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Friday, May 13, 2022

Another commenter:

Sgi are horrible criminals. A fake Buddhist cult in Japan that runs part of the government. Most people in Japan and the USA are really atheists or non religious because, we have to work too hard to and have no time, for flakey religions. My friend Richard in San Francisco says thwre will be a civil war if trump and the repuklicans Try to turm the usa into theocracy. Sgi has a theocracy in Japan . SGI is not really Anti Nuclear. They are a fake Buddhist religion and cult. the people of japan hate sgi. I know because my ex friend was one of them. Ask herve courtois any any person truly knowledgeable about Japan. They will tell you the truth . My ex friend tried to get me to join sgi. They are like Scientology and moonies. She gave scads of my money to that fake ikeda worshipping religion. The religious nuts under trump are destroying America and American freedom. Read a handmaids tale Sgi is destroying japan. 

Most tepco in Japan are Sgi and komeito. Read Mark Rogow https://markrogow.blogspot.com/2022/05/the-lowest-form-of-argument-is-employed. html Anti sgi blog in America. Religious nuts and trump are destroying America https://m.ok.ru/video/1689825839663 Watch movie a hand maids tale about religious nuts in america Revolt in 2100 Article Talk Revolt in 2100 is a 1953 science fiction collection by American writer Robert A. Heinlein, part of his Future History series. OCLC 1674023 LCCN 53-12529 The contents are as follows: Foreword by Henry Kuttner, "The Innocent Eye" "If This Goes On—" (1940; originally published in Astounding Science Fiction) The short novel, "If This Goes On—", describes a rebellion against an American theocracy and thus served as the vehicle for Heinlein to criticise the authoritarian potential of Protestant Christian fundamentalism. The work is not an attack on religion in general, however, as he has a Mormon community take part in the anti-theocratic revolt. Heinlein rewrote the work for this appearance.[1] The short stories, "Coventry" and "Misfit", describe the succeeding secular liberal society from the point of view of characters who reject it. Later paperback editions have paired Revolt in 2100 with Methuselah's Children. The afterword describes three stories which describe the beginning of the theocracy and subsequent beginnings of rebellion against it. "The Sound of His Wings" would have concerned a televangelist named Nehemiah Scudder who rides a populist, racist wave of support to the Presidency. "Eclipse" describes the subsequent collapse of American society with particular emphasis on the withdrawal from space travel by the new regime. "The Stone Pillow" offers the rise of the rebellion which the protagonists of "If This Goes On—" later join; the rebellion (styled the "Second American Revolution" in later stories of the Future History) includes Mormons, Catholics, and Jews, groups suppressed by the Theocracy, working in concert with Freemasons. Internal evidence of the series, particularly conversations in Methuselah's Children and Time Enough For Love place the Scudder election in the year 2012. The character of Nehemiah Scudder, the "First Prophet" of the regime, appeared in Heinlein's first novel (never published in his lifetime), For Us, The Living. He is also used in Spider Robinson's Variable Star, a novel based on an outline of Heinlein's. The novel borrows liberally from Heinlein's Future History, although it does not follow its timeline.

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