive spin
    in church writings. “Personnel ‘burnout’ is not new to organizations,”
    a post on Scientology’s official Web site reads, in relation to the
    RPF, “but the concept of complete rehabilitation is.”

    Former Sea Org members who’ve been through the program charge that it
    is a form of re-indoctrination, in which hard physical labor and
    intense ideological study are used to break a subject’s will. Chuck
    Beatty, a former Sea Org member, spent seven years in the RPF
    facilities in Southern California, from 1996 to 2003, after expressing
    a desire to speak out against the church. For this, he was accused of
    “disloyalty,” a condition calling for rehabilitation. “My idea was to
    go to the RPF for six or eight months and then route out,” says
    Beatty. “I thought that was the honorable thing to do.” In the RPF he
    was given a “twin,” or auditing partner, who was responsible for
    making sure he didn’t escape. “It’s a prison system,” he says,
    explaining that all RPFers are watched twenty-four hours per day and
    prevented from having contact with the outside world. “It’s a
    mind-bending situation where you feel like you’re betraying the group
    if you try to leave.”

    Quiet and disciplined by nature, Jeffrey never minded the
    regimentation and order of the Sea Org. “I was wrapped up in work,” he
    says. “And that’s what I liked doing. And I thought I was helping
    people.” But when he became ill, his perspective radically changed.
    For the first six years of his Sea Org service, Jeffrey had kept his
    asthma and other health issues in check. In the spring of 2004, he
    began to develop severe chest pains. By the summer, he was unable to
    work. By fall, he could barely get out of bed.

    Scientologists believe that most illnesses are products of a person’s
    own psychic traumas — they are brought upon themselves. Sea Org
    members are promised medical care for any illness, but Jeffrey says
    that he received little medical attention or money with which to seek
    outside medical care. Instead, he was sent to Ethics counseling. When
    that didn’t cure him, it was suggested he return to the EPF to repeat
    his training.

    Even while bedridden, “if I wasn’t there pushing somebody to take me
    to a doctor . . . it didn’t happen,” he says. Lying in bed one night,
    Jeffrey listened to a taped lecture given by L. Ron Hubbard, in which
    he made his famous statement “If it isn’t true for you, it isn’t
    true.” For Jeffrey, this began a questioning process that would
    eventually lead to his leaving Scientology altogether. “Nobody can
    force Scientology upon you, but that is exactly what was happening to
    me,” he says.

    And so, one day last February, he asked for some time off to see a
    doctor. Then he called his mother and asked her to come get him. When
    she arrived the next morning, Jeffrey left his keys and his Sea
    Organization ID card behind on his bed. Then, taking only his clothes,
    he left.

    Now twenty-three, Jeffrey lives in a small mountain town more than
    four hours from Los Angeles. Since his “escape,” as he calls it, from
    the Sea Org, he has not returned to the church. He has never spoken
    out about his experiences, which he still insists “weren’t all that
    bad.” But because he left the Sea Org without permission, he has been
    declared suppressive. Soon, he believes, his family still in the
    church will have nothing more to do with him.

    The order of disconnection, called a “declare,” is issued on a piece
    of gold-colored parchment known as a “goldenrod.” This document
    proclaims the suppressive person’s name, as well as his or her
    “crime.” According to one friend of Jeffrey’s mother who has read his
    declare, Jeffrey’s crimes are vague, but every Scientologist who sees
    it will understand its point.

    “This declare is a warning to Jeffrey’s friends in the Sea Org,” this
    woman, who is still a member of the church, explains. “It’s saying to
    them, ‘See this kid, he left without permission. This is what happened
    to him. Don’t you make the same mistake.'”

    * * * *

    During the time I was researching this piece, I received a number of
    e-mails from several of the Scientologists I had interviewed. Most
    were still technically members of the church in good standing;
    privately they had grown disillusioned and have spoken about their
    feelings for the first time in this article. All of the young people
    mentioned in this story, save Natalie, are considered by the church
    hierarchy to be Potential Trouble Sources. But many have begun to
    worry they will be declared Suppressive Persons.

    Their e-mails expressed their second thoughts and their fears.

    “PLEASE, let me know what you will be writing in the story,” wrote one
    young woman. “I just want to make sure that people won’t be able to
    read it and figure out who I am. I know my mom will be reading.”

    “The church is a big, scary deal,” wrote another. “My [initial]
    attitude was if this information could save just one person the money,
    heartache and mind-bending control, then all would be worth it. [But]
    I’m frightened of what could happen.”

    “I’m about two seconds away from losing my whole family, and if that
    story comes out with my stuff in it, I will,” wrote a third. “I’m
    terrified. Please, please, please . . . if it’s not too late . . .
    help me keep my family.”

    One particularly frantic e-mail arrived shortly before this story was
    published. It came from a young Scientologist with whom I had
    corresponded several times in the course of three or four months. When
    we first met, she spoke passionately and angrily about the impact of
    the church on herself and those close to her.

    “Please forgive me,” she wrote. “The huge majority of things I told
    you were lies. Perhaps I don’t like Scientology. True. But what I do
    know is that I was born with the family I was born with, and I love
    them. Don’t ask me to tear down the foundation of their lives.” Like
    almost every young person mentioned in this piece, this woman was
    given a pseudonym to protect her identity, and her family’s. But it
    wasn’t enough, she decided. “This is my life . . . Accept what I tell
    you now for fact: I will not corroborate or back up a single thing I
    said.

    “I’m so sorry,” she concluded. “I hope you understand that everyone I
    love is terribly important to me, and I am willing to look beyond
    their beliefs in order to keep them around. I will explain in further
    detail, perhaps, some other day.”

    ————

    March 1, 2006 at 6:21 am #11068
    spongebob
    Participant

    —-They assert that 75
    million years ago, an evil galactic warlord named Xenu controlled
    seventy-six planets in this corner of the galaxy, each of which was
    severely overpopulated. To solve this problem, Xenu rounded up 13.5
    trillion beings and then flew them to Earth, where they were dumped
    into volcanoes around the globe and vaporized with bombs. This
    scattered their radioactive souls, or thetans, until they were caught
    in electronic traps set up around the atmosphere and “implanted” with
    a number of false ideas — including the concepts of God, Christ and
    organized religion. Scientologists later learn that many of these
    entities attached themselves to human beings, where they remain to
    this day, creating not just the root of all of our emotional and
    physical problems but the root of all problems of the modern world.—-

    ———————————————————————-

    Sure! why not? as anyone learned different?

    March 2, 2006 at 4:56 am #11070
    spongebob
    Participant

    Well the Crowley connection was enough, and about all you need to read to know hwere this piece was going. and it says a lot about the founding and intention of Scientology and L. Ron Hubbard. The whole article and his life would be laughable if it his organizatin hadnt caused so much pain and suffering.

    Interestingly, this is not the first time i’ve heard about aliens and galactic wars as a basis for a faith, and every time i do, it is from a “satanic” source. i wonder whats up with that……

    Creepy stuff this. All the elements of the darkside and those CIA mind control experiments you hear about.

    March 2, 2006 at 11:12 am #11072
    Jernej
    Participant

    Hubbard established Scientology because he lost his power over Dianetics organization. He gave them right to certify and the voted him over. Thus when he established Scientology, he kept all rights to processes. His death certificate of death was presented to US bureacracy after several demands. And it was just a day before his death that he gave his rights to church. Go figure.

    It seems that everybody was in bad with everybody. The church, the intelligence, the occult. Spongebob duely noted the connection to German/English pre/war occult.n Here present the connection between RV, intelligence and scientology.

    Hubbard of course did not see combat. He was in Naval intelligence.

    Research team work (practical team was stationed elsewhere, see Joe Macmoneagle) was done at Stanford research institute that was formed because students (Vietnam era) protested against government/military research of university and institures was conveniently moved away from campus, hence SRI.

    Ingo Swann was OT VII (top level in scientology for decades). Helped establish celebrity center org in Los Angeles.
    Pat Price was OT IV.
    Puthoff was OT III. Also was NSA officer.
    Targ was not ‘Clear’.

    Swann used power processes for RV. This is basically yang inner smile communion. It works because OTs have processed their internal clutter, so clearing body, and so enabling exterioation, the open communication.
    (see: http://freezoneamerica.org/Prometheus04/powerR6/power/ro_prpr.htm)

    Swann used anchoring point technique described in Hubbard book Creation of human abilities. ‘Grand tour’ process comes in reference.
    (see: http://www.sc-i-r-s-ology.pair.com/veritas/cst/cst-cia.htm)

    Swann was later deemed Suppresive for his actions outside the church.

    All this is secondary data.

    March 2, 2006 at 10:20 pm #11074
    spongebob
    Participant

    Another useful thing about this article is taht it describes in detail a lot of the patterns in organizations like these. If you haven’t learned those patterns already, stufy them here. they could prove useful later when tracking.

    the patterns are merely the concentric rings of the intentions of the leaders of the organization. within them can be revealed the actual motives themselves. and the author of this piece does a very good job of revealing them.

    remember also that the darkside is extreme yin contraction. organizations that are secretive and closed, that shun the rest of the world, that try to “protect” their members in “bubbles” are darkside organizations. they’re contracting to within themselves and away from humanity. Eventually they either implode and/or explode as the natural cycle restores balance. so, scientology eventually will also. already almost happened once (see article).

    March 7, 2006 at 2:12 pm #11076
    Yoda
    Participant

    The thing that I don’t understand is why didn’t Xenu just nuke them where they stood? It seems like a lot of work to move them around like that.

    Must have been a good reason, though.

    I’m sure thankful that I’m not a galactic warlord.

    March 8, 2006 at 12:10 pm #11078
    Jernej
    Participant

    You are right. I retracted the article and is more skillfully written than I noticed first…
    And btw, Tom Brown novels do rock!

    March 8, 2006 at 8:19 pm #11080
    spongebob
    Participant

    GO TOM!!!! but i think he only writes non-fiction.

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