Theophobia

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Re: Theophobia

Postby Hammer of Los » Sun Jul 03, 2011 8:45 am

Don't argue, nice people.

I like you a lot AD, your anti cult materials provide me with an interesting perspective. Don't be so mean to him VK.

In fact, because I always like to state where our opinions (for whatever they are worth) coincide, here is something else I can happily agree with;

AD wrote:So my point was not to say "faith bad" or "faith good" but to use this example of further evidence of my ongoing point, which is: spiritual "faith" in and of itself is no guarantor of ethical behavior individually, nor of decent social politics, nor that critical thinking is being used in general.


Having said that, this "faith" label is problematic. Rajneesh would never have encouraged anyone to have faith in anything except themselves, and that's a fact.

Also, go check out more details about Sheela Silverman, if you want to find out the likelihood of whether a lot of bad things might have come from the commune without the Bhagwan's knowledge.

Firstly, it was the Bhagwan himself, who told the authorities of the crimes that had been committed, and provided them with the evidence. He claimed that as soon as he found out what was happening, he went to the authorities. He was never charged with any of these crimes, but deported on the basis of a violation of immigration law, to which he admitted. What did they have on him? Clearly nothing. He gave them the evidence on Sheela though, so they had to at least be seen to be doing something there;

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ma_Anand_Sheela wrote:Sheela and her co-conspirators admitted to the attempted murder, poisoning two county officials, setting fire to a county office, and setting up an elaborate wire-tapping network at the commune's telephone system, among other charges. Sheela and Puja were sentenced to 24-year jail terms in federal prison,[36] and fined $470,000.[31] She was fined $400,000, plus a charge of $69,353.31 in damages of restitution to be paid to Wasco County, Oregon.[46][47] All told, Sheela received sentences of three concurrent 20-year terms in prison.[46] The State of Oregon recommended that Sheela's jail time be spent in federal prison.[46] Sheela and Puja served their jail time in Pleasanton, California, in a prison for nonviolent white-collar criminals.[47] She was released after two and a half years and immediately left for Switzerland on 13 December 1988.[2] The State of Oregon had intended to charge Sheela and Puja with additional crimes after their federal sentences had been served, but the two left for Europe before the United States Department of Justice had given notice to Oregon.[47]
Release and later life

In December 1988, Sheela was released for good behaviour after serving twenty-nine months of the 20-year sentence for attempted murder of Meredith, first and second degree assault (poisoning) of public officials, immigration fraud, wiretapping within Rajneeshpuram, and the bioterror attack.[1][48][49] She also lost her green card.[48]

Following her release, Sheela returned to Europe and married Urs Birnstiel. She gained immunity from extradition from future charges, including those related to the 1985 plot to assassinate US prosecutor Charles Turner; however, she was convicted by a Swiss court in 1999 for "criminal acts preparatory to the commission of murder", but did not serve additional time.[14] After her release, Sheela moved to Switzerland where she started a new profession managing two nursing homes.[49] In 2000, she lived in Switzerland, being the widow of a Swiss citizen.


What happened at the commune couldn't have been that bad, could it? She got less than two and a half years in a cushy prison for nonviolent white-collar criminals. And that's for poisoning and a bioterror attack. You know, some folk might suspect she was some sort of agency agent provocateur within the movement. They always slide at least one in. They have to get the handler inside to look after the one perceived as dangerous. Like my YoYo that glows in the night; what made him special, made him dangerous. She was big on poisoning too, might she have been slipping the Bhagwan something? She was later convicted of plotting murder, but did not serve time apparently. That's good going. But it's all fine now, she's managing two nursing homes and the bhagwan is cold and dead and tarred with her crimes. Job done eh? She seems to be able to plot murders and never get charged with anything.

I'm just concerned about the residents of those nursing homes. Perhaps someone should find out if she still manages them, and let everyone involved know exactly who their manager is.
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Re: Theophobia

Postby justdrew » Sun Jul 03, 2011 9:07 am

he's fairly bad news...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osho_%28Bhagwan_Shree_Rajneesh%29
A professor of philosophy, he travelled throughout India in the 1960s as a public speaker. His outspoken criticism of socialism, Mahatma Gandhi and institutionalised religion made him controversial. He also advocated a more open attitude towards sexuality, a stance that earned him the sobriquet "sex guru" in the Indian and later international press.[3] In 1970, he settled for a while in Bombay. He began initiating disciples (known as neo-sannyasins) and took on the role of a spiritual teacher. In his discourses, he reinterpreted writings of religious traditions, mystics, and philosophers from around the world. Moving to Poona in 1974, he established an ashram that attracted increasing numbers of Westerners. The ashram offered therapies derived from the Human Potential Movement to its Western audience and made news in India and abroad, chiefly because of its permissive climate and Osho's provocative lectures. By the end of the 1970s, there were mounting tensions with the Indian government and the surrounding society.


she's a monster... and who exactly arranged for her new career in Switzerland running two nursing homes, after a string of attempted murder (and so much more) convictions all over the world?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ma_Anand_Sheela
sounds like a retirement plan for a well used asset.
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Re: Theophobia

Postby Hammer of Los » Sun Jul 03, 2011 9:22 am

We have established he was sexually permissive and a highly provocative speaker.

Does that make him "fairly bad news?"

I don't know.
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Absolute cleanliness is Godliness!

Postby IanEye » Sun Jul 03, 2011 9:29 am



13th: "Knowing the full truth that unites the human race & not teaching all is deathly guilt!" , learned carpenter Jesus from Mason Rabbi Hillel! ... As Mao wrote in Redbook 51: "Marxist-Communism, once in power, is utterly unworkable, has less value than cowdung. Its power is the gun!" ... As teaches African-shepard Astronomer Israel for 6000 years, "LISTEN CHILDREN ETERNAL FATHER ETERNALLY ONE!" For on God's Spaceship Earth, with Bomb & Gun, we're All-One or none! All-One! All-One! Exceptions eternally? Absolute none!
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Re: Theophobia

Postby American Dream » Sun Jul 03, 2011 9:38 am

Hammer of Los wrote:Don't argue, nice people.

I like you a lot AD, your anti cult materials provide me with an interesting perspective. Don't be so mean to him VK.

In fact, because I always like to state where our opinions (for whatever they are worth) coincide, here is something else I can happily agree with;

AD wrote:So my point was not to say "faith bad" or "faith good" but to use this example of further evidence of my ongoing point, which is: spiritual "faith" in and of itself is no guarantor of ethical behavior individually, nor of decent social politics, nor that critical thinking is being used in general.


Having said that, this "faith" label is problematic. Rajneesh would never have encouraged anyone to have faith in anything except themselves, and that's a fact.

Also, go check out more details about Sheela Silverman, if you want to find out the likelihood of whether a lot of bad things might have come from the commune without the Bhagwan's knowledge.

Firstly, it was the Bhagwan himself, who told the authorities of the crimes that had been committed, and provided them with the evidence. He claimed that as soon as he found out what was happening, he went to the authorities. He was never charged with any of these crimes, but deported on the basis of a violation of immigration law, to which he admitted. What did they have on him? Clearly nothing. He gave them the evidence on Sheela though, so they had to at least be seen to be doing something there...


Yes and although I wouldn't want to rule out Rajneesh knowing a bit more about what was going on under his watch, I will certainly accept the premise that he didn't as a starting point. This leads quite naturally into the Cosmic Bliss Factor: It is very, very easy to be fooled by manipulative psychopathic-type people when you are cultivating not only inner beauty, but also a view of the Universe which highlights the blissful and divine aspect of the greater world. If one is doing ecstatic practice around groups of people who are in consensus about this this can be even more true. If drugs and tantric sex are involved, there can be an even greater danger of these sorts of problems.

Then add in the projection issue- where people want and need an idealized guru figure to worship as a perfect master, no matter what that guru-figure might say or do. All the more so in the European-colonized world if that object of devotion happens to be Asian, if Orientalism is a factor.

So "faith" as it has been used in this thread-a sort of spirituality not necessarily fixed to outward religious forms, can do great things. it can inspire us to live- and die- for others. That said, it can also inspire us towards all sorts of misguided activity, up to and including mass murder as the very "spiritual" Aum Shinrikyo people can remind us.

So where does this leave us? Not "faith bad" or "faith good" but definitely "faith not enough by itself".
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Re: Theophobia

Postby hanshan » Sun Jul 03, 2011 10:17 am

...

Project Willow wrote:
barracuda wrote:But is faith, in and of it self, commendable? It doesn't seem so. Having faith is like having a nose. Except for a very unfortunate few, everyone has a nose, but we don't praise a person in some way for this attainment. And like your nose, your faith is really only a virtue with regards to the object of its attentions.


But, what if one has a really, really cute nose? j/k.

I consider faith, as more narrowly defined in terms of religious or spiritual belief, to be a tool for individuals to pick up or reject to varying degrees according to their own needs. It can also be a tool for those who wish to exercise power over through manipulation and possibly everything in between that and benevolent care, yet it is still a tool. I was under the impression that around here we generally acknowledge that tools aren't the impetus of wrong doing. Tools may serve any number of roles in a process, but they don't sit in the seat of genesis.

So, after 18 pages here, can we get down to delineating exactly what aspects of the process of holding a faith, as opposed to any other possible stance or philosophy of life, by their very nature, might represent an inherent potential for leading to wrong doing?

This entire conversation is reminding me of the useless and distracting focus on the belief systems of satanic cults when it's the crimes they commit that should garner all attention. The philosophical framework rationalizes and perhaps organizes the activity, but it doesn't define it, nor is it requisite.

Getting back to the OP, specifically what perceived personal or intellectual failing lies at the root of theophobia if indeed it exists as described? Briefly, and I'd like to go into this in further detail later, I'd say that it has to do with suspicions about how much one relies on external vs. internal sources in assessments of right and wrong.



"A rose is a rose is a rose is a rose".

unless, of course, it's a cute nose.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gertrude_Stein#Quotations


Searcher08 wrote:It was a much more complex mix than one person being responsible - it was a scary case of enanatiadromy - something turning into its opposite.

There were elements of

Genuinely psychopathic / sociopathic leadership
Animal Farm being reenacted
Rajneesh becoming addicted to pain medication - and being easily led and cocooned
from people by a 'priesthood'
A Jonestown Us vs Them mindset

It was doomed from the moment Rajneesh knowingly let Sheela came into organisational control. I have seen this happen in business where one person can destroy a company culture.

I remember meeting people who came back from Rajneeshpuram in 1984 and they actually looked like they were drugged (TBH it wouldnt have surprised me if they were) It later turned into a rotten destructive cult. When he left America and went back to India, he was embittered and worn out. From someone who wrote some of the greatest
commentraies on Zen, Christianity, Islam, he had a hell of a fall.

Bhagwan: The God That Failed by Hugh Milne is the definitive book, wriiten by his former photographer and bodyguard

http://truemilena.blogspot.com/2006/11/ ... ailed.html


yeah, read the raj before he decamped stateside (philosophe)
; regarded the ongoing drama at Antelope w/ somewhat detached amusement.
Have since spoken w/ someone who was a child of the environment(along w/ her brother,7-8 respectively IIRC), her mother being
one of the preemies( to borrow a term); & she, ( the girl who has since grown up) related some of the internal dynamics,
& their literal escape to freedom (which is to say nothing more than having to steal one of the company's Mercedes, & one of the kids had to drive them out as the mother didn't know how to drive). etc., ad infinitum.

As for Sheela, never met her.


...
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Re: Theophobia

Postby Hammer of Los » Sun Jul 03, 2011 10:32 am

Cosmic Bliss Factor: It is very, very easy to be fooled by manipulative psychopathic-type people when you are cultivating not only inner beauty, but also a view of the Universe which highlights the blissful and divine aspect of the greater world. If one is doing ecstatic practice around groups of people who are in consensus about this this can be even more true. If drugs and tantric sex are involved, there can be an even greater danger of these sorts of problems.


I guess that's true. And surely drugs and sex magick have their own sets of overlapping problems, if you will. I wouldn't endorse drugs or sex magic, nor would I condemn them either. Each to their own, but wisdom can be applied anywhere.

I guess it's true that in all areas of life it is easy to be fooled by manipulative psychopathic-type people.

But also, I guess Rajneesh found out the downsides of cults in the end, too. He was most likely murdered by a cultist. I feel he would likely agree with you, from beyond the grave as it were, about the dangers of cults. I could try and channel him to find out, but I don't think the world is ready for that. I'll stick with JK for now, a much more sober individual. He wasn't permissive, he spoke of the sex drive dismissively as an itch. He did have an affair with a friend's wife though, if I recall correctly.

No cults for me, no sirree! I'm a cult of one. Yes, I did say that right. But I'm a sucker for gurus of every stripe. It doesn't mean I believe a word they say; radical autonomy is the only way.
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Twin Freaks

Postby IanEye » Sun Jul 03, 2011 10:33 am

Image




Intuition

Knowing That by knowing which everything is known.
Upanishads


Life is filled with abstractions, and the only way we can make heads or tails of it is through intuition. Intuition is seeing the solution - seeing it, knowing it. It's emotion and intellect going together. That's essential for the filmmaker.

How do you get something to feel right? Everybody's got the same tools: the camera and the tapes and the world and the actors. But in putting those parts together, there are differences. That's where intuition enters.

Personally, I think intuition can be sharpened and expanded through meditation, diving into the Self. There's an ocean of consciousness inside each of us, and it's an ocean of solutions. When you dive into that ocean, that consciousness, you enliven it.

You don't dive for specific solutions; you dive to enliven that ocean of consciousness. Then your intuition grows and you have a way of solving those problems - knowing when it's not quite right and knowing a way to make it feel correct for you.

That capacity grows and things go much more smoothly.





Religion

I was raised Presbyterian. I respect people who are religious, and I think they find something there that's beautiful, just beautiful. There's truth there. Because these religions are old, though, and they've been fiddled with, possibly, I feel some of the original keys from the masters have been lost. But we're all going to the same beautiful goal; that's the way I see it.

All religions flow ultimately to the one ocean. Transcendental Meditation is a technique to experience that ocean, and it's a technique practiced by people from all religions. Transcendental Meditation itself is not a religion - it's not against any religion; it's not against anything.



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Re: Theophobia

Postby Searcher08 » Sun Jul 03, 2011 10:46 am

Hammer of Los wrote:
Cosmic Bliss Factor: It is very, very easy to be fooled by manipulative psychopathic-type people when you are cultivating not only inner beauty, but also a view of the Universe which highlights the blissful and divine aspect of the greater world. If one is doing ecstatic practice around groups of people who are in consensus about this this can be even more true. If drugs and tantric sex are involved, there can be an even greater danger of these sorts of problems.


I guess that's true. And surely drugs and sex magick have their own sets of overlapping problems, if you will. I wouldn't endorse drugs or sex magic, nor would I condemn them either. Each to their own, but wisdom can be applied anywhere.

I guess it's true that in all areas of life it is easy to be fooled by manipulative psychopathic-type people.

But also, I guess Rajneesh found out the downsides of cults in the end, too. He was most likely murdered by a cultist. I feel he would likely agree with you, from beyond the grave as it were, about the dangers of cults. I could try and channel him to find out, but I don't think the world is ready for that. I'll stick with JK for now, a much more sober individual. He wasn't permissive, he spoke of the sex drive dismissively as an itch. He did have an affair with a friend's wife though, if I recall correctly.

No cults for me, no sirree! I'm a cult of one. Yes, I did say that right. But I'm a sucker for gurus of every stripe. It doesn't mean I believe a word they say; radical autonomy is the only way.


Life of Rajneesh in 60 seconds
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Re: Theophobia

Postby Laodicean » Sun Jul 03, 2011 1:52 pm

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Re: Theophobia

Postby Project Willow » Sun Jul 03, 2011 2:58 pm

hanshan quoting Stein wrote:...
"A rose is a rose is a rose is a rose".


:basicsmile

I sometimes don't know what a rose is either. Forgetting is part of the creative process.
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Re: Theophobia

Postby Laodicean » Sun Jul 03, 2011 5:59 pm

Project Willow wrote:
hanshan quoting Stein wrote:...
"A rose is a rose is a rose is a rose".


:basicsmile

I sometimes don't know what a rose is either. Forgetting is part of the creative process.


Indeed. And here's one for Synchronicity's glorious sake - it's been called one of the best songs of 2011 so far:



with faith or not...still:



Up for talking about Bob Dylan's "faith"? :wink
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Re: Theophobia

Postby American Dream » Sun Jul 03, 2011 6:42 pm

Laodicean wrote:Up for talking about Bob Dylan's "faith"? :wink


Here's something to get the ball rolling:

TUESDAY, MAY 24, 2011

Bob Dylan: Born again and again


Image
(Dylan at St. Lawrence University)


After 70 birthdays, it seems that Bob Dylan just keeps being born again and again.

The first time around, he was born as Robert Zimmerman to a Jewish family from Minnesota. Thirteen years later, he was born into manhood at his 1954 Bar Mitzvah. In 1971, well after being born again as folksinger Bob Dylan, Zimmerman visited Israel and met with Rabbi Meir Kahane of the Jewish Defense League (whom he called “a really sincere guy”). At the time, Time Magazine also reported that Dylan was returning to “his Jewishness” and “reading all kinds of books on Judaism.”

All that was before Dylan boarded the Slow Train to be born yet again as a Christian. In the late 1970s, he began earnestly studying Christianity after a hotel-room conversion experience. Upon noticing that Dylan looked quite ill during a concert, a fan had tossed a silver cross upon the stage. He picked it up and took it back to his room that night. Dylan later said that Jesus appeared to him as a palpable and divine presence - right there in that Tucson hotel room. He then studied for months under the tutelage of the Vineyard Fellowship, a Bible-based ministry. During this time, he also read the apocalyptic works of Hal Lindsey.

Born out of this intensity was Dylan’s acclaimed 1979 “gospel” album, Slow Train Coming. The most famous song from this album was the Grammy-winning Gotta Serve Somebody. Throughout the lyrics, Dylan reiterates that – no matter who you are (or who you think you are), “you’re gonna have to serve somebody” (be it the devil or the Lord).

Wikipedia reports that by 1984 Dylan was “distancing himself from the ‘born again’ label.” He denied ever
being an agnostic in the first place; therefore, “born again” did not seem the right term to him (he also disliked its media-driven triteness). When asked by Kurt Loder during a Rolling Stone interview whether he belonged to any church or synagogue, Dylan “laughingly” replied: Not really. Uh, the Church of the Poison Mind.

Although Dylan has returned in part to his Jewish roots (with some involvement in the Chabad Lubavitch movement) , he also put out an album of very heartfelt Christmas songs in 2009. When told during an interview with Bill Flanagan that he delivered the song O Little Town of Bethlehem “like a true believer,” Dylan replied: Well, I am a true believer.

Resources

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Dylan
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slow_Train_Coming
http://www.bobdylan.com/songs/gotta-serve-somebody
http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,944419,00.html
http://www.bigissuescotland.com/features/view/187
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Re: Theophobia

Postby Laodicean » Sun Jul 03, 2011 6:54 pm

Very nice, AD. With that, I for one am hoping (faithing?) Jeff will chime in Here with his perspective...
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Re: Theophobia

Postby Laodicean » Sun Jul 03, 2011 7:08 pm

Oh holy shit...More synchronicity to go around on this Forth (not a typo) of July weekend...

A Pat Tillman playlist:

http://tillmansnyc.com/select/

Wow! :lovehearts:

And on edit (Jeff), don't let them take the last (w)holy donut...

My avatar inspired...
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