Lawson's not taking advantage of me.  I'm just stating the obvious.  I am 
thinking this AM that I do tend to "throw the baby out with the bath water" 
when I detect what I deem to be hypocrisy, which works against me *personally* 
in many regards, as there is always hypocrisy when interpreted through the 
human experience.  We are all hypocritical.  Does one discount all the 
beautiful philosophical treatise in the world because of the "who," or "what" 
that is stating them?  Of course not.  One looks that them in the context they 
were created and judges them based on their value to our personal existence or 
based on our assessment of their value to mankind.  


________________________________
 From: turquoiseb <no_re...@yahoogroups.com>
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Saturday, July 28, 2012 6:18 AM
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: TM, the Dome Badge, and Religious Practices
 

  
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "sparaig" <LEnglish5@...> wrote:
>
> > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Emily Reyn <emilymae.reyn@> wrote:
> >
> > If this is such a priority and they really believe what 
> > they are saying, why don't they just bring in meditators 
> > from other countries to reach the goal? Are there not 
> > 2000 flyers in the entire world? In the name of global 
> > peace, I would think that many of the idealistic and 
> > altruistic nature would volunteer even to pick up and move.
> 
> They have imported about 1,000 Vedic PUndits, and pay 
> Americans $800/month to participate full time (8 hours/day 
> 7 days/week) for at least a month.
> 
> I'd say they are pretty serious.

Just so that Emily is not swayed by this disinformation,
what she means by "they" and what Lawson means by "they"
are completely different. I suspect that by "they" Emily
meant the TM organization per se, the entity that has 
been estimated by The Illustrated Weekly of India to have
a net worth of 3.5 billion dollars. Given that amount of 
capital, and given the importance the organization 
*claims* to place on getting large numbers of Yogic 
Flyers together to do their thang for world peace, her 
proposal seems very logical -- "Put your money where 
your mouth is."

*In constrast*, what Lawson is talking about are two
programs paid for entirely by donations begged or demanded
from TMers. The program that pays for people to buttbounce
full-time for $800 per month was paid for *entirely* by
one wealthy TMer. The pundits were similarly funded by
donations from well-meaning (and yes, idealistic) TMers.

As far as I know, the TM organization itself, sitting on
top of all that wealth, *has not spent a penny of its
own money* to achieve its own goals. 

This is a policy that goes back to the very beginnings of
the TM movement. Maharishi was almost *never* willing to
spend his own money on his own projects. He always found
a way to beg the money for them from his followers, or
in his worst moments *extort* the money for them. (What
else would you call the frantic pleas for money some
time before he died in which he declared outright that
the world would end if it wasn't raised.)

I think Emily has a point. If the TMO 1) actually believed
that its programs could bring about world peace, and 2) 
were sitting on top of sufficient financial assets to put 
those beliefs to the test, wouldn't their failure to do
so paint them as hypocritical at the very least, and 
downright mercenary at worst?

Lawson knows all this. He was taking advantage of Emily
*not* knowing it to spin things in such a way as to make
it seem as if the TM organization *itself* paid for the
efforts he listed. That isn't true, and has never been.
The TMO does *NOT* pay for these things; the same well-
intentioned suckers who have been paying for Maharishi's
dreams since the beginning of the movement paid for them.


 

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