Re: Semi-OT: Hiding your secret organization
- From: Walter Bushell <proto@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 2009 15:07:59 -0500
In article <3jzsl.1855$%u5.248@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
Brenda Clough <clough@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Walter Bushell wrote:
In article <7piql.14690$as4.5453@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
Rebecca Rice <rebecca_rice@xxxxxxx> wrote:
Ok... I've been watching "Dollhouse" (not entirely sure what
I think of it yet), which isn't writeen, but may be SF.
Anyway, the basic idea is that you have a house full of
people who have had their personalities removed, so that
they can be imprinted with the required personality for
their "engagement", and then returned to their blank state
before the next mission. I'm assuming, based on naming
convention, that there are 26 female and 26 male agents.
Then there are their handlers (which appear to be a
one-to-one ratio), the massage therapists, doctors, lab
geek, and security guards.
Now... this spot is located in a city. With a fair amount
of traffic in and out of it. And you need to feed everyone,
and then there's zoning laws, taxes, etc., to deal with.
If you were running the place, what sort of front would you
pick to keep people from figuring out what you were _really_
doing? The ones that come to mind for me are:
1. A boarding school. The agents seem a bit old for that,
and you might get people wondering about enrolling their kids.
2. An exclusive luxury spa. You might still have problems
with other people wanting to book services, but you might be
able to get away with "if you have to ask, you can't afford it."
Any other thoughts?
Rebecca
A monastery and nunnery for a freak cult. Give services and instruction
in meditation for the curious. Register as a religion, of course to
avoid taxes. You can program the victim with the cult religion and they
will be happy to teach, and you need a default personality anyway so
they can do grocery shopping and take care of themselves. Absences can
be assigned to the God had a role for him to play. You might not even
need many handlers. As a bonus anyone who gets to involved with the cult
can be "recruited".
It's actually not that easy to get a tax break for being a religion,
otherwise anybody could set up the First Church of Me. The IRS is
notably unpleasant about it.
Brenda
Anything on this scale should have no problem. You hold services, and
seeker events and hand out sandwiches and beer to the homeless on
Tuesdays, stuff that Me can't economically do. You have a congregation,
and to quote Jubal Harshaw, "If you can sing to glory of God, you can
roller skate to the same end." Call yourself "Children of the ***",
and publish _The Five Fold Path_, and have one of the acolytes read from
it on Wednesday service and you should be good to go. Of course,
prostalatize the investigators.
Maybe you spring for some stained glass for the sanctuary.
.
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