Reader's Digest, May 1980
Scientology: Anatomy of a Frightening Cult
by Eugene H. Methvin
In the late 1940s, pulp writer L. Ron Hubbard declared,
"Writing for a penny a word is ridiculous. If a man really
wants to make a million dollars, the best way would be to start
his own religion."
Hubbard *did* start his own 'religion,' calling it the "Church
of Scientology," and it has grown into an enterprise today
grossing an estimated $100 million a year worldwide. His
churches have paid him a percentage of their gross, usually ten
percent, and stashed untold riches away in bank accounts in
Switzerland and elsewhere under his and his wife's control.
Surrounded by aides who cater to his every whim, he reportedly
lives on church-owned property, formerly a resort, in Southern
California.
Scientology is one of the oldest, wealthiest -- and most
dangerous -- of the major "new religions" or cults operating in
America today. Some of its fanatic operatives have engaged in
burglary, espionage, kidnapping and smear campaigns to further
their goals. Says Assistant U.S. Attorney Raymond Banoun, who
directed a massive investigation that resulted in conspiracy or
theft convictions of nine top Scientology officials in
Washington, D.C., last October: "The evidence presented to the
court shows brazen criminal campaigns against private and
public organizations and individuals. The Scientology officials
hid behind claims of religious liberty while inflicting
injuries upon every element of society."
In 1950, Hubbard, then 39, published Dianetics: The Modern
Science of Mental Health. In 1954 he founded the first Church
of Scientology in Washington, D.C. By 1978 the organization
claimed 38 U.S. churches, with 41 more abroad, and 172
"missions" and 5,437,000 members worldwide. These claims are
highly doubtful; critical observers have estimated a hard core
of around 3,000 full-time staff and no more than 30,000
adherents in the United States.
Even so, Hubbard may live more regally than did the Maharajah
of Jaipur, whose 30-room mansion and 57-acre estate in England
Hubbard bought in the late 1950s as "world headquarters" for
his growing movement. His retinue includes young women, known
officially as "messengers," who light his ever-present
cigarettes and catch the ashes. They record every word he says,
including his frequent obscene outbursts of rage. They help him
out of bed in the morning, run his shower, dress him. They
scrub his office for a daily "white glove" inspection and rinse
his laundry in 13 fresh waters. (Former members say he erupts
volcanically if he sniffs soap on his clothes.)
Hubbard attracts and holds his worshipful followers by his
amazing capacity to spin out an endless science-fiction fantasy
in which he is the supreme leader of a chosen elite. He tells
them he is a nuclear physicist who was severely wounded while
serving with the U.S. Navy in World War II. "Taken crippled and
blinded" to a Naval hospital, he claims to have "worked his way
back to fitness and full perception in less than two years." In
the process, he developed the "research" that led him to
discover "Dianetics" and Scientology, the answers to most of
mankind's ills.
The truth is something else. Hubbard did take a college course
in molecular and atomic physics, which he flunked. He served in
the Navy, but Navy records do not indicate he saw combat or was
ever wounded. He was discharged and later given a 40-percent
disability pension because of an ulcer, arthritis and other
ailments. About this time he was petitioning the Veterans
Administration for psychiatric care to treat "long periods of
moroseness and suicidal inclinations." He was also arrested for
petty theft in connection with checks. When he wrote to the FBI
that communist spies were after him, an agent attached a note
to one of his letters: "Make 'appears mental' card."
Since Dianetics, Hubbard's bizarre "philosophy" has expanded
into a 25-million-word collection of books, articles and
tape-recorded lectures. Hubbard claims to have traced human
existence back 74 trillion years, suggesting it began on Venus.
Today's earthlings are material manifestations of eternal
spirits who are reincarnated time and again over the eons. But,
Hubbard claims, our earthly troubles often result from ghostly
mental images which he calls "engrams" -- painful experiences
either in this life or in former incarnations.
Hubbard's original book created a sensation; he claimed to have
"cleared" 270 cases of engrams, thus greatly increasing the
subjects' I.Q.s and curing them of assorted ills from arthritis
to heart troubles. Later Hubbard said that Scientology
eradicated cancer and was the only specific cure for
atomic-bomb burns.
To detect engrams, Hubbard adopted a battery-powered
galvanometer with a needle dial wired to two empty tin cans.
Charging $150 an hour, a Scientology "minister" audits a
subject by having him grip the tin cans and answer detailed
questions about his present or past lives. The needle's
gyrations supposedly detect the engrams. By causing the subject
to "confront" the engrams, the 'minister' claims to "clear his
memory bin," thus raising both body and mind to a superhuman
state of "total freedom."
The Scientology auditor also carefully records any intimate
revelations, including sexual or criminal activities or marital
or family troubles. According to the church's own documents and
defectors' affidavits, such records are filed for blackmail
purposes against any member (or member's family) who becomes a
"potential trouble source" by threatening to defect, go to the
authorities, or generate hostile publicity.
Of course, new prospects are never asked to swallow the whole
ridiculous story at first gulp; they get it in timed-release
capsules. The process transforms them into what one who went
through it calls a "robot-like" state.
Typical was the experience of 17-year-old Julie Christofferson,
a high-school honors graduate who was invited by an
acquaintance -- actually a shill -- to take a "communications
course." (The church advertises that these "field-staff
members" get ten-percent commissions on all money their
recruits pay.) Unknowingly, Julie hooked herself onto a
mind-scrambling conveyor belt of hypnotic "training routines"
developed by Hubbard. The recruit, cynically referred to as
"raw meat," sits knee to knee with a "coach" for hours, her
eyes closed. Next she sits, eyes open, for hours. Then the
coach tries to find "emotional buttons." Hours of commands
follow: "Lift that chair." "Move that chair." "Sit in that
chair."
As Margaret Thaler Singer, a University of California
psychologist who interviewed Julie and over 400 former members
of cults, observes, "These routines can split the personality
into a severe, dissociated state, and the recruits are hooked
before they realize what is happening."
Julie found that the next step, auditing, continued to erase
the boundary between reality and fantasy. In this phase, Julie
exhausted all $3000 of her college savings. Then she was told
she could take college-level courses while going "on staff" and
working full time to recruit and process new raw meat. She
ended up working 60 to 80 hours a week, at a maximum salary of
$7.50 [per week]. She had now reached the "robot-like" state.
Julie felt superior, one of the chosen elite of this universe.
She was one of the faithful who are promised they will "go with
Ron to the next planet." Thus, they are conditioned to the "us
against them" outlook that characterizes so much religious and
political fanaticism.
Julie Christofferson was among the lucky, however. After nine
months, her parents removed her from the cult and snapped her
out of her zombie-like trance. Last August, a Portland, Ore.,
jury found the church's conduct so fraudulent and outrageous
that it awarded her $2,067,000.20 in damages.
Less fortunate was Anne Rosenblum, who spent nearly six years
in Scientology. During her last 15 months she was in the
church's punishment unit, the "Rehabilitation Project Force."
There, prisoners are guarded constantly, never left alone or
allowed to speak to any outsider without permission. They eat
leftovers, sleep on the floor, and fill their days with
strenuous physical and menial labor, classroom study of Ron's
works and grueling auditing to detect "crimes against Ron" in
"this or past lives."
As defectors have attested, subjects become hysterical and
psychotic in their auditing. Then they are locked in isolation.
Not surprisingly, suicides occur. Last January in Clearwater,
Fla., for example, a Scientology member hurled herself into the
bay and drowned.
Through the years, Hubbard has continually added new grades and
"levels" of belief. The "clearing course" costs $3812, but to
get to the highest level, the devotee shells out $14,295.
Hubbard has punctuated his policy letters to staff with
exhortations to MAKE MONEY, MAKE MORE MONEY, MAKE OTHER PEOPLE
PRODUCE SO AS TO MAKE MONEY. When numbers of recruits and
receipts fall off, Hubbard orders staffers onto a diet of rice
and beans.
But revenues appear to have been consistently high. In 1974 the
church spent $1.1 million for an old Jesuit novitiate in
Oregon. In 1976 the IRS turned up $2.86 million in cash aboard
Hubbard's 320-foot flagship Apollo. Moving secretly, the church
paid another $8 million for a hotel and other properties in
Clearwater, Fla. A top Hubbard lieutenant who recently defected
has attested that the Clearwater organization alone last year
was grossing as high as $1 million per week.
In 1966 Hubbard created his own "intelligence" organization,
called the "Guardian Office" (GO) [now called OSA]. He had
convinced himself that a "central agency" was behind attacks
against Scientology, and his suspicion focused on the World
Federation for Mental Health. "Psychiatry and the KGB operate
in direct collusion," he declared. He seemed to think they
worked through the FBI, CIA, various newspapers and other
groups. He named his third wife, Mary Sue Hubbard, to direct
his own counterattack from the Los Angeles headquarters. She
defined the GO's objective: "To sweep aside opposition
sufficiently to create a vacuum into which Scientology can
expand."
The GO training program included instructions in how to make an
anonymous death threat to a journalist, smear an antagonistic
clergyman, forge phony newspaper clips, plan and execute
burglaries. Public-relations spokesmen were drilled on how to
lie to the press -- "to outflow false data effectively." A
favorite dirty trick: making anonymous phone calls to the IRS,
accusing enemies of income-tax cheating and thereby inducing
the IRS to audit them. Big targets were organizations that
investigated Scientology or published unfavorable articles
about it -- newspapers, Forbes magazine, the American Medical
Association, Better Business Bureau and American Psychiatric
Association.
Individuals were also targeted. In 1971 Paulette Cooper, a New
York free-lance writer, published a book called The Scandal of
Scientology. The church responded with an elaborate campaign of
litigation, theft, defamation and malicious prosecution. She
got death-threatening phone calls. According to church
documents later revealed, this campaign was aimed at "getting
P.C. incarcerated in a mental institution or in jail."
It came incredibly close. Miss Cooper and her publisher were
sued in several U.S. cities and foreign countries. In order to
call off the Scientology legal war, her publisher agreed to
withdraw the book. "It just wasn't worth the legal expenses,"
he explained.
The worst thrust, Miss Cooper says, came after a Scientology
agent stole some of her stationery, faked bomb-threat letters
and framed her. She was indicted by a federal grand jury on a
charge of making bomb threats [and purjury]. She went through
two years of torment until she volunteered to take a Sodium
Pentothal "truth" test. Only after she passed did the
government drop the charges. Defending herself cost her $28,000.
In 1976 the FBI discovered that two Scientology agents were
using forged credentials to rummage through a Justice
Department office at night, and thereby uncovered the tip of a
widespread espionage operation in Washington. One agent,
Michael Meisner, after nearly a year as a fugitive, offered to
cooperate with the government. Meisner said that in 1974
Scientology had mounted an all-out attack on U.S. government
agencies the church thought were interfering with its
operations ["opperation Snow White"]. He himself supervised
Washington operations. With another agent, he broke into the
IRS photographic-identification room and forged the credentials
that they used to enter various government buildings, steal and
copy keys left carelessly on desks, pick locks, and steal and
copy government files.
With Meisner's testimony, the FBI obtained search warrants and,
on July 8, 1977, raided Scientology headquarters in Washington
and Los Angeles. Agents in Los Angeles seized 23,000 documents,
many stolen from the U.S. government, plus burglar tools and
electronic-surveillance equipment. The scope of the espionage
operation was staggering. In a Justice Department agency, a
Scientology employee-plant actually worked in a vault
containing top-secret CIA and defense documents. Other
Scientologists entered on nights and weekends and ransacked
offices, including the Deputy Attorney General's, stealing
highly secret papers and copying them on government copiers.
On October 26, 1979, nine high Scientology officials stood
before a federal judge and were found guilty of theft or
conspiracy charges arising from their plot against the
government. Heading the list was Mary Sue Hubbard, 48, who had
supervised the operation. Hubbard himself and 24 other
Scientologists were named as unindicted co-conspirators.
Since the convictions, many former Scientologists have come
forward to tell stories they had previously kept secret for
fear of Hubbard's Guardians. In Boston, attorney Michael Flynn
has filed a $200-million federal class-action suit for fraud,
outrageous conduct and breach of contract on behalf of a former
Scientologist and others who have been abused by the cult.
But Hubbard and his Scientologists have not been deterred.
After last fall's convictions, they issued an appeal for
volunteers for the Guardian counterattack, "to ferret out those
who want to stop Scientology."
The lessons of Hubbard's Church of Scientology are many. As
history demonstrates, when a fanatical individual employing
powerful communication skills gathers an entourage of
followers, infects them with his own delusion, persuades them
that the outside world is hostile and they alone can save the
world, and exacts blind obedience, the collective may break the
fabric of civilized restraints and descend into terrifying
crimes. Convictions, seized church documents, stipulated
evidence and defectors' affidavits demonstrate that
Scientologists have already indulged in burglary, espionage,
blackmail, kidnapping, false imprisonment, and conspiracies to
steal government documents and to obstruct justice; some have
committed suicide. The parents of a teen-age girl, after
following her into Hubbard's entourage for several weeks,
issued an urgent appeal last January to help prevent "what we
believe could be another mass murder or suicide."
Above all, the 20th-century record of leader-cults demonstrates
that such collectives need watching. Nothing in our legal
tradition requires us to shut our eyes to a racket religion
simply because it masquerades and claims immunity under our
First Amendment. As the late U.S. Supreme Court Justice Robert
H. Jackson pointed out, the Constitution is not a suicide pact.
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