Tai Ji Men’s heart Kung Fu inspires both the global promotion of peace, love, and conscience, and the fight for tax and legal reform in Taiwan.
Taiwan
Facing Uncertain Times: Pursuing Peace and Justice with Love and Conscience
Tai Ji Men dizi promote a culture of conscience, love, and peace throughout the world. They also ask for tax oppression against them to cease.
From Bordeaux to Taipei: Tai Ji Men and the Pursuit of Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity
Both Scientology’s resilience to French anti-cult laws and campaigns and Tai Ji Men’s strength in front of tax and media harassment prove that public slander can be successfully resisted.
The Significance of the Tai Ji Men Case for Tax and Legal Reform in Taiwan
Studying their own case, Tai Ji Men dizi (disciples) discovered a dark side in Taiwan’s tax and legal systems.
Respect All with Conscience and Tolerance: The Tai Ji Men Case and the Pandemic of the Century
As a doctor and a Tai Ji Men dizi, I learned that everybody should be treated with patience and respect and stigmatizations should be avoided.
Unveiling the Potential: How Tai Ji Men Contributes to a Better Future “Beyond the Code”
The progress of DNA research may offer a perspective to look at the positive contribution of Tai Ji Men to society.
The Chinese “Esoteric Paradigm,” PierLuigi Zoccatelli, and Tai Ji Men
Whether a “non-Western esotericism,” including a Chinese one, exists is a controversial question. Zoccatelli offered a solution, which led him to study Tai Ji Men with interest.
A Uyghur View of the Taiwan Issue: Can the CCP Speak on Behalf of “1.4 Billion Chinese”?
The Party attacked the new President of Taiwan in the name of “all Chinese.” Uyghurs are not Chinese, however, and many Chinese do not like the CCP either.
Palermo: The Tai Ji Men Case Discussed at the European Academy of Religion
The Taiwanese and international contexts of the case were presented in one of the best attended sessions of the international conference.
Why Spiritual Organizations Should Be Tax-Exempt—Including Tai Ji Men
It is a matter of Taiwanese law. But general principles of freedom of religion or belief, and common sense, also tell us that religious and spiritual paths should not be taxed.









