創価学会を、ましてや統一教会を擁護するつもりはないですが、「仏では公式に統一教会や創価学会をカルト認定している」にはニュアンスが必要。議会の委員会が作成したリストに統一教会や創価学会が入ったことがあることは事実だが、リスト化はフランス国内でも批判され現在は団体のリストはない。 https://t.co/IZCVQvV8gu
— 伊達聖伸 / Kiyonobu Date (@KiyonobuDate) August 29, 2022
Defamation lawsuit against the Daily Mail
In 1978, the Daily Mail, a British tabloid newspaper, published an article with the headline: "The Church That Breaks Up Families".[313][314] The article accused the Unification Church of brainwashing and separating families. The British Unification Church's director Dennis Orme filed a libel suit against the Daily Mail and Associated Newspapers, its parent company, resulting in one of the longest civil actions in British legal history – lasting six months.[313][315][316] Orme and the Unification Church lost the libel case, the appeal case, and were refused permission to take their case to the House of Lords.[316] The original case heard 117 witnesses, including American anti-cult psychiatrist Margaret Thaler Singer.[313] In the original case, the Unification Church was ordered to pay Associated Newspapers GB£750,000 in costs which was maintained after appeal.[317] The jury of the original case not only awarded Associated Newspapers costs, but it and the judge requested that the Attorney General re-examine the Unification Church's charitable status, which after a lengthy investigation from 1986 to 1988 was not removed.[318][319] According to George Chryssides, about half of the Unification Church's 500 full-time membership in Britain moved to the United States.[320] The Unification Church sold seven of its twelve principal church centers after the ruling.[321] Other anti-cultists in countries like Germany sought to incorporate the London High Court's decision into law
イギリスでも「洗脳して家族をバラバラにする教会」として報道されていたが、公益法人格を奪って税の控除の優遇措置を取りやめることはできなかったみたいだね。
やはり、 宗教法人格を奪うにはハードルは高そうだね。
民族差別、偽装勧誘、霊感商法、霊感献金などの実態をどんどん報道して、社会的、政治的に孤立させていくしかないかもね。
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