

にゃんSun
14.1K posts

@LesserPlhlw
マラソンが趣味の会社員建築士丨休眠宅建士丨会社起業し譲渡丨英語勉強中丨飛行機好き、船はもっと好き丨スパイ防止法丨安倍元首相の名誉回復丨現代の魔女狩りに絶対反対丨先に逝った妻とペンで交流





はい、マジでヤバい流れ来てる🔥 組織票ゼロ・後ろ盾なしの浜田聡が、共産推薦候補とガチで2位並走! 四条通り演説で人集めまくり。有権者の4割未定→ここ動いたらマジで逆転あり得る。 京都、ほんとに変わるかも…って熱くなった人続出

これが今話題の日本基督教団牧師による統一教会信者に対する「保護説得」のマニュアル本です。 昔はこの本が堂々と書店で販売されていました。





「平和を学ぶ場で命守れず、重い責任」 辺野古転覆、船運航のヘリ基地反対協が謝罪文 okinawatimes.co.jp/articles/-/180…

【三枝玄太郎氏が辺野古の闇を暴く】 ・ヘリ基地反対協議会は社民党と共産党の連合軍で、オール沖縄化してる ・辺野古基金は色んな団体がカンパして反対活動を応援するためにあり、毎年1,000万円が流れてる ・全国の都道府県の日教組、自治労、民放労連がカンパしてる 一つの大きな組織だよこれ😨




To understand the dissolution of the Family Federation in Japan, you need to know about the kidnapping and forced confinement cases. Pastors of the United Church of Christ in Japan were involved in abducting and confining Family Federation members to force them to leave their faith. They spoke about this during their own worship services. Confinement was the first step in a coordinated process: - Left-wing lawyers referred families to specialist pastors - Believers were held until they renounced their faith - Release required filing a civil lawsuit against the Church - Those lawsuits became the state's evidence Behind the scheme was the National Network of Lawyers Against Spiritual Sales, founded by attorneys with close ties to left-wing political parties. According to submissions by legal researcher Patricia Duval to the UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion, at a 1991 meeting, network lawyers and pastors publicly declared a shared goal: eliminate the Family Federation by accumulating civil damages cases. Lawyers pushed former members to sue the Church as proof of their apostasy. Japan's government then used those civil judgments as the basis to file for dissolution. The evidence base is lawsuits filed by people who had no choice but to file them to get out. Sources: Bitter Winter / Patricia Duval - "The Duval Report. 1. Organized Tort Cases" - September 26, 2024 bitterwinter.org/japan-and-the-… Bitter Winter - "Japan: Lawyers, Deprogramming...Executive Summary" - June 21, 2025 bitterwinter.org/japan-lawyers-…

