--- In [email protected], Vaj <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> 
> On Jun 4, 2007, at 7:09 PM, authfriend wrote:
> 
> > > And all because you felt the need to trash Vaj.
> >
> > Actually not. Rather, because Vaj felt the need
> > to respond to my reminder of his earlier lie by
> > lying some more, again and again, compulsively,
> > about his faux-Google search, until he finally
> > got so strung out he became incoherent.
> 
> I pointed out the precise nature of Gratzon's book as it directly  
> relates to 'do nothing, achieve everything', how he conceals the  
> principle with a catchy title

<horselaugh>

Right, Vaj. The title is "The Lazy Way to Success:
How to Do Nothing and Accomplish Everything." That
sure is a great way to conceal the principle, by
putting it in the title of the book.

> and how it links to literally hundreds of web sites.

But none of that has ever been in dispute, of course.

Here's the lie Vaj told:

"if you do a web search for 'Do nothing and accomplish
everything' the phrase is usually tied to get rich
quick schemes."

In fact, virtually every Google hit on the phrase
is tied to Gratzon's book, which is not, of course,
a "get rich quick scheme."

What Vaj wanted readers to believe was that there
were multiple get-rich-quick schemes--pyramid schemes,
Ponzi schemes, multilevel marketing schemes, real
estate schemes, etc.--out there being perpetrated by
TMers using "Do nothing and accomplish everything" as
the hook.

That wasn't true. Vaj knew it wasn't true.

Now, the lie having been exposed, in desperation
Vaj is trying to pretend Gratzon's book is itself
a get-rich-quick scheme. But not only is that not
what he said initially, it's not true either.

Gratzon's book, as I've already noted, is very
much along the create-your-own-reality lines of
"The Secret," but geared specifically toward
business. There are no "schemes" in it. It's pop 
psychology/philosophy with mystical overtones.

As Vaj knows, I hold no brief for Gratzon's
approach. My only point is that it isn't what
Vaj claims, a get-rich-quick scheme. Someone
might well use the approach to attempt to get
rich quickly, but that's quite different from
what Vaj wanted readers to think when he made
his initial comment.

Nor, as Vaj also knows, have I ever suggested
TMers have *not* been involved in actual get-
rich-quick schemes, either as perpetrators or
dupes. That wasn't what I was addressing.

But Vaj has knowingly falsely claimed it was my
argument, using all kinds of ad hominem: that I
didn't know what I was talking about because I
was only "on the periphery of the movement" (I'm
not even on the periphery and have said so many
times, but that's totally irrelevant to the issue
of Vaj's lie), that I was a "course reject"
(completely false), that I have led a "sequestered
life" (laughably false), that I have "dissembled"
and attempted to "suppress" something-or-other (by
that time he was so incoherent I couldn't even be
sure what he was accusing me of).

None of this was true, not a single word, and Vaj
knows it.

> There was nothing more to say once the point was made clear.
> I'd even go further and say that Mahesh's 'do nothing,
> achieve everything' sales pitch is one of the more popular
> new age gimmicks out there.

Of course it is. It's been around practically
forever in one form or another. That was never
in dispute, Vaj's silly attempts to make it the
issue notwithstanding.

> Given my own first hand experience of the same phenom and
> numerous others on this very list, it's pretty damn clear
> what a dissembler, manipulator, red herring merchant and
> liar you really are.
> 
> Not that I (or many here) were at all surprised. ;-)

In his desperate attempts to confuse the issue
so as to cover up the fact of his original lie,
Vaj has piled lies on top of lies. And he's still
at it.


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