There are more then two points of view Mr Black and White fallacy, I've already cited the sensored google information and Time magazine as outside sources. The link you provided contained the following:Stas Bush wrote:SpyderSo it's the "when cultists say they are not dangerous, I believe. When the government says they are mad fucks, I don't believe... because I believe the cultists" line. Great.Also, do you have a source that says that a Falun Gong practitioner did anything worse then unfurl a yellow banner that didn't originate from the Chinese government?
That really doesn't help your argument. Quite the opposite infact.The Chinese government has relentlessly suppressed religious groups since achieving power in 1949. The rest of the world is most familiar with its oppression of non-registered Christian groups. However, the government has also persecuted many types of new religious and spiritual groups, including the Falun Gong. In fact, its suppression extends beyond such groups to include organizations that teach only simple meditation and gymnastic techniques. The government appears to fear any national group that is capable of organizing its followers into direct action.
No, they're facing persecution too,I think it's a reasonable conclusion. If you read the article with attention, you would notice that Falun Gong didn't attract attention for quite a while.Oh gee, the Chinese government said it...must be true then.
Also, it would be ridiculous to persecute on religious grounds one religion, but not another. If religion is the ground for persecution, then why aren't all Buddhists, Daos, Shaoling monks and Confucians facing persecution?
Maybe because they don't tell people to reject medicine and burn themselves up?
Christian Persecution
And for the win,A Chinese Christian refugee in New York, working with Christians in China, has compiled an extensive new archive documenting brutal religious persecution that has caused more than 100 deaths and thousands of injuries.
Activist Li Shi-xiong, head of the New York City–based Committee for Investigation on Persecution of Religion in China, believes these documents establish that communist rulers at the highest levels take an active role in persecuting house-church Christians. In the past, top leaders in China have blamed repression on overzealous local officials....
Buddhism, Daoism, Islam. Catholicism, and Protestantism
Until your knowledge of this area surpasses that of a wet cabbage I'm going to have to insist that you avoid the reply button.In this report, Human Rights Watch/Asia focuses on the persistent crackdown against religious expression of Catholics and Protestants. We note, however, that repression in China is directed against all religions, the five that are officially recognized (Buddhism, Daoism, Islam. Catholicism, and Protestantism) and all allegedly aberrant and superstitious sects. In Tibet, for example, the Chinese government has violated international standards of religious freedom by insisting on its own choice for the new Panchen Lama, the second most important religious authority for Tibetan Buddhists.