So, hard-yards is pushing this pile of whiny bull:
>\342\200\234Not only are foreign media organizations prevented from
>covering these events, but the authorities have also organized a
>veritable disinformation campaign, using pro-government media such
>as the Global Times, which play down the disturbances and accuse
>the international community of interfering.
>
>\342\200\234Few media outlets are able to obtain first-hand
>information and fewer still manage to travel to the regions
>concerned.
>
>\342\200\234Out of sight of the world, a major crisis is unfolding.
>Even Pyongyang has an international media presence, . . . <snip>
Push, push , push . . ..
Now nobody can possibly be doing anything sinister to keep "foreign
media organizations" "from covering these events" because this kind of
news is pretty much just gossip stuff told "over tea" by a Da Lama
friendly propagandist, as we can see from the following report:
On the day in January when Lobsang Jamyang struck the match that
took his life, the former Tibetan monk paid the world a subtle
goodbye. He ate vegetarian food,visited his old monastery to circle
it in prayer, and counselled a recently divorced couple to get back
together.
Then, after drinking a bottle of petrol, his quiet preparations
became a visceral act of political protest. "When he was on fire,"
one of his friends told me recently over tea, "he exploded".
If this kind of ghastly terrorizing act wasn't done behind the public,
if it was done at all, the community that has been aiding and abetting
this kind of terrorist acts would have to be completely shut down for
failing to live up to its responsibility to protect and care for the
safety of their own members and the community at large - by any civil
society in which such a community exists.
These immolation acts are immoral acts and aimed to terrorize the
audience wherever the propagandists can find one.
The so-called "major crisis" that these immoralists are pushing to
"unfold" is always a huge exaggeration to maximize the dramatic effect
of these terrorist acts.
In fact, plenty of western news outlets from the Voice of America, the
Voice of Free this and that, to the New York Times are aching to
retell these tea-time explosive stories if they have any room left
after covering Syria, Libya, and commentaries about how "despicable"
China and Russia are these days.
But how many immolation deaths will have to happen, if they do happen,
to match the number of drone deaths when each attack will evaporate a
score or more of unarmed civilians on the ground who harbor no death
wishes or some totally irrational wish to have another person live
thousands of years more while you self-immolate?
And how many immolation deaths will have to happen, if they do happen,
to match the total excess deaths of Iraqi citizens as a result of the
Iraq war based on false pretenses?
Now those have been ongoing major crises in the world and yet nobody
has been able to do anything about them despite the number of deaths
that have actually occurred.
There is a problem of perspective, man ... when these Tibetan young
men would buy the garbage the exploiting Da Lama and his cohorts in
Dharamsala try to feed them as they themselves have allowed such a
medieval level of ignorance to take a hold of their lives.
Nobody should blame others for their own ignorance! Besides the fact
that their destructive acts will never amount to anything because if
Mrs. Clinton is huffing and puffing about the "inaction" in Syria, who
is going to do better and send in the drones to help bring Da Lama
back to lord over "his people".
I'll instead call on the Tibetan people to wise up and spend their
time learning logic, mathematics, physics, and biology and see that
your own life is the greatest gift in the world any living being can
have. You burn yourself so that Da Lama can come back and live for
thousands of years? Don't fool yourself, there is no logical,
physical, biological, or mathematical path that can connect the
extinction of your life with Da Lama's existence, despicable or not.
You shouldn't immitate a moth and Da Lama should at least re-incarnate
at least once as a worm so that he can help the other worms to redress
their pains suffered when their cold hard lives on the Tibetan plateau
were disturbed in order to satisfy the earthly pleasure of Da Lama and
his aristocratic friends at their movies parties in mid-summer nights
way back when they should have been helping to improve the lives and
longevity of "their people"?
Anti-causal or anachronistic? Not at all ... when it comes to those
who believe that Da Lama can reincarnate ad nauseum into another and
still another woman's womb and grow into a man and always a man again
and again in order to retain his lifestyle at Potola and Norbulingka
Palaces in Lhasa while keeping the masses at the dirt level either as
hard laborers or worms.
So what is the point of fighting for your freedom to hold on to a
religion if that religion simply deprives you of all your freedom to
think and live freely.
So, wake up! If you don't like anybody, it's within your right and
prerogative to do something right. But being foolish is never right
and will never help you live a better life or anyone else to do the
same.
lo yeeOn
========
I am attaching the following post for more thought on this subject.
In article <
d8561f38-4400-41ae...@z12g2000yqm.googlegroups.com>,
bmo...@nyx.net <
bmo...@nyx.net> wrote:
>On Jan 5, 1:58 am,
acous...@panix.com (lo yeeOn) wrote:
>> If it's so important for Da Lama to collect still another meaningless
>> award bearing Mahatma Gandhi's name, then it should be even more
>> important to let today's Tibetan people know what a scoundrel Da Lama
>> was when he had a chance to lead and help improve their ancestors' lot
>> but did not!
>>
>> Norbulingka is Da Lama's legacy as well as his lifetime indictment as
>> another corrupt religious head who did not care about the masses under
>> his rule.
>
>He was 15 years old at the time, you idiot!
>
Oh yeah? "Only 15 years old at the time", eh? The 15-year old was
telling his servant/friend Herr Harrer: "Heinrich, go tell `my people'
to dig the ground at Norbulingka and build me a nice movie theater,
'cause I really liked the movies you and I were watching together last
night ...! Okay, Heinrich?"
If Da Lama was innocent, then you are a total idiot, no question about
it! So I should not be at all surprised to see how much you want to
keep drawing attention to yourself for the stupid and meangingless
work that you're doing on these internet newsgroups.
See, I didn't invent the misery Da Lama caused the Tibetan people.
His friend Heinrich Harrer revealed it to the world through the book
he called "Seven Years in Tibet". He did an effective job telling the
world what Da Lama was doing as a boy king in the isolated Tibet.
Lo and behold, what the boy king was doing clearly explained why Tibet
was such an impoverished place, where people's average lifespan was
under forty years of age and where over 80% of the population was
illiterate, when the People's Liberation Army arrived in 1950.
The boy king might have been in his teens, but it didn't stop him from
ordering the commoners to dig the ground at Norbulingka and build one
palace after another. Where did "his people" get a chance to have an
education? How could they live a decent lifespan working under such
harsh conditions on the Himalayan plateaus year after year?
Did Da Lama care? Obviously not! Compassion? It's just propaganda
when it suits his western masters.
Even the Wikipedia cited Da Lama as responsible for overseeing many of
his selfish palatial building projects at Norbulingka, including the
building of the movie theater described in the "Seven Years in Tibet"
so vividly.
So no matter how loud you shout in trying to keep the ugly truth about
Da Lama from the public consciousness, Wikipedia has more authenticity
than your shout will ever be able to match. You should realize that!
lo yeeOn
========
So, let's look at what Da Lama was doing when he had a chance to order
people around and caused misery to the Tibetan people which he called
his "people":
So, I'm reposting what I wrote last time with a few clarifications:
If it's so important for Da Lama to collect still another meaningless
award bearing Mahatma Gandhi's name, then it should be even more
important to let today's Tibetan people know what a scoundrel Da Lama
was when he had a chance to lead and help improve their ancestors' lot
but did not!
Norbulingka is Da Lama's legacy as well as his lifelong indictment as
another corrupt religious head who did not care about the masses under
his rule.
In addition to the terrible physical hardship, Da Lama year after year
gave "his people" a great deal of emotional distress, when he wanted
work done on his lavish palatial projects. By asking his blonde
European visitor (Herr Heinrich Harrer) to direct "his people" to
break the hard cold ground of Lhasa for his movie theater, he forced
them to face, according to the superstitions they had been taught,
countless numbers of their "mothers" and "grandmothers" writhing in
pain in their own bare hands, as the poor little creatures who were
their mothers before were now uprooted.
For the laborers, it was their misfortune that their "mothers" and
"grandmothers" who would be reincarnated as earthworms, not Da Lama's
own mother and grandmother. Why? Because, according to the feudal
theocratic teaching of Tibetan buddhism, the poor are poor because
that's what they have earned from their prior lives. Their lack of
good karmic credit has condemned them to a life of re-incarnation
which appears from an anthropocentric viewpoint even more miserable in
the next cycle around.
But this is a skilful way for the early clergy of the cruel religion
to figure out how the monks can eternally dictate to the masses what
they want from their labor. It also ensures the continuity of the
social order so that the ruling class remains the ruling class while
the lowly denizens remain lowly denizens.
Such an absurd and unflattering portrait of the old feudal Tibet was
brought up by Herr Heinrich Harrer, the blonde European visitor from
Austria mentioned above who had counted Da Lama as a personal friend.
Da Lama showed a total lack of sensitivity, humanity, and compassion
in his type of despicable aristocratic conduct toward the commoners
he ruled.
lo yeeOn
========
In article <
88311a25-59d5-4750...@y7g2000vbe.googlegroups.com>,
Peter Terpstra <
pe...@dharma.dyn-o-saur.com> wrote:
>China rejects calls for fact-finding missions to Tibet
>Phayul[Tuesday, December 13, 2011 19:23]
>
>DHARAMSHALA, December 13: In a letter sent to a news website based in
>Brussels, the Dalai Lama has urged European Union (EU) foreign affairs
>chief Catherine Ashton to press China on allowing a visit by EU
>diplomats to Tibet.
>
>"The situation in Tibet is very desperate. It is urgent that the . . .
It's consistent with Da Lama's propensity to exaggerate and to say
anything to suit his immediate purposes. When I grew up, I saw local
Buddhist monks as mostly a lazy, lying, and cheating group of people.
In college, I learned that there were some nice ideas in Buddhism that
can help one to become a better person. But an average monk doesn't
seem to be aware of those teachings.
And I never gave much thought to Da Lama until reading the garbage
Hard-yards Terpstra posted day after day.
The Norbulingka Palace playboy blew his chance when he squandered away
the time he was god-king of the Tibetans. He had an educated blonde
European who could have taught his subjects some geography and
science. But he monopolized the asset as his personal property.
As a result, some 80% plus of the population was illiterate and its
average longevity was under 40 years of age under his rule, as the
bulk of China was rapidly transforming itself into modernity, even
before the CCP came.
Da Lama doesn't know what it means for a situation to be desperate.
The situation in Tibet (before 1951) when he was still its king was
desperate by any account; yet he didn't see it at all.
He spent the wealth of the Tibetan people building summer palaces for
himself and his aristocratic/theocratic class.
And in the process of doing that, he drove the flora and fauna farther
and farther away from their natural habitat in the beautiful Tibet.
What he did was definitely against the teaching of the Buddha. And it
shouldn't be hard for any person with an ounce of common sense to see
that it was an extremely self-indulgent and selfish act.
But what can we expect of Da Lama?
Instead of repenting, he sold his soul to the powers-that-be in the
West at the expense of the well being of the Chinese people. He's
consorted with the CIA, the NED, and similar evil organizations which
exist solely for the purpose of subverting peaceful societies around
the world.
Da Lama has lost all credibility ever since he squandered it decades
ago when he still had power in Tibet.
And shame on those who continue to promote this stooge of the West for
the purpose of turning China into a Libya, an Iraq, or an Afghanistan.
lo yeeOn
========
Subject: Norbulingka - summer palace for Da Lama
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norbulingka
The Norbulingka palace has been mostly identified with the 13th and
the 14th Dalai Lamas who commissioned most of the structures seen here
now.
There is also a zoo at Norbulingka, originally to keep the animals
which were given to the Dalai Lamas. Heinrich Harrer helped the 14th
Dalai Lama build a small movie theatre there in the 1950s.
[So who says Da Lama, aka the 14th Dalai Lama, was too young to be
responsible for the feudal system, the serfdom, and their iniquity
there? Indeed, Da Lama gave "his people" a lot of emotional pain,
in addition to terrible physical hardship, by asking Harrer to direct
them to break the hard cold ground of Lhasa for his movie theater,
thus forcing them to face countless of their "mothers" writhing in
pain as the poor creatures who were their mothers before were now
uprooted. Da Lama showed a total lack of sensitivity, humanity, and
compassion in this type of aristocratic conduct toward the masses.]
The palace, with 374 rooms, is located 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) west of
the Potala Palace, which was the winter palace. It is in the western
suburb of Lhasa City on the bank of the Kyichu River. When
construction of the palace was started (during the 7th Dalai Lama's
period) in the 1740s, the site was a barren land, overgrown with weeds
and scrub and infested with wild animals.[6]
Fruit trees of apple, peach and apricot were also reported (but the
fruits did not ripen in Lhasa) . . .
In article <1622245.kdTlGXAFRq@Dharma>,
Peter Terpstra <
pe...@dharma.dyn-o-saur.com> wrote:
>Presentation to His Holiness the Dalai Lama of the Mahatma Gandhi
>International Award for Reconciliation and Peace during the
>Kalachakra for World Peace in Bodh Gaya, India, on January 4, 2011.
[2011??? Tsk, tsk, tsk . . . typical hardyards!!!]
>
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Sk5CafEJH8
>
>Presentation to His Holiness the Dalai Lama of the Mahatma Gandhi
>International Award for Reconciliation and Peace during the
>Kalachakra for World Peace in Bodh Gaya,
>India, on January 4, 2011.
[Doing it for the second time, eh??? 2011??? Tsk, tsk, tsk
. . . typical hardyards!!! Don't even bother to get the date
right???]
>
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Sk5CafEJH8
>
-------------------
>... - all the while whinging about China having been raped by
>colonialists sometime in the past. In the opinion of this new "running
>dog of imperialism" it is entitled to all the resources on the planet,
>and in return, it peddles killer "baby formula" and substandard cheap
>crap through Walmart while manipulating its currency. Yeah, the new
>Shangrila is here. So, when are you moving to this new paradise?
>
>--
>VB, Ubetjotushy
>'ome=shanty
>
>-----
>About the Jihadi Loon Squad:
>---------------------------------------------------------------------
>A jihadi loon is someone like Jade Muckeraj.
>
>"Jade Muckeraj" aka "The Old Cow of Hawaii" <
char...@fraudsrus.com>
>tries her best to pretend she is a Hindu -- cutting and pasting, and
>even doctoring what others post/write about Hindus/Hinduism on the
>internet, deliberately pidginizing Sanskrit and providing wrong
>translations, inventing brand new books in the Mahabharat (reducing it
>to Muckabharat), stalking and abusing people who disagree with her by
>hijacking their posts, and then cuts and pastes about Hindu ethics and
>moans self-righteously about honesty -- and succeeds spectacularly in
>convincing all, except other jihadi loons, that she is not a Hindu.
>She is in fact a creepy jihadi loon, who thinks she owns the newsgroup
>s.c.indian, and has absolutely no problem slandering anyone. As a
>Indian citizen supposedly, she meddles in US political issues, and
>advocates civil war in India.
Tibetan suicides are tinder for future unrest in China
Greg Bruno
Feb 27, 2012
http://www.thenational.ae/thenationalconversation/comment/tibetan-suicides-are-tinder-for-future-unrest-in-china
On the day in January when Lobsang Jamyang struck the match that took
his life, the former Tibetan monk paid the world a subtle goodbye. He
ate vegetarian food,visited his old monastery to circle it in prayer,
and counselled a recently divorced couple to get back together.
Then, after drinking a bottle of petrol, his quiet preparations became
a visceral act of political protest. "When he was on fire," one of his
friends told me recently over tea, "he exploded".
Twenty-two similar acts of Tibetan defiance - from the first in March
to the most recent last week - have happened in the last
year. Tibetans, who have lived under Chinese rule for six decades,
have embraced a grisly and desperate method - self-immolation - to
demonstrate a renewed anger towards Beijing's religious, economic and
cultural repression. In modern Tibet, the first instance of
self-immolation occurred in 2009; in the past year, it has become a
relative epidemic. The question is,how will it end?
For Beijing, the answer is force. Thousands of paramilitary police
have floodedSichuan and Qinghai provinces in China's Tibetan region,
and Communist Party officials have condemned suicidal monks as
anarchists, terrorists and rebels. In December, one party official
compared protesters to "rats" born of "weasels".
What Chinese authorities seem to fail to realise is that nearly two
dozen self-inflicted deaths are not a police problem, but rather the
start of a violent trend that could accelerate if concessions and
dialogue are not offered.
In the Tibetan exile capital of Dharamsala in India, religious leaders
and political activists rightly see hypocrisy in China's crackdown. As
security forces stream into eastern Tibet, grievances elsewhere in
China are being addressed with a new degree of diplomatic acumen.
Recent protests in the village of Wukan, in the southern province of
Guangdong, are instructive. When residents massed last year to condemn
corrupt property deals, the Communist Party could have responded with
more violence, as it had on many other occasions. Instead, officials
offered to hold free village elections and to conduct an
investigation.
Wukan cast ballots earlier this month. And on the same day that they
voted, party officials in Sichuan blamed "trained separatists" and
terrorists for the continuing unrest in Tibet.
Since the 1950s, fear of domestic instability has inclined Beijing to
respond to its "Tibet problem" with violence, economic coercion and
endless propaganda. But decades of social development and
infrastructure improvements have failed to win over the millions of
Tibetans who live in the vast expanse of grasslands and mountains of
the Tibetan plateau.
Almost every one of the 22 people who have set themselves on fire over
the last year had the same demand: Beijing must stay out of Tibetan
religious affairs and allow the return of the Dalai Lama.
Neitherdemand is likely to be answered anytime soon. And yet, they
demonstrate the depth of reverence for the man viewed as the
embodiment of the intangible Tibetan faith. No degree of force or
"re-education" can wipe away that belief.
In Tibetan Buddhism, the Dalai Lama is believed to be the earthly
embodiment of the Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, the deity of
compassion. The incarnations of the Dalai Lama in different
individuals have served as the spiritual and temporal leader of
Tibetans for centuries.
China's manipulation of reincarnation doctrine - with Beijing
introducing a law mandating that lamas, including the Dalai Lama, be
approved by the officially atheist Communist Party - is rightly seen
as an attemptto wipe out the Tibetan identity.
The spate of self-immolations is only a glimpse of the unrest that
China will see if the Dalai Lama, now 76, dies without a solution that
is acceptable to Tibetans. Kirti Rinpoche, an exiled abbot of
amonastery that has seen about half of the recent immolations, told me
that unless China changes its policies on religious practices, the
crisis will deepen.
"The Chinese communist government should consider the situation and
they should improve it," the abbot said, "or it could lead to
violence." Tibetans, he said, "are helpless".
Not all Tibetans would see themselves as helpless bystanders. In
death, Lobsang Jamyang may have accomplished morethan he could have in
life. Far from driving the Tibetan issue underground, China's military
response has only generated more unity and resolve.
"People were coming [to pay respects] from as far away as Lhasa,"
Lobsang's friend, who asked to remain anonymous, told me. "There is a
spark of unity, and nationalism, now in Tibet; nationalism that is
being sparked for the first time."
It is true that Beijing's grip on the Tibetan region faces no real
challenge. Tibetans are not demanding political independence. Rather,
they are calling for religious freedom, recognition of the status of
high lamas and cultural respect.
Beijing's response, then, will shape the future. This is not an
Arab-style rebellion that threatens regime change. But the deployment
of police and tankscannot frighten protesters who are willing to set
themselves on fire.
For now, Tibetans across the plateau continue to hold on to a belief
that the Dalai Lama can, and will, bring them salvation. When his
light is extinguished, do not expect the sparks of unrest and
rebellion to disappear with it.
In article <2942143.d8Il1pS3ox@Dharma>,
>previously arrested on 27 July 2010 for “political
>On the same day the tag of Liu Zhiming, an investigative journalist