MAZEROSKI: There's something I think you ought to see first. They
call themselves the Church of the Red Museum. They're followers of a
guy named Odin that moved out here from California three years ago
and bought a ranch.
SCULLY: What's the significance of the name "Red Museum?"
MAZEROSKI: Well, Odin and the rest of them are a bunch of vegetarians.
They drove the ranch right into the ground, turned 500 head of beef
cattle into pets. Calls it a monument to barbarism.
MULDER: Probably went over big with the local ranchers.
MAZEROSKI: Well, you gotta admit, it takes some big ones to set down
in the middle of cow country and start a church like his.
SCULLY: (in a restaurant) You know, Mulder, with ribs like these I'd say the Church Of the Red Museum has its work cut out for it.
MULDER: ...[as a "Walk-In"] you become open and vulnerable.
SCULLY: To inhabitation by a new spirit.
MULDER: A new Enlightened spirit. According to the literature, Abe Lincoln was a Walk-In. And Mikail Gorbachev and Charles Colson, Nixon's advisor.
SCULLY: But not Nixon?
MULDER: No. Not even they want to claim Nixon.
MULDER: Looks like the sperm posse just arrived...
SCULLY: Well, it's kinda hard to tell the villains without a score-card.
MULDER: You know, for a holy man you've got quite a knack for pissing people off.
MULDER: I don't know. In the absence of any plausible explanation, it's a novel theory.