I don't know yet who asked him to come, it wasn't me of course. It
weren't the Munich psychs either, because they kicked him out. They
did not let him see me, because he was an American psych! (I believe
he died in 1999.)
He was a Scientology attacker, so what were the Germans afraid of? If
I really would have been insane, it should not matter from what
country the psychs are, because all should be able to recognize the
insanity, right? Isn't insanity or sanity the same all over the world?
Psych Clark was Harward educated, but that was apparenly not good
enough for the German psychs to recognize the "mental health problem"
I "suffered" from. Actually, people say that Clark knew a lot about
Scientologists, that Scientologists were his "speciality". So, why
would the German psychs and government not let such an "expert" see
me? - I tell you why: Because I was everything else than insane, and
they were afraid that this could be revealed. (I believe that if they
would have treated psych Clark nicely, he would have even gone along
and lied about me together with them, because there are Americans that
behave just like the German poodles. But the Germans are so fanatical
that they make only mistakes.)
RB wrote: "If I would have known that Professor Clark was in the
institution, I would have lay myself in front of the door!"
What does this mean? Why was I institutionalized for eight months and
not RB?
RB wanted Clark to see me, because she thought as more psychs are
around me, as better for me. (She however doesn't think that anymore.
By using me as experiment, she found out what I told her for years,
that the psychs are rotten to the bones.)
The Munich psychs did not tell me who wanted to see me. But note, I
was not in any isolation. German anti-Scientologists had access,
against my will, to me right from the start. Otherwise I was
constantly surrounded by 12 obnoxious women (that were not crazy, but
rather acted being crazy) and by their also obnoxious visitors and
nasty and corrupt hospital staff.
Read more in the next installment.
Barbara Schwarz,
March 22, 2003