Title of this post: Wasting time (I should be devoting to cleaning my kitchen and washing the pollen out of my clothes) by replying to the idiocy of Ricardo Williams:
Richie says: You've got plenty of time to post about MMY but no comments on post the Boston Massacre in a thread about the Boston Marathon? Go figure. The thread was using the poster's presence at the Boston Marathon as a springboard for talking about how good it is to fly in groups and a call for action to all the flyers to fly in groups because the world is still a dangerous place, you stupid, stupid inattentive and apparently illiterate man. The majority of the post was about the world at large, not the specific events at the marathon, which were only voiced in the beginning paragraph, so yes, work on your reading comprehension. Richie says: You're the guy that mumbled nonsense gibberish to himself for years while trying to get a degree in English from MUM up in Iowa, but I have a reading comprehension problem? LoL! Evidently you have both memory and reading comprehension problems. At no time have I ever claimed to have been a student at MIU or to have sought an English degree. I was on kitchen service staff my entire 2 years at the place. You are either making up bullshit to amuse yourself or your obsessive belief that all the world's finest things came out from under a Buddhist stupa in the ancient past have warped your head. Richie says: Internally meditating on OM, or bouncing on foam, have nothing to do with the practice of 'TM', Boston, the Marathon, MMY, or the massacre. Again you have reading comprehension problems (at least). I said nothing about meditating on the mantra "OM". I was making a facetious reference to the practice of TM by calling it "omming internally." This, you see, is an analogy. An analogy is a literary device that helps to establish a relationship based on similarities between two concepts or ideas. It was also intended as irony. I will let others, if they choose to waste their time doing so, address the idea that bouncing on foam, i.e. - yogic flying, has nothing to do with TM or Massa Marshy the fraud. By the way, referring to yogic flying as bouncing on foam is called a simile, a literary device drawing parallels or comparisons between two unrelated and dissimilar things, people, beings, places and concepts. And since the yogic flying that some here actually believe in is in reality no more than bouncing on foam, it is irony as well.
