Showing posts with label jane fonda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jane fonda. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 12, 2024

Death By Vitamin D

 


 

 "What right did Britain have to grant you (Jews) somebody else's country?" 

   

 I think Hitchens, today, wouldn't cower from this performance, but would have more to add. This was in 2005, but posted on YouTube in 2013. It wasn't until 2014 that "The Secret Casualties of Iraq’s Abandoned Chemical Weapons" by C.J. Chivers was published in the NYT, featuring Army sergeant Jarrod L. Taylor saying, “I love it when I hear, ‘Oh there weren’t any chemical weapons in Iraq.’ There were plenty.” Saddam's deceit continues to confuse the world. In hindsight, Galloway appears to be wrong, here, about Hitchens in Dundee, he misrepresented Hitchens' position on Palestine, and Galloway WAS playing, cynically, with the story of Cindy and Casey Sheehan. Oh, and anyone who would tour with Janet Fonda in 2005 (when she was on tour saying "[Cosmic energy fields are] not just NewAge hogwash. It is actually how reality works," is not only suspect, but probably uber-grateful Hitchens is dead today. 

   

 "You can 'manifest' a man." 

    

Falun Gong: The Shen Yun Ballet Cult
 

Saturday, March 30, 2013

"Thanks" (For Nothing,...)


Here's a quote, related to the last post, but still worthy of mention:
“If Jesus came back and saw what was being done in his name, he’d never stop throwing up.” 
Woody Allen, Hannah and Her Sisters
To Ann Althouse and her "sisters" - including Jane Fonda - I rest my case:

 Fuck your Mother's Day - I'll stick with respecting women who are respectable,...
 

Monday, February 14, 2011

It's So Weird That We All Had To Take It (When Only Some Of Us Were Willing To Bend Over,..)

We've been telling you yoga is a cult for years now (check the dates on the links) but, of course, once the yogis lie and scream "No it's not - it's exercise!" enough, they've got most people fooled, which is the point:

If they go around letting people know they're participating in goofy cults, they'll also probably end up doing those stupid poses by themselves, and where's the I'm-cooler-than-you-normal-Americans cache' in that?

Come on, along with buying all the cult gear, claiming yoga as exercise is fine, in a fraudulent "you can fool some of the people some of the time,..." kind of way, except A) no one who understands exercise will agree with it, and B) the truth might slip out whenever yogis are caught talking to each other:
In her new memoir “Poser: My Life In Twenty-Three Yoga Poses”, Claire Dederer takes on the contradictions inherent in being a Westerner who dabbles in a non-Western belief system that comes lightly disguised as an exercise class.
Bingo, baby! That's Emily Gould, and her article in - get this - More Intelligent Life magazine (will these people ever stop flattering themselves?) is a hoot, filled with every cult buzzword ever written!

Just scanning the first three paragraphs of her piece, we've got such exercise-oriented phrases as "yogic philosophy", "meditation", "self-help", "Eastern asceticism", "Intuitive", "a Zen rock garden", and the always hopeful and greedy NewAge bastard's desire for "abundance”. (Kind of makes you miss the NewAge language of reps and checking their heart rate, doesn't it?) And all that's just in the first three paragraphs!

Who do they think they're fooling?

Part of what makes studying American cultism so fun is unraveling their contradictions, and Mrs. Gould is more than happy to lay some real head-scratchers out, from Yoga Journal, for our perusal:
Don’t get me started on the ads, a regular source of contention in YJ’s letters-to-the-editor section. I’m clearly far from the only person who finds it annoying that articles about accepting your body are always surrounded by photos of young, lithe, mostly-white women showing off skin-tight, expensive spandex. In other ads, Eastern asceticism meets Western commerce in discomfiting ways. The most recent issue had a quarter-page ad for a book called “The Intuitive Investor”, featuring an image of the book jacket floating over a Zen rock garden and the copy “Lovingly written for you … for a life of abundance”. A few pages later, an article about meditating in order to let go of desire nestled between half-page ads for retreats in tropical paradises. Wish you were there? No! Don’t wish for anything!
Yes, these yogis do love confused white people!

And the type who join the yoga cult are very confused, sucked up into every bullshit NewAge fad that's come down the pike in the last part of the last century. Mrs. Gould's writes of Claire Dederer:
Born and raised in the Pacific Northwest, she now lives in a North Seattle community of locavore recyclers where, she writes, signs on her neighbours’ gates warn “be mindful of dog” (instead of “beware of dog”). Even still, Dederer had spent years feeling deeply suspicious of yoga: “I thought yoga was done by self-indulgent middle-aged ladies with a lot of time on their hands, or by skinny fanatical twenty-two-year-old vegetarian former gymnasts. I was also unsettled by the notion of white people seeking transformation through the customs of brown-skinned people.”  
 
Despite these well-founded misgivings, Dederer finally starts taking a Hatha yoga class, spurred by back pain from nursing her daughter.
Of course she did, because going to,...oh, we don't know,...a back doctor, was just too simple of an idea, right?

Sure it is, when she's the daughter of a woman who left "her husband for a much younger man during the dawn of feminism" (Dederer, to her credit, does admit "it’s possible" that event made her "a less stable young adult” - you think?) and now she's part of a equally lame-brained and wasteful recycling community that can't even admit dogs bite.

Seriously, where the bullshit begins and ends must be hard to figure out - especially if you're an American so sucked into a series of belief systems that you'll accept simple phrases like "full splits" have to be referred to as "hanumanasana". Or fearfully living with "the organic baby food and toxin-free lifestyle".

We'd never make it there without killing somebody.

We first began studying NewAge cultism after the killer ex left, and we started reading her books to see just what in the FUCK had gotten into that woman. One thing we clearly remember is the deeper we got into the cult experience, the more our head would hurt and a voice would rise up in our mind that would scream "NO!" and, on occasion, we'd fling a book across the room involuntarily. Not these women. These women are "seekers". They're "on the path" to madness, so there are no books being flung anywhere when the shit gets crazy.


And, if there's one thing they're NOT after, it's exercise:
About yogic philosophy, too, Dederer is at her best when she’s describing her own struggles to make sense of texts, like the Sutras, which at first seem impenetrable. “They were brief, yes, and looked aphoristic, but reading them was not like reading Oscar Wilde. It was like reading bread, or grass. Impossible.” Most Westerners who’ve tried, like Dederer, to swiftly assimilate a new belief system will relate to her confusion and frustration: “I mean, it was one thing to read about stilling the fluctuations of consciousness but another thing entirely to do it. Beyond that, I liked the fluctuations of consciousness. I made a living off the fluctuations of consciousness.” Dederer concludes her brief tour of her local bookstore’s Eastern Religions section by deciding that she will persevere in her classes, even though she “couldn’t be bothered to learn the right way to do yoga.” Her approach to yoga, she decides, will steer clear of research and focus on experience, specifically: “submission, trust, transmission from teacher to student, imperfection, the release of the ego.” 
Oh, geez - here we go with the "release of the ego" crap again. (We ARE finding this in the arrogantly-titled More Intelligent Life magazine, right?)

Even worse - and more revealing of how little "ego" these people are releasing - compare her notion that reading the Sutras "was like reading bread, or grass" with this description of how cultists absorb occult writings and quackery:
“The more convoluted the explanation, the more unintelligible the practitioners are, the more people may be inclined to believe them. It makes it appear as though it is privileged knowledge, like real medicine and auto tech.”
Kind of hard to resolve releasing your ego with feeling privileged, isn't it?

Our favorite part of all this malarky is when the discussion turns to Dederer's husband.

Like a lot of NewAgers, Dederer "is unsparing in detailing her marriage’s weak points" - a main one being what's described as her "unsympathetic" husband's "depressive episodes". Her man doesn't sound depressive to us but - heaven forbid - rational when dealing with an "unsympathetic" fruitcake:
“How am I supposed to keep my career going without any time to do my work?” she asks him. “I don’t know, but I do know that I can’t take time off from my job so you can write BOOK REVIEWS for YOGA JOURNAL,” he shouts. She storms out of the room,...
Yea, she's released her ego alright.

One of these days, probably after the Baby Boomers are long gone and most of their kids are finally leaving this mortal coil themselves, the truth of this time will finally come into focus, and all the various cult beliefs and influences will finally get the hearing they deserve, and nonsense like "yoga as exercise" will be revealed for what it is - a bald-faced lie. A lie swallowed whole, and spread by people too insecure and proud to admit they got snookered.

It will finally be known that from the election of Barack Obama (with Oprah Winfrey's NewAge help) all the way back to the arrival of the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi (with Jane Fonda and The Beatles) these fools were BSing themselves, and the rest of us, until little by little their grip weakened and America's conservative way of life could return to some semblance of what it was before anyone had ever heard of hippies and the stupid "path" to nowhere they took us on:
She acknowledges that her search for meaning and purpose has been inconclusive, that her life, like her yoga practice, is a work in progress. And she always maintains just the right amount of irony about the inherent cheesiness of such an acknowledgment. Describing her struggle not to feel ridiculous while doing “lion”, a breathing exercise that entails making a very goofy facial expression, she writes about “the hippie laugh. You know the hippie laugh. It says: I’m light of heart! Yet aware of my foibles! Also free! Very, very free!” That someone can be this self-aware, yet is capable of sticking her tongue out, rolling her eyes back and roaring in tandem with a classroom full of fellow adults, is endearing.
No it's not. It's not endearing. That's not it at all:

It's immature and childish, and that's what it should be called, just like yoga should be called a cult belief system - not exercise - and the sooner everyone comes to grip with all of this, the better off we'll all finally be.

That will be endearing.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Just Twisting Yourself Into Knots (Over Nothing)

Oh-ho-ho! So Yoga, as so many tell us, is just exercise in the West? Then what is this woman getting rid of?:
TARA Stiles does not talk about sacred Hindu texts, personal intentions or chakras. She does not ask her yoga classes to chant. Her language is plainly Main Street: chaturangas are push-ups, the “sacrum” the lower back. She dismisses the ubiquitous yoga teacher-training certificates as rubber stamps, preferring to observe job candidates in action.

In her classes, videos and how-to book, “Slim Calm Sexy,” Ms. Stiles, a 29-year-old former model with skyscraper limbs and a goofball sensibility, focuses on the physical and health aspects of yoga, not the spiritual or the philosophical. For traditionalists, this is heresy, reducing what they see as a way of life to just another gym class.
Somebody's lying out there, because if Yoga wasn't a 5,000 year-old spiritual practice to make you stupid, then this woman wouldn't have to be changing it - and nobody would be pissed at her - but she is and they are. So which is it:

Are you being fooled or is she?

We especially like her take on those oh-so-nice and "peaceful" types in the Yoga "scene":
In the decade since she came to New York, Ms. Stiles has built a business out of breaking those rules. She rejected the city’s yoga scene as exclusive and elitist — it reminded her of the mean girls in high school, only with incense and bare feet.

“I feel like I’m standing up for yoga,” Ms. Stiles said. “People need yoga, not another religious leader. Quite often in New York, they want to be religious leaders, and it’s not useful.
Indeed. As we keep saying, the Yoga crowd are a bunch of hypocritical bitches with nothing to recommend them but the other hypocrites they gather with - this includes Ms. Stiles, who claims she's stripping the bullshit from Yoga, but works with Jane "we're all energy" Fonda and Deepak "I've got a scam" Chopra.

These Yoga fools must gather together because, while they call it a "lifestyle" what they really mean is it's a exploitable cult with it's own language and belief system. If it isn't, then why is Stiles talking, specifically, of "religious leaders" for what people claim is exercise? Someone's very, very confused here and in need of psychiatric care. A lot of someone's.

We'll end this, here, with the only comment worth anyone taking away from the post:

You're all a bunch of self-deluded liars, fooling no one but yourselves, and you can be sure Indians have been laughing at your elitist racial appropriation stupidity for decades.

Call us whenever you decide to develop a coherent personality, and cult(ure), of your own.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

We Studied The Art Of Living (Like A Pig In Shit)

O.K., Tiger, follow along as the veil is slowly lowered, and the truth few seemingly want you to see can be observed for what it is:
I’m being sued by a religious cult.

I’m being sued by a religious cult that I used to be a member of, because they want to stop me and other ex-members from revealing their dirty secrets on this blog.

I, together with a handful of other ex-members, have been blogging about our experiences with being in and leaving The Art of Living, a spiritual organization founded in the 1980s by the Indian guru Sri Sri Ravi Shankar.

On paper, The Art of Living offers courses in yoga, meditation and breathing techniques and performs humanitarian work in the third world. In reality, we believe they are more like a religious cult.
That "on paper" is priceless. They're clearly saying there's a public perception, and then, there's the real deal.

The real deal is referred to as "dirty".

So let's break this one quote down. For starters, "The Art of Living" sounds a lot like Oprah's "How To Live Your Best Life Ever!" bullshit, doesn't it? (Put them together and you've got The Art Of Noise, but we digress,...) That's because none of these NewAge fools has an original idea in their heads, just as the minds they capture are unoriginal - or do you think someone who looks to a TV personality (or a "guru") for help with "living" has all their pistons firing right? Face it:

They're suckers, responding to the same mundane stimuli, with today's cult leaders repeating what other cult leaders throughout history have always done.

No one questions why they would want to control another's life, or why a follower would ever let their life be controlled. They "just do it."

They're fools. The whole lot of 'em, one and all.

Now, of course, we've got a whole file on that faker, Sri Sri Ravi Shankar. All we'll point out now is he's an(other) "Indian guru", and India seems to be a factory for abusing people, seeing how the conditions there are so poor few are truly educated enough to think for, or even feed, themselves. Westerners, like Jane Fonda, who got caught up in this charade - and even attempt to lead the parade - have no excuse for themselves and should be regarded as the fools and/or traitors they truly are.

Now let's get to the juicy part:
On paper, The Art of Living offers courses in yoga, meditation and breathing techniques and performs humanitarian work in the third world. In reality, we believe they are more like a religious cult.
Come on, you know you've heard it a thousand times:

"My yoga class isn't a cult, they teach exercise!"

Yea, right. Fool, yoga ain't exercise. They may be able to deceive you, but these cultists don't fool us for a second.

Listen, you have to buy into certain ideas to even pursue yoga, so don't give us that "I do it for my balance" bullshit. You can't find anything - anything - without a "spiritual but not religious" attachment to it, in order to merely balance yourself? Sure. (Funny but, even before we got into the study of NewAge, we've always been able to master that.)

Just admit, if only to yourself - you've been a sucker for exotica, leftists politics, or whatever you want to call it - now get the hell out!

We always crack up at the "breathing techniques" trope. Breathing is a natural function - it doesn't require training in the least - and the idea anyone would fall for there being "techniques" (multiple) is hilarious. But this is another example of how easily charlatans can get the gullible to part with their money.

"Breathing techniques". It's hard to imagine anyone can be so stupid as to fall for that one, but there it is, right before our eyes.

We sincerely hope The Art Of Living cult is brought down - and soon. We hope their lawsuit against those who are speaking out is the very catalyst that wrecks their entire world. And we hope their former members are finally free, and mentally healthy, and able to return to productive lives free of manipulation, deception, and fear.

Unfortunately, for us, we can't:

Wallowing in this crap is our job - and we're loving it waaay too much.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Once A Crazy Cultist, Always A Crazy Cultist

Aww, isn't this cute:

Jane Fonda is blaming the shooting of Gabrielle Giffords on Sarah Palin, Glenn Beck, and the Tea Party movement.

Of course we now know none of these is to blame.

So let us point you to the words of Yuri Bezmenov, the KGB agent who, in the '60s, spent time with Fonda, The Beatles, and others at the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi's ashram in India - where he says the participants were "contaminated" - before saying:
They are programmed to think and react to certain stimuli in a certain pattern. You can not change their mind even if you expose them to authentic information. Even if you prove that white is white and black is black, you still can not change the basic perception and the logic of behavior.
Truer words were never spoken. But wait - it get's better:

Here's Fonda wearing the clothing of the Lululemon cult, and of course, there's her famous unhinged NewAge ramble about "energy" and other nonsense at Eve Ensler's vagina conference, or whatever it was.

Isn't it funny how it's always the usual suspects with this stuff?

Friday, December 3, 2010

Get Smart: A Belief Works Without It Being Seen

So what's today's all-important lesson?

Today's lesson is the same as yesterday's:

We're stupid.

But not just any kind of stupid but major fucking stupid - as a people - and if we don't recognize it, we're doomed.

How's that for a happy go lucky message to start your day?

Fuck you.

Look, we told you, and told you, and told you, but your punk asses don't listen (make a note: not listening? That's what we call a major flaw in your make-up. You need to work on that, pronto.) so you're repeating the same mistakes in different ways and thinking you're making "change" when you've got your representative of that change in the White House and can see how it's going.

What's wrong with you?



Above is that video we posted a few days ago. (Yes, we want you to watch it again, but this time ignoring the George W. Bush parts because, as we told you, the bitch is a socialist and was/is wrong about her political views, as history has already shown us.)

Today we want you to pay attention to the parts where she says, over the last decade, the decade when Baby Boomers were in charge - the biggest, most dominant generation in history - if you gave them accurate information, you were marginalized, and, if you told the truth, you got fired.

That's what's important to us now.

Recognizing how much damage a huge gang of jerks (and that's what Boomers are) could insist on doing to good, intelligent people's lives, and then trying to not repeat the Boomer's mistake.

What's the mistake? You idiot, are you new around here?

The mistake was believing NewAgers!

The only reason why no one is listening to the truth is because they built a bullshit culture convinced they can change shit with their minds.

It's that whole, stupid, Maharishi Mahesh Yogi nonsense, writ large, and by now everybody ought to know better than to believe it, but they don't!

Like how many friends do you have who meditate and/or do yoga?

Wait - let us rephrase that - how many idiots do you know who pay to have their lives wasted and insist on trying to convince others to do the same - while regularly railing about evangelical Christians for basically the same behavior and beliefs?

You fucking saps.

Like those before you, you're fucking pathetic in how short-sighted you've allowed yourselves to become, unable to see anything beyond your own eyes.

But why are we surprised?

You're the kids of Boomers.

But, still, you've got to stop all of this.

You've got to get out of the lotus position, roll up the yoga mats, and then help your neighbor to do the same.

The two of you can empty out the medicine cabinets of all your "alternative" medicines, and then, go to the pharmacy and buy some real ones that work.

Throw out, or turn off, anything that reeks of Oprah Winfrey (which includes the spinoffs by Dr. Phil or Dr. Oz or that sunny bitch with the cooking show) Tony Robbins, Andrew Weil, Kevin Trudeau, Shirley MacLaine, Jane Fonda, or even the younger outliers like Jenny McCarthy, Madonna, Angelina Jolie, Lady GaGa - anybody that never got off, or seemed to have been born on, the Magical Mystery Tour bus - just abandon them all.

Immediately.

That means NOW.

Remember "Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out"?

This is the same exact thing, except you're tuning back onto reality, and dropping out of the stupid matrix these rich fucks have constructed for you to live in.

Don't think so? Well then, answer us this:

Other than dying, how easy is it to avoid Oprah Winfrey?

That bitch follows you everywhere.

She's in the supermarket checkout lines.

She's on TV.

When she's not on TV one of her chosen minions is on you - and the entire culture encourages it!

Why is that so much better to watch and believe in than this:



See the bitch with the hammer?
That's TMR - and it should be you, too.

Smash the NewAge in it's every manifestation and we might have a chance to regain our footing.

Ignore this message and we're going to keep sliding off a cliff of our own design.

Our enemies are watching, both foreign and domestic, and the domestic ones are all NewAgers.

They told you to vote for Barack Obama.

What you get in return, for listening to them, really couldn't be more plain.