Get To The Chopra

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Colette Browne tweetz:

Oh dear, from the SBP website

[soundcloud url=”https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/179298352″ params=”color=ff5500&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false” width=”100%” height=”166″ iframe=”true” /]

Meanwhile, on RTÉ Radio 1’s ‘It Says in the Papers’, Clodagh Walsh quoted the Sunday Business Post in Deepak Chopra being a member of the Troika.

IMF.

Any excuse.

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11 thoughts on “Get To The Chopra

    1. Pob

      I can cure you of that anger, add one drop of bile to ten drops of a child’s salty tears and consume. If you don’t have bile just speak the word bile into the container of tears and that’ll work just as well.

      That’ll be €500.

    2. SOMK

      I wouldn’t say it’s admirable, there’s no art to it, at least you can imagine Yuri Gellar breaking his shit laughing when the cameras are off him, he at least has the decency to take the piss, fly around in helicopters trying to telepathically communicate with footballs and sell dowsing rods to the Israeli army.

      Deepa Chorpa is just, I mean read his twitter feed, it reads like someone tricked the world’s most boring person into thinking he’s on acid and to describe what they ‘feel’.

      https://twitter.com/deepakchopra

      He does nothing but make hippies and moon maidens even more fucking insufferable, I shudder to think how bad his books are, I’d imagine reading one would do about as much for your IQ as getting your head run-over by a steam roller.

      1. Pob

        “It has been said by some that the thoughts and tweets of Deepak Chopra are indistinguishable from a set of profound sounding words put together in a random order, particularly the tweets tagged with “#cosmisconciousness”. This site aims to test that claim! Each “quote” is generated from a list of words that can be found in Deepak Chopra’s Twitter stream randomly stuck together in a sentence.”

        http://www.wisdomofchopra.com/

  1. Sinabhfuil

    Whereas Ajai writes sparkling prose “The effects of a persistently weak economy and high long-term unemployment can reverberate through a country’s economy long into the future—commonly referred to by economists as hysteresis.
    “Our analysis of such hysteresis effects shows that the large and sustained output gap, the difference between what an economy could produce and what it is producing, raises the danger that a downturn reduces the economy’s productive capacity and permanently depresses potential GDP.
    “Such effects could arise because of the erosion of skills from persistently high long-term unemployment, the scrapping of idle capital, and inadequate investment that erodes the capital stock and hinders innovation and the development of new technologies. This would be an enormous waste.”

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