It is all very well to sit back and hope for "the best in this best of all possible worlds" but it's the course of personal and national suicide. Unl… - L. Ron Hubbard

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It is all very well to sit back and hope for "the best in this best of all possible worlds" but it's the course of personal and national suicide.
Unless there is a vast alteration in man's civilization as it stumbles along today, man will not be here very long and none of us. Times must change.

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About L. Ron Hubbard

Lafayette Ronald Hubbard (13 March 1911 – 24 January 1986) was an American science fiction author. He developed Dianetics and founded Scientology. He was the father of Ron DeWolfe.

Also Known As

Pen Names: W.R. Colt Winchester Remington Colt Lt. Jonathan Daly Tom Esterbrook Capt. Charles Gordon Capt. L. Ron Hubbard Ron Hubbard Bernard Hubbel Michael Keith George Kellogg Rene Lafayette Lt. Scott Morgan Legionnaire 148 Legionnaire 14830 Capt. B.A. Northrop Barry Randolph Kurt von Rachen Capt. Humbert Reynolds John Seabrook Mr. Spectator
Native Name: Lafayette Ronald Hubbard
Alternative Names: LRH Ron

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Additional quotes by L. Ron Hubbard

Leukemia is evidently psychosomatic in origin and at least eight cases of leukemia had been treated successfully by Dianetics after medicine had traditionally given up. The source of leukemia has been reported to be an engram containing the phrase 'It turns my blood to water.'

Rate of change is this mathematics known as Calculus. … Now I hope you understand this, because I've never been able to make head nor tail of it. It must be some sort of a Black Magic operation, started out by the Luce cult — some immoral people who are operating up in New York City, Rockefeller Plaza — been thoroughly condemned by the whole society. Anyway, their rate-of-change theory — I've never seen any use for that mathematics, by the way — I love that mathematics, because it — I asked an engineer, one time, who was in his 6th year of engineering, if he'd ever used Calculus, and he told me yeah, once, once I did, he said. When did you use it? And he said I used it once. Let me see, what did you use it on? Oh yeah. Something on the rate-of-change of steam particles in boilers. And then we went out and tested it and found the answer was wrong.

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