Prabhupāda: Yajñād bhavati parjanyaḥ (BG 3.14). If there is... What is your nonsense science? If there is no rain, drought, what you can do?
Hari-śauri: They can't develop their science to that point where they can...
Prabhupāda: No, these... These scientists are rascals. I call them rascals. That's...
Hari-śauri: Jaya Śrīla Prabhupāda. (break)
Rāmeśvara: ...to make them fatter. (laughter)
Prabhupāda: So madman they are.
Rāmeśvara: It was in Reader's Digest. They had that idea. And they described one man who invested fifty thousand dollars and imported crabs from... Where? Australia?
Hari-śauri: Indonesia.
Rāmeśvara: Indonesia. And he put them in a pond. He was thinking, "They will reproduce, and I'll have huge family of crabs."
Prabhupāda: That you can have. That is material...
Rāmeśvara: And the crabs, in such close quarters, they began eating each other.
Prabhupāda: Acchā?
Rāmeśvara: And at the end he had one crab left for his fifty thousand dollars. (chuckling)
Prabhupāda: A madman working. Chāgale nā khāya, pāgale ki bale. "A madman, what does he not say, and a goat, what does he not eat?" There is a system like that amongst the Muhammadan aristocracy. They keep one hundred chickens. Each day they kill one chicken, and that flesh, chopped up and given to the ninety-nine. Then, next day another. In this way, when one is left, that the master eats. Concentrating from hundred to one, and then he eats it. This is Muhammadan process.
Rāmeśvara: What is the use?
Prabhupāda: They know. (chuckling) They think the hundred chickens' vitamin comes into one.
Hari-śauri: Māyayāpahṛta-jñānā (BG 7.15).
Prabhupāda: And by eating such chicken, you don't require one cloth. That is aristocracy. They, during severe cold, they will have fine panjabi. You know panjabi?
Hari-śauri: Yes, very thin.
Prabhupāda: And if you wear... (break) (end)