![](https://ip.bitcointalk.org/?u=https%3A%2F%2Fpp.vk.me%2Fc7004%2Fv7004048%2F125f6%2FrIQLe40c4M8.jpg&t=663&c=3lyXRrAK3gnm8w) "pizdets, look at females to hold at next time!"
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![](https://ip.bitcointalk.org/?u=http%3A%2F%2Furod.ru%2Fuploads%2F122014%2F3hIU1H9oHFE.jpg&t=663&c=I37m8nAa4Rz4NQ) "Loved school - Bye Bye"
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![](https://ip.bitcointalk.org/?u=http%3A%2F%2Fs00.yaplakal.com%2Fpics%2Fpics_preview%2F7%2F7%2F5%2F6607577.jpg&t=663&c=um0TK2v8An-SPg) sunflower semen sign - "Oxana, congratulations on Births Day"
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![](https://ip.bitcointalk.org/?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.facts.org.cn%2FFeature%2Ffpflg%2Fsdflgsrdr%2F201504%2F09%2FW020150409745962801702.jpg&t=663&c=KPTl2rA-MLrIiQ) Shut up all of you! - Issue on Freedom of Speech "In Western countries, Falun Gong used attack and prosecution as means to protect its benefits, never feeling ashamed. In November 1998, the BBC World released a report by Correspondent James Miles about Falun Gong. The report pointed out that Falun Gong is "No.1 Cult" in China and warned people that Falun Gong would lead to "Collective Suicide". Falun Gong supporters wrote to CEO of BBC, the British Ambassador to China and the British Prime Minister respectively, demanding for BBC's public apology. "The reaction was quite extraordinary," said Miles later, "More response than to any article I've ever written in my entire career." On November 3, 2001, the La Presse Chinoise published an article criticizing Falun Gong. The article is a self-statement by a former female Falun Gong follower named He Bing. A number of Falun Gong supporter lodged a lawsuit against the newspaper for its "libel". On December 7, 2005, the Supreme Court of Quebec of Canada came to the final verdict of the case after four years: the plaintiff Falun Gong lost the lawsuit. The verdict pointed out, "Falun Gong is a controversial movement, which does not accept criticism." " ![](https://ip.bitcointalk.org/?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.facts.org.cn%2FFeature%2Ffpflg%2Fsdflgsrdr%2F201504%2F09%2FW020150409745962822032.jpg&t=663&c=m766LUbm_u6Lpw) "In December 2003, the Australian Chinese Daily published a declaration by Chinese Embassy in Australia against Falun Gong. In May 2004, Falun Gong lodged a lawsuit at the Supreme Court of New South Wales against the newspaper for its "libel". Afterwards, Falun Gong made use of its own media to widely attack the Chinese Daily and made personal attacks on the newspaper's editor-in-chief and other editors. On April 5, 2006, the Supreme Court of NSW of Australia ruled that Falun Gong lost the lawsuit while Chinese Daily won. On January 21, 2005, the Associated Press published an article entitled "Chinese Show Off Repentant Falun Gong", which objectively reported the status quo of the participants of the Tian'anmen Square self-immolation incident on the Chinese New Year's Eve and their reflections on Falun Gong. On the morning of January 25, Falun Gong organized a group of people to demonstrate before the office building where the Associated Press headquarters were located in Manhattan of New York, demanding that the AP withdraw the report. On February 11, Epoch Times, of Falun Gong, published an article calling the AP "down-to-earth small bastard". The Great Wall Platform cooperated with Rogers Company in scrupulously selecting 9 representative channels from 17 channels of the American Great Wall Platform. The Rogers Cable agent is left to apply with the CRTC for the entitlement to the program trans-broadcasting. Such a local Chinese cultural and recreational affair was obstructed by Falun Gong by all means. Between March and June of 2006, Falun Gong organized its members for many times to demonstrate before the Rogers' headquarter in Toronto, which severely affected the normal running of Rogers Company. On December 22, 2006, the Great Wall Platform gained permission to open its business in Canada. " On February 6, 2008, the New York Times published a feature entitled "A Glimpse of Chinese Culture that Some Find Hard to Watch". Afterwards, over 10 articles were released on the website of Falun Gong to attack and frame New York Times and the author of the article Eric Konigberg. The articles claimed that Eric Konigsberg was well known by his ill reputation… and was absolutely inhuman. In the view of Falun Gong, no one or no medium enjoys the right to criticize Falun Gong. According to the top order of Li Hongzhi, any criticism on Falun Gong is defaming Dafa and cannot be tolerated. (China Association for Cultic Studies, May, 2008) Download The Article: 03 你们都闭嘴!-2100.doc 03 Shut Up All of You!.doc 03 ?Cállaos todos!.doc 03 Taisez-vous tous !.doc 03 Прикусите язык!.doc 03 Halt den Mund!.doc http://www.facts.org.cn/Feature/fpflg/sdflgsrdr/201504/09/t20150409_2442172.htmIn the view of Falun Gong, no one or no medium enjoys the right to criticize Falun Gong. According to the top order of Li Hongzhi, any criticism on Falun Gong is defaming Dafa and cannot be tolerated. (China Association for Cultic Studies, May, 2008)
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Falun Gong, A racist and sexist culthttp://forumosa.com/taiwan/viewtopic.php?f=86&t=48287&sid=c291bbb0cc2116093c86803a47cbce61king wu Racism: bullet According to the New York Times, Li Hongzhi said that: "...interracial children are the spawn of the 'Dharma Ending Period,' a Buddhist phrase that refers to an era of moral degeneration. In an interview last year, he said each race has its own paradise, and he later told followers in Australia that, 'The yellow people, the white people, and the black people have corresponding races in heaven.' As a result, he said, interracial children have no place in heaven without his intervention." As noted below, homosexuality is degenerate behavior, on a par with sexual promiscuity. Beliefs about homosexuality: The Falun Gong movement appears to treat homosexuality -- presumably homosexual behavior not homosexual orientation -- as a degenerate behavior, on a par with sexual promiscuity: Founder and current leader Li Hongzhi delivered a lecture in Sydney, Australia in 1996. 7 In it, he made a passing reference to homosexuality: "A lot of people have done many bad deeds. Things such as organized crime, homosexuality, and promiscuous sex, etc., none are the standards of being human." http://www.religioustolerance.org/falungong1.htmMy name is Samuel Luo and my parents are both Falun Gong practitioners who have been hurt and exploited by this cult. Among the many harms done to them, I have been seriously concerned that they have refused needed medical treatment. In 2002, my step-father initially refused help when he had a stroke and he has suffered painful gout attacks unnecessarily for five years. He did so because he was being brainwashed into believing that Li Hongzhi, the founder and leader of this cult has the power to cure illnesses and taking medicine is counter productive. http://melbourne.indymedia.org/news/2006/02/107037_comment.php------------------------------ Lord Lucan
... The simplistic anti-government propganda of the FLG is so trite, and so blindingly obvious to any Chinese person that it could only be for foreign consumption. :roll: I suspect the China end of the FLG is a cynical manipulation by overseas elements to create a persecution complex among members using Chinese (fuck it, there's plenty of them) as the victims. And it is disgusting. Screw the FLG. And screw all these fuckwits in the West blindly supporting something they know absolutely nothing about, nor have no experience of. ... Give your money/support to HRW China or something, or reporters san frontiers of something, but save us from the FLG!
...
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Li Hongzhi promotes racism — for instance by claiming that there are different heavens for believers from different races. While practitioners reportedly include gays, lesbians and bi-sexuals, Hongzhi’s expressed views regarding homosexuality are considered homophobic. During a lecture in Australia he mentioned ” organized crime, homosexuality, and promiscuous sex,” saying “none are the standards of being human.”
Li Hongzhi, Lecture in Sydney, 1996, FalunDafa.org.
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Taiwanese officials urge Falun Gong to leave Chinese tourist sites, sect refuses
TAIPEI, Taiwan - Falun Gong followers said Wednesday they will keep promoting their movement at Taiwanese sites popular with tourists from China, where the sect is banned, despite official requests for them to leave.
Large numbers of Chinese tourists are expected to start arriving in Taiwan in July after the two longtime rivals signed a June 13 agreement allowing direct weekend charter flights between them. Taiwan hopes the pact will help boost its laggard economy.
China banned the Falun Gong as an "evil cult" in 1999 and continues to imprison and harshly punish its followers. Taiwan has no such restrictions on the movement, which teaches the development of health and morality through meditation and exercise.
But authorities in the southern Taiwanese city of Tainan, a popular tourist attraction known for its 17th century Dutch colonial structures, have been urging Falun Gong followers to leave the sites.
Yu Chi-chi of Tainan's Cultural Affairs Bureau said Falun Gong practitioners have set up tables and hoisted banners outside several tourist spots in the area, and the city government is worried this will affect the "appearances" of the sites.
"If the sect refuses to leave, the matter then will be left to the discretion of the police force," Yu said. He did not elaborate on what police may do.
Taiwan Falun Dafa Society Chairman Chang Ching-hsi said followers will not agree to leave the Tainan tourist sites.
Chang said small groups of practitioners — usually less than 10 at a time — have been distributing information for the past three or four years near sites that are popular with Chinese tourists.
"Freedom of speech is a basic human right," Chang said. "We will not leave."
Despite Tainan's stance, city officials seem to have mixed feelings about the arrival of much larger numbers of Chinese tourists.
Tainan City Health Bureau Director Hu Shu-chen told city councilors Monday that her bureau will coordinate efforts to "sterilize every place Chinese tourists will have visited" after they start to arrive in large numbers.
Her statement came after a city councilor expressed worries that Chinese visitors could bring infectious diseases to the island.
Taiwan and China split amid civil war in 1949. Communist Beijing still claims the self-governing island and has threatened war if it tries to make its de facto independence official.
Ties have warmed, however, since the May 20 inauguration of Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou, who promised to improve long-strained ties and bolster economic exchanges with China.
iht.com
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Falungong is legal all over the world except mainland china, that fact itself figures out all.
Everyone can put on search engine "Falun Gong Practitioners Forced Deportation"
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если бы приносил - зачем продавать курицу, несущую золотые яйца ?
За знания надо платить, он не хочет рассказывать бесплатно.
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"As for China, not all dissidents have clean hands. What about Falun Dafa (Falun Gong), which independent investigators have concluded is an authoritarian cult that also has a conservative Buddhist homophobic bias? Moreover, it should also be remembered that while it trails Europe and South America in LGBT rights terms, China did finally decriminalise male homosexuality (1997) six years before the United States (2003)." http://www.gaynz.com/articles/publish/32/article_6313.php
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Falungong is legal all over the world except mainland china, that fact itself figures out all.
SINGAPORE — A Singapore court Tuesday charged 15 followers of the Falun Gong spiritual movement with illegal assembly after their unauthorized vigil in memory of fellow believers they say died in police custody in China. The nine men and six women were led into a Singapore courtroom in handcuffs to hear the formal charges. Most wore bright yellow T-shirts that read: "The great law of Fa Lun: truthfulness, benevolence, tolerance." The charges, including obstructing a police officer, were read to each defendant in English and translated into Mandarin through an interpreter. After their arrest on New Year's Eve, the detainees refused to post bail, saying they did nothing wrong. But by the time the court hearing ended late Tuesday, they were each in the process of posting $1,150 bail. Falun Gong member Ng Wee Keong said the accused were all "fellow practitioners" of the spiritual movement. Police detained them just before midnight Sunday after a three-hour standoff involving about 80 Falun Gong members in a Singapore park. The sect, legal in Singapore, has been banned in China and has been targeted by a crackdown there. The Falun Gong members, mostly women and children, had gathered around two makeshift cardboard memorials pasted with pictures and names of the alleged victims in China. Demonstrations and protests are rare in tightly controlled Singapore, where permits are required for any public gatherings. Most of the detained Falun Gong members in Singapore are Chinese nationals, according to a court document. At least two dozen police cordoned off the area and demanded that the Falun Gong followers hand over the memorials. They refused, at one point locking arms to prevent police from detaining members, police said. The crime of obstructing a policeman carries a maximum jail sentence of 3 months and a maximum fine of $285. The unlawful assembly charge also carries a maximum 3-month jail term, and a maximum fine of $2,850. The meditation sect has attracted millions of members in China and throughout the world. Beijing, fearing Falun Gong's popularity and its threat to Communist Party rule, has banned the group and sent thousands of members to prison and labor camps. Human-rights groups say at least 92 have died in detention since the government banned the sect in July 1999, including four who were reported dead Tuesday by the Information Center for Human Rights and Democracy. The Hong Kong-based information center said the latest victims included 33-year-old Xu Bing and 34-year-old Lou Aiqing from China's eastern Shandong province. Police arrested the two Dec. 20, when they were posting Falun Gong slogans on walls in Shandong's Qingdao city, and beat them in detention, it said. On Dec. 24, police informed the families of Xu and Lou that they had died of heart disease. Spotting numerous wounds on the bodies, the families took pictures of the corpses, only to have the films seized by police, the rights group said. - See more at: http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:RPNi0wSut_sJ:articles.chicagotribune.com/2001-01-03/news/0101030244_1_falun-gong-spiritual-movement-singapore-park+&cd=1&hl=it&ct=clnk&gl=us#sthash.xxFoHQ7e.dpuf
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![](https://ip.bitcointalk.org/?u=http%3A%2F%2Fs00.yaplakal.com%2Fpics%2Fpics_original%2F8%2F3%2F5%2F6607538.jpg&t=663&c=elwlchPeR3ArHg) "butt"
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![](https://ip.bitcointalk.org/?u=http%3A%2F%2Fs00.yaplakal.com%2Fpics%2Fpics_original%2F7%2F8%2F4%2F6607487.jpg&t=663&c=fmcxx9VyRdgWSg) "obama is chmo"
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