Re: Theos-World Are China facing the Law of Karma?
Mar 22, 2008 10:43 AM
by Richard Semock
Really, where was that. Try it in Bejing or Lhasa and see what
happens.
--- In theos-talk@yahoogroups.com, Drpsionic@... wrote:
>
>
> I've done it.? And nothing happened.
>
>
>
> Chuck the Heretic
>
>
>
> http://www.geocities.com/c_cosimano
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Cass Silva <silva_cass@...>
> To: theos-talk@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Fri, 21 Mar 2008 8:57 pm
> Subject: Re: Theos-World Are China facing the Law of Karma?
>
>
>
>
>
>
> We can test the 'ideal' or notion of freedom of speech, by telling
a Judge or a Policemen to get f*****.
> Cass
>
> Drpsionic@... wrote:
> It's an ideal that has the force of law behind it in the US.? If an
athlete is actually disciplined by the US Olympic committee, he can
probably sue for consipiracy to violate his civil rights and given
the way the courts rule in such matters, collect significant damages.
>
> We upset the apple cart all the time around here.
>
> Chuck the Heretic
>
> http://www.geocities.com/c_cosimano
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Cass Silva <silva_cass@...>
> To: theos-talk@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Wed, 19 Mar 2008 7:08 pm
> Subject: Re: Theos-World Are China facing the Law of Karma?
>
> So much for freedom of speech eh! My mother told me years ago that
freedom of speech is just an ideal, it doesn't exist in the real
world. It's a nice idea but upset the apple cart and you will be
regarded as a bad apple and dealt with appropriately. The ideal of
national security has taken away all our personal freedoms. We have a
new nose on an old face, democracy mimicking communism. Democracy
invents a reason, doesn't matter if it is true or false, communism
promised a better way of life.
>
> Cass
>
> Cass
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> Drpsionic@... wrote:
>
> The IOC has placed restrictions on what the athletes can say at
olympic events, however, at least as far as the US is concerned, I
would not be surprised if Congress passes a bill forbidding the US
olympic committee from enforcing any restrictions on what US athletes
might say in protest and that would also block any disciplinary
action by the IOC as well as the US olympic committee would have to
enforce those.
>
> Chuck the Heretic
>
> http://www.geocities.com/c_cosimano
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Cass Silva <silva_cass@...>
> To: theos-talk@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Tue, 18 Mar 2008 9:17 pm
> Subject: Re: Theos-World Are China facing the Law of Karma?
>
> Come to think of it, very little advertising in Australia this year
for the Olympics.
> Cass
>
> Drpsionic@... wrote:
> No, they wouldn't change the location now, but it would certainly
make life interesting for the IOC.? By the way, my wife has noticed
something.? Normally the companies that sponsor the games use that in
their advertising, usually at the tail end of their commercials with
the olympic logo.? Not this year.? They are not mentioning it at all,
which means that the sponsors?are already losing money.
>
> Chuck the Heretic
>
> http://www.geocities.com/c_cosimano
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Cass Silva <silva_cass@...>
> To: theos-talk@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Tue, 18 Mar 2008 4:38 am
> Subject: Re: Theos-World Are China facing the Law of Karma?
>
> It won't happen Chuck, too much money invested. They could ban
China and reschedule the games back to Greece, but that won't happen.
> Not taking any sides but I heard on the news that inflation is now
running at 9 percent in Tibet and the people are struggling
economically, on the good side, their health and education has been
improved since chinese occupation, life mortality is up apparently,
but I suppose its no good living longer if you dont have the money to
feed yourself.
>
> Cass
>
> Drpsionic@... wrote:
>
> China believes that Tibet is a part of China.?
>
> China is an interesting country in that it actually does not have a
history expansionism after the Mongols, but it does claim an interest
in certain contiguous territories.
>
> Now, conventional protests don't work on the Chinese.? They have
skins almost as thick as American conservatives and they just don't
give a damn.? But they are sensitive to certain things and while the
IOC is not going to cancel its games, the IOC can be made to pay for
having them in China, or rather its sponsors can.? Now this is really
out of my field of knowledge, but if a major boycott of Olympic
sponsors could be organized...
>
> Chuck the Heretic
>
> http://www.geocities.com/c_cosimano
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Cass Silva <silva_cass@...>
> To: theos-talk@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Sat, 15 Mar 2008 6:06 pm
> Subject: Re: Theos-World Are China facing the Law of Karma?
>
> I am curious to know why China would be interested in Tibet. It's
not as though the country would ever be a threat to China, it's not
as though they have minerals or oil, perhaps the only threat is that
the Chinese fear that Tibetinism will spread to the Mainland, who
knows? If Karma is involved Morten, I suspect that Tibet is also
dealing with its national karma as well as China.
>
> Cass
>
> Morten Nymann Olesen <global-theosophy@...> wrote:
>
> To all readers
>
> To all readers
>
> My views are:
>
> Now, what is going on?
>
> Are China facing the Law of Karma?
>
> Tibet gripped by violent clashes
>
> a.. Jonathan Watts in Beijing
>
> b.. guardian.co.uk,
>
> c.. Friday March 14 2008
>
> d.. Article history
>
> About this article
>
> Close
>
> This article was first published on guardian.co.uk on Friday March
14 2008. It was last updated at 14:56 on March 14 2008.
>
> Tibetans throw stones at Chinese army vehicles in Lhasa as violent
protests against Chinese rule break out. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
>
> The Tibetan capital of Lhasa was on the brink of chaos today as the
fiercest anti-government protests in almost 20 years erupted into
violence between Chinese security forces and protesters wielding iron
bars.
>
> A radio station reported at least two people had been killed in the
rioting. The US-funded Radio Free Asia quoted two witnesses as saying
two bodies were seen lying on the ground in the Barkor area, a
shopping district where protests had been particularly fierce.
>
> Armed police used water cannons and teargas on the crowds, and
witnesses say security vehicles were set on fire and Chinese drivers
were carried off with bloodied faces after being beaten by a mob of
young Tibetans.
>
> The US embassy in Beijing said its citizens in Lhasa had reported
gunshots being fired in the city. The embassy emailed an advisory
note to Americans warning them to stay away from the city, now in its
fifth day of anti-Chinese protests.
>
> The Dalai Lama, the spiritual leader of Tibet's Buddhists, urged
China not to use violence to quell the protests, which he called "a
manifestation of the deep-rooted resentment of the Tibetan people
under the present governance".
>
> "I therefore appeal to the Chinese leadership to stop using force
and address the long-simmering resentment of the Tibetan people
through dialogue with the Tibetan people," he said in a statement.
>
> The EU and the White House also issued statements urging China to
show restraint.
>
> Coming just months before the start of the 2008 Olympics, the
protests against Beijing rule threaten to overshadow preparations for
the games.
>
> A resident told the Guardian that he heard an explosion and around
10 shots every minute at one point, but thought it was teargas rather
than bullets being fired because he saw people running from plumes of
smoke and covering their mouths.
>
> "I am too afraid to go out," the source, who asked to remain
anonymous, said. "It is chaos out there."
>
> The source, who is from the Chinese Han ethnic group, said he saw
Tibetans attack two fire engines.
>
> "I saw Tibetans throwing stones at the vehicles. They dragged
drivers from vehicles, took off their uniforms and helmets, then beat
them.
>
> "The chanting mob beat up around five or six drivers who had to be
carried away with blood on their faces ... then they put a motorbike
under the fire engine and set fire to it so the engine was burned."
>
> The report was difficult to confirm. The Chinese government has yet
to make a statement, and communications with the tightly-controlled
Himalayan region are difficult even during calm periods.
>
> A blogger who writes from Lhasa under the name Beifang described
the violence on his blog.
>
> "Police cars and fire engines were outside smashed and burned. A
lot of Tibetans ran towards Dazhao [Jokhang] temple. I heard
gunshots. Five army police vehicles drove that way. A large number of
armed police followed. A few people with blood on their faces were
taken away."
>
> Tibetan support groups overseas said they were hearing reports of a
fire and protests near the Tromsikhang market near the Jokhang temple
in central Lhasa.
>
> According to the Free Tibet campaign, there were also protests
today in the Labrang monastery in Gansu province, where 200 monks led
demonstrations on the streets. The group said this showed the
protests were gathering momentum.
>
> The AFP news agency said one of its reporters saw monks leading a
crowd of around 300 people near the monastery, one of the most
important in Tibetan Buddhism.
>
> Since the first protest by monks on Monday, thousands of armed
police have locked down monasteries in and around Lhasa. Witnesses
said today's protesters were mostly lay Tibetans.
>
> China's Xinhua news agency reported that shops had been set on fire
in Lhasa but gave no other details.
>
> The International Campaign for Tibet said two monks at the Sera
monastery had stabbed themselves and others had gone on hunger strike.
>
> About a dozen monks were reportedly detained on Monday, when
several hundred from the Sera and Drepung monasteries took to the
streets to mark the 49th anniversary of a failed uprising against
Beijing. Similar protests took place in the Ganden and Lutsang
monasteries in Qinghai (known in Tibetan as Amdo) where hundreds of
monks reportedly chanted slogans calling for their exiled leader, the
Dalai Lama, to return.
>
> The upsurge in activism comes amid growing frustration with the
lack of progress in talks between representatives of the Dalai Lama
and Beijing.
>
> M. Sufilight
>
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