Customize

Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

Discussion in 'General Discussion' started by tendervittles, Feb 9, 2009.

  1. Buttons Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    Anonymous-

    Agreed. Topic better suited for a different thread.

    Just wanted new posters/members not to feel stupid for not knowing who Paulette Cooper is, but at the same time, for them to recognize how significant her posting on this board is for many of us.
  2. SuitTie Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    wouldnt suprise me
  3. moose Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    and lets not forget their focus on psychiatrists raping patients, although I have a little theory about that: Imagine LRH in a waitingroom at a psych hospital, totally nuts, not being able to control his thoughts, and then noticing the sign on the psycho-therapists door saying "PsychoTheRapist" ... that would freak out any patient imho.
  4. Anonymous Member

  5. FreakE420 Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    260pgf6.jpg
  6. Anonymous Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    QFT
    FTW
    and all that other stuff
  7. mefree Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    Probably not back in those days. It is done outpatient now.
  8. Ramona Member

  9. PagAnon Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    I read that earlier today. Went to the library and read from part of dianetics. I was like this is shit he's on crack or something. then I slipped in a folded "Scientology is a Fraud" flyer. lolz.
  10. JohnnyRUClear Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    I'll take "PsychoTheRapist" for $600, Alex.
  11. Ogsonofgroo Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    XP Lololol! That was a perfectly good cocktail gone ta waste! MY NOSE! IT BURNS!

    XD

    XD
  12. DeathHamster Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    Too bad that there's no one year gap in Hubbard's publication history between 1947 through to the end of 1950, as well as other problems trying shoehorn it in between his reported appearances.

    From the Satanic thread, it sounds like some people have gotten way too attached to this speculation.
  13. Anonymous Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    Regardless, there is plenty of evidence that Hubbard was mentally ill, at least going back to his military career.

    Hubbard begged for psychiatric help.


    L. Ron Hubbard - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  14. Caligula Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    Well isn't that interesting.

    Also a bit ironic, I suppose. But frankly, not at all surprising.
  15. DeathHamster Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    It's important to look at Hubbard's letter begging for psychiatric help (aka more veterans pension money) in the context of all his other letters begging for money and claiming all sorts of non-existent injuries.

    I certainly think that Hubbard was mentally ill, but I doubt that this was any kind of sincere request on Hubbard's part or admission of his condition. I think that Hubbard figured that it would be a lot easier to fake psychiatric problems than physical ones, and would have played to his ego of having "put one over on them". (It would have been interesting to see what diagnosis and treatment they would have come up with.)
  16. Ramona Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    Clearly he was a scammer, but the 1951 request for protection in Cuba sounds like a person who knows he is cracking up. In view of such desperation in 1947 and 1951, even a few weeks as a patient in 1949 seems plausible.


  17. TomVorm Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    An obituary for prominent journalist Jack Nelson, appeared today in the Los Angeles Times.

    Aside from his famed work with their Washington bureau for many years (including a breakthrough interview exposing links to the White House in the Watergate cover-up), Jack Nelson also reported FBI abuses and on the lesser-known February 1968 Orangeburg, SC massacre of students by local police.

    Jack Nelson received a Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting in 1960, for his reports in the Atlanta Constitution newspaper which exposed patient abuse and other improper actions at the Milledgeville Central State Hospital in the 1950's. Accounts from this institution, also known as the Georgia State Sanitarium, do tend to support Hubbard's frequent later accounts of psychiatric abuses.
  18. FYIANON Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    You trying to win the oddest post ever contest?

    I find this far more interesting: Hubbard begged for psychiatric help.

    Too bad he never got the help he needed. If he did whyaretheydead.info wouldn't exist.
  19. TomVorm Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    Apparently, whatever he observed or experienced at the Georgia asylum, precipitated his targeting of psychs.
  20. AnonSC Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    could explain scientology....
  21. DeathHamster Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    Still no dox that he observed or experienced anything in the Georgia asylum.
  22. Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    LOL Did they ever realize that Hubbard......... ummmm.......got out?
  23. TomVorm Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    LRH spent his next 36 years filling his writings with references to psychs. Jack Nelson received a Pulitzer prize for his coverage of what was occurring at that asylum in the 1950's.

    What we could presume, could be that LRH was in a position to acquire some of his beliefs at that asylum. It could also be speculated, that the non-reference to this asylum (by name) in his writings is for other reasons: He was a patient there, or he himself was involved in abusive "experiments" there (which, according to "OTOP" beliefs are to be covered up), or for some reason LRH didn't want to mention some of his ties to certain psych wards (like the Maryland facility, which had ties to the CIA).
  24. DeathHamster Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    Completely speculation. Still no dox, nor any gap in Hubbard's penny-a-word writing career.
  25. TomVorm Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    LRH did disparage a psych by his name (Dr. Center), who worked at that asylum.

    But you're right that more research is needed, to flesh out what LRH was actually doing in Savannah at that time.
  26. themadhair Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    Bumped because I think this is quite interesting
  27. Anonymous Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    Tracking down Alexis Valerie may be worthwhile. Hopefully her mom Sara Northrup, told her things before she died. Paulette Cooper may have some contact information.
  28. Anonymous Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    Now she is Alexis Hollister Connolly
  29. ElenaP Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    this is a list of hospitals in Cuba with their websites:

    Cuba (12)
    Centro Internacional de Retinosis Pigmentaria Camilo Cienfuegos retina.sld.cu
    Centro Nacional de Cirugía Endoscópica Hospital Luis de La Puente Uceda cce.sld.cu
    Centro Para La Investigación y Rehabilitación de Las Ataxias Hereditarias ataxiacubana.sld.cu
    Clínica Central Cira García cirag.cu
    Hospital Docente Ginecobstetrico Ramón Gonzalez Coro gonzalezcoro.sld.cu
    Hospital General Universitario Vladimir Ilich Lenin hvil.sld.cu
    Hospital Psiquiatrico de La Habana psiquiatricohph.sld.cu
    Instituto de Medicina Tropical Pedro Kouri ipk.sld.cu
    Policlínico Docente Enrique Betancourt Neninger polebn.sld.cu
    Policlínico Docente Robert Manuel Zulueta Cayol polrzulueta.sld.cu
    Policlínico Flores Betancourt fbetancourt.sld.cu
    Policlínico Universitario Rampa, Centro de Referencia de Criocirugía y Crioterapia Para La Atención Primaria de Salud policlinicarampa.sld.cu
  30. PodPeople Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    I'm gonna guess that dox won't materialize due to age. But, a little common sense interjection: 1) We have dox he was there and when 2) Family dox of his mental state 3) FBI dox of his mental state 4) Military dox of his mental state and other dox of same.

    What are the chances that a mental facility would accept hubbard as anything other than a patient? And in the long run, there's enough dox about his mental state to suffice.

    But in the odd circumstance that he got in as some kind of "practioner", with all the dox above at that time, doesn't that in itself prove that he was mentally delusional? just sayin'
  31. Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    Didn't Hubbard claim he was doing research as the reason for his stay? There was a glory marcabia post on this, that blog has been deleted.

    This patient, i mean researcher escaped and started his own errr science of mental health, later changed to a religion for tax purposes and to avoid medical malpractice cuz it didn't do what he promised.

    He was a liar who made up a lot of stuff.

    Something about an evil galactic overlord and identical copies of DC-8's dropping aliens in volcanoes on earth 75 million years ago and blowing them up with hydrogen bombs and capturing their souls (thetans) with electronic umbrellas which caused a lot of misery here by attatching themselves to people.

    Apparently some people believed him.

    The results have not been pretty.
  32. DeathHamster Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    That's making the assumption that there were any records or that he was in an institution.

    That kind of thing runs barking all through this thread. "Suspicious" that there wasn't more on Hubbard's stay in Savannah. Really, why? Because it doesn't mention the theorized stay in the funny farm?

    This and the occasional attempt to add this to Hubbard's Wikipedia article without any references leads me to think that some people are far too attached to a pet theory.

    Hubbard's published stories during 1948-1950:
    • 1948/Mar Her Majesty's Aberration (Third in the “Ole Doc Methuselah” series)When Ole Doc Methuselah lands on the planet Dorcon, he finds murderously hostile inhabitants, a mad queen with a face disfigured by an assassin's bomb, and her deposed tubercular son—the true king—and his wife and child imprisoned in the palace dungeon. Ole Doc restores the old queen's beauty and sanity, and puts the son back on his rightful throne. Science Fiction
    • 1948/May The Obsolete Weapon An American soldier in modern Rome finds himself jailed for desertion after an “obsolete” fountain pen-like device that alters time transports him back to the Rome of Nero as a gladiator in the Colosseum. Science Fiction
    • 1948/Jun The Magic Quirt When a ranch cook saves an Aztec family from bandits, they give him a silver quirt with magical properties that enable him to perform extraordinary deeds of courage. It's only later—after his heroics—that he discovers the quirt is just a souvenir, worth $2.50. Western
    • 1948/Jul When Shadows Fall (First of nine stories in the “The Conquest of Space” series)Far in the future, the earth faces the prospects of slow environmental death, or more immediate destruction from the fleets of the myriad colonial civilizations spawned by Earth among the galaxies. Three missions are dispatched to solicit help for the home planet from these new worlds; two out of the three missions return with grimly pessimistic reports. But when the colonial fleets do land, they come with a braver purpose: “So we have come here, these combined forces, to make the land green again, to replace the oceans, to rebuild the atmosphere, to make the rivers run, to put fish in the streams, and game in the hills.” Science Fiction
    • 1948/Sept The Great Air Monopoly (Fourth in the “Ole Doc Methuselah” series)Ole Doc Methuselah and his companion, Hippocrates, discover that a man named Tolliver has monopolized the air on the planet Arphon, taxing the inhabitants tyrannically for making the air breathable. The Soldier of Light uncovers the truth—an atmosphere contaminated with ragweed—and exposes Tolliver's scheme to control the planet. Science Fiction
    • 1948/Dec 240,000 Miles Straight Up A renegade Russian general seizes the moon—“240,000 miles straight up”—for a potential military base, menacing the United States. First Lieutenant Cannon Gray, in defiance of presidential directives, successfully thwarts the general's plot and defeats him in a final battle. Science Fiction
    • 1948/Dec Stacked Bullets Charley Montgomery has the only land around with water on it. When he sells it for needed cash only to lose the money in a fixed poker game and the new owners start charging the other ranchers for water, Charley takes appropriate steps to rectify the situation in a shootout, and to recover his lost poke. Western
    • 1949/Jan Forbidden Voyage (Second in “The Conquest of Space” series)George Carlyle knows how to get to the moon—but conscientious folk in authority do their best to prevent him. When he does make it there and back, his feat goes unheralded. Science Fiction
    • 1949/Feb Gunman! With three days left to save his badge, the marshal of Deadlight cleverly prevents the bank from being robbed. Western
    • 1949/Mar The Magnificent Failure (Third in “The Conquest of Space” series)Jonathan Bates, the legendary “Father of Exploration,” reaches the moon, discovers George Carlyle has preceded him, then takes off for Mars and Venus and successfully returns. When subsequent spaceflights end disastrously, Bates builds a bigger ship, takes on a little boy and his dog as companion voyagers, and leaves Earth, never to return. Science Fiction
    • 1949/Apr The Gunner from Gehenna The renegade “Gunner” returns, steals the miners’ gold and vanishes into the desert with the deputy sheriff in angry pursuit. Western
    • 1949/Apr Plague! (Fifth in the “Ole Doc Methuselah” series)A spaceship, with an epidemic aboard, is ordered back into space, and ultimately lands on the third habitable planet of Sirius, communicating the “plague” to the local inhabitants. Ole Doc Methuselah saves the ship and its environs from being destroyed, and identifies the “plague” as an ancient—but totally unfamiliar—disease: measles. Science Fiction
    • 1949/Apr Gun Boss of Tumbleweed Forced to act as a gunhawk for the man he hates bitterly, Mart Kincaid brings matters to a fiery Colt showdown. Western
    • 1949/May The Conroy Diary Mallory Fitz explores new worlds to open up the universe for mankind. When he writes a book about his travels, which becomes an instant bestseller, he's hit with a fraud case—and a gigantic tax bill! Science Fiction
    • 1949/May The Incredible Destination (Fourth in “The Conquest of Space” series)James Dolan, using a magnetic space drive, reaches a distant solar system, returns to Earth with proof in the form of photos—unfortunately damaged—and mineral samples that are dismissed as laughable. Though his claims are discredited, Dolan in fact finds a way to the distant stars long before mankind begins to make the same journey. Science Fiction
    • 1949/May Battle of Wizards The Mineralogy Service wants to mine the fuel catalyst crystals on Deltoid, but the primitive natives object. With the issue to be resolved in a battle of magic between resourceful civil officer Angus McBane and the natives’ great wizard, McBane resorts—with mystifying success—to a ruse of robotry. Science Fiction
    • 1949/Jun A Sound Investment (Sixth in the “Ole Doc Methuselah” series)The Soldier of Light summarily fires Hippocrates for carelessness, discovers a plot to destroy all life in the Fomalton planetary system, the man behind the plot, and a subsonic weapon that kills by inducing lethally paralyzing fear. Ole Doc Methuselah reduces the plotter to pulpy helplessness in a fistfight, and takes Hippocrates back. Science Fiction
    • 1949/Jul The Unwilling Hero (Fifth in “The Conquest of Space” series)It's not hunger for personal glory or adventure that propels Vic Hardin into the far reaches of outer space on a daring rescue mission: he's been ordered out there by his editor. Science Fiction
    • 1949/Aug Johnny, the Town Tamer Texas Johnny frustrates an attempt to kill him, and runs off the man who tried to do it. Western
    • 1949/Aug A Matter of Matter There have been small-time real estate swindlers, but in a galactic economy, the man who sells planets does it on a stupendous scale: like selling the unwary customer a planet he can't even sit down on. It's all a matter of negative matter. Science Fiction
    • 1949/Sept Beyond the Black Nebula (Sixth in “The Conquest of Space” series) Writer Anthony Twain—accused of being a charlatan—can restore his reputation only by going where no man has gone before: through the forbidding Coal Sack in space. Science Fiction
    • 1949/Sept Guns of Mark Jardine Young Mark Jardine returns to the Arizona Territory to avenge the torture and death of his close friend, a landowner ambushed after striking gold. Faced with the task of single-handedly tracking down the unknown killers—and protecting the life of the landowner's beautiful daughter—Jardine sets out on a lone, perilous course of retributive justice. Western
    • 1949/Sept Blood on His Spurs Two old antagonists—Bates and McLean—bury their feud long enough to save McLean's son and wipe out a band of rustlers. Western
    • 1949/Oct The Automagic Horse “Gadget” O’Dowd builds an “automagic” mechanical facsimile of the great racehorse Man-of-War for a movie, finally races it—and wins—at Santa Anita, then equips it with an anti-gravity device: all to deceive a beautiful accountant and conceal the secret building of a spaceship. Science Fiction
    • 1949/Oct The Planet Makers Sleepy McGee isn't too accomplished as a poker player—but he has an ace in the hole for building new planets. Science Fiction
    • 1949/Nov The Emperor of the Universe (Seventh in “The Conquest of Space” series)When Erskine encounters “The Emperor of the Universe,” again, the old man is dead, lying within yards of his disreputable old spacecraft and its extraordinary cargo—the seeds the “Emperor” has been sowing among the barren planets in preparation for man's coming among the distant stars. Science Fiction
    • 1949/Nov Man for Breakfast Being robbed, almost hung, dry-gulched and wounded, is all in a day's work for young Johnny Purcell. Western
    • 1949/Dec Stranger in Town New in Dry Creek himself, Zeke Tomlin knows someone will ride in one day, looking for him. When the corrupt marshal arrives in pursuit, Zeke must deal with him and the town. Western
    • 1949/Dec A Can of Vacuum A cosmic practical joke backfires when Bigby Pettigrew actually brings back the “rudey rays” he was sent out to get—as a joke. Science Fiction
    • 1950/Jan Ole Mother Methuselah (Seventh and last in the “Ole Doc Methuselah” series) It's one thing when lions are bred on planet Gorgon as an environmental measure to deal with the feral cat beast population, but when a shipment of human embryos mysteriously finds its way into the lion breeding vats, the result is a race of beings with superhuman strength and powers. Ole Doc Methuselah discovers the alien origin of the embryos, then induces an allergy in the superbeings that changes their cell structure and their behavior. Science Fiction
    • 1950/Jan Hoss Tamer An ex-circus horse trainer foils the Gopher Hole Gang's attempt to rob the Wells Fargo train by whistling at their horses. Western
    • 1950/Jan Beyond All Weapons When fugitive colonists return to Earth from the stars to administer retributive justice to those who had driven them into exile, they find man's most pitiless enemy, time itself, has done their work for them. Science Fiction
    • 1950/Jan The Last Admiral (Eighth in “The Conquest of Space” series)The Admiral saves the Navy from extinction by intercepting a powerful pirate space vessel—at the sacrifice of his own life. Science Fiction
    • 1950/Feb-Mar To the Stars (aka Return to Tomorrow) They are the outcasts of time—space voyagers among the distant stars, rootless exiles from a world they left that has aged and passed away even as they remain young. Alan Conroy seeks understanding of his mission in life, in a world—unfamiliar, inhospitable—altered by the relative passage of time; at the end, he is the new commander of the symbolically named starship Hound of Heaven. Science Fiction
    • 1950/Feb Devil's Manhunt Jumped by a pair of bandits, Tim Beckdolt is forced to work his claim at gun-point, knowing when his work is done, his reward will be a bullet. Western
    • 1950/Winter The Kingslayer A brilliant young engineer is kidnapped by a member of a revolutionary group, told of the existence of “The Arbiter,” the person responsible for all the world's evil, and sent on a mission to find and destroy him. Discovery of the true identity of the Arbiter, and of the real purpose of the engineer's mission—and destiny—provides an ending of startling dimensions. Science Fiction
    • 1950/Apr Greed Far in the future, two Earth empires—separated physically by a weapon-projected “wall of space”—are poised for war. A space-navy lieutenant becomes a space raider, turns the weapon against the evil empire and destroys it. Science Fiction
    • 1950/May The No-Gun Man Monte Calhoun returns to Superstition, uncovers his father's killer, survives a murderous assault, and brings the guilty man and his three sons to stern justice. Western
    • 1950/Jun Vengeance Is Mine! Whitney administers harsh vengeance, only to find, with cruel irony, that he has killed unjustly. Western
    • 1950/Aug Battling Bolto When a strong man pretends to be a robot named Battling Bolto to sell fake robots, and discovers his “boss” is a robot pretending to be human, it touches off a series of curious events, including a prison stint in the mines for Battling Bolto. Science Fiction
    • 1950/Sept Final Enemy The threat of the mysterious invaders that have wiped out millions of people on two planets unites the nations of Earth and spurs collective space exploration. The invaders, paradoxically, prove to be from Earth, itself. Science Fiction
    • 1950/Oct The Masters of Sleep An older Jan/Tiger and Alice/Wanna rediscover adventure and each other, and Jan/Tiger finally merges into a single entity—master of day and night, of the parallel worlds of sleep and waking. (Sequel to “Slaves of Sleep” #135) Fantasy
    • 1950/Nov Tough Old Man (Ninth and last story in “The Conquest of Space” series) Moffat is sent for final training under the Senior Constable of the Frontier Patrol, old Keno. When Moffat—subjected to severe tests—discovers why Keno doesn't feel extreme cold or heat, and never seems to eat, he succeeds the old policeman as senior constable. Science Fiction
    Add Dianetics to that, and I don't see a gap where he could have been locked up, even allowing for varying delays between writing and publishing. (And no, they aren't going to let him write escapist junk from his padded cell.)
  33. Anonymous Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    You've left out 1948 which is the year Hubbard went to Savannah
  34. DeathHamster Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    Added now, doesn't help. (As well, a number of the stories published in 1949 would have been written in 1948.)
  35. Anonymous Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    San Francisco Chronicle

    Ron Hubbard Insane, Says His Wife

    April 24, 1951


    The wife of L.Ron Hubbard, 40, founder of the Dianetics Mental Health Movement, filed suit for divorce today, charging he is suffering from a mental ailment. Mrs. Sara Northrup Hubbard, 25, said "competent medical advisers" had examined her 40-year-old husband and concluded he was "hopelessly insane" and should be placed in a private sanitarium for "psychiatric observation." She said doctors told her her husband was suffering from a mental ailment "known as paranoid schizophrenia."

    Mrs. Hubbard also charged he subjected her to "systematic torture" by beating and strangling her and denying her sleep. Her suit said Hubbard once told her he didn`t want to be married and suggested that if she really loved him, she would kill herself because a divorce would "hurt his reputation."

    Mrs. Hubbard described her husband`s dianetics research foundation as his "alter ego" and said the institution did more than $1,000,000 business last year.

    When informed of the doctors` recommendation that he be placed in a mental institution, Hubbard took their 13-month-old daughter, Alexis, from Mrs. Hubbard`s apartment and went into hiding, the suit charged.

    The wife also said Hubbard told her he was unmarried when they were wed Aug. 10, 1946, at Chestertown, Md., but it was not until December, 1947, that he divorced a former wife, Mrs. Margaret Grubb Hubbard, at Port Orchard, Wash. Mrs. Hubbard asked $500,000 damages to compensate for the loss of "the golden years of a woman`s life" and an annulment of their marriage if the court finds she never was legally marriedto the dianetics founder.
  36. DeathHamster Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    And before that in February 1951:

    Bare-Faced Messiah, p.179:
    It does say "any further attempts Sara might make to have him committed", but I don't think it mentions what previous attempts there were.
  37. Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    "Hubbard once told her he didn`t want to be married and suggested that if she really loved him, she would kill herself because a divorce would "hurt his reputation." "



    "Mrs. Hubbard described her husband`s dianetics research foundation as his "alter ego" "




    "She said doctors told her her husband was suffering from a mental ailment "known as paranoid schizophrenia." "



    Hubbard died in 1986. I never get tired of noticing just how much the actions, and attitudes of Ron Hubbard are so similar to the actions and attitudes of the OSA. But then again, all staff members have to follow policy written out by Hubbard himself. Actions speak louder than words and Hubbard is alive and kicking and speaking from the grave through the many OSA perps who think that they are "saving the world". All staff, OSA or otherwise, are just robots programmed by Hubbard to do his dirty work for him. Except for Miscavige and maybe a few others who at some point found out or figured out that it was all a scam, that is.

    Sorry for the sidetrack. I just didn't want to start a new thread.

    And now back to the original topic........
  38. HellRazor Member

  39. Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    Great save, Thx

    If LRH wasn't a patient, he certainly qualified or maybe was over-qualified.


    The FBI was a lot more perceptive in those days.
  40. Sponge Member

    Re: Was Hubbard a PATIENT in the Savannah Insane Asylum in 1949?

    ^lol

    [IMG]

Share This Page

Customize Theme Colors

Close

Choose a color via Color picker or click the predefined style names!

Primary Color :

Secondary Color :
Predefined Skins