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Memoirs of a Scientology Warrior

Memoirs of a Scientology Warrior

byMark "Marty" Rathbun
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Top positive review

Positive reviews›
ChuckBeattyxHOEYologist75to03
5.0 out of 5 starsExperts should read this book
Reviewed in the United States on May 30, 2013
Some very important precedents, which I hope other ex leaders of Scientology do, in their future books, is discuss Hubbard's private writings.

Marty does discuss private despatch traffic that very much influenced the early 1980s tumultuous period of top ranks Scientology. The Mission All Clear (MAC) mission was the priority that we see was behind the scenes, something on Hubbard's mind, to Hubbard's final days. Marty's book includes the raw interview Marty did with Sarge Steven Pfauth, where Pfauth tells firsthand accounts and many more details about Hubbard, in Hubbard's final months. For this alone, this book is a must read, for this new Hubbard biographical info.

In all cases, experts will need to read all of the senior ex members' books. Of Marty's 3 books so far, though, for academics, I think they need read mainly this 3rd book of Marty's.

Any scholars wishing to do the whole hog study of Hubbard, there's now a growing list of good books.

Professor Dave Touretzky at Carnegie Mellon University has started online editions of most of the past several decades of critical books on Scientology.

Google "Secret Library of Scientology" for all those free online past great books.

The top two councils managing Scientology are Watchdog Committee and the Executive Strata. Books by those people (Amy Scobee, Jeff Hawkins, Nancy Many, Mark Headley, even though the last two were not technically in WDC or Exec Strata, they were in equivalent or parallel units near Scientology "top management").

Books to compare with Marty Rathbun's trio of books, will be Jesse Prince's book, when Jesse's comes out. Marty's book give leads to other major players, who hopefully will be interviewed or write their own accounts, or at least answer and comment on the major history points Marty's attributes to them. The Reisdorf sisters, Terri Gamboa, Bill Franks, Gerry Armstrong, I hope all answer Marty's take on history.

And I'm hoping Ken Urquhart, who was Hubbard's butler and Hubbard's Personal Communicator, and spent way more facetime with Hubbard compared to Marty Rathbun, will be coming out with Ken's memoirs I hope, before Ken dies.

Of the ex member leader's books, this final book in Marty's trio of books, if you aren't an expert, maybe wait until the price comes down, since 19 bucks is awfully high for a very thin paper back.

This book is for well informed Scientology watchers. Marty's blindspots on some aspects of Scientology's legal history, particularly Marty has a conspiracy view of the US Justice Dept officials, which seems preposterous. To me, it seems more that Scientology was so believed to be a con job fraudulent "religion" that the Scientology movement was even fair game to the US Justice Dept hush hush sting operations. Had Scientologist leaders had amongst them wiser heads, but with Hubbard still alive, and Hubbard spouting science fiction fantasy as if that were truth, I cannot blame the US Justice Dept from being as skeptical as they were about Scientology. Marty's chapters on his dealings with the mafia and US Justice Dept are excellent stories none the less.

The "Farsec" discussion, is worth the book alone, for experts. There were numerous other despatches from Hubbard, I know, I read many others similar to the Farsec despatch, which are important for judging Hubbard, from Hubbard's viewpoint of himself and the universe.

The discussion of Pat Broeker's final writings that Hubbard authorized, which told a nice story, a nice story that had to be rescinded from the membership, is important to hear the behind the scenes details of that story.

Buy and read if you are an expert, or just curious, and you're in the ex Scientologist community and know who Marty is.

Marty was once a "small cheeze" on the rise up, and because he worked on the communication lines, and worked close to the Commodore's Messengers who were battling, sort of, amongst themselves for supremacy, in those crucial moments when L. Ron Hubbard "moved off the lines", Marty was there, and his chapters 11, 12 and 13 are worth the price of the book, though, for experts and the curious for another insider viewpoint for the 1979 - 1981 years, at La Quinta and the Hemet secret headquarters.

Chapter 14 is worth the price of the book, and a must read for experts. I hope this chapter alone draws Bill Franks and Terri Gamboa into discussions about what Marty's written. Bill was the Executive Director International. Terri was Marty's superior during this period and for the following years when Terri was the Executive Director of ASI.

Marty's detailing the exact moment when current leader David Miscavige inserted himself into the communication line between Hubbard, who was in hiding, and the other leaders where Marty was stationed, is excellent.

It's a complicated story, but experts who've followed the details for years from other accounts, will appreciate what Marty explains. I'm sure some of what Marty says will be challenged by Bill Franks and Terri, though. Other Commodore's Messengers, now out, like the Reisdorf sisters, and Janis Grady, there is much additional information out. Experts should google "Gang of Five" articles, on the Scientology-Cult website, for some of the best information from the viewpoint of the LRH messengers who lived David Miscavige's "power push", when Miscavige was blaming Bill Franks as being one of the heads of what Hubbard accepted as the "power push" against Scientology. Marty's Epilogue does a tying together and brings in the power push theme again, and pins the power push pattern much on Hubbard.

To Marty's credit, in the eyes of harsh critics of Scientology's patent ludicrousness, Marty takes aim at several of the pillars of Hubbard's organized church, and Hubbard's own major hand in the power push politics that always was existent at the top of the movement. Sounds like Terri Gamboa behind the scenes has talked to Marty, and another reason I hope Terri someday writes or lets a good writer more in depth historian of Scientology history interview her more extensively.

Marty's book explains the weaknesses of the personalities around Hubbard, including Mary Sue, and gives an account of the reasons things went as they did.

Too bad Mary Sue is dead and cannot speak her thoughts. In any event, Marty's praise of Mary Sue for her loyalty to Hubbard, and some of Marty's positive firsthand stories about Mary Sue are important additions to Scientology history.

For beginners, this book isn't worth the 19 bucks, unless you have that kind of expendable income, and have an interest in some very fine details of the top ranks turmoil in the Scientology movement.

Beginners ought to read Lawrence Wright's "Going Clear" instead, if you are just trying as a newbie to get a grip on Scientology's first 60 or so years of existence!

Wright broke some blockbuster news, gotten from Sarge Steven Pfauth, the man who was Hubbard's security and ranch hand and friend and a Scientologist who lived and cooked and did errands for Hubbard, for Hubbard's final years. Pfauth signed Hubbard's death certificate. Marty's interview with Pfauth gives even more details of Hubbard's final years and month of life, compared to Wright's "Going Clear."

But this book is far better and more insightful about Marty's own character, even people who thought they knew Marty, will find a lot more to Mark Marty Rathbun reading this more personal book which covers a lot of his life's struggles and why Scientology suited him, as well as his disagreements with Scientology's ways.

And it will hopefully cause more of the ex senior leaders go public, hopefully, of more of that tumultuous period in the late 1970s and early to mid 1980s in Scientology upper history, as Hubbard was drawing away from full control of the movement.

It's a must read book for experts.

Left to go, in terms of senior ex leaders of the Scientology movement, would be books by Pat Broeker, the Reisdorf sisters and Terri Gamboa. All of whom Marty's book takes up these people. I hope they are stirred to comment and add history, especially Pat Broeker and Terri Gamboa.
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14 people found this helpful

Top critical review

Critical reviews›
nyctc7
3.0 out of 5 starsA Disappointment
Reviewed in the United States on July 15, 2013
I ordered the book with much anticipation as Rathbun was a top lieutenant of David Miscavige and would make for compelling reading.

It takes Rathbun almost 50 pages to get to his first encounter with Scientology. On the one hand it is interesting to read about his background, so we know where he is coming from. But he does go into much unnecessary detail about his teenage basketball exploits and some other things as well. Rathbun spent his preteen/teen years in Laguna Beach California in the late 1960s to early 1970s and the area in that era is described far better in Orange Sunshine: The Brotherhood of Eternal Love and Its Quest to Spread Peace, Love, and Acid to the World. Rathbun is at times a good writer, but for a project such as this--a real book--as opposed to blog writing--I think he would have greatly benefited from a co-writer or editor experienced with the memoir/autobiography genre.

The experience of joining the Sea Org and what life is like there is described far better, far more compellingly, and much more interestingly in books like Marc Headley's Blown for Good, Jefferson Hawkins' Counterfeit Dreams, and John Duignan's The Complex.

What "Memoirs" ends up being is a sort of (perhaps unintentional) attempt at a legal thriller. Much of the book is a fairly dull recounting of Rathbun's role as organizer and coordinator of defending the COS against lawsuits. While not an attorney himself, Rathbun is put in charge of overseeing it all. But this is no "A Civil Action" or John Grisham novel. Much of it, as I said, makes for fairly dull reading.

Rathbun also spends a bit too much time trying to explain Scientology, and there is in my opinion too much space devoted to quotes from Hubbard, whether musings or Scientology "scripture". That is not what I bought the book for.

But there are more than a few interesting passages, enough for me to give the book 3 stars. However I feel the book is a missed opportunity to get a really compelling behind-the-scenes look at the people and personalities that made up the top of the COS hierarchy. From the book: "I did not witness the Mission Holder's conference first-hand, nor the Mayo-Nelson takedown. It would be years later before [I heard about it]...I was too busy fighting in the trenches, fighting the war..." Well, from reading the book, it seems that what Rathbun did in this war was deathly dull legal work, filing endless motions, that sort of thing. The COS spent millions defending lawsuits that they could have settled for a song, and Rathbun knows it. But he is powerless to change the strategy.

I was also expecting the book to be about Rathbun's complete career in Scientology (the title suggests as much), yet the book ends upon the death of Hubbard. There is a short epilogue and Rathbun mentions that he has mostly written about his post-Hubbard Sea Org career elsewhere. I found this a bit odd; I suppose readers of Rathbun's other two books won't mind, but as I have not read them, I was left wanting less about his early, pre-Scientology life, less about the lawsuits, and more about the COS under Miscavige.

Rathbun himself is an interesting figure, no doubt. He comes across in interviews as soft-spoken, intelligent, and insightful. Yet he was a right-hand-man to the evil David Miscavige, and is pretty unapologetic about it all (only very recently, when he pretty much had to move away from his Texas apartment because he was being spied upon by the COS, did he say that it was sort of Karma what was being done to him).
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From the United States

ChuckBeattyxHOEYologist75to03
5.0 out of 5 stars Experts should read this book
Reviewed in the United States on May 30, 2013
Verified Purchase
Some very important precedents, which I hope other ex leaders of Scientology do, in their future books, is discuss Hubbard's private writings.

Marty does discuss private despatch traffic that very much influenced the early 1980s tumultuous period of top ranks Scientology. The Mission All Clear (MAC) mission was the priority that we see was behind the scenes, something on Hubbard's mind, to Hubbard's final days. Marty's book includes the raw interview Marty did with Sarge Steven Pfauth, where Pfauth tells firsthand accounts and many more details about Hubbard, in Hubbard's final months. For this alone, this book is a must read, for this new Hubbard biographical info.

In all cases, experts will need to read all of the senior ex members' books. Of Marty's 3 books so far, though, for academics, I think they need read mainly this 3rd book of Marty's.

Any scholars wishing to do the whole hog study of Hubbard, there's now a growing list of good books.

Professor Dave Touretzky at Carnegie Mellon University has started online editions of most of the past several decades of critical books on Scientology.

Google "Secret Library of Scientology" for all those free online past great books.

The top two councils managing Scientology are Watchdog Committee and the Executive Strata. Books by those people (Amy Scobee, Jeff Hawkins, Nancy Many, Mark Headley, even though the last two were not technically in WDC or Exec Strata, they were in equivalent or parallel units near Scientology "top management").

Books to compare with Marty Rathbun's trio of books, will be Jesse Prince's book, when Jesse's comes out. Marty's book give leads to other major players, who hopefully will be interviewed or write their own accounts, or at least answer and comment on the major history points Marty's attributes to them. The Reisdorf sisters, Terri Gamboa, Bill Franks, Gerry Armstrong, I hope all answer Marty's take on history.

And I'm hoping Ken Urquhart, who was Hubbard's butler and Hubbard's Personal Communicator, and spent way more facetime with Hubbard compared to Marty Rathbun, will be coming out with Ken's memoirs I hope, before Ken dies.

Of the ex member leader's books, this final book in Marty's trio of books, if you aren't an expert, maybe wait until the price comes down, since 19 bucks is awfully high for a very thin paper back.

This book is for well informed Scientology watchers. Marty's blindspots on some aspects of Scientology's legal history, particularly Marty has a conspiracy view of the US Justice Dept officials, which seems preposterous. To me, it seems more that Scientology was so believed to be a con job fraudulent "religion" that the Scientology movement was even fair game to the US Justice Dept hush hush sting operations. Had Scientologist leaders had amongst them wiser heads, but with Hubbard still alive, and Hubbard spouting science fiction fantasy as if that were truth, I cannot blame the US Justice Dept from being as skeptical as they were about Scientology. Marty's chapters on his dealings with the mafia and US Justice Dept are excellent stories none the less.

The "Farsec" discussion, is worth the book alone, for experts. There were numerous other despatches from Hubbard, I know, I read many others similar to the Farsec despatch, which are important for judging Hubbard, from Hubbard's viewpoint of himself and the universe.

The discussion of Pat Broeker's final writings that Hubbard authorized, which told a nice story, a nice story that had to be rescinded from the membership, is important to hear the behind the scenes details of that story.

Buy and read if you are an expert, or just curious, and you're in the ex Scientologist community and know who Marty is.

Marty was once a "small cheeze" on the rise up, and because he worked on the communication lines, and worked close to the Commodore's Messengers who were battling, sort of, amongst themselves for supremacy, in those crucial moments when L. Ron Hubbard "moved off the lines", Marty was there, and his chapters 11, 12 and 13 are worth the price of the book, though, for experts and the curious for another insider viewpoint for the 1979 - 1981 years, at La Quinta and the Hemet secret headquarters.

Chapter 14 is worth the price of the book, and a must read for experts. I hope this chapter alone draws Bill Franks and Terri Gamboa into discussions about what Marty's written. Bill was the Executive Director International. Terri was Marty's superior during this period and for the following years when Terri was the Executive Director of ASI.

Marty's detailing the exact moment when current leader David Miscavige inserted himself into the communication line between Hubbard, who was in hiding, and the other leaders where Marty was stationed, is excellent.

It's a complicated story, but experts who've followed the details for years from other accounts, will appreciate what Marty explains. I'm sure some of what Marty says will be challenged by Bill Franks and Terri, though. Other Commodore's Messengers, now out, like the Reisdorf sisters, and Janis Grady, there is much additional information out. Experts should google "Gang of Five" articles, on the Scientology-Cult website, for some of the best information from the viewpoint of the LRH messengers who lived David Miscavige's "power push", when Miscavige was blaming Bill Franks as being one of the heads of what Hubbard accepted as the "power push" against Scientology. Marty's Epilogue does a tying together and brings in the power push theme again, and pins the power push pattern much on Hubbard.

To Marty's credit, in the eyes of harsh critics of Scientology's patent ludicrousness, Marty takes aim at several of the pillars of Hubbard's organized church, and Hubbard's own major hand in the power push politics that always was existent at the top of the movement. Sounds like Terri Gamboa behind the scenes has talked to Marty, and another reason I hope Terri someday writes or lets a good writer more in depth historian of Scientology history interview her more extensively.

Marty's book explains the weaknesses of the personalities around Hubbard, including Mary Sue, and gives an account of the reasons things went as they did.

Too bad Mary Sue is dead and cannot speak her thoughts. In any event, Marty's praise of Mary Sue for her loyalty to Hubbard, and some of Marty's positive firsthand stories about Mary Sue are important additions to Scientology history.

For beginners, this book isn't worth the 19 bucks, unless you have that kind of expendable income, and have an interest in some very fine details of the top ranks turmoil in the Scientology movement.

Beginners ought to read Lawrence Wright's "Going Clear" instead, if you are just trying as a newbie to get a grip on Scientology's first 60 or so years of existence!

Wright broke some blockbuster news, gotten from Sarge Steven Pfauth, the man who was Hubbard's security and ranch hand and friend and a Scientologist who lived and cooked and did errands for Hubbard, for Hubbard's final years. Pfauth signed Hubbard's death certificate. Marty's interview with Pfauth gives even more details of Hubbard's final years and month of life, compared to Wright's "Going Clear."

But this book is far better and more insightful about Marty's own character, even people who thought they knew Marty, will find a lot more to Mark Marty Rathbun reading this more personal book which covers a lot of his life's struggles and why Scientology suited him, as well as his disagreements with Scientology's ways.

And it will hopefully cause more of the ex senior leaders go public, hopefully, of more of that tumultuous period in the late 1970s and early to mid 1980s in Scientology upper history, as Hubbard was drawing away from full control of the movement.

It's a must read book for experts.

Left to go, in terms of senior ex leaders of the Scientology movement, would be books by Pat Broeker, the Reisdorf sisters and Terri Gamboa. All of whom Marty's book takes up these people. I hope they are stirred to comment and add history, especially Pat Broeker and Terri Gamboa.
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nyctc7
3.0 out of 5 stars A Disappointment
Reviewed in the United States on July 15, 2013
Verified Purchase
I ordered the book with much anticipation as Rathbun was a top lieutenant of David Miscavige and would make for compelling reading.

It takes Rathbun almost 50 pages to get to his first encounter with Scientology. On the one hand it is interesting to read about his background, so we know where he is coming from. But he does go into much unnecessary detail about his teenage basketball exploits and some other things as well. Rathbun spent his preteen/teen years in Laguna Beach California in the late 1960s to early 1970s and the area in that era is described far better in Orange Sunshine: The Brotherhood of Eternal Love and Its Quest to Spread Peace, Love, and Acid to the World. Rathbun is at times a good writer, but for a project such as this--a real book--as opposed to blog writing--I think he would have greatly benefited from a co-writer or editor experienced with the memoir/autobiography genre.

The experience of joining the Sea Org and what life is like there is described far better, far more compellingly, and much more interestingly in books like Marc Headley's Blown for Good, Jefferson Hawkins' Counterfeit Dreams, and John Duignan's The Complex.

What "Memoirs" ends up being is a sort of (perhaps unintentional) attempt at a legal thriller. Much of the book is a fairly dull recounting of Rathbun's role as organizer and coordinator of defending the COS against lawsuits. While not an attorney himself, Rathbun is put in charge of overseeing it all. But this is no "A Civil Action" or John Grisham novel. Much of it, as I said, makes for fairly dull reading.

Rathbun also spends a bit too much time trying to explain Scientology, and there is in my opinion too much space devoted to quotes from Hubbard, whether musings or Scientology "scripture". That is not what I bought the book for.

But there are more than a few interesting passages, enough for me to give the book 3 stars. However I feel the book is a missed opportunity to get a really compelling behind-the-scenes look at the people and personalities that made up the top of the COS hierarchy. From the book: "I did not witness the Mission Holder's conference first-hand, nor the Mayo-Nelson takedown. It would be years later before [I heard about it]...I was too busy fighting in the trenches, fighting the war..." Well, from reading the book, it seems that what Rathbun did in this war was deathly dull legal work, filing endless motions, that sort of thing. The COS spent millions defending lawsuits that they could have settled for a song, and Rathbun knows it. But he is powerless to change the strategy.

I was also expecting the book to be about Rathbun's complete career in Scientology (the title suggests as much), yet the book ends upon the death of Hubbard. There is a short epilogue and Rathbun mentions that he has mostly written about his post-Hubbard Sea Org career elsewhere. I found this a bit odd; I suppose readers of Rathbun's other two books won't mind, but as I have not read them, I was left wanting less about his early, pre-Scientology life, less about the lawsuits, and more about the COS under Miscavige.

Rathbun himself is an interesting figure, no doubt. He comes across in interviews as soft-spoken, intelligent, and insightful. Yet he was a right-hand-man to the evil David Miscavige, and is pretty unapologetic about it all (only very recently, when he pretty much had to move away from his Texas apartment because he was being spied upon by the COS, did he say that it was sort of Karma what was being done to him).
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Mark J. Patterson
5.0 out of 5 stars Compelling story of the good, and the bad, of Scientology
Reviewed in the United States on September 13, 2013
Verified Purchase
I read the book soon after it came out. Each person who comes into Scientology has their own story of why they became a Scientologist in the first place, and the battle scars that they have collected over the years of their involvement. Marty was in a unique position of being being lost in the weeds of the day-to-day trials and tribulations of the era directly before L. Ron Hubbard's death. As I was reading this section of the book, I couldn't help thinking "what does this have to do with Scientology?" And, of course, that is the point. The legal maneuverings, the tactics of trying to "protect" Scientology, the scorched-Earth approach to litigation, had nothing to do with Scientology. It was a bunch of kids, over their heads, doing whatever they could to make Ron able to show up in public again. Marty soon quit being a Scientologist and instead became a warrior for L. Ron Hubbard and David Miscavige. There is a difference.

A lot of people wonder "what does anyone see in Scientology? What could possibly be the lure?" Marty answers that incredibly well in chapter five. Chapter five captures the essence of what Scientology was like, and why it was good. This alone is worth the price of the book.

Marty's faithful reproduction of his interview with Steve "Sarge" Pfauth about the last days of Ron Hubbard are required reading. There are a lot of myths (pro and con) out there regarding Mr. Hubbard, and Pfauth's account helps to deflate at least some of them.

Whether or not you are a Scientologist, the story of Scientology is fascinating. This book is a must-read for anyone interested in the subject.
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Stephen R. Devoy
4.0 out of 5 stars I would recommend this
Reviewed in the United States on January 11, 2016
Verified Purchase
I'm a little surprised by reviews critical of the fact that the author still embraces to basic philosophy of Scientology. I don't see how that is relevant in the process of rating the book. I also do not understand how anyone could be critical of the life details in the first five chapters, after all, this is a memoir, what does a reader expect?

I found the book to be very informative and it provides a very deep presentation of the structure of the "church" and how that structure changed over time. It exposes the ethical impairments of the "church's" hierarchy and the unethical means it uses to crush dissent and criticism. Most of all, it alleges many character flaws of the "church's" present leader, David Miscavige. Finally, it explains why the "church" is in decline and how its future, under Mr. Miscavige, appears dim.

It was well worth the money I paid for it and the time I spent reading it. I would recommend this book
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Kindle Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars For the curious or formerly hard core
Reviewed in the United States on June 26, 2013
Verified Purchase
By far the best book by former #2 man in the Church of Scientology. Despite official scientology, those of us who were involved at various levels know full well that Marty Rathbun was a highly respected, feared and dedicated senior official in the Church.

He writes this memoir from his heart - pouring out his early years. The loss of his mother, his love of sports and his failed attempts to save his brother from a life time of psychiatric institutions.

Along the way, Marty revels his thoughts about what happened to Hubbard. How he became a victim of his own philosophy. Why he created ultimately a draconian organization, intended to save him from those who might harm the organization only to find himself in the end virtually alone and afraid.

One is even left feeling sorry for the man who has become to many the nemesis of "true" scientology -- David Miscavige. Himself a 2nd generation scientologist, DM is a man caught up through misplaced devotion and his own delusions in a web of intrigue, abject fear of everyone and an iron fist -- made of diamonds he's ensured are his to wear.

Definitely read this book. You'll learn a great deal. I did and I've been following the unwrapping of the Church of Scientology for over 20 years after being a member for the prior 20.
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Steve Harrison
VINE VOICE
3.0 out of 5 stars For Believers Only
Reviewed in the United States on July 31, 2013
Verified Purchase
The key to understanding this book is that its title is truthful: the author, while no longer a top official of the Church of Scientology, is -- still -- a Scientology Warrior. This is not of the "I-was-a-Scientologist-until-I-realized-it-is-phony" genre.

Rathbun is a true believer. He compares L. Ron Hubbard to the Buddha. His descriptions of Scientology's teachings are supportive and sympathetic. He even seems to accept the Xenu story, suggesting that it is in essence consistent with Gnostic philosophy (which is true, though the same can be said more convincingly of Mormonism; in any event, Rathbun does not explain why the fact that it echoes a recurrently-popular idea over two thousand years old proves that it was a cosmic insight of L. Ron Hubbard). The books' theme is that David Miscavige has perverted and largely destroyed a religion that could have brought wisdom and health to the world, mostly by defeating psychiatrists. Rathbun's animus against them stems from his dislike of the psychiatrist who treated his brother, who was apparently psychotic; this is a principal subject of the book's five introductory biographical chapters, which is, with all due respect, about three too many. They do explain, though, that like so many of the people who have joined and left Scientology Rathbun was a rootless child from a dysfunctional family who lacked education beyond High School.

Much of the book deals with Rathbun's involvement in coordinating legal matters, mostly lawsuits against Hubbard and Scientology. Although he has no legal training his experience gave him a good understanding of litigation. His descriptions of law, procedure, and strategy, as well as of the kinds of debates and discussions that go on behind the scenes before and during trials, are accurate.

The book discusses a few of Scientology's embarrassing episodes and acknowledges that they occurred with Hubbard's knowledge and approval, and generally at his inspiration. But it presents them as unfortunate excesses committed as overreactions to nefarious acts of Scientology's vicious and unprincipled "enemies," including psychiatrists, law enforcement, and various state and federal government agencies. Rathbun tells us that he has seen documents proving that the psychiatrists, etc., did lots of bad things but that the documents couldn't actually be revealed, you see, because even though they were stolen by Scientologists (one of those unfortunate excesses) to prove these things, revealing them would harm Scientology.

The book's editors are Scientologist friends of Rathbun; his prose is clear and easily-read but a professional might have pointed out that it does not always recognize where real English stops and Scientology jargon begins. The proofreading is not perfect; there are, at least at the moment, a few typos and places where information is repeated, clearly inadvertently, but not enough to be bothersome.
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Frik Blaauw
5.0 out of 5 stars Wow! This will go down as one of those that wrote history
Reviewed in the United States on March 19, 2014
Verified Purchase
Mark's personal background that got him into Scientology is no different to so many others. And at the lower levels it helps and provides the hope of the spiritual freedom that Scientology promises.

And then Mark rose to the senior management and got embroiled in the war that the movement faced from many governmental and interest groups who did not want free people. It is so much easier to control people who are non-thinking slaves, isn't it? And then the saga of the end of the founder of Scientology, L Ron Hubbard's live approaches and the in-fighting of succession resulted in very, very dirty tactics by the winning group, who then continued to use those tactics to not only consolidate their position, but have perverted the church into a money-making machine! And the leader, David Miscaviage, now rules a multi-billion empire, answerable to no one.

And Mark was witness to the inhumane, criminal, and sociopathic actions by Miscaviage. Mark escaped from the Church, only to be harrassed, followed, hounded by this cult and their leader.

Where will this end?
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Dean J. Detheridge
5.0 out of 5 stars Balanced perspective re-gained
Reviewed in the United States on July 4, 2013
Verified Purchase
It's been roughly 3 weeks since I finished Marty's latest book. I started on a Friday evening and finished the following morning. I made myself unavailable and unreachable until I reached the back cover.

The book answered all the nagging questions I had regarding what went wrong. Ironically, Hubbard said in an early lecture that every living thing carries the germ of its own demise. I believe Marty spots the germs Hubbard himself implanted - no pun intended.

But it also gave Marty's very personal experience with how very right many core aspects of the subject are; and which kept him fighting the good fight. The parallels with my Scn-staff experience were many.

I had personally believed Hubbard missed or under-evaluated one axiom: "Absolute power corrupts absolutely" . But its never just one datum that derails a subject.

Thanks Marty. And as I keep an eye on your blog - I'd like to take this opportunity to thank Mosey.

As tough as Marty is I have my doubts he could of weathered these last several years without you.
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brian
4.0 out of 5 stars What a wild ride
Reviewed in the United States on June 1, 2013
Verified Purchase
This book is a non stop roller coaster ride. What an amazing look into the bowels of the Scientology power beast. Here, saving the world can surely end up looking like cookoo land. I highly recommend reading this war time story of the "religion" that seeks destruction of critics.

But all Marty really wanted to do is help his brother and he ended up an intel operative and legal rat fighting cosmic bad guys for the "only hope for man".

I know people love to hate Marty or put him up on some pedestal. But I gained an empathy for him by understanding the karmic forces that jettisoned him into cookoo land.

I applaud his intimate candor and sensitivity as a boy and cringed at the way he was rocketed, as a young man, into the hypnotic influence of cult metntality.

I recommend this book.
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Robin
5.0 out of 5 stars AMAZING and UNSETTLING BOOK
Reviewed in the United States on November 19, 2013
Verified Purchase
A must read for any Scientologist of any stripe. I said on Marty's blog that LRH's end was a Shakespearean tragedy: ill, isolated, and without Mary Sue, there he was, an aging genius with David Miscaviage whispering poison in his ear. And I said he lost his purpose before his demise. I was wrong about something: his purpose was blocked. Once I read and assimilated this book, I see how much he was to blame for his own condition. I suppose his ego got in the way of his not seeing DM for who he really was.

Thank you Marty for having the courage to write your story. I really enjoyed the personal early stuff as well. I have at least 3 other people lined up to buy and read this book. My OT friend, who I got back together with, is very charged up about the church, so I got her started on your book 1. She is experiencing relief already....
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