A couple points:
Part of his appeal was also that he made racism against NDNs (the romanticized image of the Noble Savage in particular) sound appealing to the counterculture.
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Cleargreen is mentioned in several threads in here, but we don't have a thread specific to it. Since they're an abusive cult who continue to harm many people, a thread is badly needed.
Yours and moma porcupine points are very good...
I could only not agree about the "noble savage" notion - Don Juan was presented as a very modern "NDN", actually a philosopher, as someone who has seen through our contemporary society with the gaze of "The Other". (at least I understood it like that). This is not "noble savage" imidge. Such people (philosophically - not as sorcerers or shape-shifters or whatever) do exist. Also inside "western" culture. But the origins of their knowledge is more reliable and real. Or at least attributed to the right sources, not fake ones.
But exactly this modern, "see-through" style is probably why it appealed so much to the "counter-culture" and that is also why this enterprise lost its appeal with later published books that became more and more new-age and poorer in construction and definitely lost any of its appeal to "counter-culture" with the Cleargreen Inc. which can only appeal to nuage-heads...
I agree - there is a need for a clean and sharp thread about Cleargreen Inc. on this forum.
P.S.
ed.ind. - you asked what appealed to us - this thread stirred my old interest and I went searching the net and found a collection of well-known quotes of Don Juan. Now thinking aside of fraud and fakeness of some of their origin - but those ideas are very reasonable to me and still valid as such - not attributed to the specific person, origin,... :
"A petty tyrant is a tormentor.......Someone who either holds the power of life and death over warriors or simply annoys them to distraction."--Don Juan
(petty tyrant and how to deal with them was one of my favourite ideas from C. books - I met quite many in my life and those books helped with dealing with them)
I am not bothered by the word "warrior" - it can be exchangead by something appropriate. "I Ching" talks about "great man", Nietzsche talks about "super-man" - all that can sound pompous but it really means (simply put) just someone that sees (or tries to) beyond the utilitarian, materialistic mode and seeks answers and the right/real conduct in/of life
Some quotes good for self-criticism and introspection:
"The characteristic of miserable seers is that they are willing to forget the wonder of the world. They become overwhelmed by the fact that they see and believe that it's their genius that counts." ----Don Juan p58
"Self-importance is man's greatest enemy. What weakens him is feeling offended by the deeds and misdeeds of his fellow men. Self-importance requires that one spend most of one's life offended by something or someone."--Don Juan
(Zen, Tao, Buddhist thought in general?, maybe even traces of NDN philosophy?)
Some more very likeable Don Juan's thoughts ("real" as a caracter, people!):
"The basic difference between an ordinary man and a warrior is that a warrior takes everything as a challenge, while an ordinary man takes everything as a blessing or as a curse."--Don Juan
(we could attribute this to I Ching, Taoism or even Nietzsche)
"What a strange paradox! Every warrior on the path of knowledge thinks, at one time or another, that he's learning sorcery, but all he's doing is allowing himself to be convinced of the power hidden in his being, and that he can reach it."
----Don Juan Matus, The Power of Silence
(Buddhism and any other "enlightenment" path philosophy)
And Castaneda "outs" himself, hehe:
"It's better to get something worthwhile done using deception than to fail to get something worthwhile done using truth."---Don Juan (Carlos Castaneda)
And the core of Don Juan philosophy that showed me "sense" as a teenager:
"For the average man, the world is weird because if he's not
bored with it, he's at odds with it. For a warrior, the world is
weird because it is stupendous, awesome, mysterious, unfathomable.
A warrior must assume responsibility for being here, in this
marvelous world, in this marvelous time."
(Average man and warrior concepts are the same concepts as in I Ching - describing a man that does not think about his actions and the other one that feels a need to do so... Nothing pompous - just two different ways of percieving the world.)
So, what could not be likeable about so much new wisdom for a young man? (but I wouldn't recommend his work nowadays - I would point people to other, more valid sources)
It can be too misleading or even dangerous if you don't discover that it comes from other sources and just fall for his deception.
In his books he never claimed to be "good" or "nice".
I think compassion was described in a Nietzschejan way as weakness and fake. I conclude that they both (Castaneda and N.) understood compassion more in a contemporary Christian way not in a Buddhist way.
Actually Castaneda was openly a deceiver - he even described it as a technique of "stalking". That does not make him right, but anyone who fails to see through it even Don Juan hasn't teached a thing, hehe..
Sorry, if all this seems too much. Had to spit it out.
Understanding comes from confrontation of opinions and you are very good and sharp debaters.
P.P.S. I am really not defending Castaneda as person... Just saying that his first books were helpful to me at some stage, but I still recognize them as fake now and know the real origins of those ideas. And also that some ideas are valid as such and should not be mudded just because he used them.
This article says probably most of what needs to be said about this con:
http://www.salon.com/books/feature/2007/04/12/castaneda/