Sharon Gans had a problem. She was a washed up actress at age 40. Married to a NY dentist and with two kids, she was in a rut. So when she met a charismatic Californian named Alex Horn who lived on a Sonoma ranch and was a spiritual teacher and playwright she was swept off her feet. Alex was 55. So they got quickie divorces and ran away together, moving into a house in San Francisco.
Although they were soulmates, love wasnt gonna pay the bills. They needed a plan. And they needed something to satisfy the mental illness they both shared - i.e., narcissistic personality disorder (NPD). They each had exaggerated feelings of self-importance, outsized needs for admiration, and a complete lack of empathy toward other people. So instead of spending their time just thinking about achieving power and success, they did something about it - they opened a cult. They made a small fortune. And they were the center of attention. But when the San Francisco papers did an expose alleging they were an abusive cult they quickly skipped town.
They resurfaced in New York, reinvented as teachers of an “esoteric school” of the “Fourth Way.” On the QT, they recruited upper middle class New Yorkers to attend secret classes where ancient hidden knowledge would be revealed. Within a couple of years they had hundreds of members and piles of cash. Rom-Con recounts all the crazy hijinks of Gans and Horn: how they gaslighted everyone into thinking that they had some hidden wisdom; how they persuaded intelligent people to do crazy things (arranged marriages, forced adoptions, gay conversion, forced labor) and think they were doing good things.
Years ago Robert Klein and Geoffrey Chasin were involved with Dial-a-Mattress. Maybe it was a handy business for laundering the $$ coming in from "students." Was Chasin a part of school, does anyone know?
ReplyDeleteAnd what's with the new company he's with, https://www.nrxlogistics.com/about.html
Is this also a "school-related" business?
What happens with $$ from cults (human trafficking, narcotics, etc) is part of what makes the world go round. It's an important part of understanding the bigger story.