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wow, really great explanation for speeding up the tape playing of dull Hubbard's droning extra verbose lectures on those old reel to reel tape machines.

This speeding up the tapes was just so widespread, but I never mastered how to do it, only heard about it.

The content of the Briefing Course has so much material that isn't used today, so studying it, really it's not like Hubbard's output warrants anyone doing it, honestly.

Some of the squirrel splinter Scientologists have discussed, "verbal tech" which is a taboo, openly tried to explain the late 1950s "SOP Goals" and then the "GPM Goals" etc, and it's at least better easily understood when someone has become a "squirrel release" (joke, but the point is that someone has to achieve splinter/squirrel/verbal tech level grasp of Hubbard's "tech" quackery to talk about it sensibly, I believe.

Also, even more extreme, I've found people in other mystical practices who can grasp and talk sensibly simply cut to the core, of Hubbard's crap, better than trained "KSW" Scientologists.

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The whole speeding up the tape machines to get through the "Wall of Tapes" though, that would be a transgression, a group "mutual out ruds" overt and withhold, in Hubbard's blaming the followers for all bad results of the Hubbard quackery.

Calling Scientology quackery, quickly puts the Hubbard quackery in it's rightful place.

Then all the transgressions supposedly against failing to meet Hubbard's endless quackery regulations, also puts those Hubbard draconian blaming penalties in correct light.

There is really no fault in failing at the Hubbard rules in failing to perform the Hubbard quackery nor learn the whole painfully obscure details of all of Hubbard's quackery development.

But the Briefing Course, that in the movement's history, is the hardest longest course, and the Wall of Tapes is where it just goes on and on and on, never ending.

I'm currently studying one of the four main divisions of the Pali Canon of the Buddha's discourses and the 1/4 I'm studying is 44 hours audible book length, and thankfully it is far far easier to absorb than anything Hubbard garbly lectured.

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