Post 3/3
The next is a suggestion, which I'd also tried implementing in my own extended family:
I think if Hindoo kids were made to watch good documentaries - especially Attenborough's natural history docos (start with those on evolution) - then it would permanently immunise them to christoislamoronism. Good documentaries give a Bigger Picture (of the history of life and the world, and our planet's place in the universe, etc), and also further encourages commonsense and logical thinking. The christoislamoronisms are so utterly incompatible with the known facts, that educating Hindoos about the reality of the universe and our world/life in it would instill in Hindoos the self-empowering sense to avoid christoislamicommunisms like the plague, so they would no longer be dependent on external aid in the form of other Hindoos having to warn them off from christoclass traps. Hindoos would also not fall for new-ageisms either (another important trap to avoid) or peddle it about the internet.
Plus this is exactly the sort of thing that will never catch on among Indian christoislamaniacs, so Indian christoislamaniacs will remain stupid forever [well, they're already permanently stunted thanks to their babble-koran and instilled tendency to "blind faith"/belief], while Hindoos - like people in E Asia already do, apparently* - can stay up to date, with no more effort than reading highly entertaining pop-sci and watching entertaining TV. Plus does one even need to mention that Attenborough et al's natural history/animal docos are like a great excuse to gape at cuddly animals in their natural settings while pretending you're in it for the "educational value". (<- OK, I confess that's the *real* reason I watch documentaries. But other people would likely have loftier reasons in addition.)
* All my Chinese colleagues at work - heathen (=Taoist) and non-religious - had already read the translated version of Hawking's famous pop-sci in high school. (Meanwhile, when I was in high school I just read sci-fi/fantasy or historical/adventure novels like Sutcliffe and native NL authors. Wait, that's still the stuff I predominantly read.... But anyway, even if Dawkins has poo-pooed fairy tales as per news of his tweets, Einstein very rightly recommended that parents hoping to raise prospective physicists expose the kids to lots and lots of fairy tales, to fire their imagination, since Imagination is the most important skill of all and promotes intelligence and the ability to grasp things. Maybe we can't all be Ramanujan or Einstein or Hawking, but at least we can all develop ourselves. And at least we won't be stupid like those possessed by christoislamania.)
Therefore, like the Chinese, Hindus should similarly translate pop-sci books into local languages and Hindu schools should make them part of the syllabus for Hindoos-only (christoislamic and communist parents will object to their kids getting exposed to such stuff and will riot that "it offends minorities", so no point offering such information to "all" Indian kids). Can also teach it alongside Hindoo class, for instance can use physics cosmology and Hindoo cosmology (the theistic i.e. pre-classical Vedic Sankhyam from the Upanishads etc) to help students to gain a better understanding/visual conception of the other. Indian cryptochristos cannot shriek "saffronisation of science education in Hindoo schools", because - and christocommunists just need to face it - western physicists have found Hindoo cosmological conceptions inspiring and influential in their conception (and even formulation) of modern physics. <- And that is the real use of statements by Heisenberg et al endorsing Vedic concepts: to silence cryptochristos and communists by telling them that Hindoos have Every Right to teach Hindoo cosmology and physics side-by-side, because "even western physicists found it useful and used Hindoo religion as a sounding board". (Eventually, could even introduce other heathen cosmological views like especially that of the Daoists.)
And if Chinese schools are encouraging their students to read good pop-sci, then surely this is creating entire generations of Chinese immune to the christoclass virus. I already know from Chinese colleagues and friends that they look down on christianism as a moronic mental disease - which it is - and don't understand why people get possessed by it. (I regularly got asked about what the appeal was to christianism. I stick with my hypothesis that it appeals only to those prone to it: morons.)
I understand that the Chinese govt-owned channels even translate most of the important documentaries - especially British and other European ones, since they're better than American ones: each time I recommended any documentary to Chinese friends, they had already watched it in their own language or else immediately looked it up only to find it was already available officially dubbed by a channel or at least subtitled by lay Chinese.
Indians shouldn't get left behind. Don't be like the AmriKKKans (who did their best to obscure the key portion of Hawking's Grand Design series or else produce christo apologetics about it that they inflict on the christo populace to ensure these remain stupid). Be like the Chinese in this matter. Since Hindoos don't have the money to make insightful documentaries, at least can dub or subtitle what's already out there. Also, it can replace bollywho in people's homes: Hindoos in Bharatam really should disconnect TVs from Indian cable, and just find online videos of documentaries and other classy programmes to show their kids. Enthusiasts and parents can even produce fan subtitling and start a fansub community, since the Indian christomedia won't subtitle such anti-christian documentaries as physics and bio programmes.
The large quoteblock in the previous post and this next bit in red is the important stuff:
Watch Hawking's episode "Did god create the universe?" from his 3-part "Grand Design" series (2012). Can get the DVD. Alternatively, it seems you can watch it online at the following link, but have to sit through under a 1 minute of adverts first. (I'm assuming the episode posted at the link is uncut and untampered, but as I didn't watch more than a few seconds past the adverts, I can't confirm):
watchdocumentary.org/watch/curiosity-episode-01-did-god-create-the-universe-video_8cc568d0e.html
The next is a suggestion, which I'd also tried implementing in my own extended family:
I think if Hindoo kids were made to watch good documentaries - especially Attenborough's natural history docos (start with those on evolution) - then it would permanently immunise them to christoislamoronism. Good documentaries give a Bigger Picture (of the history of life and the world, and our planet's place in the universe, etc), and also further encourages commonsense and logical thinking. The christoislamoronisms are so utterly incompatible with the known facts, that educating Hindoos about the reality of the universe and our world/life in it would instill in Hindoos the self-empowering sense to avoid christoislamicommunisms like the plague, so they would no longer be dependent on external aid in the form of other Hindoos having to warn them off from christoclass traps. Hindoos would also not fall for new-ageisms either (another important trap to avoid) or peddle it about the internet.
Plus this is exactly the sort of thing that will never catch on among Indian christoislamaniacs, so Indian christoislamaniacs will remain stupid forever [well, they're already permanently stunted thanks to their babble-koran and instilled tendency to "blind faith"/belief], while Hindoos - like people in E Asia already do, apparently* - can stay up to date, with no more effort than reading highly entertaining pop-sci and watching entertaining TV. Plus does one even need to mention that Attenborough et al's natural history/animal docos are like a great excuse to gape at cuddly animals in their natural settings while pretending you're in it for the "educational value". (<- OK, I confess that's the *real* reason I watch documentaries. But other people would likely have loftier reasons in addition.)
* All my Chinese colleagues at work - heathen (=Taoist) and non-religious - had already read the translated version of Hawking's famous pop-sci in high school. (Meanwhile, when I was in high school I just read sci-fi/fantasy or historical/adventure novels like Sutcliffe and native NL authors. Wait, that's still the stuff I predominantly read.... But anyway, even if Dawkins has poo-pooed fairy tales as per news of his tweets, Einstein very rightly recommended that parents hoping to raise prospective physicists expose the kids to lots and lots of fairy tales, to fire their imagination, since Imagination is the most important skill of all and promotes intelligence and the ability to grasp things. Maybe we can't all be Ramanujan or Einstein or Hawking, but at least we can all develop ourselves. And at least we won't be stupid like those possessed by christoislamania.)
Therefore, like the Chinese, Hindus should similarly translate pop-sci books into local languages and Hindu schools should make them part of the syllabus for Hindoos-only (christoislamic and communist parents will object to their kids getting exposed to such stuff and will riot that "it offends minorities", so no point offering such information to "all" Indian kids). Can also teach it alongside Hindoo class, for instance can use physics cosmology and Hindoo cosmology (the theistic i.e. pre-classical Vedic Sankhyam from the Upanishads etc) to help students to gain a better understanding/visual conception of the other. Indian cryptochristos cannot shriek "saffronisation of science education in Hindoo schools", because - and christocommunists just need to face it - western physicists have found Hindoo cosmological conceptions inspiring and influential in their conception (and even formulation) of modern physics. <- And that is the real use of statements by Heisenberg et al endorsing Vedic concepts: to silence cryptochristos and communists by telling them that Hindoos have Every Right to teach Hindoo cosmology and physics side-by-side, because "even western physicists found it useful and used Hindoo religion as a sounding board". (Eventually, could even introduce other heathen cosmological views like especially that of the Daoists.)
And if Chinese schools are encouraging their students to read good pop-sci, then surely this is creating entire generations of Chinese immune to the christoclass virus. I already know from Chinese colleagues and friends that they look down on christianism as a moronic mental disease - which it is - and don't understand why people get possessed by it. (I regularly got asked about what the appeal was to christianism. I stick with my hypothesis that it appeals only to those prone to it: morons.)
I understand that the Chinese govt-owned channels even translate most of the important documentaries - especially British and other European ones, since they're better than American ones: each time I recommended any documentary to Chinese friends, they had already watched it in their own language or else immediately looked it up only to find it was already available officially dubbed by a channel or at least subtitled by lay Chinese.
Indians shouldn't get left behind. Don't be like the AmriKKKans (who did their best to obscure the key portion of Hawking's Grand Design series or else produce christo apologetics about it that they inflict on the christo populace to ensure these remain stupid). Be like the Chinese in this matter. Since Hindoos don't have the money to make insightful documentaries, at least can dub or subtitle what's already out there. Also, it can replace bollywho in people's homes: Hindoos in Bharatam really should disconnect TVs from Indian cable, and just find online videos of documentaries and other classy programmes to show their kids. Enthusiasts and parents can even produce fan subtitling and start a fansub community, since the Indian christomedia won't subtitle such anti-christian documentaries as physics and bio programmes.
The large quoteblock in the previous post and this next bit in red is the important stuff:
Watch Hawking's episode "Did god create the universe?" from his 3-part "Grand Design" series (2012). Can get the DVD. Alternatively, it seems you can watch it online at the following link, but have to sit through under a 1 minute of adverts first. (I'm assuming the episode posted at the link is uncut and untampered, but as I didn't watch more than a few seconds past the adverts, I can't confirm):
watchdocumentary.org/watch/curiosity-episode-01-did-god-create-the-universe-video_8cc568d0e.html