RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses.
Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses.
You idiot - have you ever considered taking a course in reading comprehension? My point is not about Indians on skins, but about men who claim to be enlightened or close to it having to fret about the vibes in the chair they want to sit on. If they are enlightened by Marshy's definition, where they are in sync with all the laws of nature, then the energy of their enlightened asses should purify any and all vibes they come into contact with. One of my early disconnects with the Movement was the same kind of thing TM is 'posed to make you strong but with all the do's and don'ts that got pasted onto the practice - don't meditate in the bed you sleep in, don't meditate with animals in the room, don't meditate with your hair wet - plus the actual Movement sanctioned crap like be sure to hide under your desk when there is a full eclipse of the sun, never mediate in a south facing building and so forth, you would think TM made you the weakest person in the world. From: punditster no_re...@yahoogroups.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Tuesday, September 10, 2013 12:17 PM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses. Michael Jackson: ...the skin boy idea is ludicrous but not surprising, I mean if a man is a yogi, a realized master what the heck does he have to worry about what kind of vibe exists where he is sitting? Addressing the important issues! Your comments on Indians sitting on skins is probably just a prejudice against Hindus, not surprisingly. Sitting on skins originated with the ancient shamans of Siberia and later the habit was imported into Northern India by the Sanskrit speaking Aryans. It's a custom at least 10,000 years old. And it makes perfect sense - when you're sitting around together it's natural to sit on a skin or two, or on a leather horse saddle. Remember, oriental carpets weren't invented yet. A skin is really just a blanket for covering or a type of insulation when sitting on the ground. There's nothing specificaly religious about it - it's just a custom of simple country people who don't have fancy wooden rocking chairs like you big city folk do. LoL! Have you ever considered taking a history course at a community college?
RE: [FairfieldLife] Re: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses.
Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses.
Well... it's 'bout time we change that custom to sitting on a lazy- boy, complete with cup holders! From: punditster no_re...@yahoogroups.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Tuesday, September 10, 2013 9:17 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses. Michael Jackson: ...the skin boy idea is ludicrous but not surprising, I mean if a man is a yogi, a realized master what the heck does he have to worry about what kind of vibe exists where he is sitting? Addressing the important issues! Your comments on Indians sitting on skins is probably just a prejudice against Hindus, not surprisingly. Sitting on skins originated with the ancient shamans of Siberia and later the habit was imported into Northern India by the Sanskrit speaking Aryans. It's a custom at least 10,000 years old. And it makes perfect sense - when you're sitting around together it's natural to sit on a skin or two, or on a leather horse saddle. Remember, oriental carpets weren't invented yet. A skin is really just a blanket for covering or a type of insulation when sitting on the ground. There's nothing specificaly religious about it - it's just a custom of simple country people who don't have fancy wooden rocking chairs like you big city folk do. LoL! Have you ever considered taking a history course at a community college?
Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses.
Mine are clear - they began to clear up after I left the Movement From: dhamiltony...@yahoo.com dhamiltony...@yahoo.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 7:12 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses. Yes, beware the color of your glasses. -Buck --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote: http://www.latimes.com/obituaries/la-me-rochus-misch-20130907,0,7348086.story Rochus Misch never expressed regret over his wartime service or doubts about the man he and his comrades called the boss. Misch was Adolf Hitler's bodyguard, messenger and telephone operator. He had tea and cookies with Hitler's sister in Vienna. He delivered a congratulatory bouquet from Hitler to a young musician who had just announced his engagement. He was in the next room of the infamous Berlin bunker when Hitler and Eva Braun, the longtime mistress who two days earlier had become the Nazi leader's wife, killed themselves on April 30, 1945. Misch, the last survivor of the entourage holed up in Hitler's underground lair, died in Berlin on Thursday. He was 96. His death was confirmed to the Associated Press by Burkhard Nachtigall, an author who helped Misch write his 2008 memoir, The Last Witness. In numerous interviews over the years, including a lengthy 2004 oral history with the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, Misch said he had no knowledge of the millions of deaths by genocide at Nazi concentration camps. I ask you, if Hitler really did all the terrible things people now say he did, how could he have been our Fuhrer? Misch said in a 2005 Salon interview. How is that possible? At the war's end, Misch was captured by Russian soldiers invading Berlin, tortured in prison and sent to work camps in Kazakhstan and Siberia until his release in 1953. He was never charged with a war crime. Summoned as a witness to the Nuremberg trials, he was not called to testify. A former member of an elite Nazi SS guard, Misch drew outrage from critics with his nonchalant approval of Hitler decades after the war. He is the most unrepentant and unapologetic Hitler supporter you could ever have the misfortune to meet, a reporter for the London Sunday Express wrote in 2003. It was a good time with Hitler, Misch said in the article, which was based on a 2 1/2-hour interview. I enjoyed it and I was proud to work for him. Born in what is now Poland on July 29, 1917, Misch was raised by his grandparents. His soldier father died of a battlefield wound three days before Misch was born. Three years later, his mother died of pneumonia. Misch studied painting but in 1937 volunteered for a four-year tour in the German army, hoping, he later explained, to protect Europe from the incursions of Stalin. He was shot in the chest during the German invasion of Poland in 1939. Impressing his commanding officers, the convalescing Misch won a spot on the unit that provided Hitler with personal aides and bodyguards. Recalling his first meeting with Hitler, at the Reich Chancellery, Misch told the BBC: I felt cold, then hot. I felt every emotion. He wasn't a monster or a superhuman, Misch told the Express in 2011. He stood across from me like a completely normal man with nice words. Misch said accounts of Hitler as an aberrant personality suddenly flying into rages or plunging into depression never rang true. When Misch married his wife, Gerda, on New Year's Eve in 1942, Hitler gave him 1,000 marks and 40 bottles of wine. When Gerda became pregnant in 1944, Eva Braun sent her a baby carriage. Still, Misch on several occasions came across Hitler in what appeared to be moments of intense melancholy. Late one night in the German dictator's living room, Misch saw him in a trance-like state staring at an oil painting of Frederick the Great that was flickering in the candlelight, he told the Express. I felt like an intruder interrupting someone in the middle of prayer. In 1944, Misch witnessed the attempted assassination of Hitler by top generals. In the Reich's final days the next year, Misch was manning the bunker's phones when Hitler gathered his remaining staff for goodbyes. A little while after he and Braun disappeared into his office, someone discovered their bodies and Misch came running. I saw him slumped with his head on the table, he told the BBC. I saw Eva on the sofa; her head was next to him, her knees drawn tightly up to her chest. Hitler had shot himself and his wife had taken cyanide. Not long afterward, Magda Goebbels, wife of Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels, ushered her six children into the bunker and had a doctor give them some kind of sugary drink, Misch told the BBC. All of us knew what was going on, he said. An hour or two later, Mrs. Goebbels came out crying. She sat down and played solitaire to calm herself. The next day, she and her husband
Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses.
Wow! Hitler had a *skin boy*. From: dhamiltony...@yahoo.com dhamiltony...@yahoo.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 4:12 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses. Yes, beware the color of your glasses. -Buck --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote: http://www.latimes.com/obituaries/la-me-rochus-misch-20130907,0,7348086.story Rochus Misch never expressed regret over his wartime service or doubts about the man he and his comrades called the boss. Misch was Adolf Hitler's bodyguard, messenger and telephone operator. He had tea and cookies with Hitler's sister in Vienna. He delivered a congratulatory bouquet from Hitler to a young musician who had just announced his engagement. He was in the next room of the infamous Berlin bunker when Hitler and Eva Braun, the longtime mistress who two days earlier had become the Nazi leader's wife, killed themselves on April 30, 1945. Misch, the last survivor of the entourage holed up in Hitler's underground lair, died in Berlin on Thursday. He was 96. His death was confirmed to the Associated Press by Burkhard Nachtigall, an author who helped Misch write his 2008 memoir, The Last Witness. In numerous interviews over the years, including a lengthy 2004 oral history with the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, Misch said he had no knowledge of the millions of deaths by genocide at Nazi concentration camps. I ask you, if Hitler really did all the terrible things people now say he did, how could he have been our Fuhrer? Misch said in a 2005 Salon interview. How is that possible? At the war's end, Misch was captured by Russian soldiers invading Berlin, tortured in prison and sent to work camps in Kazakhstan and Siberia until his release in 1953. He was never charged with a war crime. Summoned as a witness to the Nuremberg trials, he was not called to testify. A former member of an elite Nazi SS guard, Misch drew outrage from critics with his nonchalant approval of Hitler decades after the war. He is the most unrepentant and unapologetic Hitler supporter you could ever have the misfortune to meet, a reporter for the London Sunday Express wrote in 2003. It was a good time with Hitler, Misch said in the article, which was based on a 2 1/2-hour interview. I enjoyed it and I was proud to work for him. Born in what is now Poland on July 29, 1917, Misch was raised by his grandparents. His soldier father died of a battlefield wound three days before Misch was born. Three years later, his mother died of pneumonia. Misch studied painting but in 1937 volunteered for a four-year tour in the German army, hoping, he later explained, to protect Europe from the incursions of Stalin. He was shot in the chest during the German invasion of Poland in 1939. Impressing his commanding officers, the convalescing Misch won a spot on the unit that provided Hitler with personal aides and bodyguards. Recalling his first meeting with Hitler, at the Reich Chancellery, Misch told the BBC: I felt cold, then hot. I felt every emotion. He wasn't a monster or a superhuman, Misch told the Express in 2011. He stood across from me like a completely normal man with nice words. Misch said accounts of Hitler as an aberrant personality suddenly flying into rages or plunging into depression never rang true. When Misch married his wife, Gerda, on New Year's Eve in 1942, Hitler gave him 1,000 marks and 40 bottles of wine. When Gerda became pregnant in 1944, Eva Braun sent her a baby carriage. Still, Misch on several occasions came across Hitler in what appeared to be moments of intense melancholy. Late one night in the German dictator's living room, Misch saw him in a trance-like state staring at an oil painting of Frederick the Great that was flickering in the candlelight, he told the Express. I felt like an intruder interrupting someone in the middle of prayer. In 1944, Misch witnessed the attempted assassination of Hitler by top generals. In the Reich's final days the next year, Misch was manning the bunker's phones when Hitler gathered his remaining staff for goodbyes. A little while after he and Braun disappeared into his office, someone discovered their bodies and Misch came running. I saw him slumped with his head on the table, he told the BBC. I saw Eva on the sofa; her head was next to him, her knees drawn tightly up to her chest. Hitler had shot himself and his wife had taken cyanide. Not long afterward, Magda Goebbels, wife of Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels, ushered her six children into the bunker and had a doctor give them some kind of sugary drink, Misch told the BBC. All of us knew what was going on, he said. An hour or two later, Mrs. Goebbels came out crying. She sat down and played solitaire to calm herself. The next day, she and her husband committed suicide
Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses.
Ha ha ha! I hadn't thought of it that way, but you're right. All those guru types, demagogues and dictators need little snakes to allow the big snakes to crawl around eating up whatever they want. Come to think of it, the skin boy idea is ludicrous but not surprising, I mean if a man is a yogi, a realized master what the heck does he have to worry about what kind of vibe exists where he is sitting? And the rule is supposed to be that the deer or tiger skin has to come from an animal that died of natural causes, not violence - yeah right! From: Mike Dixon mdixon.6...@yahoo.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 12:51 PM Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses. Wow! Hitler had a *skin boy*. From: dhamiltony...@yahoo.com dhamiltony...@yahoo.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 4:12 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses. Yes, beware the color of your glasses. -Buck --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote: http://www.latimes.com/obituaries/la-me-rochus-misch-20130907,0,7348086.story Rochus Misch never expressed regret over his wartime service or doubts about the man he and his comrades called the boss. Misch was Adolf Hitler's bodyguard, messenger and telephone operator. He had tea and cookies with Hitler's sister in Vienna. He delivered a congratulatory bouquet from Hitler to a young musician who had just announced his engagement. He was in the next room of the infamous Berlin bunker when Hitler and Eva Braun, the longtime mistress who two days earlier had become the Nazi leader's wife, killed themselves on April 30, 1945. Misch, the last survivor of the entourage holed up in Hitler's underground lair, died in Berlin on Thursday. He was 96. His death was confirmed to the Associated Press by Burkhard Nachtigall, an author who helped Misch write his 2008 memoir, The Last Witness. In numerous interviews over the years, including a lengthy 2004 oral history with the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, Misch said he had no knowledge of the millions of deaths by genocide at Nazi concentration camps. I ask you, if Hitler really did all the terrible things people now say he did, how could he have been our Fuhrer? Misch said in a 2005 Salon interview. How is that possible? At the war's end, Misch was captured by Russian soldiers invading Berlin, tortured in prison and sent to work camps in Kazakhstan and Siberia until his release in 1953. He was never charged with a war crime. Summoned as a witness to the Nuremberg trials, he was not called to testify. A former member of an elite Nazi SS guard, Misch drew outrage from critics with his nonchalant approval of Hitler decades after the war. He is the most unrepentant and unapologetic Hitler supporter you could ever have the misfortune to meet, a reporter for the London Sunday Express wrote in 2003. It was a good time with Hitler, Misch said in the article, which was based on a 2 1/2-hour interview. I enjoyed it and I was proud to work for him. Born in what is now Poland on July 29, 1917, Misch was raised by his grandparents. His soldier father died of a battlefield wound three days before Misch was born. Three years later, his mother died of pneumonia. Misch studied painting but in 1937 volunteered for a four-year tour in the German army, hoping, he later explained, to protect Europe from the incursions of Stalin. He was shot in the chest during the German invasion of Poland in 1939. Impressing his commanding officers, the convalescing Misch won a spot on the unit that provided Hitler with personal aides and bodyguards. Recalling his first meeting with Hitler, at the Reich Chancellery, Misch told the BBC: I felt cold, then hot. I felt every emotion. He wasn't a monster or a superhuman, Misch told the Express in 2011. He stood across from me like a completely normal man with nice words. Misch said accounts of Hitler as an aberrant personality suddenly flying into rages or plunging into depression never rang true. When Misch married his wife, Gerda, on New Year's Eve in 1942, Hitler gave him 1,000 marks and 40 bottles of wine. When Gerda became pregnant in 1944, Eva Braun sent her a baby carriage. Still, Misch on several occasions came across Hitler in what appeared to be moments of intense melancholy. Late one night in the German dictator's living room, Misch saw him in a trance-like state staring at an oil painting of Frederick the Great that was flickering in the candlelight, he told the Express. I felt like an intruder interrupting someone in the middle of prayer. In 1944, Misch witnessed the attempted assassination of Hitler by top generals. In the Reich's final days the next year, Misch was manning the bunker's phones when Hitler gathered his remaining staff
RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses.
Re: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses.
Michael, where do you get the idea that the skins have to come from animals that died of natural causes? No rules, dude. Violence is natural. Ask any tiger. I always loved to hear some fool tell another fool about how M got his deer skin. One(deer) walked across his path and then suddenly died. LOL Satyanand was asked where they got them and he said they shoot'em , we buy',em. I've been told that some of M's skins came from Texas. Seems there are more Black Buck Antelope and Tigers in Texas than in India. Back in the fifties ranchers imported them and raised them for *canned* hunts. Now you can see entire herds, (not the tigers) off of fenced land, grazing along the sides of roads. From: doctordumb...@rocketmail.com doctordumb...@rocketmail.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 10:50 AM Subject: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses. Isn't it a little early for the sandwich boards, MJ? --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote: Ha ha ha! I hadn't thought of it that way, but you're right. All those guru types, demagogues and dictators need little snakes to allow the big snakes to crawl around eating up whatever they want. Come to think of it, the skin boy idea is ludicrous but not surprising, I mean if a man is a yogi, a realized master what the heck does he have to worry about what kind of vibe exists where he is sitting? And the rule is supposed to be that the deer or tiger skin has to come from an animal that died of natural causes, not violence - yeah right! From: Mike Dixon mdixon.6569@... To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 12:51 PM Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses. Wow! Hitler had a *skin boy*. From: dhamiltony2k5@... dhamiltony2k5@... To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 4:12 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses. Yes, beware the color of your glasses. -Buck --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote: http://www.latimes.com/obituaries/la-me-rochus-misch-20130907,0,7348086.story Rochus Misch never expressed regret over his wartime service or doubts about the man he and his comrades called the boss. Misch was Adolf Hitler's bodyguard, messenger and telephone operator. He had tea and cookies with Hitler's sister in Vienna. He delivered a congratulatory bouquet from Hitler to a young musician who had just announced his engagement. He was in the next room of the infamous Berlin bunker when Hitler and Eva Braun, the longtime mistress who two days earlier had become the Nazi leader's wife, killed themselves on April 30, 1945. Misch, the last survivor of the entourage holed up in Hitler's underground lair, died in Berlin on Thursday. He was 96. His death was confirmed to the Associated Press by Burkhard Nachtigall, an author who helped Misch write his 2008 memoir, The Last Witness. In numerous interviews over the years, including a lengthy 2004 oral history with the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, Misch said he had no knowledge of the millions of deaths by genocide at Nazi concentration camps. I ask you, if Hitler really did all the terrible things people now say he did, how could he have been our Fuhrer? Misch said in a 2005 Salon interview. How is that possible? At the war's end, Misch was captured by Russian soldiers invading Berlin, tortured in prison and sent to work camps in Kazakhstan and Siberia until his release in 1953. He was never charged with a war crime. Summoned as a witness to the Nuremberg trials, he was not called to testify. A former member of an elite Nazi SS guard, Misch drew outrage from critics with his nonchalant approval of Hitler decades after the war. He is the most unrepentant and unapologetic Hitler supporter you could ever have the misfortune to meet, a reporter for the London Sunday Express wrote in 2003. It was a good time with Hitler, Misch said in the article, which was based on a 2 1/2-hour interview. I enjoyed it and I was proud to work for him. Born in what is now Poland on July 29, 1917, Misch was raised by his grandparents. His soldier father died of a battlefield wound three days before Misch was born. Three years later, his mother died of pneumonia. Misch studied painting but in 1937 volunteered for a four-year tour in the German army, hoping, he later explained, to protect Europe from the incursions of Stalin. He was shot in the chest during the German invasion of Poland in 1939. Impressing his commanding officers, the convalescing Misch won a spot on the unit that provided Hitler with personal aides and bodyguards. Recalling his first meeting with Hitler, at the Reich Chancellery, Misch told the BBC: I felt
Re: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses.
David Lynch and friends do that, so I don't need to. From: doctordumb...@rocketmail.com doctordumb...@rocketmail.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 1:50 PM Subject: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses. Isn't it a little early for the sandwich boards, MJ? --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote: Ha ha ha! I hadn't thought of it that way, but you're right. All those guru types, demagogues and dictators need little snakes to allow the big snakes to crawl around eating up whatever they want. Come to think of it, the skin boy idea is ludicrous but not surprising, I mean if a man is a yogi, a realized master what the heck does he have to worry about what kind of vibe exists where he is sitting? And the rule is supposed to be that the deer or tiger skin has to come from an animal that died of natural causes, not violence - yeah right! From: Mike Dixon mdixon.6569@... To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 12:51 PM Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses. Wow! Hitler had a *skin boy*. From: dhamiltony2k5@... dhamiltony2k5@... To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 4:12 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses. Yes, beware the color of your glasses. -Buck --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote: http://www.latimes.com/obituaries/la-me-rochus-misch-20130907,0,7348086.story Rochus Misch never expressed regret over his wartime service or doubts about the man he and his comrades called the boss. Misch was Adolf Hitler's bodyguard, messenger and telephone operator. He had tea and cookies with Hitler's sister in Vienna. He delivered a congratulatory bouquet from Hitler to a young musician who had just announced his engagement. He was in the next room of the infamous Berlin bunker when Hitler and Eva Braun, the longtime mistress who two days earlier had become the Nazi leader's wife, killed themselves on April 30, 1945. Misch, the last survivor of the entourage holed up in Hitler's underground lair, died in Berlin on Thursday. He was 96. His death was confirmed to the Associated Press by Burkhard Nachtigall, an author who helped Misch write his 2008 memoir, The Last Witness. In numerous interviews over the years, including a lengthy 2004 oral history with the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, Misch said he had no knowledge of the millions of deaths by genocide at Nazi concentration camps. I ask you, if Hitler really did all the terrible things people now say he did, how could he have been our Fuhrer? Misch said in a 2005 Salon interview. How is that possible? At the war's end, Misch was captured by Russian soldiers invading Berlin, tortured in prison and sent to work camps in Kazakhstan and Siberia until his release in 1953. He was never charged with a war crime. Summoned as a witness to the Nuremberg trials, he was not called to testify. A former member of an elite Nazi SS guard, Misch drew outrage from critics with his nonchalant approval of Hitler decades after the war. He is the most unrepentant and unapologetic Hitler supporter you could ever have the misfortune to meet, a reporter for the London Sunday Express wrote in 2003. It was a good time with Hitler, Misch said in the article, which was based on a 2 1/2-hour interview. I enjoyed it and I was proud to work for him. Born in what is now Poland on July 29, 1917, Misch was raised by his grandparents. His soldier father died of a battlefield wound three days before Misch was born. Three years later, his mother died of pneumonia. Misch studied painting but in 1937 volunteered for a four-year tour in the German army, hoping, he later explained, to protect Europe from the incursions of Stalin. He was shot in the chest during the German invasion of Poland in 1939. Impressing his commanding officers, the convalescing Misch won a spot on the unit that provided Hitler with personal aides and bodyguards. Recalling his first meeting with Hitler, at the Reich Chancellery, Misch told the BBC: I felt cold, then hot. I felt every emotion. He wasn't a monster or a superhuman, Misch told the Express in 2011. He stood across from me like a completely normal man with nice words. Misch said accounts of Hitler as an aberrant personality suddenly flying into rages or plunging into depression never rang true. When Misch married his wife, Gerda, on New Year's Eve in 1942, Hitler gave him 1,000 marks and 40 bottles of wine. When Gerda became pregnant in 1944, Eva Braun sent her a baby carriage. Still, Misch on several occasions came across Hitler in what appeared to be moments of intense melancholy. Late one night in the German dictator's living room
Re: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses.
I read it in other places too, but the previous quote sums it up - the same is supposed to apply to tiger skins as well. http://www.ocoy.org/dharma-for-christians/bhagavad-gita-for-awakening/the-yogis-inner-and-outer-life/ From: Mike Dixon mdixon.6...@yahoo.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 2:20 PM Subject: Re: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses. Michael, where do you get the idea that the skins have to come from animals that died of natural causes? No rules, dude. Violence is natural. Ask any tiger. I always loved to hear some fool tell another fool about how M got his deer skin. One(deer) walked across his path and then suddenly died. LOL Satyanand was asked where they got them and he said they shoot'em , we buy',em. I've been told that some of M's skins came from Texas. Seems there are more Black Buck Antelope and Tigers in Texas than in India. Back in the fifties ranchers imported them and raised them for *canned* hunts. Now you can see entire herds, (not the tigers) off of fenced land, grazing along the sides of roads. From: doctordumb...@rocketmail.com doctordumb...@rocketmail.com To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 10:50 AM Subject: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses. Isn't it a little early for the sandwich boards, MJ? --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote: Ha ha ha! I hadn't thought of it that way, but you're right. All those guru types, demagogues and dictators need little snakes to allow the big snakes to crawl around eating up whatever they want. Come to think of it, the skin boy idea is ludicrous but not surprising, I mean if a man is a yogi, a realized master what the heck does he have to worry about what kind of vibe exists where he is sitting? And the rule is supposed to be that the deer or tiger skin has to come from an animal that died of natural causes, not violence - yeah right! From: Mike Dixon mdixon.6569@... To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 12:51 PM Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses. Wow! Hitler had a *skin boy*. From: dhamiltony2k5@... dhamiltony2k5@... To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com Sent: Monday, September 9, 2013 4:12 AM Subject: [FairfieldLife] RE: See? Anyone can wear the rosy glasses. Yes, beware the color of your glasses. -Buck --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote: http://www.latimes.com/obituaries/la-me-rochus-misch-20130907,0,7348086.story Rochus Misch never expressed regret over his wartime service or doubts about the man he and his comrades called the boss. Misch was Adolf Hitler's bodyguard, messenger and telephone operator. He had tea and cookies with Hitler's sister in Vienna. He delivered a congratulatory bouquet from Hitler to a young musician who had just announced his engagement. He was in the next room of the infamous Berlin bunker when Hitler and Eva Braun, the longtime mistress who two days earlier had become the Nazi leader's wife, killed themselves on April 30, 1945. Misch, the last survivor of the entourage holed up in Hitler's underground lair, died in Berlin on Thursday. He was 96. His death was confirmed to the Associated Press by Burkhard Nachtigall, an author who helped Misch write his 2008 memoir, The Last Witness. In numerous interviews over the years, including a lengthy 2004 oral history with the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, Misch said he had no knowledge of the millions of deaths by genocide at Nazi concentration camps. I ask you, if Hitler really did all the terrible things people now say he did, how could he have been our Fuhrer? Misch said in a 2005 Salon interview. How is that possible? At the war's end, Misch was captured by Russian soldiers invading Berlin, tortured in prison and sent to work camps in Kazakhstan and Siberia until his release in 1953. He was never charged with a war crime. Summoned as a witness to the Nuremberg trials, he was not called to testify. A former member of an elite Nazi SS guard, Misch drew outrage from critics with his nonchalant approval of Hitler decades after the war. He is the most unrepentant and unapologetic Hitler supporter you could ever have the misfortune to meet, a reporter for the London Sunday Express wrote in 2003. It was a good time with Hitler, Misch said in the article, which was based on a 2 1/2-hour interview. I enjoyed it and I was proud to work for him. Born in what is now Poland on July 29, 1917, Misch was raised by his grandparents. His soldier father died of a battlefield wound three days before Misch was born. Three years later, his mother died of pneumonia. Misch studied painting but in 1937 volunteered for a four-year tour in the German