According to Osho, the public psyche is tribe-bound and comparative: it clings to labels—religion, caste, color—defends its own idols, and reacts with hurt pride and quarrel when truths cross boundaries. Such conditioning resists universality. The remedy is to cite the finest example wherever found and affirm one humanity, prioritizing the point over provenance.
People get upset when their group is challenged, so look past labels and choose the best wisdom wherever it appears.