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All right, so Roger was humorous and I was not. I was simply ticked off at Roger's humor because it pushed one of my buttons. The majority of people in the West do not understand Eastern philosophy. They don't care to understand it either. For them it is entertainment to laugh at it, and to put it down at every opportunity they get.
Hubbard did that. Alan did that. And, now I see Roger do that. Before them the Christian missionaries in India did that. What is up with these guys? Looking at it squarely, the basic issue is Ego. One may call it "individuality" but it does not make it any less of ego. Ego is just dressed up nicely as "individuality."
These guys were or are attached to winning games in this universe. That is ego. East doesn't care about it. The priority for East is to be exterior to this universe, by not being attached to this universe at all. West seems to laugh at it.
Now that doesn't mean that everybody in the East is trying to get exterior to the universe. East has been learning from the West, just as West has been learning from the East. I am simply talking about two different mind sets that are historically documented as Western and Eastern. Hubbard actually pointed out this difference very nicely in The Phoenix Lectures:
I was very impressed with Scientology Axiom #1 because I thought that it reflected the concept of Brahma and Nirvana, I went through all of Scientology with that understanding and I learnt a lot. I did my TR0 the way I have documented in the three issues here:
LOOK & NOTICE
EXPERIENCE
ATTENTION
But Now I am coming to realize that Hubbard meant something different with his concept of Static in Scn Axiom #1, and that he really looked down upon Nirvana (see the section INDIVIDUALITY VS. IDENTITY in SCN 8-8008, as well as refer to KSW1).
I am also coming to understand why I was able to really get people winning on TRs Course in late 70s at Flag by word clearing them using various references, which were not on TRs course; and why I was removed from TRs Course Word Clearer's post, accused of squirreling.
I am coming to understand why Alan Walter tended to put me down and make fun of Hindu deities. I remember Alan calling Krishna in a picture a women. I don’t think Alan cared much about Hinduism. His ignorance of Hinduism was plainly visible. He certainly cared about boosting power of an individual so he could win MEST games and make a lot of money.
I am also coming to understand the OT Levels better. They are all about boosting the power of the individual so he could better control the MEST universe and win all his games in the MEST universe. Hubbard aspired to be the greatest individual ever. Nobody can deny that Hubbard did not have a big ego.
How does Hubbard’s compassion compare to the compassion of Buddha?
Hubbard tried to ride on the coattails of Buddha. Buddha lived to be a stable and healthy 90-year old before he died. His philosophy brought civilization to three-quarters of the world. And what did Hubbard do? He made a lot of money by “translating” Buddhists thoughts to Western lingo, and died at 76 in poor health and a nervous wreck. Buddha was out and about among the masses. Hubbard was hiding in his trailer in a remote location.
This is Nirvana versus Individuality.
.
Hubbard did that. Alan did that. And, now I see Roger do that. Before them the Christian missionaries in India did that. What is up with these guys? Looking at it squarely, the basic issue is Ego. One may call it "individuality" but it does not make it any less of ego. Ego is just dressed up nicely as "individuality."
These guys were or are attached to winning games in this universe. That is ego. East doesn't care about it. The priority for East is to be exterior to this universe, by not being attached to this universe at all. West seems to laugh at it.
Now that doesn't mean that everybody in the East is trying to get exterior to the universe. East has been learning from the West, just as West has been learning from the East. I am simply talking about two different mind sets that are historically documented as Western and Eastern. Hubbard actually pointed out this difference very nicely in The Phoenix Lectures:
There was evidently a split of races somewhere in the vicinity of the Ural Mountains. Part of the population which is now in the northern hemisphere went east, and part of it went west. The borning spot of the human race has been variously disputed but if we don’t worry about the borning spot and just say -- that is more or less what occurred at that time, that there was a sharp division, and that part of the northern hemisphere’s people went east and part of them went west -- we discover that a singular difference of personality occurred which is in the northern hemisphere the most observable difference.
The people who went into the steppes, into the Gobi, into China, India, and into the various islands, were faced by an enormous chain of deserts. They were faced by privations of great magnitude, and they developed a philosophy of enduring. That was the keynote because that was what their environment demanded of them. They had to endure and so we find these races colored in a certain way so as to thwart the onslaught of sun and snow. We find them without natural protection in their environment and therefore we find them able to survive long after those who went in the opposite direction.
And so it is, their colorations, their customs, and so on, are different from ours just to the degree that they can survive in tremendously arduous surroundings, and the surroundings of those lands is arduous. They are, those races that are there, able to endure. And if you said anything about them, this is certainly a clear statement of fact.
They also are tremendously practical. Their practicality is such as to stagger a westerner. The explanations that they will suddenly and innocently voice to a query are always of such sweeping simplicity that they leave a westerner standing there staring with a slack jaw.
Now the races which went in the opposite direction from the Urals, evidently went in to a country which had a heavy forestation. It had a great deal of game and the philosophy of the western world became that of striking a hard blow. If you could strike a blow of great magnitude hard enough and fast enough you could kill game and so you could live. Because of the vegetation and because of many other factors, they did not particularly need coloration. Their own customs did not need to be as thoroughly practical and they were able to dispose of their lives much more easily, you might say, since food was plentiful, as it was not in Asia. And we discover western philosophy building up on the behavior pattern of striking a hard blow. Get in quick, hit hard, your game drops and you eat. And beyond that, not very much thought or practicality.
However the truth of this may be, here certainly is something which is said to have preceded a period of 10,000 years ago. It might or might not have truth. But it is a very fast explanation of this -- and we discover immediately, as we look at these two worlds, that one of these worlds, having to endure, being faced with enormous privation, would of course develop a certain patience and an ability to philosophize. An ability to think. It would take a long time for anyone to think all the way through something. And a man who is merely accustomed to striking a hard blow is not likely to think all the way through something. When we are up against philosophy, we are fortunately or unfortunately up against an Asian tradition.
I was very impressed with Scientology Axiom #1 because I thought that it reflected the concept of Brahma and Nirvana, I went through all of Scientology with that understanding and I learnt a lot. I did my TR0 the way I have documented in the three issues here:
LOOK & NOTICE
EXPERIENCE
ATTENTION
But Now I am coming to realize that Hubbard meant something different with his concept of Static in Scn Axiom #1, and that he really looked down upon Nirvana (see the section INDIVIDUALITY VS. IDENTITY in SCN 8-8008, as well as refer to KSW1).
I am also coming to understand why I was able to really get people winning on TRs Course in late 70s at Flag by word clearing them using various references, which were not on TRs course; and why I was removed from TRs Course Word Clearer's post, accused of squirreling.
I am coming to understand why Alan Walter tended to put me down and make fun of Hindu deities. I remember Alan calling Krishna in a picture a women. I don’t think Alan cared much about Hinduism. His ignorance of Hinduism was plainly visible. He certainly cared about boosting power of an individual so he could win MEST games and make a lot of money.
I am also coming to understand the OT Levels better. They are all about boosting the power of the individual so he could better control the MEST universe and win all his games in the MEST universe. Hubbard aspired to be the greatest individual ever. Nobody can deny that Hubbard did not have a big ego.
How does Hubbard’s compassion compare to the compassion of Buddha?
Hubbard tried to ride on the coattails of Buddha. Buddha lived to be a stable and healthy 90-year old before he died. His philosophy brought civilization to three-quarters of the world. And what did Hubbard do? He made a lot of money by “translating” Buddhists thoughts to Western lingo, and died at 76 in poor health and a nervous wreck. Buddha was out and about among the masses. Hubbard was hiding in his trailer in a remote location.
This is Nirvana versus Individuality.
.


