Indian thinker Bahukas economics rejected in India thousands of - TopicsExpress



          

Indian thinker Bahukas economics rejected in India thousands of years ago, is now followed by America The economic policy which makes the people dependent on the government was originally expounded by an ancient Indian thinker Bahuka. Kamsa, who became a hate figure because he repeatedly killed the children Vasudeva, asked his adviser Bahuka how to make the people, who hate him, accept him. To which Bahuka replied: open your treasury to the people; give them free money to enjoy life; breakup families; teach women that chastity is not worth having at the cost of pleasure; bring up children to look upon parents as old and useless; once people begin to believe in unrestrained pleasures of life as the goal of life, self-restraint will disappear; and men will be like well-fed cattle at the mercy of their cowherds and like uncomplaining beasts, obey your lash as if it were a favor from you. [1] This is precisely what the US economic system has done to its people. It has freed the people from families and relations and enslaved them to the government. This individuals are individually free, but collectively slaves! Each one of Bahukas advice has been implemented in US. Women have lost chastity for pleasure and that is why a fifth of the pregnancies are teenage girls; 41% of the pregnancies are unwed women [2]; and half of the households are government dependent [3]. The Americans have discarded their relations, turned families into contracts, to be finally at the mercy of the government. The individuals, women, and elders got freedom from their families only to become slaves of the governments. So the advice of Bahuka rejected by Indians thousands of years ago, has now been adopted by US with the disastrous consequences which India has avoided. The US today bears testimony to the fact that the decline in culture leads to decline in economic performance and strength of a nation. [1] Krishnavatara I The Magic Flute by KM Munshi Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan. P50-51 [2] usatoday/news/.../2011-01-25-editorial25_ST_N.htm [3] blogs.wsj/.../number-of-the-week-half-of-u-s-lives-in-household...
Posted on: Sun, 31 Aug 2014 02:32:31 +0000

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