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J**N
For an Indian guru in the legacy of buddhism to challenge the basic charters on human rights leaves a question mark and threaten
This is an ill-considerable work that says more about Osho than about human rights. The question of rights has been controversial from the start and yet they represent a crucial innovation in human history in concert with the democratic revolutions of modernity. For an Indian guru in the legacy of buddhism to challenge the basic charters on human rights leaves a question mark and threatens to group Osho with the esoteric buddhist fascists who dislike rights because they challenge the power of the buddhas ambitious to a dictatorship of the buddhas to exert the power off veto over human autonomy. That's the 'right' of gurus to the power of life and death and it is malevolent to even suggest it.
M**℠
Five Stars
Great books every one should read it.
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