Yes, Happytown,
Without even watching your video of a public shaming, I would like to confirm that public shaming is a very regular occurrence in the Moo Satsung videos that I have watched.
Often, it's a subtle thing, where someone asks a genuine question, then Moo makes an off-hand comment and the audience starts giggling. Oh yeah, that Moo is such a funny guy...
Straight up, Moo gets all the power in the exchange, by leading the audience to laughter. No matter what the person with the genuine question says next, the audience are primed up to start giggling again.
And so they do.
The result it that the genuine question from the spiritual seeker seems absurd or unimportant.... It's much more fun to laugh at Moo's silly jokes. Moo looks like a great guy. The question is forgotten, the asker of the question looks like a dum-dum and then the very long-winded trance speech begins... Moo proclaims a lot of airy-fairy mumbo-jumbo and everyone blisses out.
And the money keeps rolling in.
Without even watching your video of a public shaming, I would like to confirm that public shaming is a very regular occurrence in the Moo Satsung videos that I have watched.
Often, it's a subtle thing, where someone asks a genuine question, then Moo makes an off-hand comment and the audience starts giggling. Oh yeah, that Moo is such a funny guy...
Straight up, Moo gets all the power in the exchange, by leading the audience to laughter. No matter what the person with the genuine question says next, the audience are primed up to start giggling again.
And so they do.
The result it that the genuine question from the spiritual seeker seems absurd or unimportant.... It's much more fun to laugh at Moo's silly jokes. Moo looks like a great guy. The question is forgotten, the asker of the question looks like a dum-dum and then the very long-winded trance speech begins... Moo proclaims a lot of airy-fairy mumbo-jumbo and everyone blisses out.
And the money keeps rolling in.