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originally posted by: HillbillyHippie1
If you can tax anyone who has a political issue they wish to speak about, you might as well discard freedom of religion. A government or its people could make anything political, if they wanted too. Trying to tax religious organizations under the guise of the separation of church and state is the dumbest idea I have ever heard of, and only an idiot would not see it is meant to eradicate religious speech entirely.
If one wanted too, they could make the historicity of Jesus or reincarnation a political issue. Attempts to tax churches for their speech are merely attempts to create ground for making such things political to silence the religious. The religious see this, and the non-religious support it not having thought through the implications, for once the government clandestinely creates a religious group who speaks about what you want too, it will be taxed and have to government sanctioned as well.
originally posted by: NavyDoc
originally posted by: Tangerine
originally posted by: infolurker
The best way to ensure that no one will read a long-winded rant is to post it in a thousand-word block of print with no paragraphs. Thank you for doing so.
There have been a lot of positions bantered about. Yours in particular would be?
I already stated my position which is that if ANY organization holding tax exempt status violates the rules they should lose their tax exempt status.
originally posted by: beezzer
originally posted by: windword
a reply to: beezzer
Hi Beez,
But I see many who would replace religion with government.
Can you explain, for me, the difference between governance and religion?
Religion is the formal structure of faith. It provides a moral foundation for society based on the instruction of the religious focus.
Government (governance) is the formation of a series of rules/laws based upon a geographical group of individuals.
Just off the top of my head, but I hope that it answered your question.
originally posted by: SkepticOverlord
Here's my solution.
originally posted by: Chronogoblin
originally posted by: Krazysh0t
So is it ok to take away their tax exempt status then? I don't serve any master. Master implies slavery.
You want my opinion? NO ONE SHOULD BE TAX EXEMPT. Especially the corporations of the World, paying little to NOTHING in taxes every year. Please don't mistake my faith for naivete, I am a realist at heart. No church should ask for a tithe, the pastor/priest should work a regular job, and give sermons too. If I, or anyone else, can work and still get to church, then they can as well.
As for the slave thing, yeah... just try to leave. Try to leave it all behind, leave your money, your debt, and all your responsibilities behind. Can't? Right. Yeah, I think we are all slaves to something.
originally posted by: OccamsRazor04
First of all that is taxes paid by PEOPLE, not a church. Last I checked people who belong to a church pay taxes still. Maybe you can show me what church has members that are exempt from taxation?
originally posted by: Krazysh0t
originally posted by: Chronogoblin
originally posted by: Krazysh0t
So is it ok to take away their tax exempt status then? I don't serve any master. Master implies slavery.
You want my opinion? NO ONE SHOULD BE TAX EXEMPT. Especially the corporations of the World, paying little to NOTHING in taxes every year. Please don't mistake my faith for naivete, I am a realist at heart. No church should ask for a tithe, the pastor/priest should work a regular job, and give sermons too. If I, or anyone else, can work and still get to church, then they can as well.
Well we don't live in a world like that do we? Sometimes you have to be able to divide reality from idealism. In this reality entities pay taxes to fund the government. And the tax laws in this country say that in order for a church to be exempt from those taxes they can't preach politics during a sermon.
As for the slave thing, yeah... just try to leave. Try to leave it all behind, leave your money, your debt, and all your responsibilities behind. Can't? Right. Yeah, I think we are all slaves to something.
I COULD do it. I don't know about you. Dropping off the grid isn't hard if you know how to survive alone. I currently don't want to do it, but it's not like it would be impossible. It's just a matter of willpower over comfort.
originally posted by: Pinke
originally posted by: SkepticOverlord
Here's my solution.
DO IT.
I bowed out of this thread early because even as an atheist I can see a massive disconnect between making no political statements and being an institution that deals with morals, ethics, and principals. Such a take on it may also allow the potential for more secular / gnostic religious beliefs that don't necessarily have a sky daddy, physical body time sharing program, or claim to being every single thing at once.
Pinke for example would like to start the church of Christopher Walken, who reads good, does other things good, and gives things to homeless folks too. Instead of just being a joke at religious people, the church of Walken pays taxes unless it does piles of charity. That would be neat.
originally posted by: Gryphon66
originally posted by: beezzer
originally posted by: Gryphon66
a reply to: beezzer
Government and religion were the same thing for most of human history.
There certainly are many who want to recombine the two; but that is anathematic to the American way.
I agree.
But I see many who would replace religion with government.
I don't disagree.
But I see many who would replace government with religion.
That doesn't make me sleep any better at night; how about you?
originally posted by: Logarock
a reply to: SkepticOverlord
The church was never intended to find any societal justification in its charity work. That was something they just did anyway. Now it defines them in many eyes.
They cannot maintain their constitutional position, no law inhibiting the free exercise thereof, if they are bound to any government agency or revenue stogies. The constitution would have to be changed and in this case the very Bill of Rights.
originally posted by: babybunnies
Any pastor that preaches politics should lose their tax exempt status as per the law, and probably their status as a pastor with the Catholic Church too.
Preaching politics at Church is an absolute no-no, both with the Catholic Church and the IRS.