Pierre S. Freeman Company Profile
After his first book, The Prisoner of San Jose was published, Pierre S. Freeman began interacting with his various readers, gaining a great deal of insight as to the effect of first attempt at exposing the Mind Control mechanisms of AMORC, the Ancient and Mystic Order of Rosae Crucis, the alleged Rosicrucian Order with headquarters in San Jose, California. Although he had sketched out exactly how AMORC functioned as a cult and how it used hypnosis as the backbone of its "occult" teachings, he felt that his readers lacked an in-depth understanding of exactly how the mind control elements were embedded in the lessons, how they worked to progressively deepen hypnotic states and how eventually, in certain members, they would invoke personality alteration and hallucinatory episodes based on post-hypnotic triggers. Further, to understand this process, it was important to understand AMORC's doctrines and "theology." For this reason, Freeman decided to write a more complete expose, AMORC UNMASKED- focusing more on the cult's progressive unveiling of its theology along with its ever-deepening methodology of Mind Control conveyed to its students through "experiments" and exercises. Further, he wanted to convey to his readers that, although he has been thoroughly disillusioned with AMORC, he has not given up in his belief that the spiritual impulses that led him to AMORC have legitimate foundations. Although still a seeker, he challenges his readers with a vision of another type of spiritual path that stands outside the veil of illusion that AMORC has cast over its followers. In this manner, he shows where and how AMORC has taken grains of truth from various traditions and recast them into the hypnotic matrix of mind control. At this point, having set aside his many years of social and economic isolation prior to his returning to school to get his degree and chart a real course with his career, Freeman continues to function as a successful analyst for several large financial institutions in the Minneapolis areas, as he has been doing for the last twelve years. He takes a great deal of satisfaction in understanding that life without AMORC, although it takes realistic planning and hard work, fulfills the hope for prosperity, stability and spirituality he had sought back in Haiti. He admits also to the satisfaction of being able to tell his story.