SHOCKING: The Occult Empire – How Black Magic and ...

SHOCKING: The Occult Empire – How Black Magic and Satanic Rituals Created Scientology 🔥

What Hollywood Stars Don’t Want You to Know: The Demonic Roots of Scientology Exposed 😱

In a revelation that reads like the darkest thriller, one of the world’s leading experts on Scientology has pulled back the curtain on the sinister occult foundations of the controversial organization that counts Hollywood A-listers among its most devoted followers.

Former insider and acclaimed researcher Jon Atack has laid bare how L.

Ron Hubbard, the man who founded Scientology, was not merely a science fiction writer chasing riches but a practicing black magician deeply immersed in the rituals of Aleister Crowley, the self-proclaimed wickedest man in the world.


Atack, who has spent decades studying Hubbard’s life and the inner workings of the Church of Scientology, reveals that Hubbard’s fascination with the occult began early.

By age sixteen, he had already devoured Crowley’s infamous Book of the Law.



He joined the Ancient and Mystical Order of the Rosy Cross and later became convinced he was the successor to Crowley’s legacy as the Beast 666, the Antichrist, and Lucifer himself.


The most explosive chapter in this hidden history unfolded in January 1946.

While still on terminal leave from the Navy, Hubbard moved into the Pasadena home of Jack Parsons, a brilliant rocket scientist and co-founder of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at Caltech.

Parsons was a devoted follower of Crowley’s teachings.

Together, Hubbard and Parsons conducted a notorious sex magic ritual known as the Babylon Working.

Its goal was nothing less than summoning the Scarlet Woman described in the Book of Revelation — the destroyer of mankind — to incarnate the Antichrist on Earth.

This was no casual experiment.

The ceremony followed the eighth degree of the Ordo Templi Orientis, Crowley’s elite magical order.

Atack notes that Parsons even recorded the rituals, leaving behind transcripts that survive to this day.

Hubbard, however, soon betrayed his partner.



He ran off with Parsons’ girlfriend — who was also his sister-in-law — and convinced Parsons to hand over his life savings of $35,000.

Hubbard used the money to buy yachts and launch a short-lived business venture.

Parsons never fully recovered his fortune despite winning a court judgment.

These events were not isolated quirks in Hubbard’s past.

Atack explains that Hubbard openly referenced Crowley in his 1952 Philadelphia Doctorate Course lectures, describing him as a close influence and defending his practices.

Throughout Scientology’s development, Hubbard wove in core elements of Crowley’s philosophy, particularly the use of intention and will to control others.

The ultimate goal of Scientology’s highest levels, Atack reveals, is to reach the state of Operating Thetan where one can allegedly command matter, energy, space, and time through pure intention.

Yet the darkest secret came years later.

In 1988, two years after Hubbard’s death, the Church released Operating Thetan Level Eight.

A bulletin that was quickly withdrawn stated explicitly that Hubbard declared himself the Antichrist and Lucifer.

This came from the same man who had spent decades promising followers god-like powers while building a multi-million dollar empire.

Atack draws chilling parallels between Scientology’s techniques and government mind control programs of the same era.

Founded in 1953, the same year the CIA launched MK-Ultra, Scientology blended occult ritual with sophisticated psychological manipulation.

Hubbard boasted that his methods could brainwash people faster than the Russians or Chinese, achieving total amnesia in seconds.

Atack argues that Scientology’s auditing processes, with their intense questioning and past-life regression, served as powerful tools for control.

The most disturbing connection Atack uncovers involves one of America’s most notorious criminals.

Charles Manson spent fourteen months deeply engaged in Scientology studies in 1961 and 1962 under a professionally trained auditor named Lanier Ramer.

Manson absorbed techniques including past-life auditing.

Atack believes this directly contributed to Manson’s conviction that he was the reincarnation of Jesus — the “Son of Man.

” Manson reportedly enacted realistic crucifixions in front of his followers while they were under the influence of LSD.

Manson never abandoned these practices.

Former Family members confirm he continued using Scientology-derived methods to maintain absolute control over his followers.

The same emphasis on past lives that Crowley championed and Hubbard incorporated became central to Manson’s delusional messianic identity.

Atack paints a complex portrait of Hubbard himself.

Far from a confident conman, Hubbard suffered lifelong illnesses including asthma, ulcers, and poor eyesight.

He was likely bipolar and possibly afflicted with temporal lobe epilepsy, conditions that fueled both his grand visions and deep depressions.

In manic states, he claimed to receive automatic writing from an entity called the Empress and conversed with supernatural beings.

In darker periods, he cowered in bed, overwhelmed by failure.

Despite these struggles, Hubbard maintained a ruthless understanding of human psychology.

In the Philadelphia Doctorate Course, he openly described life as a game in which players must keep the rules hidden from the pieces.

Atack interprets David Miscavige, current leader of Scientology, as the current player keeping the true nature of the organization hidden from ordinary members.

Hubbard’s worship of ancient deities adds another layer of intrigue.

A handwritten blood ritual document uncovered from his private archives shows a pact with the Egyptian goddess Hathor, known in magical traditions as the destroyer of mankind.

Hathor, linked to the Empress card in Crowley’s Tarot deck, became central to Hubbard’s personal mythology.

He even named his daughter Diana after the Roman equivalent and called his first major work Dianetics.

Atack emphasizes that most Scientologists, including high-profile celebrities like Tom Cruise, remain unaware of these origins.

The organization rephrases occult concepts — replacing Crowley’s “Thelema” or will with “intention” — while promising supernatural abilities that never materialize.

Members pour hundreds of thousands of dollars into courses, chasing the Operating Thetan state where they believe they can move objects with their minds or influence reality at will.

When confronted with evidence, many Scientologists experience intense cognitive dissonance.

Atack, who has helped hundreds of people leave the organization through careful interventions, describes the psychological barriers as formidable.

He compares the process to gently providing missing information in a safe environment rather than direct confrontation.

The financial empire Hubbard left behind speaks volumes.

Upon his death in 1986, he bequeathed hundreds of millions of dollars, much of it funneled into organizations dedicated solely to preserving his name and writings.

Atack sees this as Hubbard’s ultimate success in his stated goal: smashing his name into history.

Yet Atack warns that Scientology’s methods of psychological enslavement remain among the most effective ever devised.

Even those who leave often carry lingering beliefs that require years to unpack.

The organization’s aggressive response to critics, including harassment and lawsuits, has silenced many voices over the decades.

This hidden history raises profound questions about belief, power, and manipulation.

How can a system rooted in black magic and satanic ritual continue to attract intelligent, wealthy followers in the modern world? Atack suggests the answer lies in humanity’s deep desire for power, immortality, and meaning.

Hubbard promised followers they were already gods, merely needing to unlock their true potential.

The price was total surrender to his vision.

As more former members speak out and researchers like Atack continue to expose the truth, the carefully constructed image of Scientology as a benevolent self-improvement movement cracks wider.

The celebrities who promote it may never fully understand the demonic foundations upon which their church was built.

The story of L.Ron Hubbard is ultimately a cautionary tale about the dangers of unchecked charisma combined with occult obsession.

From the Babylon Working in 1946 to the secret OT VIII materials in 1988, the thread of dark magic runs straight through the heart of Scientology.

Atack’s groundbreaking research forces us to confront an uncomfortable reality: sometimes the most dangerous beliefs are those dressed in the language of enlightenment.

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