Buddhist Grammar Nazis?

Satirical logo representing grammar nazis

I recently came across a Facebook page devoted toward being a “grammar nazi” ( my term, not the author’s ).

I tend not to care for such things, but I subscribed anyway. The author, after making fun of other people’s mistakes posts an explanation of why the writing was wrong. I tend to be in the middle on the grammar proficiency scale, so I thought I could learn a few things.

I did.

Then for the holidays the author posted a little bit about her background. It turns out she was raised a “secular Buddhist”. Translation: her parents liked the down to Earth teachings of Buddhism, but decided to ditch the religious trappings, superstitions and the parts of Asian Buddhism they did not care for. I have no problem with that.

However, I was a bit disturbed. My opinion of “grammar nazism” is that it is a mean spirited cheap shot 99% of the time. People criticize grammar, when they can’t answer a point made in the content of what a person had to write.

One thing I always liked about Asian and some Western Buddhism, is the subculture of respect, kindness and using speech constructively. I have to say I was a bit disturbed that someone calling herself a “secular Buddhist” would have a “grammar nazi” page. The focus of her page was making mean jokes at other people’s expense – at their writing mistakes, which we ALL make.

Not my cup of tea.

Just saying ….

Raw Food Diet Myths

 

Dr. Michael Greger, M.D. is the director of Public Health and Animal Agriculture in the farm animal welfare division of the Humane Society Of The United States. He regularly reviews medical and nutritional journals to publish reports of the most interesting findings in easy to understand videos. The video posted above comes from his site NutritionFacts.org.

Raw Foodism is a popular diet promoting the belief that it is better for human beings to subsist entirely off of uncooked vegetables,fruits, nuts and seeds…*ONLY*. Though none of the ideas of Raw Foodism are based on actual medical research, the diet is quite popular. In the short 3 minute video above, Dr. Greger debunks some of the more common myths of Raw Foodism. Dr. Greger also provides some valuable safety information for people insisting on eating that way.