--- In [email protected], TurquoiseB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], "authfriend" <jstein@> wrote:
> >
> > --- In [email protected], TurquoiseB <no_reply@> 
wrote:
> > >
> > > --- In [email protected], "Robert Gimbel" 
<babajii_99@>
> > > wrote:
> > > >
> > > > Therefore there have been many prophecy's of this time;
> > > > So, the real question is:
> > > > With so many people, expecting something like this to happen;
> > > > These fanatical thought forms...
> > > > Will there be a chance to change this apparent destiny?
> > > 
> > > A good question.
> > > 
> > > Not to comment on your last question (I have 
> > > no answer) but on the first statement, a couple
> > > of the teachers I've worked with had an inter-
> > > esting interpretation of people's fascination
> > > with Armageddon and impending disasters and 
> > > prophecies of Huge Events and possibly even the 
> > > end of the world being right around the corner. 
> > > 
> > > They termed it 'self importance.'
> > > 
> > > I think there is some truth in this. When there
> > > is an upsurge in the number of people believing
> > > that they're in the Last Days, there is prob-
> > > ably *also* an upsurge in the self importance
> > > of the people who believe this. "I'm so important
> > > that these Huge Events are going to happen during 
> > > my lifetime," "Aprés moi, le deluge," and all that. 
> > > And thus there is probably a corresponding upsurge 
> > > in the *fear* that accompanies identification with 
> > > the self.  
> > > 
> > > You heard the same thing in the Middle Ages, and 
> > > in the Renaissance, and in thousands of eras in
> > > thousands of cultures all over the planet. And 
> > > we'll probably *keep* hearing it for a long, long 
> > > time. It may be a buncha cockroaches saying it, 
> > > with no humans left,
> > 
> > Which would mean that the last humans around before
> > the cockroaches took over were right to believe
> > they were so important that the Huge Events were
> > going to happen in their lifetimes....
> 
> The cockroaches don't miss 'em. Neither
> will the universe.

Non sequitur.  Point being that by postulating
a human-free world dominated by cockroaches,
you've acknowledged that the elimination of the
human race isn't the self-important fantasy you
were mocking to start with, but a real prospect.

In other words, at some point it will no longer
be *us* who keep hearing about the Last Days.
Your "long, long time" won't be quite as long
as you suggest.

Never mind; it's just an editorial comment on
the way you tend to get so carried away with
your rhetoric that you step on your own point.


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