Don't be ridiculous. Did you read my posts on this? What Barry wrote made no 
sense.
 

 Can you refute anything I said?
 

 No, I didn't think so.
  
 Michael wrote:

 > I agree with his assessment - I think you take issue with it just cuz you 
 > don't like Barry
 --------------------------------------------
 On Wed, 10/23/13, awoelflebater@... mailto:awoelflebater@... 
<awoelflebater@... mailto:awoelflebater@...> wrote:
 
 Subject: [FairfieldLife] RE: Before evangelizing TM, consider your target 
audience
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
 Date: Wednesday, October 23, 2013, 1:33 PM
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
 
 ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,
 <fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com mailto:fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
 
 Just a note of
 caution to those who still believe that "If we charge
 more/less/enough for TM, they will come," *they* in
 this case being the untold millions you think are required
 to make the world a better place and who are out there, just
 waiting for the right TM marketing approach. Consider who
 you're talking to, and what *they* believe.
 
 The latest Gallup poll doesn't seem to indicate that
 John Q. American Public is quite on the same wavelength that
 you are. 58% of them probably wouldn't make it through
 the "15 day waiting period." The legalization of
 marijuana has five times the number of supporters as
 Congress does. 63% are unthreatened by homosexual behavior,
 and 53% believe that same-sex marriage should be legalized.
 The more-puritan-than-the-Puritans lifestyle ethic of many
 die-hard TMers just doesn't map to the way that most
 Americans see the world. 
 
 
 
http://www.businessinsider.com/gallup-legal-marijuana-is-more-popular-than-almost-anything-else-2013-10
  
http://www.businessinsider.com/gallup-legal-marijuana-is-more-popular-than-almost-anything-else-2013-10
 
 
 Me, I find these Gallup findings positive, and hopeful,
 because they're *pragmatic*, and on the whole they seem
 to indicate that Americans aren't quite the
 hyper-conservative know-nothings that the Tea Party and
 others would have you believe they are. But such pragmatism
 is not gonna be appealed to by Woo Woo propaganda about how
 many Yogic Flyers can butt-bounce on the head of a pin made
 of polystyrene foam, and how that's gonna magically
 create Whirled Peas.
 
 The thing that would make TM "marketable" again
 IMO would be a return to the more pragmatic approach of the
 late 60s, in which it was marketed as a simple relaxation
 technique that would help to make you less stressed and more
 productive in your real-world activities. Nobody gives a
 shit about enlightenment; if the Gallup organization polled
 for that one, my bet is that the percentage of people
 they'd find who believe it exists wouldn't crack two
 digits, and the number who would actually pay money for it
 would be a fraction of that. 
 
 A non-drug technique that takes only 40 minutes per day and
 could help to lower stress levels is marketable. A Woo Woo
 "gateway drug" that only seeks to hook people on a
 path to spending several hours of their day bouncing on
 their butts with other people to create Whiled Peas is not.
 Just sayin'...
 As usual, Barry misses
 entirely the point of his own post. In addition, he makes up
 random shit, comes to erroneous conclusions and generally
 ends up with mushed carrots rather than his purported
 "whirled peas". If Barry were a kitchen appliance
 he would most closely resemble a
 garburator. 

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