Ty HassyのProgressive Innovation

人類の叡智と知の最先端を探求し続けて・・年、知ってしまうと目から鱗の新しい世界観が目の前に拓けてくるかも知れません。その秘蔵ネタをチビリチビリと小出しにして行きます。乞うご期待!

Easy ways to identify fraudulent cults.

 There are so many religious organizations in the world that at first glance it seems very difficult to tell which ones are sound and which ones are fraudulent cults.

 However, there is actually a very simple way to tell the difference.

 It is whether it costs money or not. Any religious group that costs a lot of money is a fraudulent cult, and no matter how splendid its teachings may be, they are nothing more than a story made up to motivate the believers and extract money from them. I can say this with absolute certainty.

 A sound religious organization should be a group that wishes for the happiness of its followers and all people, and its doctrines should be in line with that. If such an organization, which is supposed to wish for the happiness of people, asks for money, it is because the organizers of the group have a very secular and evil intention of "wanting more money".

 As long as the organizers of the cult have worldly evil intentions, everything they preach is only a front, and their true intention is only, "Listen to what we say, be deceived, and pay us! That is all. In other words, they are nothing more than a criminal group.

 As a religious organization, it is true that it needs facilities such as a house of worship and a meeting place, so it needs a certain amount of money. However, that should be covered by monthly membership fees, just like a sports gym. So, to put it simply, any religious organization that charges more than a sports gym, you can be sure that someone is trying to make an unfair profit.

 If you are invited by someone to join a religious group, you should always ask how much it costs, and be suspicious if you are told vaguely that there is no fee or that it depends on how you feel.

 In any case, as soon as you find out that it is going to cost more than the gym membership fee, I think you should immediately consider it a fraudulent cult and cut all ties with it.

 However, there are some Christian churches and religious organizations with a long tradition that require 10% or 20% of its followers’ income to be donated, so it is true that money alone is not necessarily the determining factor. In my opinion, however, 10% or 20% of income is too much, and we should carefully check how they are using the money they raise.

   In any case, as long as the religious group or its organizer does not have the evil intention of "wanting more money," they will never ask for more money than they need.

   We should clearly recognize that religious organizations that cost more money than necessary are not really religious organizations at all, but merely fraudulent criminal organizations under the name of religion.