There are so many things wrong with your logic here, I don't even know where to start.
I probably shouldn't but...
Let's start with the "league's agenda". Can you explain what it is? Because it seems to me that if the league has ANY agenda, it's not handing the Lakers a 2-0 series lead. Because that doesn't make them more money
And I don't think ANYONE thinks they just want the Lakers to win, just because. If you're claiming an agenda, let's hear the logic behind it. The only logical agenda would be to split the first two games to drive fan interest, advertising dollars, and box office numbers.
To your point about the conference finals schedules... you really think the timing of the games was deliberately planned, along with "criminal" officiating, to give the Celtics a disadvantage vs. the Lakers in the finals? Really? If so, why?
Do you think that Phil Jackson was commenting on the officiating to perhaps sway favor in game three?
And yeah, all those calls on Kobe were not legit.
Confirmation bias is a hell of a drug.
The refs again called it tight, both ways, and again made some bad calls, both ways. A couple of Kobe's fouls were pretty weak. Garnett probably tipped that ball out although on replay he and Gasol's fingers were intertwined, making it impossible to tell for sure. The call that fouled Artest out was very weak, and was probably the most important call of the game for us.
On the flip side, both Pierce and Baby had clean blocks in the 2nd half called fouls. There was also a sequence in the first quarter where Rondo got hacked at the rim, then Kobe jumped from out of bounds to save it. Ray got literally bent over double by Fisher on one play, and the ref standing right there ignored it and whistled an out-of-bounds screen on Pierce immediately after.
On sum though, you have to have some seriously thick green glasses to see an active conspiracy against the Celtics in the game. The refs just blew calls, it's what they do. It'll happen in Game 3 too.
But I am glad they are clearly looking to give players some slack before calling a cheap double technical. It's a step in the right direction at least.