A webinar featured scholars and human rights activists from different countries calling for truth, justice, and a solution of the case.
Taiwan
Bitter Winter Goes to Taiwan: Witnessing for Freedom of Religion or Belief
A week of initiatives allowed human rights scholars from different countries and continents to discuss religious liberty throughout the world and in Taiwan.
Remembering Romero: Prophecy, Truth, and the Tai Ji Men Case
The martyred archbishop reminded the world that prophecy means telling the truth on the basis of one’s “undisturbed conscience,” and that most prophets are persecuted.
Discriminating Against Evil: Zero Discrimination and the Tai Ji Men Case
Practicing “Zero Discrimination” towards all, rivals and persecutors included, is what Tai Ji Men teaches and does.
Zero Discrimination Against Tai Ji Men
On Zero Discrimination Day, scholars, human rights activists, and Tai Ji Men dizi discussed discrimination problems in Taiwan and internationally.
A Tale of Two COVIDs: Zero Discrimination, Religious Liberty, and Tai Ji Men
Other groups have been more successful than religious liberty advocates in fighting discrimination. This should change.
The Tai Ji Men Case: What Social Justice Is—And Isn’t
The injustice happening in Taiwan is an example of how ideology and personal interests of rogue bureaucrats corrupt the concept of social justice.
Tai Ji Men: From the “White Terror” to the Terror of Persecution
After the Martial Law was lifted, not all the problems of democracy were solved in Taiwan, as the Tai Ji Men case demonstrates.
The Great Bengal Famine of 1770: When Taxes Created a Genocide
The sudden rise of land revenue taxes, together with drought, caused what some now call a genocide, which killed from one to ten million Bengalis and Biharis.
There Can Be No Social Justice Without Tax Justice: The Tai Ji Men Case
Scholars and human rights activists discussed tax reform and the injustice vested on Tai Ji Men on World Day of Social Justice









