Yea. I somehow believe that the government did infiltrate the CoS, even though people want to laugh it off. and I think that is the agenda of the higher powers that are on this planet. To make the whole thing look kooky and silly. I mean, laugh it off and pretend that psychiatry really isn't that bad. The statistics of people that have died in asylums over the past years is pretty much a genocide in itself, and these are many deaths that have nothing to do with age. But the unfortunate part is that no body hears their stories. It isn't something that is in the best interest of the media channels. After all, who is one of their abundant supporters? The pharmaceutical companies. The FDA does many shady under the table deals with these companies. The hound the little companies that could be a threat to their profit. Especially companies that selll natural products, I mean come on now,they can't put a patent on natural products, and now their trying to get their hands on making Vitamins accessible only by prescription.
Well, I have to tell you, many of the figures on my computer screen started moving really oddly after I clicked the reply button. I wouldn't be surprised if this forum is being checked out by certain people, especially after you made the implication that these guys really did infiltrate the CoS. Those suckers will send disinformation agents to this forum to cover up any truth you may have about their presence being existent in the CoS
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0lnJL1kp0x8
Probably the first comment under the you-tube video sums up the situation:
"This video would have been a lot better served if it didn't start out with a quote from that nut-case L. Ron Hubbard. Now I can't show it to anyone and expect to have any credibility."
This video has been around from some time, and the Hubbard quote at the beginning was tacked on by someone else.
Anyone who sees himself, or his group, as visionary and with a plan that would arouse the ire of the "powers that be," can attach his message to the beginning of this (or similar) video.
1) The message added to the front is one thing.
2) The general conspiracy-theory (or cause-effect theory) of history is another.
I'm not automatically ridiculing the latter (various theories), however I've found that arguing about them to be mostly a waste of time.
From my (somewhat dusty) hardbound autographed copy of 'None Dare Call It Conspiracy' by Gary Allen, to 'America's Sixty Families' by Ferdinand Lundberg (from the 1930s), and other more 'traditional' background texts, to various books by, and stacks of periodicals by, Lyndon LaRouche, (most, sent to me by an old friend over the years), I've been familiar with this area for a long time.
Those writings exist, separate from L. Ron Hubbard's many stories; and Hubbard's stories break down into two rough categories:
What he actually believed.
And what he wanted others to believe.
Have you read Hubbard's many letters to the FBI from the early/mid 1950s? If so, do you believe that he was approached by the KGB (Russian secret police) and told that, if he would defect, that he'd be given his own laboratory with a big expense account in the USSR? Well, this was what Hubbard told the FBI, at a time when he was trying to motivate them to convince the IRS to stop looking into his finances (repeatedly declaring bankruptcy while stuffing cash into shoe boxes, and leaving investors and creditors in the lurch) - Did Hubbard believe it? Probably not. Did he want the FBI to believe it, so they'd tell the IRS to back off, lest he defect to Russia (!) - Apparently, yes.
Hubbard's writings are full of this sort of thing: Tall tales intended to manipulate others into doing what he wanted them to do.
When Hubbard told his inner circle - in 1969 - that his 2nd wife was a secret agent named "Komkovadamanov," did
he believe it? Probably not.
http://www.forum.exscn.net/showpost.php?p=79110&postcount=23
The Scientology operation, per Hubbard's design - is based on the "tight conspiracy"-model (See 'Bolivar' PL, and his many [mostly confidential] "Scientology covert Intelligence Tech" writings.) So, going back to the 1960s, Hubbard had already established Scientology on the "tight conspiracy/crime syndicate"-pattern. That was HIS idea.
Scientology, one could say, is a kind of "mini-conspiracy" - as designed by Hubbard. Many of the secret writings have been exposed, one way or another, and now it can be "decoded" and understood.