Operation Snow White
You may have heard of Scientology, the religion that was founded by a Science Fiction writer and has had some issues with public relations in the past, both recent and not so recent. So in the 1970's the Church of Scientology decided to go with the basic reaction of any group with a bad public image: they infiltrated the government to get rid of any records that portrayed them in an unfavorable light.Over the course of about 2 years, the Church of Scientology had as many as 5,000 covert agents infiltrate various branches of the government, including the IRS, the Coast Guard, and the DEA. The main goals were to gain a tax-exempt status as a religious group and to remove any evidence of Scientology's crazier plots (including when they tried to get a journalist committed to a mental institution).
Amazingly, the plan worked. Then, in early 1977, one of the agents got arrested while breaking into a government building. After that, it all unraveled very quickly, culminating in 11 high-ranking members, including the founder's wife, getting indicted in 1978. 6 of the 11 went to jail for four years, and each had to pay a $10,000 fine.
I would call that pretty light punishment for the people who orchestrated the single largest infiltration of the government in the history of the United States.
Government Media Control
Everyone has heard at one time or another the theory that the government actually controls everything that we see and hear in the media. Most of the time, the people that you hear it from are also convinced that a secret organization actually rules the world, so I wouldn't put too much stock in the theory itself.Then again, reality can be a strange thing. In 1948 Frank Wisner, who was in charge of the sinister-named Office of Special Projects, started Operation Mockingbird. This goal of this operation was to infiltrate every major media outlet with reporters who were on his payroll.
The program was astonishingly successful. In under ten years, there were over 400 reporters on the government's payroll, including some of the big shots at ABC, NBC, CBS, The New York Times, and the Associated Press. This level of infiltration allowed the government to suppress any story they didn't like as well as planting pro-government stories. Apparently, this was all so easy because, as one operative noted, "You could get a journalist cheaper than a good call girl, for a couple hundred dollars a month."
Luckily for us, the entire operation was disbanded in the mid-1970's. Or not, according to much of the internet.
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For this post, much of my research and some of my sources came from Cracked.com, who I strongly recommend that you check out, especially this article:
This blog post reminds me a lot of my step dad who has conspiracy theories for almost every single thing that has happened in our country, like 9/11. He contends that we (the USA) had information about the attacks but allowed for them to occur so we could have a push for war in Iraq. The was was not to find nuclear weapons (shocker) but rather to implant the ideas of democracy in the region. According to him, these ideas we planted there to help start the wave of revolutions in the region in recent years. Interesting stuff. I'm sure he thinks something to the effect of Operation Mockingbird is still going on, just as he'd support most conspiracy theories (or make up his own)! The strange thing is if you give him enough time to fully explain himself... you start to believe him.
ReplyDeleteThe thing to remember is that usually conspiracies and rumors have some factual origin to them. Currently, there is a trending conspiracy on the resignation of 85-year-old Pope Benedict XVI, who announced his intention to carry out the first papal resignation since 1415. His reasons were his age and decline in both mind and body, which seems like a fair explanation. He faces arthritis and other health issues. However, many are not accepting this simple reason. It seems a little odd that the Pope would resign and break a long-standing tradition, and so many are speculating that there might have been turmoil within the papacy (sexual abuse, scandal within the Vatican bank, etc). I'm not sure what the real reason is, but it is definitely worth looking in to.
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