As usual you are wrong - I never said "enlightenment" made someone an asshole - 
besides it is pretty clear that TM doesn't lead to enlightenment anyway.




________________________________
 From: "doctordumb...@rocketmail.com" <doctordumb...@rocketmail.com>
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Tuesday, March 5, 2013 9:47 PM
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: To card - mUrdhajyothiShi
 

  
I see. So, Tweedle Dee (MJ) and Tweedle Dum's (TB) egos assert that 
enlightenment, as a result of TM, causes people to be assholes, so neither 
Tweedle will do TM. 

I visited various tribes as a child with my dad in remote regions of the world. 
Some were suspicious of being photographed, because they believed that their 
souls were literally captured on film. No kidding.

So the error of primitive thinking, like the tribes, who at least had the 
excuse of isolation, and what you two display, is that you are driven by 
superstitious beliefs, based on no direct evidence*.

*One data point of possible contradiction: Barry IS an asshole, and WAS a TM 
teacher about a million years ago. Although in his case, I think we'll go with 
correlation NOT being the same as causation. As many have pointed out, the 
issues he continues to face were formed way before his TM experience began. 

Btw, the tribes got over it. Will you two? My money is on 'nope'.

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, turquoiseb  wrote:
>
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Michael Jackson  wrote:
> >
> > It was rhetorical, actually - the man was many things, but 
> > enlightened or saint were not among those things. Enlightened 
> > men or women and saints do not leave behind the flotsam of 
> > destruction that Marshy left behind. 
> 
> For that matter, enlightened men probably do not spend
> their last days re-enacting King Lear and trying to get
> the people around him (who have already paid a million
> bucks each to wear crowns and robes and call themselves
> Rajas) to outbid one another to see who who can...uh...
> erect the most phallic monuments to his memory, in the
> form of the meaningless "Maharishi Towers Of Invincibility."
> 
> It's really hard to get past the last act of *that* play, 
> unless one is seriously, deeply, hopelessly in denial...
>


 

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