Showing posts with label homicide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homicide. Show all posts

Friday, February 20, 2026

Happy B-day Kurt Cobain (was murdered)


I didn't kill him (Courtney Love)
Kurt Donald Cobain (February 20, 1967–circa April 5, 1994) was an American punk, emo, alternative rock musician and a member of the infamous 27 Club. He was the lead vocalist, guitarist, primary songwriter, and a founding member of the grunge band Nirvana, a name he chose when he found out that in Buddhism the definition of nirvana is "the end of suffering." Through his angsty songwriting and anti-establishment persona, he widened the thematic conventions of mainstream rock music. He was heralded as a spokesman of Generation X and is widely recognized as one of the most influential rock musicians. More

(Asmongold TV) Kurt Cobain didn't kill himself. (They found proof). [And a hired private investigator came to the conclusion that it was his drug addict wife Courtney Love.]

Syd Barrett after acid (LSD) at age 27

The Pink Floyd Sound with Syd (on right)
Roger Keith "Syd" Barrett (Jan. 6, 1946–July 7, 2006) was an English singer, guitarist, and songwriter who co-founded the rock band Pink Floyd in 1965. Until his permanent departure in 1968, he was Pink Floyd's frontman and primary songwriter, known for his whimsical style of psychedelia and stream-of-consciousness writing [1, 6]. He was already absent and undependable by 1967. As a guitarist, he was influential for his free-form playing and for employing effects such as dissonance, distortion, echo, and feedback. More: Syd Barrett

Thursday, October 23, 2025

Holy D: Demons on Stage: Deicide


The spectacle of WOW (Wendy O. Williams) and punk-metal Plasmatics

Holy Deception: The Story of Deicide┃documentary
(RAWMUSICTV) Premiered Oct. 23, 2025: WATCH my first gaming documentary about HOLLOW KNIGHT here: • Soul Vessel - The Story of Hollow Knight ┃... Buy some Merch here: https://lucis666.com/ Follow my Official IG THEGHOULWALK / theghoulwalk Follow the Official RAWMUSICTV IG / rawmusictv Join the Discord / discord

Friday, September 15, 2023

The Chimpanzee Civil War of 1974 (video)

Sheldon S., CC Liu, Pfc. Sandoval (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

The insanity of the Gombe Chimpanzee War
(National Park Diaries) Aug. 21, 2023: GOMBE NATIONAL PARK The Gombe Chimpanzee War was an intergroup conflict between two chimpanzee communities in Gombe National Park, Tanzania, Africa.

Prior to this conflict being observed, it was thought that chimpanzees were largely peaceful creatures and vegetarians. But Jane Goodall and other researchers soon opened up a whole new world of chimpanzee conflict and social dynamics with their observations of this conflict.

It's a fascinating look at the brutality of the natural world and perhaps provides an opportunity to reflect on our human capacity for violence as well.
Sources and resources
  • Storyblocks
  • BBC's Planet Earth
  • Jane Goodall Institute
  • Rudicell et al, 2010
  • Konrad Wothe/Minden Pictures

Thursday, September 22, 2022

Democide: US gov't killed 10K of us (video)


That time the U.S. government intentionally poisoned and killed over 10,000 U.S. citizens
(Today I Found Out) Sept. 7, 2022. #Sponsored: Check out Squarespace (squarespace.com/BRAINFOOD) for 10% off on first purchase. This video is #sponsored by Squarespace. Love the content? Check out Simon Whistler's other YouTube Channels: Biographics, Geographics, Warographics, MegaProjects, SideProjects, Into The Shadows, TopTenz, Highlight History, Business Blaze, Casual Criminalist, Decoding the Unknown. → Some favorites. → Subscribe for new videos every day

Tuesday, June 2, 2020

Vandalizing cop cars in Beverly Hills (video)

Fox 11 News, Los Angeles local; Editors, Wisdom Quarterly
Burning police cars has become fashionable again as it was in the 1980s (kfbk.iheart.com).
It's tough to make out behind the blur but graffiti seems to read "Fudge The Police" (kfbk)

Police vehicles were attacked and damaged in Beverly Hills in defiance of curfew as protestors preferred to vandalize than loot.
.
What have police done?

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Sasquatch is REAL to Native Americans (video)

Xochitl, Pat Macpherson, Ashley Wells, Wisdom Quarterly; Monster Quest; John Two Birds


Native American Bigfoot: THE LEGEND IS REAL
Native American Medicine
This is a documentary on the Native American lore of Sasquatch (Halkomelem sásq'ets, Buddhist yakshi and yeti), popularly called "Bigfoot" as if there were only one.

It examines ancient stories and folklore to uncover the truth about the mythical human band or tribe of ogre, the "Wild Hairy Men of the Mountain."

It looks at what Native American legends say about this ancient tribe of humans (ogres) used in the creation of Homo sapiens.

True story: Native American recounts terrifying tale of a Sasquatch
reeking havoc around a reservation and what the tribe did about it.
 
Native American Elder Explains
(Morrow Chronicles) Part 1: Medicine Man John Two Birds talks about Billy Meier, humanoid ETs, and Sasquatch (the peaceful and violent varieties) with Helga Morrow in 1996. Part 2

Thursday, April 7, 2016

Abortion, suicide? What the Buddha taught

Ashley Wells, Dhr. Seven, Seth Auberon, Amber Larson, Wisdom Quarterly; AP (via mail.com)
Killer Michelle Carter in Juvenile Court, New Bedford (Peter Pereira/Standard Times/AP).
.
Court hears case of teen who sent beau texts urging suicide
BOSTON - The highest court in Massachusetts has been asked to dismiss a manslaughter case against a teenager accused of sending her boyfriend dozens of text messages encouraging him to kill himself.
 
Guns, money, and suicide mix well.
Michelle Carter listens to defense attorney Joseph P. Cataldo argue for charges against her to be dismissed at Juvenile Court in New Bedford, Mass. Carter, of Plainville, Mass., is charged with involuntary manslaughter for allegedly pressuring Conrad Roy III, of Fairhaven, Mass., to commit suicide in 2014. Her lawyer will ask the Supreme Judicial Court Thursday, April 7, 2016, to overrule a lower court judge who refused to dismiss the youthful offender indictment against her, which makes her eligible for up to 20 years in prison instead of a lower sentence if she were prosecuted as a juvenile. More
The Buddha on not encouraging killing
The Buddha taught that encouraging others to kill themselves or kill others is killing, which violates the first of the Five Precepts.

The reason he made known the Five Precepts and the hundreds of guidelines in the Monastic Disciplinary Code was not because certain deeds (actions, karma) displeased him or went against his will.

He revealed them because he saw that they resulted in unpleasant, unwished for results. Those results and fruits (vipaka and phala) are usually not immediate; that is not what results and fruits means.

They come about when karma ripens, which is opportunistic, when an action (a karma) gets the chance, whether in this life, the immediate next life, or in some future life.

Some deeds fall away and do not bear fruit if they do not get the chance within this or the next life. Karma is complicated, working itself out in mysterious ways.

But according to the Vinaya, the Monastic Disciplinary Code, there are certain "defeat" (parajika) offenses, deeds/karma. One is immediately defeated and excluded from the monastic community by committing them.

How about abortion?
One of them is murder -- and it extends to encouraging abortion or commending suicide. One is self-judged guilty of killing (taking life) by speaking in praise of abortion or suicide or homicide which the person then goes on to perform even if that person was going to do it anyway. Because one may have been the cause, or tilted the scale, one is defeated.

Sexual intercourse, stealing, and making false claims of enlightenment are other defeat offenses. So this being the case, What is our karma when we encourage abortion? When we suggest to others that they kill themselves? When we sell guns or deal in weapons, poisons (drugs including pharmaceuticals of abuse), or the flesh trade (modern slavery, prostitution, sex trafficking)?

The Buddha by his insight knew-and-saw directly the unwished for results of such deeds. In the Noble Eightfold Path he therefore defined "right livelihood" as avoiding trade in certain things -- weapons, intoxicants, people, animals for slaughter... We may not like the truth made known to us, but we can profit greatly for looking into it.

The  Buddha had little to gain by making rules or talking about boring morality. The way to popularity is to give few rules, never judge or tell anyone else what's "moral" for them or "virtuous" or "good." So some may resent a spiritual teacher telling anyone what's "right" or "wrong," what's beneficial and harmful, to be pursued or abandoned, let go of or kept close to the heart.
  • Shouldn't everything be let go of? Nothing should be clung to. Sure, let it all go but not right away. In the Parable of the Raft (MN 22), the Buddha says that one is wise to gather material like reeds and lashes to make a raft to cross over from this dangerous side to that safe side of a river using one's own paddling hands and effort THEN letting go once that raft has served its purpose. The raft is the Dharma. It should be let go of, too, but only after it has served its purpose. You don't abandon the raft before you've crossed over to safety. You don't let go of the Doctrine and Discipline before achieving enlightenment and knowing-and-seeing for yourself.
It was because of just such a comment in the Mahaparinibbana Sutta, the sutra of "The Buddha's Last Days" (The Great Final-Nirvana of the Buddha Discourse, DN 16), that "Buddhism" began as a religion.

The Kalama sutra is a gradual teaching.
The Buddha did not create a religion. He taught a Dharma, a Doctrine-and-Discipline, a Teaching, made known a Path, a Way, to enlightenment. He was a mystic and a spiritual teacher, who was not interested in teaching people what he knew -- it's true. He was interested in teaching people how to know for themselves. People came to ask, What do you think?

And he turned it around and asked them, then helped them pursue a line of thought based on what they answered, giving a gradual teaching by asking them questions. He knew the answer, but "teaching" is about bringing others to their own direct-knowledge. He was a guide, not a judge, not a dictator, not a god or God (deva or brahma). So Buddhism is not a set of beliefs to believe or parrot; it is a path to pursue that leads to direct-knowledge. That Path is folded into the Noble Eightfold Path but it is more than that, like the 37 Requisites of Enlightenment, of which the Noble Eightfold Path is a part.
 
The enlightened elder, the Great Disciple Maha Kassapa (a Brahmin), formalized the teaching into a systematic "religion." He did this on his own after the Buddha's final nirvana because of the comment of a newcomer, an old man who had only recently become a monastic.

When the group of monastics Maha Kassapa was traveling with got news that the Buddha had passed away before they reached him, some (not yet enlightened) became very dejected and cried, threw themselves on the ground, wailed, lamented how they were now lost and so on. The enlightened kept their composure. This old man/new monk, Subhadda, encouraged them:

"Enough, friends! Do not grieve, do not lament! We are well rid of that great ascetic. Too long, friends, have we been oppressed by his saying, 'This is fitting for you; that is not fitting for you.' Now we shall be able to do as we wish, and what we do not wish, that we shall not do." 
 
Venerable Maha Kassapa addressed the monastics, saying: "Enough, friends! Do not grieve, do not lament! For has not the Blessed One declared that with all that is dear and beloved there must be change, separation, and severance? Of that which is born, come into being, compounded, subject to decay, how can one say: 'May it not come to dissolution!'?" (Part 6: Section 28)

By reminding them of impermanence -- and the suffering dependent on it -- he encouraged them to realize enlightenment and be freed of ignorance, clinging, and aversion. But he realized that people would say things just like this Subhadda. They would misrepresent the Dharma, misunderstand what the Buddha taught and why. So he later organized the First Council to agree on a canon of teachings, the teachings and the disciplinary code, so that it would last a long time.

Many of us, maybe without realizing it, are just like Subhadda, with our "modern" sensibility: Don't tell us what to do, and we won't tell you what to do. You do what you like, and I'll do what I like, and we'll all be cool. And anyone who tells us what to do or not do, what is fitting or not fitting, we foolishly think we're well rid of such a person. But that person would have been our guide (not our boss or god or slave-driver) leading us to the insight that opens into enlightenment.

One goal of the Buddha's Teachings is to go beyond needing a teacher. When we realize the Truth for ourselves then it doesn't matter who says it or does not say it, agrees or does not agree, because we directly see for ourselves. So the Buddha said, "This Dharma is inviting; it invites investigation." Come see, come test it for yourself, come see for yourself. It does no good just believing or not believing if we won't see for ourselves.

Monday, July 6, 2015

More wild shark attacks: Why? (video)

Crystal Quintero, Dhr. Seven, Pat Macpherson, Amber Larson, Wisdom Quarterly (COMMENTARY), Ashley Casey (Nat Geo Wild); DreamWorksTV "Home"
I'm Nature's own eating-machine. I don't mean no harm. (Phil Blackburn/flickr.com)

The horror movie "Jaws" ruined summers at the beach for countless Americans (MAD).
C'mon, Jaws, just a little kiss...on the butt cheek. Don't be like that! (Huff Post)
An innovative solution we are planning for our surfing expeditions at Wisdom Quarterly, good both in California and Australia, where sharks attack what they think are paddling seals, is a body board painted to look like a vicious rival shark (wierdpalace.com).
Another shark attack, the seventh this year, 2015, Ocracoke Island, N.C. (AP)
.
There has been an eighth shark attack in North Carolina, this time on a Marine. Why? Global warming has led to change in the seas -- temperature, the water highway (the movement of rivers within the oceans, regular movement based on temperature differences and other factors), acidity, pollution, over-fishing, destruction of fish stocks, and periodic resurgence... we all know what's happening.

Why would anyone camp deep in Nature?
The only surprise is that wild animals seem to not understand who we are -- the destroyers of the planet -- or do they? Why are big cats attacking? Why do cryptozoological hominins like Yeti and Sasquatch and Almas abduct women and children? Why are so many more shapeshifting (skin walkers) creatures being sighted and interacted with?

We would like to think that there is a better reason than group punishment as Bhumi (Gaia) strikes back on such thoughtless mortals. We'd like to think it has something to do with personal karma.

"O thoughtless mortals! ever blind to fate,
Too soon dejected, and too soon elate"
 
Faye, don't taunt wild beasts with your female wiles!
If "group or collective karma" (like the Shakyans met with) is yielding its results and fruits (vipaka and phala), why is the epicenter North Carolina? The Earth shakes, trembles, and quivers all over the U.S. "San Andreas" is coming to Los Angeles, but all that toxic fracking is bring tremors to places that have no history of such shaking.

Moreover, why don't the cows rise up? We kill (the actual butchers and all of us who pay them to kill by buying their slaughtered flesh) them in numbers too terrible to think? A million farm animals and more are killed a DAY in the United States! Countless chickens and smaller living beings (like useless chickadees) are dragged to slaughter.

A sad strange fact about life is that stationary farmers are far more warlike and murderous than hunter-gatherers, not only among humans where we protect our vast farmlands with guns and weapons of mass destruction (courtesy of the state), it also appears to be the case among animals.

 
Maybe we are all being bombarded with the same negative programming via HAARP, microwaves, or other pulse weapons, or perhaps it has something to do with "protecting" what is "ours." The biggest killer of humans in Africa, other than other humans, are hippos. And in the U.S. and elsewhere, cows take out more humans than anyone imagines. Ungulates, particularly mothers with babies to care for, are hardly harmless.
Buddhist sutras are littered with attacks by deadly cows, so much so that we tend to scoff, and commentators attribute the high number to "possession" by angry inimical spirits. How could docile cows suddenly become warmblooded killers? Karma may have something to do with it, but the strange thing is that -- in the ultimate sense we are not the ones who inherit our karma.

It is conventionally true that "Beings are heirs of their karma (past actions, be they deeds, words, or intentions). But we will not be the same when we meet with the results of those actions, for we are not the same for two consecutive moments, how then when whole lifetimes pass by before circumstances are met with for the fruition of a past action?

When animals attack humans
(NatGeoWilde Channel via Ashley Casey) The Most Dangerous Killers: Awful attacks on people by animals on people. When animals attack...

Flags don't kill; fanatics kill for flags (AP)
So when anyone speaks of karma as a cause of our woes now, people cry, "Blaming the victim!" The working out of karma is a staggering endeavor, too much for our sharp minds. As sharp as we are, the currents are too subtle, the playing out too mysterious, the odds and probabilities too immense even for our supercomputing devices to handle. If we meditate we will see that.

One of the super-knowledges that arises when pursued with a purified mind founded on attaining the absorptions (jhanas) and concentrations (samadhis) is knowledge of past lives and a limited view of how we came to be where we are -- the past karma that brought us here. In fear we kill, so beware of fear!

Hate (phobia) is a choice. It's NOT my flag.
Why this sort of sudden animal attack death should befall spontaneous arhats, suddenly enlightened beings who hear just enough of the Truth to awaken, is even more mysterious. The truth is we are animals, a very high and well-born kind of animal, and the attackers are animals. We are far more dangerous to them than they are to us. Just look at the case of Bahiya of the Bark Cloth.

It's a dangerous planet; we did not really evolve here (though some other beings likely did); and we have had to settle and be at peace with the limited danger here, like in the new animated movie "Almost Home," a parable about how humans arrived on the planet in line with a "Buddhist Genesis" story (Aganna Sutra):

(DreamWorksTV) "[Almost] Home" They're almost here... meet our future leaders. When "Oh," a loveable misfit from another planet, lands on Earth and finds himself on the run from his own people, he forms an unlikely friendship with an adventurous girl named "Tip" who is on a quest of her own.  Through a series of comic adventures with Tip, Oh comes to understand that being different and making mistakes is all part of being human, and together they discover the true meaning of the word HOME.
 
Sharks keep the sea clean. Keep sharks in the ocean and out of the soup (SSF)

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Suicide ("Jump" the Cartoon)











A Buddhist Perspective on Suicide

Dharmachari (for Wisdom Quarterly)

The Buddhist teaching on suicide is very clear. It is killing. It is karma with heavy and unpleasant consequences. Even when life is unbearable, and it will be, there are options that are far better and available to everyone. The Petavatthu (Tales of Hungry Ghosts) has surprising tales of the consequences.

Suicide is not possible through killing oneself: All that is really happening is transitioning from a bad situation to a worse situation. One is still in a situation, still stuck in Samsara, still existing. What kind of "suicide" is that?

Craving is the root of suffering. There are, in this sense, three forms craving may take. First, there is the obvious and that is craving for sensual pleasure. Second, there is craving for continued existence (wanting to live on eternally). Third, and most relevant here, is the craving for annihilation.

Nirvana is the quenching of all thirst, craving, and desire. The world is not the problem; craving is. Life is not a problem but how one approaches it. The solution is enlightenment. The solution is redirecting the mind to what uplifts it, away from what is bringing on dejection.

Esther and Jerry Hicks in their books and workshops on the law of attraction explain an amazing thing. With a chart, they illustrate the need to move up an emotional ladder step by step, rung by rung. One cannot jump. It is not possible to go from depressed and hopeless to cheerful and optimistic in one step. Instead, one passes through intermediate stages. So very negative things like anger might be relatively good -- in that it is moving away from hopeless to angry, from angry to vengeful, from vengeful to relieved, and so on. One shifts. It doesn't become a physical action, and one doesn't remain angry. One goes to a better feeling state. One follows a bliss that actually leads to a better feeling state. One can reach "the end of all suffering" (nirvana).

Suicide "hotlines" and outreach call centers are all around (911). Assisted suicide falls into the karma of killing as well. It may not seem fair, but if a Buddhist monk or nun were to counsel or even suggest to someone to take his or her own life by saying something like, "What is this life for you? It wouldn't be much of a loss!" that is enough to permanently banish the monastic from the Sangha. They would be forfeiting their ordination. Like suggesting or recommending abortion, it is considered killing -- one of four grave offenses that cannot be corrected (parajika).

That being the case -- that the monastic did not do the killing, did not see the killing, but only thought it and said it as a suggestion -- how much more grave for the person who engages in the actual act? The person who commits suicide would bear that additional karmic burden, not only losing the great and rare opportunity of being human, as woeful as it is in this world, but inheriting a more painful, more desperate situation as a result. Shift. Happiness awaits right here in this world.

"You are the vibrational writers of the script of your life, and everyone else in the Universe is playing the part that you have assigned to them" -- Abraham (excerpted from a workshop in San Francisco, 3/2/97, see previous quote; subscribe to daily quotes).