Makes me think that L. Ron was on drugs, having a drug high, when he gushed all the wonderful things his Scientology quackery was going to do for earth. L. Ron Junior revealing how much drugs Hubbard took in the early 1950s, that connected the dots for me.
Hubbard was delusional about himself, a megalomaniac, which even when he watered do…
Makes me think that L. Ron was on drugs, having a drug high, when he gushed all the wonderful things his Scientology quackery was going to do for earth. L. Ron Junior revealing how much drugs Hubbard took in the early 1950s, that connected the dots for me.
Hubbard was delusional about himself, a megalomaniac, which even when he watered down his megalomania a bit, his now leftover cult multi echelon bureaucracy dishes out his watered down megalomania.
Professor Kent was right to peg Hubbard as a malignant narcissist.
And that's light.
Hubbard himself thought of himself as a cross between multiple of his pulp fiction characters and some Christianity and Buddhist persons (George Smiley, Ol Doc Methuselah, Buddha even, Lucifer, Cecil Rhodes, an outer space race car driver, etc, etc.)
The movie the "Master" centers on the role of being a "Master" which is a light version of the space interplanetary hopping spiritual savior, "Messiah" which Hubbard ordered Nancy Many and others to survey if the public would buy Hubbard leaning on the "Messiah" label.
Admitted "Madman" from the Granada Productions interview on the internet.
Hubbard's "beingness" was messed up.
No need for anyone to waste any more time doing the Hubbard quackery past lives pseudo-therapy and exorcism.
Scientology can't even admit publicly what Hubbard wrote about XENU and CHUG.
"Appears mental" succinct comment by the FBI in the early 1950s, about Hubbard, nails it.
But, what still kept me in the cult, til I later quit, was William James' writing called "The Varieties of Religious Experience" where religious boss founder people were so often looney, inspired loonies.
It's reason to do more reading in life, and put the inspired loonies in the curiosities category and not forward their crap.
Makes me think that L. Ron was on drugs, having a drug high, when he gushed all the wonderful things his Scientology quackery was going to do for earth. L. Ron Junior revealing how much drugs Hubbard took in the early 1950s, that connected the dots for me.
Hubbard was delusional about himself, a megalomaniac, which even when he watered down his megalomania a bit, his now leftover cult multi echelon bureaucracy dishes out his watered down megalomania.
Professor Kent was right to peg Hubbard as a malignant narcissist.
And that's light.
Hubbard himself thought of himself as a cross between multiple of his pulp fiction characters and some Christianity and Buddhist persons (George Smiley, Ol Doc Methuselah, Buddha even, Lucifer, Cecil Rhodes, an outer space race car driver, etc, etc.)
The movie the "Master" centers on the role of being a "Master" which is a light version of the space interplanetary hopping spiritual savior, "Messiah" which Hubbard ordered Nancy Many and others to survey if the public would buy Hubbard leaning on the "Messiah" label.
Admitted "Madman" from the Granada Productions interview on the internet.
Hubbard's "beingness" was messed up.
No need for anyone to waste any more time doing the Hubbard quackery past lives pseudo-therapy and exorcism.
Scientology can't even admit publicly what Hubbard wrote about XENU and CHUG.
"Appears mental" succinct comment by the FBI in the early 1950s, about Hubbard, nails it.
But, what still kept me in the cult, til I later quit, was William James' writing called "The Varieties of Religious Experience" where religious boss founder people were so often looney, inspired loonies.
It's reason to do more reading in life, and put the inspired loonies in the curiosities category and not forward their crap.