Topic: Merchants of Chaos

Any place that comes close to truth can expect to be attacked by "merchants of chaos". These people have become so overwhelmed by the matrix that they have decided that the only way to succeed is to enforce it on others - basically taking on the form of that which defeated them. This site is of course no exception.

Here are some ways to spot such people:

1. He or she speaks only in very broad generalities. “They say...” “Everybody thinks...” “Everyone knows...” and such expressions are in continual use, particularly when imparting rumor. When asked, “Who is everybody...” it normally turns out to be one source and from this source the antisocial person has manufactured what he or she pretends is the whole opinion of the whole society.

This is natural to them since to them all society is a large hostile generality, against the antisocial in particular.

2. Such a person deals mainly in bad news, critical or hostile remarks, invalidation and general suppression.

“Gossip” or “bearer of evil tidings” or “rumormonger” once described such persons.

It is notable that there is no good news or complimentary remark passed on by such a person.

3. The antisocial personality alters, to worsen, communication when he or she relays a message or news. Good news is stopped and only bad news, often embellished, is passed along.

Such a person also pretends to pass on “bad news” which is in actual fact invented.

4. A characteristic, and one of the sad things about an antisocial personality, is that it does not respond to treatment or reform.

5. Surrounding such a personality we find cowed or ill associates or friends who, when not driven actually insane, are yet behaving in a crippled manner in life, failing, not succeeding.

Such people make trouble for others.

When treated or educated, the near associate of the antisocial personality has no stability of gain but promptly relapses or loses his advantages of knowledge, being under the suppressive influence of the other.

Physically treated, such associates commonly do not recover in the expected time but worsen and have poor convalescences.

It is quite useless to treat or help or train such persons so long as they remain under the influence of the antisocial connection.

The largest number of insane are insane because of such antisocial connections and do not recover easily for the same reason.

Unjustly we seldom see the antisocial personality actually in an institution. Only his “friends” and family are there.

6. The antisocial personality habitually selects the wrong target.

If a tire is flat from driving over nails, he or she curses a companion or a noncausative source of the trouble. If the radio next door is too loud, he or she kicks the cat.

If A is the obvious cause, the antisocial personality inevitably blames B or C or D.

7. The antisocial cannot finish a cycle of action. Any action goes through a sequence wherein the action is begun, is continued for as long as is required and is completed as planned. In Scientology, this is called a cycle of action.

The antisocial becomes surrounded with incomplete projects.

8. Many antisocial persons will freely confess to the most alarming crimes when forced to do so, but will have no faintest sense of responsibility for them.

Their actions have little or nothing to do with their own volition. Things “just happened.”

They have no sense of correct causation and particularly cannot feel any sense of remorse or shame therefore.

9. The antisocial personality supports only destructive groups and rages against and attacks any constructive or betterment group.

10. This type of personality approves only of destructive actions and fights against constructive or helpful actions or activities.

The artist in particular is often found as a magnet for persons with antisocial personalities who see in his art something which must be destroyed and covertly, “as a friend,” proceed to try.

11. Helping others is an activity which drives the antisocial personality nearly berserk. Activities, however, which destroy in the name of help are closely supported.

12. The antisocial personality has a bad sense of property and conceives that the idea that anyone owns anything is a pretense, made up to fool people. Nothing is ever really owned.



Taken from: http://www.scientologyhandbook.org/SH11_1.HTM

2 (edited by lyra 2007-06-05 14:00:14)

Re: Merchants of Chaos

http://forum.noblerealms.org/viewtopic. … 13&p=5

Starts with post #69 about half way down the page and goes on from there.

(for those who are new and weren't around way back when, when this was delved into by the same poster.)

And not to negate a new/updated discussion about scientology or its beliefs...I just happened to remember this being mentioned before is all...

"Life's journey is not to arrive at the grave safely in a well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, totally worn out, shouting "Holy shit ... what a ride!"  - Anonymous
-----
"I get by with a little help from my (higher density) friends."
-----

3 (edited by mandalis 2007-06-05 13:22:47)

Re: Merchants of Chaos

and Scientology's promoters are the most anti-social sociopaths of all ...  imitating exactly another evil pseudoscience that they claim to oppose, psychiatry, by alienating with labels ...  Scientology would prescribe drugs if it were legal for them to do, they will make money selling sugar pill placeebos ... so what is the difference between the auditing of Scientology and analysis of psychotherapy?  Oh, that's right, during a Scientology audit the subject will 'remember' past lives or anything else they believe will impress the auditor, the way that patients respond to electroshock therapy ...  they actually believe themselves that things like - beginning, middle, and ending - are concepts invented by LRon Hubbard because he ascribed some jazzy label to them ...  in fact, if you pay their Dionysian progressive mystery cult the million dollars they want to 'go over the bridge' you  will find out that the core of their religious beliefs surround the idea that LRon is the reincarnation of the Buddha Maitreya ...  they depend largely on peer pressure to bully the weak minded into volunteering like every other for profit cult ... at least they are only after money instead of a group like Aum Shinkiro which craves chaos ...  the truth is that society is largely filled with unsavory elements manipulating money from people, like Scientologists, or lawyers, or psychiatrists,  or government bureaucrats ...  the one area where the Scientologists deserve significant praise is their legal techniques, as the 'Church' of Scientology won the largest case ever against the Internal Revenue Service which gave them back their tax exempt status after agreeing to withdraw their fifty thousand pending lawsuits in various courts around the country ... mad props for spanking the IRS!  Scientology, like any cult, relies on what Orwell called 'groupthink' which requires unquestioning obedience to the collective understanding and cannot tolerate innovation or independent thought of any kind yet at the same time isolating themselves above the outside critics ...  many celebrities have probably confessed to embarrassing indiscretions in their 'auditing' sessions which provides an excellent source of blackmail ... this would probably explain why Nicole Kidman came out and confessed to things like cocaine use before quitting Scientology ...  an excellent outline of techniques used by cults and other churches I have quoted elsewhere on this site can be found here,  http://www.freedomdomain.com/mindcontrol/mindbattle.htm

being anti-social is a sign of intelligence, because if you think 'society' is correct then you have a serious problem as society is the problem the individual must solve ...

additionally, many of the inner beliefs of the Church of Scientology are plagiarized from the science fiction The Mission Earth Decology about the Galactic Confederation ruled by the planet Voltar that bases their entire society on 'galactic invasion timetables' which cannot be changed without destroying the entire order of their civilization ...  because Earth is scheduled to be invaded in around a hundred years, and because Earthlings are destroying their environment so fast the planet won't be useful as a staging point by the time it is to be invaded, a combat engineer is dispatched to earth in advance to introduce technology that will save the environment so that Earth can be a useful base for further galactic conquest ...  as the head of Voltar's 'Coordinated Information Apparatus' (CIA) wants the mission to fail so he can seize power he dispatches a CIA agent to sabotage Mission Earth who tells the entire several thousand page pulp science fiction series in first person  ...  the premise isn't bad but the whole thing starts getting a little trite when the antagonist head of the CIA hires a Madison Avenue publicist to promote his regime ...  a great read when I was twelve ...  (sing along the cheesy bonjovi-esque soundtrack song by Edgar Winter) MISSION EARTH!  CONDITION RED!   had to do it or wind up dead!  MISSION EARTH!  the cross I bear, how could fate be so unfair! woow woow woow woow

anyone can label everything anything ... call them demons, aliens, engrams, karmas, or 'loosh reservoirs' as montalk elloquently labels them - they are really just bad ideas ... or more concisely they are 'problems' that need to be solved by learning ...  i really have to hand it to montalk, his information is very articulate and descriptive without relying on needless jargon (or selling it) that seeks to look down on others that don't know what an 'engram' is ...  impressive ...

and a note on negativity ... the universe consists of virtue and sin, light and darkness, good and evil, yin and yang ...  in order to truly understand the universe, both must be appreciated where appropriate ...  positive thinking is just as much of a trap as negative thinking as it removes your consciousness from the present ...  the endless promoters of positive thinking are usually just trying to draw attention away from something negative ... an excellent description of this is given in the book called 'The Inner Game of Tennis' by W. Timothy Gallwey (http://theinnergame.com/html/Inner_Tennis_home.html), worth a million times it's weight in Scientology ...  while it focuses on tennis as an example, I have found the ideas equally applicable to futures trading or any other competitive endeavor ...