• Tar_Alcaran@sh.itjust.works
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      2 months ago

      There are plenty of tax-exempt charities. And they file paperwork and meet several conditions. Churches don’t.

      If churches want to be tax-exempt, they should meet the same criteria as the other charities.

        • Tar_Alcaran@sh.itjust.works
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          2 months ago

          I think you’ve got this the wrong way around buddy.

          The government specifically decides who is a church, and that means they don’t pay taxes. If they decide you’re not a church, you have to meet the stricter criteria. That’s LITERALLY the government dictating religious matters, they are exempting certain groups based on religion, and not others.

          Let me give you an example:

          Say I have a deeply held belief in, oh, the treegod in my backyard, and decide to do charitable work by letting people sit under my tree and eat a meal for a small fee. The government will immediately decide I’m not a church, and I will still have to pay taxes over my income, and I still have to pay property taxes, etc etc.

          But if the catholic church does it, they’re exempt, because the government makes special exemptions for their religion, and not mine.

          Now, I can still be tax exempt, but I will have to show my paperwork, and prove that i’m doing the right things. The catholic churhc doesn’t, because the government makes special exemptions for their religion, and not mine.

          The fair thing would be to hold EVERY group, religious or not, to the same standard.

    • pneumatron@sh.itjust.works
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      2 months ago

      Paying taxes immediately benefits everyone in the community. Helps pay for schools, roads, police and fire, etc. Do you not know how taxes work? There’s also the added benefit of not being proselytized at.

      • Maeve@kbin.earth
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        2 months ago

        Perhaps larger, proselytizing , politically active in the pulpit churches should pay taxes. Perhaps small churches who ‘proselytize’ by merely setting an example by serving should be exempt.