Re: Karma
I think that it's important to remember that karma is more cause and effect than a cosmic balancing system. The old president of Uganda, Idi Amin, was a brutal man. The number of people that died under his rule was in the neighborhood of 100,000 or more. He enjoyed every luxury that one could think of when one rules the entirety of a country, no matter how lavish.
But his actions got him deposed and exiled. But even if he didn't get deposed or exiled, how did he end up living his life? He became unstable and confused, he became deranged. People left him and those that remained, he knew were there only because they feared him. What must that do to a person, to know that your wife married you because to say "no" was as good as a death sentence for her? The absence of love, trust, friendship, caring, eventually even the departure from reality to the point he thought he was the last king of Scotland. Is it fair? Does that make things "Even-Steven"? No, not really, but then karma isn't a set of metaphysical scales trying to make everything square. It is simple cause and effect, but it doesn't simply stop at the physical world, or rather the world that can be objectively measured. Those that do all the "bad shit" have to live with it. Even with good intentions that's hard. One of my best friends, a US soldier, has been in every major conflict since 1997. He's a Purple Heart recipient, and has medals for bravery. He joined with the idea of defending the freedoms of Americans. He wakes up at night, sometimes screaming, the memories of the men whose lives he had to take (or loose his own) haunting him. Is that "right"? Or deserved? No, not in my mind, but then karma isn't making sure people get what they deserve. It is the result of the actions he took, well intentioned, good, bad, indifferent, survivalist, pragmatic or what have you.
You might not always end up "balancing the ledger" in the eyes of the world, but good or bad you will never escape the karma of your actions.
I think that it's important to remember that karma is more cause and effect than a cosmic balancing system. The old president of Uganda, Idi Amin, was a brutal man. The number of people that died under his rule was in the neighborhood of 100,000 or more. He enjoyed every luxury that one could think of when one rules the entirety of a country, no matter how lavish.
But his actions got him deposed and exiled. But even if he didn't get deposed or exiled, how did he end up living his life? He became unstable and confused, he became deranged. People left him and those that remained, he knew were there only because they feared him. What must that do to a person, to know that your wife married you because to say "no" was as good as a death sentence for her? The absence of love, trust, friendship, caring, eventually even the departure from reality to the point he thought he was the last king of Scotland. Is it fair? Does that make things "Even-Steven"? No, not really, but then karma isn't a set of metaphysical scales trying to make everything square. It is simple cause and effect, but it doesn't simply stop at the physical world, or rather the world that can be objectively measured. Those that do all the "bad shit" have to live with it. Even with good intentions that's hard. One of my best friends, a US soldier, has been in every major conflict since 1997. He's a Purple Heart recipient, and has medals for bravery. He joined with the idea of defending the freedoms of Americans. He wakes up at night, sometimes screaming, the memories of the men whose lives he had to take (or loose his own) haunting him. Is that "right"? Or deserved? No, not in my mind, but then karma isn't making sure people get what they deserve. It is the result of the actions he took, well intentioned, good, bad, indifferent, survivalist, pragmatic or what have you.
You might not always end up "balancing the ledger" in the eyes of the world, but good or bad you will never escape the karma of your actions.
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