Exactly I never wanted to tell but you invited it  Narayanasamy Pimp-master
of singapore ; world renouned flesh supplier

On Sun, 4 Feb 2024 at 19:35, Narayanaswamy Iyer <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> Dear folks
>
> "*Probably he proves my professional title. -- KR ex-IRS 4224 alias
> KARUPPAN-CHAAMI."*
>
> The well-known professional title of Iraachaa Iraamoo Kauppan-chami has
> always been that of brothel-keeper for his sex worker progenitress.
>
> S Narayanaswamy Iyer
>
> On Mon, Feb 5, 2024 at 3:43 AM Rajaram Krishnamurthy <
> [email protected]> wrote:
>
>> I had never seen so much of perverted Narayanasamy at 98. Probably he
>> proves my professional title.
>>
>> On Sun, 4 Feb 2024 at 00:04, Narayanaswamy Iyer <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Dear folks
>>>
>>> Amid the truckload of garbage that Rajaram Krishnamurthy has delivered
>>> to this website, one sentence stands out starkly:-
>>>
>>> "*Gandhi felt free to conduct his private “fast unto death” even as the
>>> rest of India starved.*"
>>>
>>> This is not dissimilar to Gandhi's other political ploy -- to travel
>>> Third Class on Indian trains.
>>>
>>> And a third political ploy -- to call himself a dalit, to found a paper
>>> named "Harijan", and to shun even his own varna-mates: the shoodrans.
>>>
>>> Did not the reputed popular Indian weekly "India Today" publish a couple
>>> of years ago an eye-witness account of how Gandhi the Great Mahaathma, in
>>> his very late years, used to sleep naked with very young naked girls such
>>> as his own great-niece, bathe them after they unclothed themselves, and ask
>>> them to bathe him unclothed?  He called this a great yoga-siddhantham to
>>> prove that he is above the temptations of sex !
>>>
>>> S Narayanaswamy Iyer
>>>
>>> On Sun, Feb 4, 2024 at 12:33 AM Rajaram Krishnamurthy <
>>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>> CULTURAL QA 020243
>>>>
>>>> Q4      Why do Japanese and Koreans sleep on the floor?
>>>>
>>>> G My note- Why Korea and Japan, in India also, in many homes still
>>>> sleeping on the floor on rolling beds or mats is common.
>>>>
>>>> Darba sayanam: तस्य रामस्य सुप्तस्य कुश आस्तीर्णे मही तले |
>>>>
>>>> नियमाद् अप्रमत्तस्य निशास् तिस्रो अतिचक्रमुः || ६-२१-१०
>>>>
>>>> 10. niyamaat = following the scriptural injunction; tasya = that;
>>>> raamasya = Rama; apramattasya = who was attentive; suptasya = while
>>>> sleeping; mahiitale = on the ground; kushaastiirNe = spread with Kusha
>>>> grass; atichakramuH = surpassed a time; tisraH = of three; nishaaH = 
>>>> nights.
>>>>
>>>> Following the scriptural injunction, that Rama who was devoted to his
>>>> sacred vow, while sleeping on the ground spread with Kusha grass, spent a
>>>> time of three nights there.
>>>>
>>>> स त्रिरात्रोषितस्तत्र नयज्ञो धर्मवत्सलः |
>>>>
>>>> उपासत तदा रामः सागरम् सरिताम् पतिम् || ६-२१-११
>>>>
>>>> 11. tadaa = then; raamaH = Rama; nayajN^aH = who was skilled in policy;
>>>> dharmavatsalaH = and fond of piety; triraatroshhitaH = remaining for three
>>>> nights ;tatra = there; upaasata = waiting upon; saagaram = the ocean;
>>>> sritaam patim = the Lord of rivers.
>>>>
>>>> Remaining there for three nights, Rama who was skilled in policy and
>>>> fond of piety, waited upon the ocean, the lord of rivers.\
>>>>
>>>> Sleeping on the floor is so aged as can be seen from Valmiki Ramayanam
>>>> KR  IRS  3224
>>>>
>>>> ----------------------------------------------------
>>>>
>>>> Q5      Which single person caused the greatest damage to India or
>>>> Indian society? How?
>>>>
>>>> KR   Hegde and Mr G adding wool over the eyes?
>>>>
>>>> “Why hasn’t Gandhi died yet?” Another Remark Churchill Never Said
>>>>
>>>> By RICHARD M. LANGWORTH| July 16, 2022
>>>>
>>>> Gandhi
>>>>
>>>> Sir Stafford Cripps with Mohandas Gandhi at Birla House, Delhi, during
>>>> his mission to India, April 1942. Cripps tried but failed to negotiate
>>>> Congress Party support for the war effort with the promise of Dominion
>>>> status afterward. Birla House, now Gandhi Smriti (a museum), was the
>>>> residence of Gandhi’s friend Ghanshyam Das Birla, who conveyed friendly
>>>> exchanges between Churchill and Gandhi in 1935 (see bit.ly/3Ku6Qcf).
>>>> Gandhi spent his last days there before being assassinated in January 1948.
>>>> (Imperial War Museum, public domain)
>>>>
>>>> For many years Churchill’s view of India has been distorted, quoted out
>>>> of context or based on hearsay. The Prime Minister’s attitude toward
>>>> Mohandas Gandhi is part of this demonology. Now Hira Jungkow, an Indian
>>>> student at the London School of Economics, has blown away another lie—one
>>>> of the more despicable. It is that Churchill wished Gandhi dead as a
>>>> casualty of the 1943 Bengal Famine. Gandhi certainly raised Churchill’s
>>>> hackles on many documented occasions. But wishing he would starve to death
>>>> is not in the record.
>>>>
>>>> In a 2021 interview with Andrew Roberts, one of Churchill’s foremost
>>>> defenders, The New Yorker raised this old myth: “It is just striking to
>>>> read about Churchill being alerted to the massive number of deaths of
>>>> Indians in territory that his government ruled, and asking questions like
>>>> why Gandhi hadn’t died—which he hoped for—if things were so bad.”1 (The bad
>>>> things were food shortages and famine in Bengal.)
>>>>
>>>> Research however indicates Churchill didn’t say that, and what he did
>>>> say was not in context of the Bengal Famine. After reading the New Yorker
>>>> interview, Mr. Jungkow did the research and published his findings, which
>>>> are summarized and amplified below. Why didn’t The New Yorker?
>>>>
>>>> “Why Gandhi hadn’t died yet”
>>>>
>>>> In September 1943 Churchill appointed Field Marshal Archibald Wavell
>>>> Viceroy of India. Arthur Herman noted the irony: Churchill, long blamed for
>>>> ignoring it, had appointed the very man “who would halt the famine in its
>>>> tracks.”2
>>>>
>>>> Wavell’s and Churchill’s actions to ease the famine are explained
>>>> elsewhere. (See links in endnotes 2 and 10.) We focus here only on the
>>>> specific misrepresentation of Churchill in two frequently quoted books.3
>>>> Both cite Wavell’s diary from July 1944: “Winston sent me a peevish
>>>> telegram to ask why Gandhi hadn’t died yet! He has never answered my
>>>> telegram about food.”
>>>>
>>>> Wavell did write this,4 but it was not a quote—and fairly peevish
>>>> itself. Why don’t the critics publish what Churchill actually said? Here it
>>>> is:
>>>>
>>>> Surely Mr. Gandhi has made a most remarkable recovery, as he is already
>>>> able to take an active part in politics. How does this square with the
>>>> medical reports upon which his release on grounds of ill-health was agreed
>>>> to by us? In one of these we were told that he would not be able to take
>>>> any part in politics again.5
>>>>
>>>> Wavell replied that Gandhi had been released from detention because it
>>>> was thought he was near death, but it “can hardly be said to have resumed
>>>> an active part in politics yet.” Wavell added: “His release has not
>>>> worsened [the] situation on the whole and I am clear it was right and
>>>> justified.”6 Churchill did not contest this, and the correspondence ended.
>>>>
>>>> “He has never answered my telegram about food”
>>>>
>>>> Mr. Jungkow did not investigate Wavell’s complaint that Churchill
>>>> hadn’t answered him about food, but that has a qualification too. Published
>>>> documents reveal that Wavell’s requests for food mainly went to Leo Amery,
>>>> Secretary of State for India.7 It is odd that Amery, often described as
>>>> India’s sympathizer, is never cited for what he did to ease the Famine.
>>>> Which as it turns out, was a lot less than Churchill and Wavell. And
>>>> Amery’s diaries, so often used to manufacture nasty Churchill quotes about
>>>> Indians, are laced with racial pejoratives that Churchill never used.8
>>>>
>>>> This misrepresentation is peculiar in its timing: July 1944, when the
>>>> Famine was easing. In January Bengal received 130,000 tons of Iraqi barley,
>>>> 80,000 tons of Australian wheat (with 100,000 more to come), 10,000 from
>>>> Canada. Wavell wanted more, so on 14 February, Churchill called an
>>>> emergency meeting of the War Cabinet. Could they find more grain without
>>>> wrecking plans for D-Day? In April, Churchill declared that “his sympathy
>>>> was great for the sufferings of the people of India.”9 The War Cabinet
>>>> referred him to Roosevelt.
>>>>
>>>> Churchill duly expressed “serious concern” to FDR, saying Australia had
>>>> a million tons but he lacked the shipping. Could America help? No, said the
>>>> President, U.S. shipping was stretched thin for D-Day and the Pacific.
>>>> Churchill kept at it, wrote Zareer Masani. “By the end of 1944 Wavell’s
>>>> much-requested one million additional tons had been secured from Australia
>>>> and the allied South East Asia Command…”10 Churchill’s actual words to
>>>> Wavell referred to Gandhi’s “fasts to death,” not the Famine.
>>>>
>>>> Lots of blame to go round
>>>>
>>>> Another prominent figure never questioned for ignoring the famine is
>>>> Gandhi himself. “For all his reputation as a humanitarian,” wrote Arthur
>>>> Herman,
>>>>
>>>> Gandhi did remarkably little about the emergency. The issue barely
>>>> comes up in his letters, except as another grievance against the Raj. Yet
>>>> in peacetime throughout the 20th century, the Raj always handled famines
>>>> with efficiency. In February 1944 Gandhi wrote to Wavell: “I know that
>>>> millions outside are starving for want of food. But I should feel utterly
>>>> helpless if I went out and missed the food [i.e. independence] by which
>>>> alone living becomes worthwhile.” Gandhi felt free to conduct his private
>>>> “fast unto death” even as the rest of India starved.11
>>>>
>>>> Leo Amery, however little he’d done to help, was still offering advice
>>>> as the famine ended. Acknowledging “His Majesty’s Government’s help over
>>>> food grains,” he advised Churchill: “…you may say that you cried wolf
>>>> unnecessarily to [Roosevelt], and you may wish to send him a personal
>>>> telegram explaining that the additional 200,000 tons has only been found by
>>>> a drastic cutting down of our military maintenance provision….”
>>>>
>>>> Churchill wrote on Amery’s original: “I do not propose to send a
>>>> personal telegram on this. Will you be so kind as to explain the matter to
>>>> the State Department, quoting my personal [appeal] to the President as the
>>>> key?”12 It would appear that Amery, like Wavell, expected the Prime
>>>> Minister to attend every detail of the famine problem personally.
>>>>
>>>> Endnotes
>>>>
>>>> 1 Isaac Chotiner, “Q&A: Why Andrew Roberts Wants Us to Reconsider King
>>>> George III,” in The New Yorker, 9 November 2021, accessed 7 April 2022.
>>>>
>>>> 2 Arthur Herman, “Absent Churchill, the Bengal Famine Would Have Been
>>>> Worse,” Hillsdale College Churchill Project. 2017, accessed 5 April 2022.
>>>> Churchill’s first directive to Wavell placed famine relief as second only
>>>> to the war effort.  The reference is CHAQ 2/3/66/6-7. Madelin Evans of the
>>>> Churchill Archives Centre writes that the document is still being
>>>> digitaized for online purposes, but the catalogue entry reads:
>>>>
>>>> Printed War Cabinet Paper, note by the Prime Minister and Minister of
>>>> Defence [WSC] on “India” (9 Oct) with a copy of a “Directive to the Viceroy
>>>> Designate” [Lord Wavell] by WSC (8 Oct). Subjects of the directive include
>>>> the need for India to be a “safe and fertile base” for the British and
>>>> United States offensive against Japan in 1944; famine in India and the need
>>>> to make every effort to deal with local shortages, stop grain hoarding and
>>>> ensure a fair distribution of food between town and country; the gap
>>>> between rich and poor needing examination; that [Wavell] should make every
>>>> effort to ease tension between Hindus and Muslims and encourage them to
>>>> work together, as a democratic government can not work without equality;
>>>> Wavell’s main aims should be to defend the frontiers of India, appease
>>>> communal differences, rally all sections of society to support the war
>>>> effort, and maintain the best possible standard of living for the largest
>>>> number of people; and the British Government’s commitment to establishing a
>>>> self-governing India as part of the British Empire and Commonwealth of
>>>> Nations [after the war].
>>>>
>>>> 3 Madhusree Mukerjee, Churchill’s Secret War: The British Empire and
>>>> the Ravaging of India during World War II (New York: Basic Books, 2010),
>>>> Kindle edition, 332. Shashi Tharoor, Inglorious Empire: What the British
>>>> Did to India (Royal Oak, Mich., Scribe Publishing, 2017), 160. See also a
>>>> video panel, “Churchill: Hero or Colonialist,” with Larry P. Arnn, Madhusee
>>>> Mukerjee and Sean McMeekin.
>>>>
>>>> 4 Penderel Moon, ed., Wavell: The Viceroy’s Journal (Oxford University
>>>> Press, 1973), 78.
>>>>
>>>> 5 Martin Gilbert & Larry P. Arnn, eds., The Churchill Documents, vol.
>>>> 20, Normandy and Beyond, May-December 1944 (Hillsdale, Mich.: Hillsdale
>>>> College Press, 2018), 702.
>>>>
>>>> 6 Ibid., 742.
>>>>
>>>> 7 Nicholas Mansergh, Constitutional Relations Between Britain and
>>>> India: The Transfer of Power 1942-47, Volume IV (London: HMSO, 1973),
>>>> passim, but see for example Wavell-Amery communications in 1944,
>>>> https://bit.ly/3KwUQXl, accessed 8 April 2022.
>>>>
>>>> 8 See Richard M. Langworth, “Prime Source: Leo Amery” in “The Truth
>>>> About Churchill’s ‘Racist Epithets,’” Hillsdale College Churchill Project,
>>>> 2020.
>>>>
>>>> 9 War Cabinet: Conclusions, 24 April 1944, in Martin Gilbert & Larry P.
>>>> Arnn, eds., The Churchill Documents, vol. 19, Fateful Questions, September
>>>> 1943-April 1944 (Hillsdale College Press, 2017), 2554.
>>>>
>>>> 10 Zareer Masani, “Churchill and the Genocide Myth: Last Word on the
>>>> Bengal Famine,” Hillsdale College Churchill Project, 2021, accessed 5 April
>>>> 2021.
>>>>
>>>> 11 Herman, op. cit. Gandhi to Wavell, 17 February 1944, in Ganhiji
>>>> Correspondence With the Government 1942-44 (Ahmedabad: Navajihan
>>>> Publishing, 1945), 289, https://bit.ly/3xayw1Y, accessed 8 April 2022.
>>>>
>>>> II      And Churchill is a person who cared to supply only the military
>>>> and gave a speech asking every citizen to shrink; and when leading reported
>>>> asked why you have not allowed , even a loaf of bread, Churchill retorted,
>>>> “Thank God I allowed now at least half”  So Churchill and Hitler were born
>>>> to conquer and to nbe conquered. And he was uniform throughout KR
>>>>
>>>> 12 Amery to Churchill, 30 June 1944, in Mansergh, 1059.
>>>>
>>>> Q7      What kind of people will always live life to the fullest?
>>>>
>>>> KR      Neither ignorant not the wise can lead the fullest life;
>>>> ignorant does not that he does know, so what is life he is leading is
>>>> unknown to him; a wis knows he has all and can live fully, however, being
>>>> wise, he has to answer all his actions as good and bad and, in such
>>>> process, might be floundering. There is a proverb” Paramanum Paithiyamum
>>>> eppozhudum sirithukkone iruppar; that mean till end within the frame od
>>>> sanyasi and madman they are the happiest.   KR IRS 3224
>>>>
>>>> On Sat, 3 Feb 2024 at 04:46, 'gopala krishnan' via iyer123 <
>>>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> CULTURAL QA 02-2024-3
>>>>>
>>>>> All the below   QA are from Quora DIGEST to me  on   03-02-2024.
>>>>>
>>>>> Selected quora answers generally interesting are included .Still they
>>>>> need not be 100% correct answers.
>>>>>
>>>>> Compiled and posted by R. Gopala Krishnan, 80,    on 03-02-2024.
>>>>>
>>>>> Q1      Which is the cruel bird in world?
>>>>>
>>>>> A1      Wadiyat Narjis, 9mo
>>>>>
>>>>> The southern cassowary is known as the world's most dangerous bird.
>>>>>
>>>>> Native to the forests of New Guinea and Northern Australia, in
>>>>> captivity the bird displays extreme aggression.
>>>>>
>>>>> Southern cassowaries are known for their striking appearance, with a
>>>>> tall, bony crest on their heads, a bright blue neck and throat, and black
>>>>> feathers covering their bodies.
>>>>>
>>>>> They can grow up to 1.8 meters (6 feet) tall and weigh up to 58
>>>>> kilograms (128 pounds), making them the second-heaviest bird in the
>>>>> world after the ostrich
>>>>>
>>>>> Q2      What screams "I'm a middle class Indian"?
>>>>>
>>>>> A2      Anshu Bharti, A mother of a six years old boy.7mo"Do you have
>>>>> a yoga mat?" A woman came rushing to the supermarket while I enquired
>>>>> about the same.
>>>>>
>>>>> "Yes, we do. You can check on the second floor." the cashier replied.
>>>>>
>>>>> We both proceeded towards the elevator as our purpose of being there
>>>>> was the same.
>>>>>
>>>>> "Could you please show me a yoga mat?" We both requested the stock
>>>>> assistant in the chorus as soon as we reached the second floor.
>>>>>
>>>>> "Yes, Mam, here are the ones."
>>>>>
>>>>> I felt elated as I didn't have to struggle more early morning. The
>>>>> request for a yoga mat came from my child's school last evening, and I
>>>>> couldn't manage to get it due to my office work. When I dropped him off at
>>>>> school today, I immediately thought of buying it. While I was wondering
>>>>> what color of the mat would impress him, the lady interrupted by asking
>>>>> another question to the assistant.
>>>>>
>>>>> "Don't you have smaller ones? I want to buy one for my child. I am
>>>>> sure the smaller one will cost lesser." She said.
>>>>>
>>>>> "No, Mam. We have only these."
>>>>>
>>>>> I could sense her concerns. However, since she had no choice, she
>>>>> picked up one. And I too.
>>>>>
>>>>> At the cash counter,
>>>>>
>>>>> "Sir, the price is too high. If you had a smaller one, I would have
>>>>> taken that and saved money." She uttered.
>>>>>
>>>>> "Sorry, Mam. But you see, there is a special price written on it. The
>>>>> actual price is 680 Rs, and the special price is just 550 Rs."
>>>>>
>>>>> "Ummm…could you please make it 500 Rs?" She hopelessly demanded.
>>>>>
>>>>> The cashier nodded, and I could see the brightest smile on her face
>>>>> for saving 50 Rs.
>>>>>
>>>>> My note- In Chennai I have not seen any supermarket reducing even a
>>>>> rupee-
>>>>>
>>>>> Q3      What is the funniest military-based joke you know?
>>>>>
>>>>> A3      Jim Cherry, Former Radiologist Updated Dec 8
>>>>>
>>>>> During inspection of the battalion, the lieutenant comes to a private
>>>>> who forgot to properly shine his shoes.
>>>>>
>>>>> The lieutenant says, “Your shoes look like sh’t.”
>>>>>
>>>>> To which the private replies, “Just a reflection, sir.”
>>>>>
>>>>> Q4      Why do Japanese and Koreans sleep on the floor?
>>>>>
>>>>> A4      Audrey Lewis,Nutrition Enthusiast, Health Advocate Jan 10
>>>>>
>>>>> Ah, this reminds me of a fascinating conversation I had with a
>>>>> colleague who had lived in both Japan and Korea. She explained that in
>>>>> these cultures, sleeping on the floor isn't just a matter of
>>>>> tradition, but it's also deeply rooted in their lifestyle and philosophy
>>>>> .
>>>>>
>>>>> In Japan, the practice is known as sleeping on a "futon," which is a
>>>>> type of mattress that can be easily rolled up and stored away. This
>>>>> tradition stems from the Japanese concept of space utilization and
>>>>> minimalism. Traditional Japanese homes, known as "tatami" rooms,
>>>>> serve multiple purposes – they could be a living room by day and a
>>>>> bedroom by night. The futon fits perfectly into this versatile way of
>>>>> living.
>>>>>
>>>>> Koreans have a similar practice, known as sleeping on a "yo." Like
>>>>> the Japanese futon, the yo is a thin mattress that can be easily
>>>>> stored. This practice is also influenced by the traditional Korean
>>>>> ondol heating system. The ondol system involves a unique underfloor
>>>>> heating system that makes the floor a cozy and warm place to sleep,
>>>>> especially during cold winters.
>>>>>
>>>>> Both these practices also tie into the broader Asian philosophy that
>>>>> emphasizes simplicity, efficiency, and harmony with the environment.
>>>>> Sleeping close to the ground is seen as a way to stay connected with the
>>>>> earth and maintain a humble and grounded lifestyle.
>>>>>
>>>>> It's not just about tradition, though. Many people in these cultures
>>>>> believe that sleeping on a firm surface is good for posture and back 
>>>>> health.
>>>>> While it might seem unusual from a Western perspective, it's a practice
>>>>> that has deep cultural roots and practical benefits. Plus, imagine the 
>>>>> ease
>>>>> of never having to worry about a squeaky bed frame!
>>>>>
>>>>> My note- Why Korea and Japan, in India also, in many homes still
>>>>> sleeping on the floor on rolling beds or mats is common.
>>>>>
>>>>> Q5      Which single person caused the greatest damage to India or
>>>>> Indian society? How?
>>>>>
>>>>> TheYashHegde, YouTuber (2013–present)Updated 6y
>>>>>
>>>>> Sir Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill. Many of you may know that, he
>>>>> was the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1940 to 1945 (later
>>>>> again from 1951 to 1955).
>>>>>
>>>>> Now I don't like writing long answers, so I'll try to keep it short,
>>>>> the way I like.
>>>>>
>>>>> World war 2 was at it's peak.    United kingdom was having a tough
>>>>> time with the resources.    India was a British colony back then
>>>>> (Unfortunately).Churchill ordered to divert the essential
>>>>> resources/supplies, from civilians in Bengal to the United Kingdom.
>>>>>
>>>>> The civilians in Bengal had nothing to eat, causing “The Great Bengal
>>>>> Famine”Result? 4 Million people died of starvation.
>>>>>
>>>>> Apparently, when Churchill was informed about this famine. All he had
>>>>> to say was, “Why hasn't Gandhi died yet”.
>>>>>
>>>>> My note- I have read the same was told by Churchil, earlier also, but
>>>>> how it is relating Gandhi is a big question in me.
>>>>>
>>>>> Q6      Who is/was the greatest person in India?
>>>>>
>>>>> A6      Saurabh Jha, Student at Electronics and Communication
>>>>> Engineering (2019–present) 5y
>>>>>
>>>>> He is Dr. H. C VERMA a well known experimental physicist and a retired
>>>>> professor at IIT kanpur. His book Concept of Physics is widely used
>>>>> by students.
>>>>>
>>>>> Now if you go to buy any other authors’ book you will have to pay a
>>>>> good amount of money, but concept of physics by Dr H.C Verma comes at
>>>>> very affordable rate.
>>>>>
>>>>> In an interview a student asked him why he is selling his books at
>>>>> this price he smiled and answered ‘My main motive is to deliver my 
>>>>> concepts
>>>>> through this book not to earn money’.
>>>>>
>>>>> Q7      What kind of people will always live life to the fullest?
>>>>>
>>>>> A7      Awdhesh Singh,Author: Pearls of Wisdom from Everyday Life |Ex-IRS|
>>>>> IITian 5y
>>>>>
>>>>> Two types of people live life to the fullest.
>>>>>
>>>>> 1: Ignorant
>>>>>
>>>>> If you are totally ignorant of the happening in the world, you can
>>>>> live life to the fullest.
>>>>>
>>>>> A sheep or a goat live its life to the fullest even when it is taken
>>>>> for slaughtering because it does not know that it is going to die soon.
>>>>>
>>>>> In the same way, if you are ignorant of the consequences of your
>>>>> actions and the laws of the world, you would enjoy your life to the 
>>>>> fullest
>>>>> till such time, you are hit by a calamity or die.
>>>>>
>>>>> 2: Wise
>>>>>
>>>>> If you are a wise person, you know the deepest secrets of the world.
>>>>> Hence, you know what is to be done and what is not to be done. You
>>>>> don’t do anything that can bring you suffering and hence you don’t suffer
>>>>> in life. You only perform actions that brings you joy and hence your
>>>>> life is filled with joy and you live fully.
>>>>>
>>>>> My note- I have highlighted the details of the person answered the
>>>>> question. Rest is left for  your thinking…..
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> --
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>>>>> .
>>>>>
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