--- In [email protected], "Rick" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On the new Peace Government website, permanentpeace.org, I read the
> following:
> 
> "For three years, from 1988 to 1990, at a location just outside New
> Delhi, in India, a single philanthropist supported a group of 8,000
> experts in the Transcendental Meditation technique and the advanced
> TM-Sidhi program, including Yogic Flying). Over those three years,
> every major conflict in the world peacefully resolved. First, a war of
> seven years between Iraq and Iran that had claimed millions of lives
> finally came to an end. Then, after five years, the Soviet Union's
> brutal invasion of Afghanistan was called to a halt. Most encouraging,
> in 1989 the Berlin Wall fell, the Soviet Union dissolved, and forty
> years of Cold War simply melted away."
> 
> Was this a group of 8000 Sidhas (as opposed to a mixture of Sidhas and
> regular TM meditators)?  And was the existence of this group widely
> known in the Movement?  I read a mention of it a few years ago, I
> think in Enlightenment Magazine, but it doesn't seem to have been
> loudly trumpeted among the Movement.  Perhaps because, the end of the
> Cold War notwithstanding, it doesn't seem that it produced much in the
> way of world peace.
> 
> Wars ending, in itself, doesn't really provide evidence of increased
> world peace; all wars do come to an end eventually anyway.  It's HOW
> the wars end.  If a war stops because one side has been defeated or
> because of a mere cessation of fighting without a decrease in
> hostility between the countries, this can hardly be seen as evidence
> of increased world peace.  And what about other factors that one would
> expect to show a change in a positive direction during the existence
> of a group of 8000?  There's no mention of these.  I looked
> at the US crime rate stats and there was no change in those years. 
> Perhaps that's why the existence of this group has not been paraded by
> the TMO.  I sure don't think anybody felt the collective consciousness
> of the world strongly and suddenly change back then.
>

Heh. The invasion of Kuwait, followed by the counter-invasion by dozens of 
countries isn't 
a sign of anything...

Of course, you're correct: we can't REALLY be sure of the effect on world 
consciousness by 
these groups, especially when the groups are not well-documented, but perhaps 
MMY 
believes that the internal studies done on this group of 8000 over 2 year's 
period justify 
the risk of failure by announcing the Fairfield "study" to the world.



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