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argosciv ago

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With Operation Snow White, Operation Dynamite, Operation Daniel & Operation Freakout in mind, it's easy to consider possible, that Scientologists(and likely other parties) have also actively suppressed information pertaining to the ancestry of Harry Ross Hubbard(Henry August Wilson)'s adoptive and birth parents. Could this also partially be responsible for the name chosen by LRH's eldest son, LRH Jr, who changed his name to Ronald DeWolf?

Before we look closer at Ronald DeWolf, Bonus Trivia: The DeWolf family(Ida Corinne Dewolf) traces it's roots to Emile de Loup, son of Louis de Saint Etienne

What I'm about to show you, is two explicit examples of Scientology founder L Ron Hubbard, misappropriating & incorporating "Satanic" elements as an attempt to both amplify abusive black magick rituals he had concoted himself, and to pass the buck on to Satanism should he ever be found out or exposed, as you will read about below...

[3. wiki: Ronald DeWolf]:

Not to be confused with Roland De Wolfe.

Ronald Edward "Ron" DeWolf (born Lafayette Ronald Hubbard Jr.; May 7, 1934 – September 16, 1991), also known as "Nibs" Hubbard, was the eldest child of Scientology's founder L. Ron Hubbard by his first wife Margaret Louise Grubb.

DeWolf was highly critical of his father and of the Church of Scientology.

Early life

In his 1983 interview with Penthouse magazine, DeWolf said he was born prematurely at 2 pounds and 2 ounces after surviving an early abortion attempt; his father constructed a makeshift incubator with a shoe box, later a cupboard drawer, and used blankets and an electric light bulb to keep the baby warm.[1][2]

Relationship with his father

Hubbard, Jr. claimed to have helped his father in the early days of Scientology but later rejected his father and Scientology, quitting in 1959 and changing his name to Ronald DeWolf. On November 6, 1982 in a Riverside, California, court, DeWolf sued for control of his father's estate, saying that his father was either deceased or incompetent.[3] His reclusive father was proven to still be alive, although he never appeared in court.[4]

Comments about his father

In 1981 DeWolf wrote his autobiography The Telling of Me, by Me, which he never published.[5] After detailing how his father taught him the occult, he comments: "What the hell is Dianetics and Scientology? It's a religion. A religion of self. It's one man's religion. One man's labyrinth. A trip of L. Ron Hubbard's. A trip he lays on everyone else as 'the trip,' their trip, your trip. A science fiction story he wrote and forced into reality within the heads of others by the will of L. Ron Hubbard. The self-created fantasy of one man brought to deadly reality for others by a simple word: agreement."

In the mid-1980s, DeWolf gave a series of sworn statements and interviews detailing his father's history. DeWolf explained his father had been "deeply involved in the occult and black-magic." According to DeWolf, Aleister Crowley's death in 1947 was a pivotal event that led Hubbard to "take over the mantle of the Beast". DeWolf claimed that "Black magic is the inner core of Scientology", arguing that "my father did not worship Satan. He thought he was Satan."[6]

DeWolf claimed that "99% of what my father ever wrote or said about himself is totally untrue."[7] In a lengthy 1983 interview with Penthouse magazine, he alleged that his father had claimed to be Satan incarnate, was a KGB accomplice, and a drug addict. He also claimed that Errol Flynn was his father's best friend during the late 1950s, to the point of seeming an adoptive father to DeWolf, and the two friends engaged in various illegal activities together including drug smuggling and underage sex.[8] Speaking on WDVM in Washington, DC, in 1983, on the Carol Randolph Morning Break show, he further described the Sea Org as being analogous to the Nazi SS,[9] and described drug importation operations he alleged his father had been involved in, citing organised crime connections in Mexico and Colombia.[10] In his opinion Scientology was little more than a cult that existed to make money.[citation needed]

[4. https://www.businessinsider.com.au/l-ron-hubbard-jr-interview-in-penthouse-2015-4?r=US&IR=T | https://archive.is/1yu6w]:

Founder of Scientology's son said his dad drugged him and thought of himself as the Antichrist

Christina Sterbenz

Apr 9, 2015, 8:15 AM

image:

HBO/'Going Clear'

L. Ron Hubbard the elder

While HBO’s recent documentary “Going Clear” mostly focuses on the strange and allegedly abusive practices present in Scientology, it also chronicles the life of the religion’s founder, L. Ron Hubbard.

In a 1983 interivew with Penthouse Magazine, Hubbard’s now-deceased son, L. Ron Hubbard, Jr., made some shocking claims about his father and his own childhood.

Once considered the heir to the Scientology throne, Junior eventually defected, changed his name, and became one of the Church’s — and his father’s — most vocal critics.

Junior, later known as Ronald DeWolf, said he was born two and a half months early (weighing just two pounds, two ounces) as the result of a failed abortion by his father. After the death of Aleister Crowley, a famous English Occultist who considered himself the Antichrist, Hubbard decided he should “wear the cloak of the beast” and thought of himself as the devil incarnate, according to DeWolf.

“What a lot of people don’t realise is that Scientology is just black magic spread out over a long time,” DeWolf told Penthouse.

Heavily involved as a teenager and young man in Scientology, DeWolf said he eventually became disenchanted with the rampant hypocrisy and immorality of the church and his own father.

image:

YouTube/Mark Bunker

L. Ron Hubbard, Jr. also known as Ronald DeWolf

“I began to see that my father was a sick, sadistic, vicious man. I saw more and more parallels between his behaviour and what I read about the way Hitler thought and acted,” he told Penthouse. DeWolf said his father used excessive drugs like cocaine, peyote, amphetamines, and barbiturates.

Hubbard even encouraged his son to take drugs with him, according to DeWolf. When DeWolf was 10 years old, he said, Hubbard allegedly laced the boy’s bubble gum with phenobarbital, a heavy sedative most famous for its use in execution cocktails.

Hubbard felt the drugs helped him access black magic’s power to brainwash people, according to DeWolf.

Because of his defection, DeWolf claimed he faced years of persecution from Scientologists. He died at 57 in 1991. His grandson, Jamie DeWolf, one of the few members of the family still willing to speak out against the religion, remembers him as a warm, loving, yet guarded grandparent, the Telegraph reported.

When a Penthouse editor asked Scientology then-president Rev. Heber Jentzsch if Hubbard would respond to his son’s allegations, Jentzsch said, “I will tell you this: if I were ever asked by Mr. Hubbard, I will make sure that all of the media who have currently interviewed him [Ronald DeWolf] will never, ever, ever, get a personal interview [with Hubbard].”

According to Lawrence Wright’s book, “Going Clear: Scientology, Hollywood, and the Prison of Belief,” which sparked the HBO documentary of a similar title, the Church “fiercely disputes” Dewolf’s interview.

In 1984, Dewolf went on tape, stating his comments were accurate. Then in 1987, he signed an affidavit recanting the interview as “no more than wild flights of fancy based on my own unlimited imagination.” Five years later, Dewolf said he signed the recantation to protect his wife and kids from the church.

We reached out to the Church of Scientology for comment on the Penthouse article and will update this post if we hear back.

[5. http://lermanet.com - LRH Jr. 1983 interivew with Penthouse Magazine | https://archive.is/XmOWw]:

~~L. Ron Hubbard, Jr., is a survivor. His appearance on earth, May 7, 1934, was the result of failed abortion rituals by his father, and Ron, after only six and a half months in the womb and at 2.2 pounds entered the world. His mother, Margeret ("Polly") Grubb, was to have one more child, Catherine May, before her husband ditched her in 1946 to enter into a bigamous marnage with Sarah Northrup. A half sister, Alexis Valerie, survived that union. Soon after that, the founder of Scientology married Mary Sue Whipp, the current Mrs. L. Ron Hubbard, Sr., who at this writing is serving four years in federal prison for stealing government documents. There were four childrens: Diana and Quentin, who died under mysterious circumstances in 1976; Arthur, who has been missing for several years; and Suzette.

Ron Jr. says that he remembers much of his childhood. He claims to recall, at six years, a vivid scene of his father performing an abortion ritual on his mother with a coat hanger. He remembers that when he was ten years old, his father, in an attempt to get his son in tune with his black-magic worship, laced the young hubbard's bubble gum with phenobarbital. Drugs were an important part of Ron Jr.'s growing up, as his father believed that they were the best way to get closer to Satan --the Antichrist of black magic.~~