Outing Buddhist agents
Mon 12:12 pm +00:00, 27 Jan 2025 1
Source: https://mileswmathis.com/hanh.pdf
Outing Buddhist agents of the West, Thich Nhat Hanh, Thomas Merton, and B. R. Ambedkar
“This is about Buddhism, so it will help if you have read my two previous papers on Buddhism, but isn’t really necessary”
The first 9 pages are a massive, simple and very effective, takedown of these 3 agents
More important, go to page 10 for very his interesting thoughts on God, reincarnation and eternal life
Where he follows up on his recent “Fear” paper:
“We are in the first stages of civilization, and we suffer mainly from that. That and the horrible
influence of the Phoenicians, which is an unnecessary and temporary evil, one the Earth will soon
outgrow. That is the source of suffering, not God or existence itself. But like the rest of this, it is an
influence you can throw off as soon as you choose to. The Phoenicians would fall tomorrow if we
willed it so.
So that is another reason I have mixed feelings about Christianity. It was purer in the beginning and
has purposely been corrupted over the millennia. Jesus had no truck with eternal suffering or nonexistence, and importing those ideas from Buddhism is the worst possible thing that could happen to Christianity. Those two ideas are why I previously called Buddhism the greater poison. Christianity quickly picked up or retained the various darknesses of Judaism in the earliest years, since it came from there, but even those people hadn’t plumbed the depths of darkness of eternal suffering or nonexistence. At its worst, Buddhism is darker than the darkest abyss of rabbinical fear porn, but it retains the same basic flavor, which is why I linked the two in that paper, showing you Buddhism was likely a later creation of the Phoenicians, seeded in India by them on their trade routes, as between the Achaemenids and Shakyas.”
Source: https://mileswmathis.com/hanh.pdf














Surely people just take that which resonates with them and leave the rest. Most of us look at multiple sources and our intuition gives us a clue as to whether a source is for us or not, although it may be perfectly fine for someone else.