Forward: This is always amusing. Scientology head crook and new Messiah
L. Ron Hubbard played ritual sex magic games with Jack Parsons, and it
was while Hubbard was engaged in sex with Parsons and Parsons' girl friend
that Hubbard acquired much of his profoundly insane notions which would
later become part of his Scientology scam.
Hubbard fell in with Parsons while Hubbard was pretty much living on the
street, incapable of feeding himself very well, doped to the gills on
whatever medications he was able to argue out of the Veterans Association,
while demanding help for his mental problems from the VA's offices (help
which Hubbard never acquired, obviously.)
Eventually Hubbard wound up stealing Parsons' ritual sex magic girl friend
and one of Parsons' sail boats, running to Florida where they absconded
with the sail boat, was driven backto shore after Parsons conducted some
ritual magic in a nearby hotel room (in an attempt to drive Hubbard back
to shore) and eventually Hubbard married the woman he stole -- while
forgetting to divorce the wife he already had.
The Bare-Faced Messiah book available
on that web site covers all of this, including the Scientology crooks'
attempts to deny the fact that their insane messiah got much of his cult
criminal notions from his association with Jack Parsons.
http://www.laweekly.com/ink/03/51/letters.php
IN THE REALM OF
Greg Bishop's "Best of L.A." characterization, in his piece
on Jack Parsons, of L. Ron Hubbard as a tool of Aleister Crowley's Ordo
Templi Orientalis is utterly false.
Mr. Hubbard was sent in by U.S. Intelligence to disband Parsons'
black-magic group.
Those associated with the OTO had become a serious security threat to
the nation's atomic-research program, with suspected Nazi sympathizers
among them and scientists from Caltech and Los Alamos (Manhattan Project)
suspected of engaging in rituals involving sex and drugs. Clearly a
security nightmare.
Mr. Hubbard succeeded in his assignment. In 1946, Parsons' lodge of
the OTO dispersed. Parsons lost his government security clearance in
1948, and other scientists involved in his group were among the 64
stripped of their security clearances after the war.
It really is time for the L.A. Weekly to reassess its perspective and
policy regarding such attempts to denigrate Scientology, the religion
of tens of thousands of people in your readership area.
-- Lissa Uvizl Manager, L. Ron Hubbard Life Exhibition
THE APOCRYPHAL
The name "Scientology"® is trademarked to the "Church" of Scientology. Neither this web page, nor this web site, nor any of the individuals mentioned herein assisting to educate the public about the Scientology organization's "Volunteer Minister" program are members of or representatives of the Scientology organization. Quotes used within this web page and within this web site are used according to the Fair Use laws of the United States.
If you find anything inaccurate or otherwise mistaken on this web page, please send a correction to COSVM at the e-mail address offered below -- with our thanks.
COSVM Web Site