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Re: Plant: "Rudolf Steiner training college"



Sheesh.  The man tries to become a kindergarden teacher and some
folks have to make something out of that, too.  Robert even said in a
recent interview that was his goal at that time, because he thought
kids were where the future was at.

Sorry, but if I were offered a job at Mitsubishi, and there were some
people at my church that thought you shouldn't buy their cars because
it was said that the company made sacrifices to bless the sales of
each design before they were offered to the public, I'd take the job,
anywho. Stop buying Proctor and Gamble products, too--you know they
have that star and moon logo.

Eeek.  

Hey, I'd take a job from Robert if he offered it, too, and I'm a
devout Christian.  I wouldn't be trying to "save" him, either, or
trying to take his girlfriend's place.  I just think he's got his
mind in the right place, and like the products he puts out, including
the current one.  Just MHO, but sometimes I think some folks here put
too much thought into some things.

"...don't be alarmed now. It's just a spring clean for the May
Queen."

:D

- --Uni
(Happy Birthday, Bonzo, and thanks for the cool presents!)


- --- Jerry Czarnecki <jerrymcza@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Plant: "After the death of my son Karac in 1977...
> I applied to take a job at a Rudolph Steiner training college in
> Sussex."
> 
> Rudolf Steiner is the founder of anthroposophy. From some random
> website, 
> but accurate:
> 
> Waldorf schools are the most visible activity of the international 
> Anthroposophical Society, which has been called "the most
> successful occult 
> religion in Europe" by Sven Ove Hansson, a Swedish skeptic. Other
> writers 
> refer to it as "the most developed contemporary instance of Western
> 
> esotericism"; and a "highly organized occult group."
> 
> Anthroposophy emerged from the spiritual confusion of
> turn-of-the-century 
> Germany, part of a burgeoning of exotic and occultist religious
> activity not 
> unlike the 1960s' "New Age" explosion in America. The
> Anthroposophical 
> Society was created by Rudolf Steiner (1861-1925), who had led the
> German 
> section of Theosophy, but split off to form a group that would
> follow his 
> personal revelations of the "spirit world." The sect developed to
> maturity 
> during the social and political turmoil Germany suffered during and
> after 
> World War I.
> 
> The best thing to read on this is the novel by Saul Bellow called
> Humboldt's 
> Gift. And the most popular Steiner book has the suggestive title,
> "Knowledge 
> of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment."