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We can not afford this kind of wanton waste any longer from these parasitic institutions that provide nothing and take plenty. What's best about my proposal is that, for those few churches that actually do some of the charitable things as a regular part of their operations like the scriptures they're so loudmouthed about tell them to do, they can still be tax exempt- just like any other charity that applies and meets the criteria.
Originally posted by SirMike
That was one of the dumbest arguments I have read. Local churches do A LOT for the communities they are in. Food banks, counseling services, prison outreach, day care, education .. the list goes on and on.
Originally posted by Lemon.Fresh
Reply to post by Homoousia316
Funny thing here.
Atheists, who always bring up the wall of seperation of church and state, want to get rid of a wall of seperation of church and state.
Ahhh, the irony.
Posted Via ATS Mobile: m.abovetopsecret.com
Originally posted by Homoousia316
Originally posted by Lemon.Fresh
Reply to post by Homoousia316
Funny thing here.
Atheists, who always bring up the wall of seperation of church and state, want to get rid of a wall of seperation of church and state.
Ahhh, the irony.
Posted Via ATS Mobile: m.abovetopsecret.com
How does wanting to abolish a government subsidy for churches "get rid" of the wall between "seperatin" [sic] of church and state? This is about stopping churches and clergymen from having a major advantage over the rest of us.
Originally posted by Lemon.Fresh
Originally posted by Homoousia316
Originally posted by Lemon.Fresh
Reply to post by Homoousia316
Funny thing here.
Atheists, who always bring up the wall of seperation of church and state, want to get rid of a wall of seperation of church and state.
Ahhh, the irony.
Posted Via ATS Mobile: m.abovetopsecret.com
How does wanting to abolish a government subsidy for churches "get rid" of the wall between "seperatin" [sic] of church and state? This is about stopping churches and clergymen from having a major advantage over the rest of us.
Do you really need me to explain it to you?
The power to tax is the power to control.
Governmental control of the clergy is a violation of the 1st Amendment, and breaks down the separation of church and state.
Common sense here.
Originally posted by Homoousia316
So in your mind, the best way to maintain the wall of separation of church and state is for the government to directly subsidize churches
. . .while requiring all the rest of us to saddle the burden for them in the form of taxes that the rest of us "normal" people have to pay, but they don't.
And it hardly makes sense for you to say that this exemption is just the government leaving the churches alone since it's the government that creates the exemption.
And in your mind, this SEPARATES church and state.
Originally posted by Homoousia316
reply to post by Lemon.Fresh
Really, so if the government decided that I didn't have to pay taxes but everybody else did, thereby impairing all of my competitors to my direct advantage that wouldn't be a subsidy.
But as for "double taxing," no, but SINGLE taxing would be nice- since surely you know that donations to 501(c)s are tax deductible. Surely you have ever paid taxes in your life. But if I give money to a business and actually help a hard working person, or if I invest in a start-up and actually give a leg-up to an entrepreneur to our mutual benefit and to the economy's benefit, that gets taxed.
But if I throw money into the bottomless pit of money-hungry megachurches so they can keep their private jets in the air for an extra ten seconds, that gets the subsidy of a tax exemption.
And churches weren't exempt from taxes for all of American history because the tax code we have today didn't exist for all of American history, and the kinds of taxes that we levy today did not exist throughout American history,
and if you read the Supreme Court arguments on this issue going back to 1924, you will see laughably bad legal scholarship obviously designed by theists, for theists, to protect the interests of their religio-businesses from the same kind of fair, free-market competition to which you, me, and every other ordinary business is subject.
Did everybody in this thread just fail econ 101 or something? What is going ON here?edit on 22-7-2011 by Homoousia316 because: Hit go too early
Then you have the government interfering. They would get to decide what is considered a religious donation. Don't like Buddhists? Their donations don't count for tax exemption. Nice, huh. Again, breaking down this wall that you atheists are always harping over.