An international webinar on the eve of UN International Day of Peace discussed the necessary connection between peace and justice, and the Tai Ji Men case.
Tai Ji Men
No Peace Without Real Justice: The Pillar of Sustainable Social Harmony
In theory, everybody is in favor of peace. However, peace is impossible if injustices such as the one vested on Tai Ji Men in Taiwan are not rectified.
Tai Ji Men and the UN Agenda 2030
Peace through justice is the first goal for a sustainable world. The U.N. and democratic states themselves are often weak in pursuing it, as the Tai Ji Men case demonstrates.
The Unjust Taichung Decision Against Tai Ji Men Is Denounced at the UN Human Rights Council
For the tenth time, the United Nations’s highest human rights body hears about the Tai Ji Men case.
The Kafkaesque Case of Tai Ji Men
We can all understand, without justifying it, episodes of corruption. But it is the blatant capsizing of reality that bewilders the world in face of the non-justice inflicted on Tai Ji Men for almost thirty years.
The Taichung Tai Ji Men Decision: When the Law Becomes a Tool of Violence
We normally associate violence against religion or belief with blood and torture. But court decisions may be inherently violent, too.
One Step Forward and Two Steps Back: The Road to Serfdom and the Tai Ji Men Case
The decision by the Taichung High Administrative Court was a step towards serfdom, not liberty and democracy.
Tai Ji Men and the 2024 International Day Commemorating the Victims of Acts of Violence Based on Religion or Belief
Violence against believers continues to shed blood. But there is also a less visible administrative violence, of which Tai Ji Men have become victims once again.
Article 28 of Taiwan’s Tax Collection Act and the August 2, 2024, Tai Ji Men Decision
The article was amended in 2021 to make it less favorable to taxpayers. But the Taichung High Administrative Court applied the amendment retroactively to unjustly hit Tai Ji Men.
The Precessional Transition and the Tai ji Men Case
A reading of Tai Ji Men and the Tai Ji Men case based on the “transition studies” of French author Serge Raynaud de la Ferrière.









