My Scientology excommunication
<http://www.salon.com/2012/05/05/my_scientology_excommunication/singleto\
n/>       I was one of the world's top 50 church members -- then one
mistake changed my life            By Kate Bornstein
<http://www.salon.com/writer/kate_bornstein/>

They made a lovely couple, my parents. Mildred was as gracious as she 
was elegant and beautiful. Paul was as gallant as he was rugged and 
handsome. My mom thought she was the luckiest girl in the world. My dad 
never got it, how a class act like Mildred could fall for a palooka like
him.

Around the time that my teenaged mom-to-be was making googly eyes at  my
dad-to-be, L. Ron Hubbard — like my father — was in his early 
twenties. While my father was setting up a medical practice on the 
Jersey Shore, Ron Hubbard was reportedly off tramping through Asia, 
learning Eastern religions and customs. All of us in Scientology 
believed this about Ron. He was an explorer, an intrepid researcher into
the darkest depths and starry heights of the human soul. He engineered 
and built the Bridge to Total Freedom.

Lafayette Ronald Hubbard was a rugged guy, just like my dad.

He was born on March 13, 1911, in Tilden, Nebraska. My dad was born 
just a few months later, on May 19. If you believe the authorized 
biography, Ron grew up out by a tribe of Blackfoot peoples. By the time 
he was four, he'd already learned all the Blackfoot lore there was
to  learn, so tribal elders made him a full-fledged blood brother.
What's  more, at thirteen years old, Ron became the youngest Eagle
Scout in the  history of Scouting. So goes the authorized biography, and
as  Scientologists, we believed it.

A great deal of that authorized biography has been poked full of  holes.
There's evidence that many of the outrageous claims about 
Hubbard's life are out-and-out lies — go ahead, give it a
Google. As  Scientologists, we always figured he stretched the truth a
little — to  make a good story a little bit better — but we
thought most of his  reportedly grandiose and holy life was true.

—————

I joined the Church of Scientology in 1970, and by the end of the 
decade, I was at the top of my game. I was a full Lieutenant. Only fifty
people in all of Scientology outranked me. I'd been First Mate of
the Flagship <http://www.freewinds.org/> ;  and a few years later, I was
working directly with the Commodore  [Hubbard], planning public
relations strategies for Scientology  worldwide. I managed an entire
fucking continent for them. Then I  crashed and burned on Southern
Comfort and Coca-Cola, sex, junk food,  and tranny porn. My job
performance took a nosedive, and I was summarily  removed from my post
in middle management and demoted to sales, where,  phoenix-like, I rose
from my own ashes brighter and stronger than ever.

I was a terrific salesman, a natural. I'd spent my life trying to 
make people happy with me, and there's nothing more happy-making
than  selling someone their dreams-come-true. In Scientology sales, we
were  taught to find a person's "ruin" — whatever it was
that was making a  person's life miserable and keeping them from
achieving their goals. I  could find anyone's ruin in minutes —
and in less than an hour, I'd have  sold them thousands of dollars
worth of Scientology services to handle  it. I put together a crack
staff, and together the six of us pulled in  close to a quarter of a
million dollars a week. I was a real man in  every aspect of my life
— and it all came down to money money money. After  all, what are
your dreams worth to you? How much money would you spend  if that's
all it took to make your dreams come true? You needed what we  had, and
we needed your money — most, if not all, of it.

It was common knowledge in the Sea Org
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sea_Org>   that the US government and
economy could topple at any moment — splat —  end of the world
as we know it. That's when we'd march in and take  over. We were
amassing a war chest for that day, and with that in mind,  L. Ron
Hubbard took very little money from the Church — only the  royalties
on his books and a small administrative stipend on top of his  room and
board. Beyond that, every penny went into Church maintenance,  defense,
and expansion.

In Scientology, we never used the word sales. People who sell
Scientology services have always gone by the more pleasant euphemism
registrar, often shortened to reg. In  the Sea Org, we softened the
euphemism even further: I was first posted  in New York City as part of
the international sales team called Flag  Service Consultants. We were
among the most highly skilled sales people  in all of Scientology, and
we sold only the most expensive services —  the topmost levels of
Scientology, all of which were delivered solely on  Flag by the most
highly trained Sea Org members in the world. In the  late 1970s, I was
transferred to the post of Tours Reg — Europe became  my primary
beat, and I was pulling in an average of $20,000 a week for  Flag. My
personal sales figures often topped out at $50,000 to $70,000,  which
made me one of the Sea Org's top income makers, which in turn gave 
me what they call ethics protection. In short, no one was allowed to
fuck with me.

In Europe, Scientologists wrote us checks made out to the Religious 
Research Foundation, a shell company that maintained a Swiss bank 
account that was in no way linked to the Church of Scientology. Any 
money we deposited would be used in the service of the Church without 
having to pass through any country's tax system — it's a
common business  practice used by many international organizations. Of
course, L. Ron  Hubbard had no connection with that Swiss account
because it was vitally  important to keep all his personal finances on
the up-and-up so that no  enemy of the Church could use any inadvertent
financial glitch against  him. But that was unthinkable — (a)
because he was so powerful, and (b)  because he had both the Sea Org and
the Guardian's Office to protect  him, and we protected him
fiercely.

So, life was . . . great. Thanks to my high income, I'd become a Sea
Org star. Crew members actually lined up at the doors to send me off on 
tour, or welcome me home. It all came unraveled on a sunny autumn day in
Zurich, 1982. I had just finished making a sizable deposit to the Swiss 
bank account. I was out on a quickie one-week tour on my own; my second 
wife, Becky, was back in Clearwater.

This was my first time inside the bank's home office. What a 
beautiful old place it was! The reverence for wealth was manifest in the
severe architecture, lightly touched here and there with tasteful 
elegance. I was waiting for the teller to return to his window with my 
receipts when a clerk appeared at my elbow and asked me to step inside 
the office of the vice president of the bank. Now, this had never 
happened to anyone else on my staff in all the time we'd been making
deposits at this branch, so my antennae went up. I allowed the clerk to 
usher me into the huge office of what very well might be a member of 
some vast international Swiss banking conspiracy. An old man sat behind 
the huge desk. He rose creakily to his feet, his face broke into a wide 
smile, and he walked around his desk toward me with his hand extended as
if in friendship. Swiss bankers never do that.

"Mr. L. Ron Hubbard," the old guy said to me, "the bank so 
appreciates your business all these years, and it's such a pleasure
to  finally meet you in person."

Oops. No, this was much more than an oops — this was a genuine oh 
fuck! It must have been the work of some SP [Suppressive Person — 
Scientology's term for a person who is completely and irredeemably
evil.  Like me today; I'm an SP.] Well, some SP inside the Swiss
banking  conspiracy had obviously broken into the files of the Religious
Research  Foundation and falsely linked them to the Old Man. Fuck, fuck,
fuck! I  took a deep breath and reminded myself that I was a far
superior being  to the old man — lying to him came easy.

"I'm so sorry," I say. "But I am not this Mr. El? Hub
Hubbard? of whom you speak."

By then, we were both visibly pale. My mind was racing with  worst-case
scenarios — and the old guy realized that by naming me, he'd 
violated some strict law of Swiss banking privacy. We froze, our eyes 
locked in a long awkward silence. Then we each forced a laugh at the 
silly mistake, we said our goodbyes, and I strolled casually out of the 
bank.

There was no such thing as a cell phone. I walked across the city 
square to my hotel, where I placed a call from the pay phone in the 
lobby. I couldn't trust that the phone in my room wasn't tapped.
I  called a secret number and reached a telex operator in Denmark. I
spoke  to her guardedly, but she got what I was saying and fired a
message off  to Florida that there was some plot afoot that warranted
investigation,  and I would stand by for orders. Orders came back
swiftly. I flew to  England, where I was questioned for three days. Then
the all clear came  through, and I was ordered to fly home to
Clearwater, Florida. I'd done a  great job uncovering the plot
against the Old Man!

As I stepped off the plane in Tampa, I was met at the gate by seven 
tall, muscular young guys in Sea Org officer uniforms. Heh. I was still 
the superstar. But it did strike me as odd that I didn't recognize
any  of these officers, and I knew personally every senior officer in
the Sea  Org. The young men had serious faces — they told me they
were members  of the newly formed Financial Police. I'd never heard
of that.

"What's going on here . . . sir?"

"You'll find out, and don't speak unless you're spoken
to, mister."

"Yessir."

One for one, they outranked me, so there was no questioning their 
authority. These guys escorted me into a cold, damp hallway in the 
basement of the Fort Harrison Hotel. Two of the Financial Police sat me 
down on a metal folding chair, then took up more comfortable chairs for 
themselves on either side of me. I couldn't say a word — I still
hadn't  been spoken to.

After three hours, the other five officers showed up — showered, 
freshly shaven. I smelled sour to myself, and I had a five o'clock 
shadow that rivaled Richard M. Nixon's. The seven officers escorted
me  down the hall into a room set up with a table and an e-meter. 
Non-Scientologists (we called you wogs) believed that at best, the 
e-meter — short for electropsychometer — was an unsophisticated
lie  detector. But we believed completely that in the hands of a trained
Scientologist, that little meter could detect your deepest, darkest 
thoughts and deeds — going back millions and millions of years.
That's  the basic principle of their therapy, which they call
spiritual  counseling, or auditing.

Now, mostly when you're audited, you're in a small room with one
other person, the auditor. There's never more than the two of you.
But  now, one member of the Financial Police sits across from me,
operating  the meter. Two big guys are standing behind him, two more big
guys stand  behind me, and one more big guy stands at the door. Years
later, I'd  find out they call it a gang-bang security check. One of
them spoke.

"How long have you been an agent for a foreign government?"

"What the fuck?"

"Thank you," says the big guy across from me.

Now, he didn't say thank you because I'd told him anything he
felt  grateful for. He said thank you because in Scientology you're
supposed  to verbally acknowledge anything that anyone says to you. You
use words  that show you've heard the other person — Thank you,
OK, Good, Very Good, and  so on — words that show you've heard
the other person. It's actually  quite a civilized way to talk with
people, letting them know you heard  them. So he says Thank you, then a
guy behind me says,

"How long have you been a drug addict?"

"What?!" I turned to face the guy.

"Good."

"Have you ever had unkind thoughts about L. Ron Hubbard?"

"Not a one," I answered. "Ever." But why wasn't he
personally pinning  a medal on my chest for pulling his ass out of the
financial fires?  Unless the Swiss account actually did belong to him,
in which case . . .

"OK. That read on the meter. I'll repeat the question: Have you
ever had unkind thoughts about L. Ron Hubbard?"

"Not unless you're telling me that the Religious Research
Foundation  is a bank account that funnels money into the Old Man's
pockets. Is that  what you're telling me?"

"Good. Have you ever had unkind thoughts about L. Ron Hubbard?"

For two more hours, they quizzed me about all the possible unkind 
thoughts I could ever have had about L. Ron Hubbard, until the meter 
convinced them I was OK on that score.

"Thank you. How long have you been a spy for a foreign
government?"

And they kept asking me those kinds of questions for a total of six 
hours, carefully watching the e-meter for any signs that might reveal my
evil deeds. Six hours, no evil deeds. Finally, the guy across from me 
played his ace. He said I've got a choice: I can do three years of
hard  physical labor, sleeping a maximum of six hours a night on a cold
cement  floor, eating only table scraps, and talking only with other bad
people  like me who were relegated to the months-old Rehabilitation
Project  Force. I could either do that, he said, or I could leave and be
excommunicated from the Church of Scientology for the remainder of all 
my lifetimes ahead of me. The young officer told me that he's going
to  live into the future as a hero.

"Without Scientology, you are gonna degrade into a mindless slug of
a  spiritual being. You're gonna be a body thetan, attached to the
toe of  some street bum."

So help me, that's what he said. I didn't thank him for saying
it. It  had been twelve years since I failed to acknowledge something
another  person said to me. Twelve years.

What was he saying? Sleeping on a cement floor with this neck? And he 
never answered my question about the Old Man and the Swiss bank 
account.

Twelve years.

It had to be true. Daddy was a liar and a cheat — I could deal with 
everything else about Scientology but that. My mind shattered like a 
plate glass window in a Mack Sennett comedy.

"You excommunicate me," I said, and so they did.

———-

It was January 24, 1986, when a judge handed down her approval of my 
legal name change from Albert Herman Bornstein to Katherine Vandam 
Bornstein. It was the very same day L. Ron Hubbard died.

The Commodore was seventy-five years old, living alone in a  double-wide
out on a Church-owned ranch in the desert of Southern  California. It
was a luxury trailer, but it was a trailer, and it was  the best he
could do for a hideout. The Old Man had been named as a  co-conspirator
by US government prosecutors, but he hadn't been indicted  so he was
on the lam. The government had a pretty much iron-clad case  against
more than twenty Scientologists who'd infiltrated the IRS for  years
in order, reportedly, to mine personnel files that the Church  could
leverage into getting itself a nonprofit status. Ron's wife, Mary 
Sue, had been tried and found guilty, along with ten other 
Scientologists — they were all serving time in jail. Mary Sue
Hubbard  adored Ron as deeply as my mom adored my dad. Both women
worshipped  their men, fought for their men, and placed their men above
themselves.  Mary Sue and my mother were women of a generation, and I
loved them  both. Mary Sue Hubbard was behind bars the day the love of
her life died  alone out in the desert. That's just not right.

There's a photo of L. Ron Hubbard taken just before he died. You can
find it online easily enough — it's the grainy blotchy one.
He's  disheveled and unshaven, wearing what looks like a stained
nightshirt.  His eyes are unfocused and his jaw's gone all slack.
It's heartbreaking.  Yes, yes, yes, he was a mean old man. But so
many of us held him in our  hearts like we'd hold daddy. He was a
bad daddy to be sure, but he was  daddy. No one's come forward
online to say they were there when the Old  Man was lost, or that they
held his hand and cried with him. If I'd been  there, I would have.
Adapted excerpt from A Queer and Pleasant Danger
<http://www.amazon.com/Queer-Pleasant-Danger-Jewish-Scientology/dp/08070\
01651/saloncom08-20>  by Kate Bornstein. Copyright © 2012 by Kate
Bornstein.

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