More on Patel/Maitreya

If you've read the Amy Goodman interview, check this out:

http://www.share-international.org/ARCHIVES/economics/faq_economic.htm

Did Benjamin Creme get Raj Patel to write his economics section of the Share International website?

Everything I have been reading about Maitreya suggests he will burst onto the world scene as an everyman - a teacher. From that link:

. The redistribution of resources is the problem which is at the heart of the economic and, indeed, the spiritual crisis overhanging the world today. This spiritual crisis is focused in the political and economic theatre. That is why Maitreya comes, in the first place, as a political and economic teacher. Although his teaching is non-religious, it is about the spiritual life, about right human relationships. When we share the world’s resources we take the first step into solving the ills of the world, and the first step into our divinity.


I want to draw another parallel from HERE

Q. How will sharing work in practice?

A. The UN will become the major debating chamber of the world. All world problems will be debated there and resolutions passed which will implement the new system. An entirely new UN agency will be set up specifically to oversee the process of sharing the world's resources. But I must emphasize that we have free will; nothing will be forced on humanity. . . . There is a group of high initiates who have worked out with the Masters over many years a whole series of interrelated plans which will solve the redistribution problems which today are at the heart of the economic problems. It is really a problem of redistribution of resources.



Bear with me . . .

The Right to Food Unit works on the implementation of the human right to adequate food, using the Voluntary Guidelines.


- Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nation "The Right to Food"

Almost done . . .

Our guest, Raj Patel is a writer, activist and academic. He has degrees from the University of Oxford, the London School of Economics and Cornell University, has worked for the World Bank and WTO and been tear-gassed on four continents protesting against them. He’s currently a visiting scholar at UC Berkeley’s Center for African Studies, an Honorary Research Fellow at the School of Development Studies at the University of KwaZulu-Natal and a fellow at The Institute for Food and Development Policy, also known as Food First.

He was recently invited to share his views on the global food crisis in testimony to the US House Financial Services Committee and is an Advisor to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food. In addition to numerous scholarly publications, he regularly writes for The Guardian, and has contributed to the LA Times, NY Times.com, The San Francisco Chronicle, The Mail on Sunday, and The Observer. His first book is Stuffed and Starved: The Hidden Battle for the World Food System and he is the author of the forthcoming book “The Value of Nothing: How to Reshape Market Society and Redefine Democracy”.



- LINK

1 comment:

  1. Thanks for doing the legwork on this. It is as I suspected: Raj Patel is an unconscious disciple of the teachings planned and gradually effected by those masters concerned with the "planetary project". One could say Maitreya is the co-ordinator of not only these masters but their earthly disciples, whether conscious like Mr. Creme (and others including, dare I say it, myself), or unconscious like Mr.Patel and many others who see their activism as political and economic rather than spiritual.
    I have outlined as much in my Youtube video "wordofgord on Maitreya, Benjamin Creme and Raj Patel".
    I thank for further enlightening me on this issue with this research.

    gordon phinn (wordofgord)

    ReplyDelete