Ah Neh buddhism religion is no good. Look at Ah Neh themselves, and their nation, you can see how Buddhism affect their life as lazy, selfish, greedy and cheat.
Whereas Chinese Confucius teaching make Chinese smart, hardworking, highly educated, good moral and good at reasoning.
Angmoh Christianity make them angry people, selfish (One God system) provocative and commit crimes like genocide, invasions, murders, lootings in the name of their one God system.
https://newhumanist.org.uk/articles/4021/the-dark-side-of-buddhism
On paper, Buddhism looks pretty good. It has a philosophical subtlety married to a stated devotion to tolerance that makes it stand out amongst the world religions as uniquely not awful. Even Friedrich Nietzsche, not known for pulling punches when it came to religious analysis, only said of Buddhism that it was "nihilistic", but still "a hundred times more realistic than Christianity." And we in the 21st century have largely followed his lead in sensing something a bit depressing about Buddhism, but nothing more sinister than that. But if we start looking a bit closer, at the ramifications of Buddhist belief in practice, there is a lurking darkness there, quietly stated and eloquently crafted, but every bit as profound as the Hellfires of Christianity or the rhetoric of jihad.
Whereas Chinese Confucius teaching make Chinese smart, hardworking, highly educated, good moral and good at reasoning.
Angmoh Christianity make them angry people, selfish (One God system) provocative and commit crimes like genocide, invasions, murders, lootings in the name of their one God system.
https://newhumanist.org.uk/articles/4021/the-dark-side-of-buddhism
On paper, Buddhism looks pretty good. It has a philosophical subtlety married to a stated devotion to tolerance that makes it stand out amongst the world religions as uniquely not awful. Even Friedrich Nietzsche, not known for pulling punches when it came to religious analysis, only said of Buddhism that it was "nihilistic", but still "a hundred times more realistic than Christianity." And we in the 21st century have largely followed his lead in sensing something a bit depressing about Buddhism, but nothing more sinister than that. But if we start looking a bit closer, at the ramifications of Buddhist belief in practice, there is a lurking darkness there, quietly stated and eloquently crafted, but every bit as profound as the Hellfires of Christianity or the rhetoric of jihad.