--- In [email protected], t3rinity <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], TurquoiseB <no_reply@> wrote:
> 
> > And, as I wrote about before, I just don't apolo-
> > gize because someone is demanding it of me. So I 
> > guess the overall answer to your question is No.
> > If Fairfield Life turned into the kind of place
> > where people were expected to apologize for the
> > behavior that the majority of people declared
> > "inappropriate," I would bail from it far more
> > quickly than I bailed from the TM movement, which
> > tried to do exactly that.
> 
> Now thats interesting. You had to leave the movement because you
> didn't apologize?

No, it's just that the whole *mindset* of the TM
movement was based on making people apologize for
being who they were, unless they were "on the
program." In other words, they were expected to
live according to Someone Else's Ideas of how 
they should live. If they didn't, the organiz-
ation first tried to make them feel guilty, and
if that didn't work they'd censure them, and if
*that* didn't work they'd just declare them 
anathema and get rid of them.

They never actively tried to get rid of me; I 
just grew so disgusted by the mindset that I
walked away. 



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