/You forgot to mention that you lived in a TM Center for a decade, probably
for free, and got kicked out.

So, your report coould hardly be accepted as non-biased. I would think that
you'd be grateful for the free rent instead of throwing all your old TMer
friends under the bus. Oh, I forgot you're using an alias. Go figure./

Quoting salyavin808 <[email protected]>:

A brief post about the TMO's shameless money raising techniques
appeared on TM-Free this afternoon.


  The most interesting bit for me is this:


  "...a TMO email from December 18, 2013 states that:

          '...the National Yagya program is now averaging [i.e.,
receiving donations of - ed. note]
          $429,000 USD per month....The whole world is enjoying the
blessings of the daily
          performance....'

That's $5,148,000 a year income for the 'National Yagya program'
alone...."



  I've always wondered how much they get from selling obviously
ineffectual prayers, and here it is but this is just the national
yagya programme. And doesn't every country have one of those?


  I know a great many people who have given large amounts of cash to
the yagya office, recently Skelmersdale raised 10's of thousands for
yagyas to find them a vastu site and it didn't work! And then they
decided they didn't want to move anyway!


  I never gave a penny to what is an obvious scam but is it a
malicious one? I used to think it's all folie a deux  - a shared
delusion. And then I saw John Hagelin's latest yagya rip-off video
and realised that anyone with any sort of clue about subatomic
physics will know that chanting at quarks and electrons isn't going
to change how they work. Not even a little bit. So we know that - at
least at the top level - it's a malicious attempt to get devotees to
part with hard-earned cash. What sort of organisation would do that?


  Anyway, part with it they do it seems. $5,000,000 is big money, you
could buy a lot of crowns or peace palaces with that. Heck, you could
probably pay Girish's legal fees.


  I'd love to know the full amount raised world-wide. In the UK people
buy each other yagya for birthdays. If someone is ill they get a
yagya. If they move house - yagya. Looking for work - yagya. An
astonishing amount of money must be flowing in to an organisation
that is supposedly based on scientific principles. I haven't heard
David Lynch talk about this, he probably knows it's embarrassing and
keeps quiet to avoid bad publicity. I certainly would but it
undermines so much that I just couldn't. Give this criminal
enterprise a thorough public airing and the whole house of cards will
come down.

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