jayhawk and greendawn, thank you for taking my observations in the way I intended.
Insofar as the "ad hominem" aspect of what I've posted, I'd like to share a bit of my experiences with these men, individually, at least insofar as it reflects on the "kind of people" that I perceived them to be.
One of my jobs, as a graveyard Bethelite, was to run the night-watchman routine, which took me through every floor of every one of the "Homes." Every time I did that route, one of my clock-stations was just outside of Fred's room, and every time, even though it was between 12 a.m. and 6 a.m., I'd see the light on (under his door), and hear books being tossed about on a table. I almost, once, had the courage to knock on his door and say hello. But (for what such personal memories are worth), I had the distinct felling that he was a man on a mission, so I just marched on to the next station.
And then there were the steam-room episodes, where Fred would blast the temp up to 220 degrees, and when the "slackers" LOL had faded away, he would discuss with us various Greek words, or the daily text. I didn't last but through a couple of such...I like Oregon, not Arizona! LOL
And then, when the "new elder arrangement" was about to be rolled out, Fred, at the Bethel breakfast table, would call on certain "servants" (over at the guest table), and refer to them as "elders." We were all wondering, "what the heck is Fred saying? That guy is a "servant," not an "elder!" But, idealogue that he was, as far as he was concerned, "truth was truth," and he sat there in his no-tie Pendelton shirt and spoke as if this "elder" thing was common knowledge.
And then there was a discussion I had with George Gangas, in the Bethel dinner-room, where he went off about "motion pictures of the mind," (a phrase which, I believe, has been repeated more than once in the Watchtower). I walked away feeling like I'd been in the presence of a truly sincere and insightful man.
Now, of course, my feelings about these men means nothing, other than that I was over-awed even to be in their presence. However, to this day I can't say that I sensed any dishonesty in them: they seemed to be genuine.
What they might really have been, as persons, as human beings, the "hidden being," I can't say. Thus my objection to ad hominem. However, as you both point out, what they did, in terms of policy, either individually or collectively, does serve as an external measure of their character...but, even then, in the course of my conversations with other JWs, it takes a fair bit more than "can't you see between the lines?" Therefore, my query: "What's the evidence?"