The deep moral decline of the Czech esoteric community

A new fashion trend has arrived in the Czech esoteric community: the fanatical defense of dubious esoteric charlatans. The defense of how it is "ethical" and "correct" for a dubious healer, a charlatan who is a fraud and deludes himself about his abilities (unfortunately, 95% of them are like that – the reality is really harsh), to charge outrageously large sums of money for his services.
The fact that the charlatan and esoteric fraudster/fraudster defends themselves by saying how expensive they are is still OK. It is much sadder when something like this is promoted by one of the largest esoteric servers, cestyksobe.cz
http://www.cestyksobe.cz/hodnota-lecitelskych-sluzeb/18877
http://blog.samanizmus.cz/subdom/blog/hodnota-lecitelskych-sluzeb/
http://gaia2010.sk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1834:2017-07-19-19-49-54&catid=25:aktualne-nove-lanky&Itemid=45

What is written there is truly an outrageous sewer. Unfortunately, I share the opinion of a certain shamanic scholar that 99% of healers only imagine their abilities and then charge outrageous amounts of money for their services. How low must the esoteric community in the Czech Republic have sunk when you defend an unethical esoteric business that profits from human stupidity? I agree with the opinion of a certain shamanic scholar that if a healer thinks they have abilities, they should prove it under scientific laboratory conditions. How many healers are there like Janko Pravda, whose thousands of healings have been confirmed by doctors themselves through official medical examinations? How is it possible that someone in this article would defend the unethical earning/profiting of dubious charlatan healers who have no abilities and only fool people?

Of course, the opposite extreme is also bad, such as the idea that money is evil in itself, money is yucky, money should be abolished, and therefore everything should be done for free.