Michael Kindt's Blog, page 422

January 12, 2012

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Published on January 12, 2012 11:19

blasphemybarbie replied to your post: Currently I am getting an astrological reading done over on...

blasphemybarbie replied to your post: Currently I am getting an astrological reading done over on Facebook.
I want one!

Some Facebook acquaintance is doing it. How long does it take, I wonder? I'm antsy. All these years I've been trying to figure myself out and the whole time it was written right there in the stars. Ha!

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Published on January 12, 2012 05:38

Currently I am getting an astrological reading done over on Facebook.

Good morning. This should be a hoot.

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Published on January 12, 2012 05:32

January 11, 2012

Wherein I wane philosophical.

shin8shin:



early-onset-of-night:



Ahimsa is the principle of non-harming. You go through life and try not to hurt things. I first learned about it when studying Buddhism and I was immediately attracted to it.

Much of Buddhism eluded me, striking me as illogical, especially the teaching of karma and the deterministic thrust of the rest of it. I read a book by Walpola Rahula, a Buddhist teacher, in which he asked "How can will alone be free?" Indeed, it can't, not in Buddhism where everything is conditioned by something else. Karma is the law of cause and effect. If all is conditioned, then there are no causes, only effects. In Buddhism, essentially, life, the universe, and everything is an endless stream of dominoes falling over.

Anyway, I loved the teaching of ahimsa and immediately put it into practice. I stopped killing bugs, everything. Hedonism must be tempered with ahimsa for it to make sense philosophically.

Vegetarianism/veganism doesn't go hand-in-hand with the non-harming principle of ahimsa as some might contend. Vegetarianism is not a requirement in Buddhism, although the Mahayanists tend to be. The Buddha himself wasn't a vegetarian and died from eating contaminated pork.

To eat, we must kill. This fascinates me for some reason. We feed on death and our diet consists entirely of corpses. Vegetarians murder innocent bean plants for their protein. It is mere opinion that says a cow's life is more valuable than a pomegranate's. Possessing the ability to walk around and say "Moo" does not make you a better person.

I am vegetarian for a number of reasons, none of which is ahimsa. First of all, it is virtually impossible to buy healthy meat in the United States today. It has all been modified and chemicalized. Sources of natural, un-fucked-with meat are few and far between and very expensive when you can find them. I would also like to tread more lightly on this planet and believe I do so buy not supporting the meat factories, which swallow up land and pollute the hell out of it. Vegetarianism is also easy for me. Even when I ate meat, I thought most of it was gross. The idea of a steak made my skin crawl and chicken on the bone made me nauseous just thinking about it. I did like hamburgers, though, and kinda miss them.

Eating meat isn't necessary, nor is not eating it.



re: bolded fragment


1. You can't 'murder' a plant. 
2. Plants can't be 'innocent' or 'guilty'. That is an opinion.
3. That a cow's life is more valuable may be an opinion, but there is a significant difference between killing a sentient animal with a nervous system and killing a plant.
4. A cow is not a person.

Otherwise, a nice piece. I like the reflection that we somehow feed on death, life and death so bound together in such crucial aspect of our existence. Good luck to you with staying a vegetarian.



1. Yes you can.
2. All plants are innocent.
3. No there isn't. I call nervous system elitism! Privilege! Privilege!
4. Busted.
5. College students should not be allowed to use Tumblr till after their sophomore year.

:)

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Published on January 11, 2012 17:47

Wherein I wane philosophical.

Ahimsa is the principle of non-harming. You go through life and try not to hurt things. I first learned about it when studying Buddhism and I was immediately attracted to it.

Much of Buddhism eluded me, striking me as illogical, especially the teaching of karma and the deterministic thrust of the rest of it. I read a book by Walpola Rahula, a Buddhist teacher, in which he asked "How can will alone be free?" Indeed, it can't, not in Buddhism where everything is conditioned by something else. Karma is the law of cause and effect. If all is conditioned, then there are no causes, only effects. In Buddhism, essentially, life, the universe, and everything is an endless stream of dominoes falling over.

Anyway, I loved the teaching of ahimsa and immediately put it into practice. I stopped killing bugs, everything. Hedonism must be tempered with ahimsa for it to make sense philosophically.

Vegetarianism/veganism doesn't go hand-in-hand with the non-harming principle of ahimsa as some might contend. Vegetarianism is not a requirement in Buddhism, although the Mahayanists tend to be. The Buddha himself wasn't a vegetarian and died from eating contaminated pork.

To eat, we must kill. This fascinates me for some reason. We feed on death and our diet consists entirely of corpses. Vegetarians murder innocent bean plants for their protein. It is mere opinion that says a cow's life is more valuable than a pomegranate's. Possessing the ability to walk around and say "Moo" does not make you a better person.

I am vegetarian for a number of reasons, none of which is ahimsa. First of all, it is virtually impossible to buy healthy meat in the United States today. It has all been modified and chemicalized. Sources of natural, un-fucked-with meat are few and far between and very expensive when you can find them. I would also like to tread more lightly on this planet and believe I do so by not supporting the meat factories, which swallow up land and pollute the hell out of it. Vegetarianism is also easy for me. Even when I ate meat, I thought most of it was gross. The idea of a steak made my skin crawl and chicken on the bone made me nauseous just thinking about it. I did like hamburgers, though, and kinda miss them.

Eating meat isn't necessary, nor is not eating it.

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Published on January 11, 2012 14:09

So I went down to the Co-op today to get some peanut butter and what in the fuck?

11.2 million dollars per gram for organic peanut butter. Gal in front of me was buying a jar and she actually had the title to her car and was signing it over.

Shit, man.

The guy behind the counter, you know the young one with the afro, he says there was a tragic peanut crop failure.

"Well, it was bound to happen, what with Jimmy Carter getting out of the business," I told him.

He looked at me blankly, which is generally how people look at me.

So no more bulk peanut butter for the foreseeable future, which sucks ass because I really like buying as much or as little as I want. Now I have to get it in jars like the archaic heathens do over in the regular stores. And it's well over a grand for a jar.

So I'm like fuckit I'll get almond butter and am sitting here having almond butter sandwiches for lunch. Don't you wish you were me?

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Published on January 11, 2012 11:28

"Offense is taken, not given. If you don't let yourself be offended, you're not offended...."

"Offense is taken, not given. If you don't let yourself be offended, you're not offended. Some people are offended by equality, some people are offended by mixed marriage, some people are offended by homosexuality. What are we meant to do, stop with all those things because someone's offended? No. Some people are just offended and you can't really worry about them."

- Ricky Gervais, genius, on the subject of comedy
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Published on January 11, 2012 07:30