
Ron Hubbard has lifted the lid on the secrets surrounding the death of the Scientology founder L. Johnny had a friend.The son-in-law of L. However, there is general agreement about the basic facts of Hubbard's life.Sergeant Johnny went south to Nicaragua into the thick of that ugly, unwarranted, jungle war at the height of Sandinos murky career. The last resting place of Scientology founder L Ron Hubbard has been kept in pristine condition nearly 30 years after his death, and now it is held in the highest regard by the church and its.The Church of Scientology has produced numerous biographical publications ( ) that make extraordinary claims about his life and career many of those claims are disputed by journalists and critics. Ron Hubbard has lifted the lid on the secrets surrounding the death of the Scientology founder L.
L Ron Hubbard Military Record Full Lafayette Ronald
Heinlein, Isaac Asimov, A.E. They married in 1909.Toward the end of my (military) service, I avoided out of pride any mental. Ron Hubbard, in full Lafayette Ronald Hubbard, (born March 13, , Tilden, Nebraska, U.S.died January 24, , San Luis Obispo, California), American novelist and founder of the Church of Scientology.Hubbard was born during 1911 in Tilden, Nebraska, to Harry Ross Hubbard ( 1886 - 1975) and Ledora May Waterbury.


(1934 - 1991) and Katherine May (born 1936).The real war caught up with Hubbard after he joined the United States Navy in June 1941 as a lieutenant (junior grade). Critics often cite Final Blackout, set in a war-ravaged future Europe, and Fear, a psychological horror story, as among the best examples of Hubbard's pulp fiction.Hubbard married Margaret "Polly" Grubb in 1933, with whom he fathered two children, L. He became a well known author in the science fiction and fantasy genres, and he also wrote westerns and adventure stories. In 1931, he was placed on probation for deficiency in scholarship and did not complete the program ( ).Hubbard instead pursued fiction writing, publishing many stories and novellas in pulp magazines during the 1930s ( ). He attended the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences at the George Washington University in Washington, DC between 1930– 1932.
Most of Hubbard's wartime service was spent ashore in the continental United States. Following this incident, Hubbard would receive a notation in his file denoting him as unfit for duty at sea under any conditions but close supervision, and he was ordered to report aboard the combat transport ship USS Algol (AKA-54). Spruance, was one of the Navy's most renowned heroes, having delivered a stunning victory at the Battle of Midway at the loss of only a single aircraft carrier and one destroyer. He was relieved of command of both vessels, in the latter case after shelling a Mexican island off Baja California, having previously landed himself in hot water for accusing Vice Admiral Frank Jack Fletcher, the regional commander, of covering up his "submarine" contact, supposedly to protect his reputation from "further stain." Unfortunately for Hubbard's story, in late 1942, Fletcher, along with his colleague, Rear Admiral Raymond A. He subsequently commanded the harbor protection vessel USS YP-422 (based in Boston, Massachusetts, formerly the fishing trawler Mist contrary to Hubbard's partisans, the ship never carried the name "USS Mist" in US Navy service) and the subchaser USS PC-815 (based in Astoria, Oregon).
According to Hubbard, dianetic auditing could eliminate emotional problems, cure physical illnesses, and increase intelligence. Hubbard's second wife, Sara Northrup Hubbard, gave birth to Hubbard's third child, Alexis Valerie, in March, 1950.In May 1950, Hubbard published a book describing the self-improvement technique of Dianetics, touted as "The Modern Science of Mental Health." With Dianetics, Hubbard introduced the concept of " auditing," a two-person question-and-answer therapy that involved reviewing painful memories. The letter informing him of his promotion reached his address at the home of Jack Parsons, who by that time was bitterly enraged toward Hubbard (Hubbard having run off with $10,000 of Parsons' money and Parsons' girlfriend, Sara Northrup).Hubbard remarried in 1946.
The Hubbard Dianetic Research Foundation was incorporated in Elizabeth, New Jersey, and branch offices were opened in five other US cities before the end of 1950 (though most folded within a year and Hubbard soon abandoned the Foundation, denouncing a number of his former associates as communists).With success, Dianetics became a subject of critical scrutiny by the medical establishment and the press. Van Vogt enthusiastically embraced Dianetics: Campbell became Hubbard's treasurer, and van Vogt—convinced that his wife's health had been transformed for the better by dianetic auditing—interrupted his writing career to run the first Los Angeles Dianetics center.Dianetics was a hit, selling 150,000 copies within a year of publication. Campbell's star author Isaac Asimov criticised Dianetics' unscientific aspects, and veteran author Jack Williamson described Dianetics as "a lunatic revision of Freudian psychology" that "had the look of a wonderfully rewarding scam." But Campbell and novelist A. The science fiction community was divided about the merits of this new craze. Beginning in late 1949, Campbell publicised Dianetics in the pages of Astounding Science Fiction. Campbell, who had for years published Hubbard's science fiction stories.
He moved to England at about the same time and during the remainder of the 1950s he supervised the growing Scientology organization from an office in London. With Mary Sue, Hubbard fathered four more children-Diana, Quentin, Suzette and Arthur-over the next six years.In December 1953, Hubbard declared Scientology to be a religion and the first Church of Scientology was founded in Camden, New Jersey. Hubbard also married his third wife that year, Mary Sue Whipp, to whom he remained married for the rest of his life. Her divorce papers also accused Hubbard of kidnapping their baby daughter Alexis, and of conducting "systematic torture, beatings, strangulations and scientific torture experiments."In mid- 1952, Hubbard expanded Dianetics into a secular philosophy which he called Scientology. Ron Hubbard's text, one is impressed from the very beginning by a tendency to generalization and authoritative declarations unsupported by evidence or facts." Consumer Reports warned its readers against the "possibility of serious harm resulting from the abuse of intimacies and confidences associated with the relationship between auditor and patient," an especially serious risk, they concluded, "in a cult without professional traditions."Hubbard's private behavior became the subject of unflattering headlines when Sara filed for divorce late in 1950, citing the fact that Hubbard was, unknown to her, still married to his first wife at the time he married Sara. Consumer Reports, in an August, 1951 assessment of Dianetics ( ), dryly noted that "one looks in vain in Dianetics for the modesty usually associated with announcement of a medical or scientific discovery" and stated that the book had become "the basis for a new cult." The article observed that "in a study of L.
This machine, related to the electronic lie detectors of the time, was (and still is) used by Scientologists to evaluate "mental masses" that surround the thetan. By this time, Hubbard had introduced a biofeedback device to the auditing process, which he called a "Hubbard Electropsychometer" or " E-meter." It was invented in the 1940s by a chiropractor named Volney Mathison. He codified a set of axioms ( ) and a " technology" that promised to improve the condition of the human spirit, which he called the "Thetan." The bulk of Scientology focuses on the rehabilitation of the thetan vis a vis its environment.Hubbard's followers in Scientology believed that his "applied religious philosophy" gave them access to their past lives, the traumas of which led to failures in the present unless they were audited. This became the worldwide headquarters of Scientology.Hubbard claimed to have conducted years of intensive research into the nature of human existence to describe his findings, he developed an elaborate vocabulary with many newly coined terms ( ).
