Showing posts with label miserliness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label miserliness. Show all posts

Saturday, February 24, 2024

Trump BEGS judge over $454m! He's denied

Rey Harris, TAG24 News/MSN, 2/22/24; Pfc. Sandoval, S. Auberon (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
Judge gave Trump 30 days to pay $454 million civil fraud judgment or post a bond to cover the amount to be able to appeal it. He'll owe an additional $112,000 in interest each day he doesn't
How Democrats could disqualify Trum if the Supreme Court doesn't (The Atlantic)
What could he have said? Please, Judge, please! I've got cash flow problems right now. I'm trying to get back in the White House. My wife hates me and won't touch me. My kids just want an inheritance. My daughter will no longer date me. For the love of Money, give me a break!

Judge, please, I'm trying to get reelected.
NEW YORK, New York - Former President Donald John Trump has asked the judge in his civil business fraud trial to delay the penalties attached to the damages he owes [which amount to between $355 and $454.5 million when back dated interest is included].

But the New York attorney general insists it shouldn't happen.

On Wednesday, Donald Trump and his legal team filed a request for a judge to delay penalties attached to damages he owes in his New York fraud trial.


I'm sorry, your Honor. I'm fundraising online.
According to ABC News, Trump's attorneys submitted the request on Wednesday for Judge Engoron to delay the enforcement of penalties by 30 days, citing the "magnitude" of the ruling on the trial as presenting a need for an "orderly post-judgment process."

"The Attorney General has not filed any motion on notice, nor moved to settle the proposed Judgment," the filing states regarding New York Attorney General Letitia James, who has led the case. More:
Trump’s mad at Jimmy AGAIN, right wing’s nuttiest Republicans gather, and MyPillow Mike falling apart
Order! This court will come to order! There's nothing funny about this deluded man's fine.
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(Jimmy Kimmel Live) Feb. 22, 2024: Our worst and dimmest gathered for the annual CPAC convention in Washington DC, Trump’s daughter-in-law Lara (nepotistic wife of Eric) was the bigly speaker today, there were a bunch of crazy seminars run by the best in the business, Donald gave Jimmy a shoutout on Truth Social, blundering dotard Pres. Biden touched down in San Francisco today, according to CNN his German shepherd dog "Commander" was involved in far more biting incidents than was previously reported, MyPillow Mike Lindell has been ordered to pay 5 million for the “Prove Mike Wrong Challenge,” which he lost when he was proven wrong about election interference, and Mike’s out there promoting fellow election deniers like Blake Masters who is running for Congress in Arizona. #Kimmel

Monday, October 7, 2013

Autumn Festival: story behind the cakes (sutra)

CC Liu, Seven, Wisdom Quarterly; Zen Vuong (Pasadena Star-News); Pacific Asia Museum
The glorious harvest moon refulgent with yin energy (donnalewisconan)
  
Father and son make lantern
The Mid-Autumn Festival celebrates harvest, family reunions, and hope for another year of good fortune.

Some believe the celebration’s roots originated from the Chinese rebellion against the Mongols, who detested moon cakes. The Chinese rebel leader, Zhu Yuanzhang, had a hard time organizing a coup because large gatherings were outlawed, reports ChinaTravel.com. So the rebels baked a slip of paper into moon cakes. It ordered insurgents to attack on the 15th day of the 8th lunar year. Thus the Chinese eat moon cakes during the Mid-Autumn Festival to celebrate this successful overthrow.
  
Tea with dense, sickly sweet cakes.
Thanksgiving [means] the centerpiece for this Chinese and Vietnamese harvest celebration doesn’t include a bulky dead bird. During Zhongqiu Jie, or the Mid-Autumn Festival, people give family, friends, and colleagues moon cakes, a small but filling pastry embossed with a description of its innards or the name of a bakery. Others have patterns of clouds, the moon, or a rabbit [a lucky symbol of the moon]....
 
“It’s almost like a Christmas fruitcake. It’s a traditional gift...,” said Becky Sun, a Pacific Asia Museum spokeswoman. “Adult children give them to parents and seniors. Friends and business partners give them to each other...” More 

The Miserly Treasurer
Ken and Visakha Kawasaki (trans), Illisa Rebirth Tale (Jataka 78)
The miser didn't enjoy his riches either
This story was told by the Buddha while at Jetavana Grove about a tremendously rich royal treasurer.

He lived in a town called Sakkara near the city of Rajagaha and had been so tightfisted that he never gave away even the tiniest drop of oil that could be picked up with a blade of grass. Worse than that, he wouldn't even use that minuscule amount of oil for his own satisfaction. His vast wealth was actually of no use to him, to his family, or to the deserving people of the land.
 
Moggallana, however, led this miser and his wife to Jetavana, where they served a great meal of cakes to the Buddha and a large number of monastics. After hearing words of thanks from the Buddha, the royal treasurer and his wife attained stream-entry.

That evening the monastics gathered together in the Hall of Truth. "How great is the power of Ven. Moggallana!" they said. "In a moment he converted the miser to charity, brought him to Jetavana, and made possible his attainment. How remarkable is the elder!" While they were talking, the Buddha entered and inquired as to the subject of their discussion.
 
When they told him, the Buddha replied, "This is not the first time, monastics, that Moggallana has converted this miserly treasurer. In previous days too the elder taught him how deeds and their effects are linked together." Then the Buddha told this story of the past [past life].
 
The best cake is raw vegan berry cheesecake California-style (TheRawtarian.com)
 
Long, long ago, when Brahmadatta was reigning in Benaresaranasi, there was a treasurer named Illisa who was worth 80 crores of wealth. This man had all the defects possible in a person. He was lame and hunchbacked, and he had a squint; he was a confirmed miser, never giving away any of his fortune to others, yet never enjoying it himself either.
 
Interestingly enough, however, for seven generations back his ancestors had been bountiful, giving freely of their best. When this treasurer inherited the family riches, he broke that tradition and began hoarding his wealth.
 
One day, as he was returning from an audience with the king, he saw a weary peasant sitting on a bench and drinking a mug of cheap liquor with great gusto. The sight made the treasurer thirsty for a drink of liquor himself, but he thought, "If I drink, others will want to drink with me. That would mean a ruinous expense!" The more he tried to suppress his thirst, the stronger the craving grew.
 
The effort to overcome his thirst made him as yellow as old cotton. He became thinner and thinner until the veins stood out on his emaciated frame. After a few days, still unable to forget about the liquor, he went into his room and lay down, hugging his bed. His wife came in, rubbed his back, and asked, "Husband, what is wrong?" "Nothing," he answered. More

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

The Rewards of Giving



"These are the five rewards of generosity:
  1. one is dear and appealing to people at large
  2. one is admired by good people
  3. one's good name is spread about
  4. one does not stray from the rightful duties of a householder
  5. with the break-up of the body at death, one reappears in a good destination, even in the heavenly worlds" (AN 5.35).
"There is the case," the Buddha explained, "where a certain person refrains from:
  • taking life
  • taking what is not given
  • taking liberties with regard to sexual misconduct
  • taking liberties with the truth [false, divisive, abusive, and profitless speech]
"One is not:
  • covetous
  • bears no ill will
  • has right views
"And this person gives
  • food
  • drink
  • cloth
  • transport
  • garlands
  • scents
  • creams
  • bed
  • lodging
  • lamps
"to brahmins and ascetics [or other virtuous persons].

"With the breakup of the body, after death, one reappears in the company of human beings. There one experiences the "five strands of human sensuality." These are delightful:
  1. sights
  2. sounds
  3. smells
  4. tastes
  5. tactile sensations.
"It's because one refrained from taking...and because one was not covetous, bore no ill will, and had right views that one reappears in the company of human beings. And it is because one gave that one experiences the five strands of human sensuality.

"[Similarly, in the case when one takes rebirth in the company of devas, where one experiences the five strands of divine sensuality.] At any rate, brahmin, the donor does not go without reward."

"It is amazing, Master Gautama!" exclaimed the brahmin Janussonin to the Buddha. "It is astounding. It is enough to make one want to give a gift, enough to make one want to make an offering, since the donor does not go without reward."

"That is the way it is, brahmin. That is the way it is. The donor does not go without reward" (AN 10.177).

Never underestimate the power of small gifts
"Even if a person were to throw the rinsings of a bowl or a cup into a pond thinking, 'May whatever animals live here feed on this,' that would be a source of merit" (AN 3.57).

What is not given is lost
When the world is on fire with aging and death,
One should save [one's wealth] by giving:
What is given is well saved!
What is given bears fruit as happiness.
What is not given does not:
Instead, thieves or government take it away;
It is destroyed or lost (SN 1.41).

Overcoming miserliness
  • Conquer anger with kindness
  • Bad, with good
  • Stinginess, with generosity
  • A liar, with truth (Dhp 223).
What the miser fears
That keeps that person from giving
Is the very danger that comes
When one does not give (SN I.32)
  • No misers go to the world of the devas.
  • Those who praise not giving are foolish.
  • The wise express approval for giving and
  • So find ease in the worlds beyond (Dhp 177).

More>>

Greed versus Happiness
Buddhists believe that "greed" (lobha) -- one of the three principle defilements of the mind and heart -- is based on incorrectly connecting material wealth with happiness.

This is caused by a view that exaggerates the positive aspects of an object. That is, acquiring material objects has less impact than we imagine on our feelings of happiness.

This view has been corroborated by studies in the field of happiness economics, which confirm that beyond the provision of a basic level of material comfort, more wealth does not increase happiness.