> > You're the guy that collected all the mantras 
> > for thirty years.
> >
mjackson74:
> I got three you idiot...
>
So, you got three Buddhist mantras, but in TM you
get only one mantra. Go figure.

> and you are the only one in the world I know of 
> who believes the TM mantras came from the 
> Buddhists.
> 
and you are the only one in the world I know of 
who believes he talked to the dead Buddha. LOL!

> > > > I have no problem with vastu, I object to Maharishi 
> > > > co-opting old Indian knowledge to take advantage of 
> > > > people.
> > > > 
> > > So, you're thinking that MMY 'co-opted' the TM bija
> > > mantras, yet you love all of your bijas? You're not
> > > even making any sense. It has already been established
> > > where the bija mantras used in TM came from. You're
> > > just bactracking all over the place. What, exactly is
> > > your point?
> > >
> mjackson74:
> > My point is that you apparently have an unhealthy 
> > obsession about mantras - I said nothing about mantras, 
> >
> You're not even making any sense anymore. You're the 
> guy that collected all the mantras for thirty years. LoL!
> 
> Author: mjackson75
> Subject: Fightin' about Mantras
> Newsgroup: Yahoo! FairfieldLife
> Date: September 27, 2012 5:52 pm
> 321245
> > I did not nor do I think that M co-opted the mantras - 
> > I was talking about vastu.
> >
> Maharishi 'Sthapatya Veda" is 'Maharishi' vastu 
> archtecture based on Buddhist edifice architecture. 
> 
> Go figure.
> www.maharishivastu.org/
> Tantric practices, such as bija mantra, yantra, vastu, 
> yoga, are Buddhistic.
> 'TM - Not just another tantric, alchemical sect!'
> http://tinyurl.com/9ucnro8
>
> "Wherever Buddhism has flourished, it has left its visible 
> traces in the form of monuments which have their origin 
> in the tumuli of prehistoric times. These tumuli were 
> massive structures in the form of hemispheres, cones, 
> pyramids, and similar plain, stereometrical bodies which 
> contained the remains of heroes, saints, kings, or other 
> great personalities.
>
> In India the more or less hemispheric form, as we know 
> it from the first Buddhist stupas or caityas, has been the 
> prevalent type of such monuments. They were erected 
> for great rulers (chakkavarti) in pre-Buddhist times is." 
> Shakymuni mentions in his conversation with Ananda
> that "At the four crossroads they erect a cairn to the 
> king of kings (Digha Nikya XVI, 5).
> Read more:
>
> 'Psycho-cosmic Symbolism of the Buddhist Stupa'
> by Lama Anagarika Govinda
> Dharma Publishing, 1976


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