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Thursday 30 March 2017

Starboy or Badboy...

The culture everyone seeks to enjoy for commerce, shopping and enjoyment is the Brit Milah where promises are kept, kept more often and kept quickly. This has made the U.S. successful in its application and celebration of the common law. But, for personal expression and private culture the Brit Milah also helps in that safeguards human privacy and a dignity with tolerance that enables personal cultural expression and expression in commercial enterprise; noooooooooooooobody!


This could be described as the two Hindu orders of Rita and dharma where the natural law is safe-guarded by the sovereign God in the first concept of Rita. This is equivalent to the natural law or the Brit Milah in most of the Western world that gives everyone a comfort in public spaces and malls with the ISO or the international standards.   In the private sphere, you could have a more aggressive Adventist culture where you break your mother's table to see if she is aggressive or savy or your mother and brother break your vehicle windshield to see if you are aggressive or savy enough although you would also have to call the police in your aggressive wisdom. In the private sphere, you could also have a sharia culture where you divorce the devil and the strange woman in your household as described in Proverbs 2,5,6,7,9, and 12 by saying "Talaq" three times.  





https://www.britannica.com/topic/rita-Hinduism
Rita, Sanskrit ṛta (“truth” or “order”), in Indian religion and philosophy, the cosmic order mentioned in the Vedas, the ancient sacred scriptures of India. As Hinduism developed from the ancient Vedic religion, the concept of rita led to the doctrines of dharma (duty) and karma (accumulated effects of good and bad actions). Rita is the physical order of the universe, the order of the sacrifice, and the moral law of the world. Because of rita, the sun and moon pursue their daily journeys across the sky, and the seasons proceed in regular movement. Vedic religion features the belief that rita was guarded by Varuna, the god-sovereign, who was assisted by Mitra, the god of honour, and that the proper performance of sacrifices to the gods was necessary to guarantee its continuance. Violation (anrita) of the established order by incorrect or improper behaviour, even if unintentional, constituted sin and required careful expiation.










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