dave_a_mbs
Super Member
Offline
Afterlife Knowledge Member
Posts: 1655
central california
Gender:
|
Last night I was watching Tora Tora Tora! with the wife, and got to thinking about the kamikazes, and then about wartime heros on both sides, people whose devotion to their comrades and principles led them to deliberately die in an act of courage, so that their principles might be saved. That courage deserves admiration.
Then I thought about the world's present suicide bombers, people willing to strap on a dozen pounds of C-4 and roofing nails, and then go out to blow themselves up in a public place. I have a lot of ideas about future lives available to these people. In my opinion they will probably be reborn into a place that what they have been doing is what everybody receives as daily fare. Not so good. Maybe they're not doing it right.
That led me to wonder whether the suicide bombers might be going at it all wrong. In many respects the Vietnam War arose from suicides. The difference is that the suicides were Buddhist monks who doused themseves in gasoline and burned up as a protest against social injustices. The public response was, in every case, one of horror, a great deal of empathy with someone who could be so upset, and yet who had found a harmless way to express it. A sense of wonder at the love for principles that transcended love of life, egotism and hatred. None of the immolated monks caused anyone any pain, except for the matter of cleanup. They left a taste of power, control and loving kindness, and a keen awareness of what they did, and why they did it.
This essence of love made the acts of the Buddhists far more effective than if they had, for example, blown a corner off the King David Hotel, or killed all the police candidates in some precinct. People who do that kind of thing leave an aftertaste of rage, indignation, hatred and hostility. (And they may carry such feelings to the grave, to their subsequent dismay.) To make people mad is a very poor way to make them want to agree with you, or to do what you want them to do. That might be the wrong way to approach matters.
That leads me to wonder whether it might be more effective for suicide bombers to go into major public places, clear everyone away, and then blow themselves up while friends videotaped them. The value of martyrdom is even greater in that kind of situation, because it expresses love and caring. Maybe they've been going about it less effectually in the past.
Consider, what would make the greatest impression on you? I'm interested in your feedback.
Case A is the heroic fighter who infiltrates the enemy camp and blows up a dozen people. We see a news flash that so many people have died and that women are mourning the loss of their sons and daughters.
Case B is the teenage girl whose friends hold back the public while she simply states her wishes for the people of her world, and then goes Bang. Video tapes show her expressing her caring for the world, carefully avoiding harm to others as she explains what she is there to demonstrate, and then she's gone.
I suggest that Case B would get at least ten times the international news coverage, and would leave critics gasping for lack of words with which to counter the act. "Good Lord. She was so young and so sincere. I'll pray for her."
I suggest that Case A would get no more than a twenty second spot on the Eleven O'Clock News, and would be forgotten tomorrow. "Damned nuisance."
Of course this might be none of my business, but I have come to the conclusion that all we see in the Middle East is hatred begetting hatred begetting more hatred. I stongly suspect that a suicidal act of love would be many many times more powerful. While we can easily forget hateful things, love lingers longer.
For certain, the loving acts bode better for reincarnation.
dave
|