Hi netti,
Thanks for this. My initial thought is I’m not sure about the mixing of dharma and politics.
I was not looking to; quite the opposite perhaps.
Some people say “nature is cruel.” To me, this is, er, clearly rubbish. Nature is.
There are plenty of people who eat meat who don’t think that they are involved in a cruelty. To me (in my ignorant deluded mind)…
On the relative level there clearly is suffering and so compassion is of course needed wherever we can apply it. But the absolute reality is that there is no suffering. This paradox is the nature of reality. The true Buddhist view is no view (as clearly enunciated by Nāgārjuna).
s.
Thanks for this. My initial thought is I’m not sure about the mixing of dharma and politics.
As it turns out, some things can't be totally subjectivized.
I was not looking to; quite the opposite perhaps.
I would contend that the fact is: the world is. The world is cruel is an opinion (IMO!). Everyone’s notions of what is and is not cruel vary, it seems to me. We all perpetrate cruelty, perhaps unintentionally, in the eyes of others.The fact is, the world is cruel and this cruelty is to a large degree institutionalized.
Some people say “nature is cruel.” To me, this is, er, clearly rubbish. Nature is.
There are plenty of people who eat meat who don’t think that they are involved in a cruelty. To me (in my ignorant deluded mind)…
On the relative level there clearly is suffering and so compassion is of course needed wherever we can apply it. But the absolute reality is that there is no suffering. This paradox is the nature of reality. The true Buddhist view is no view (as clearly enunciated by Nāgārjuna).
s.