Coito ergo sum wrote:Seth wrote:mistermack wrote:Churches get a huge tax break by posing as supposed charities.
They're not "supposed charities," they are actual charities.
That depends, Seth. Being a supposed charity says nothing about whether they are actually charities. Some supposed charities are actual charities, and some aren't. It depends on whether they behave like charities. However, merely being churches doesn't make them actual charities, and many churches aren't charities.
They aren't tax free necessarily because of being charities - they are tax free because they are bona fide religious organizations. Religious organizations don't have to be charitable to be tax exempt in the U.S.
Good point.
Seth wrote:
It's in their financial interest to maintain the fiction by getting involved in education.
It's not a fiction, they are accountable to the IRS just like any other non-profit. They get certain tax breaks as a matter of political policy in the US it's true, but that's because historically the taxing power has been the primary tool of government-sponsored religious oppression and in the US, which carefully protects religious freedom, we have as a society decided not to tax churches for that reason.
They are accountable to the IRS as religious 501(c)(3)s, but that's not "just like any other" non-profit.
Churches were not taxed as a way to foster the separation of church and state. The power to tax is the power to destroy, and and modify.
A fine technicality but a fair point. Thanks for making that clear.
Seth wrote:
And the REAL incentive is that they can indoctrinate their young captives at the most impressionable age.
Better them than the Marxists.
That I'm not so sure of.
I am.
If you want to raise a happy, healthy, well-adjusted child, keep them as far away from a church as possible. Wise words.
Strange, because I know a good many happy, healthy, well-adjusted children who are very religious.
I don't want kids indoctrinated by Marxists either. But, I would not say it's "better" to have them indoctrinated by fucking priests and clerics and ministers and rabbis.
Some 80 percent of the population of the planet seem to disagree with you. I think their judgment is superior to yours.
Seth wrote:
The tax payer ends up footing nearly all of the bill.
Dunno about the UK, but that's not even a little true in the US.
Well, to the extent that someone else has to pay what the churches don't, then the tax payer does end up fitting nearly all of the bill.
Huh? Sorry, this doesn't make any sense. In the US, taxpayers don't support religious schools AT ALL.
Seth wrote:
Very little of the money for church-sponsored education comes from collections and donations.
In the US it's 100 percent between donations, collections and tuition paid by parents because it's illegal for our government to pay for religious schools.
Not totally true. There have been some inroads made here in terms of school vouchers going to religious schools.
Indeed. And justifiably so. Vouchers are nothing more than the money the state allocates for educating a particular child following the child to the school of the parent's choice, which is exactly how it should be, whether that is a religious school, a charter school or a public school. The state can require that children be schooled, but it ought not have the authority to dictate where that child attends school. So, it makes no difference to the taxpayers if the money allocated to educating a particular child goes to this school or that school so long as both schools provide the state-mandated minimum curriculum. Whatever else the school teaches is up to the school and the parents, and the taxpayers are still only paying for the state-required secular educational requirements, not for religious teachings, which are in addition to the state-required curriculum.
Parents who wish to get better educations for their children by sending them to private religious schools should get the same amount of money towards the state-mandated curriculum as parents who subject their children unwillingly to the Marxist public school educational system.
The reason vouchers are opposed is quite simply because public school teacher's unions know full well that they are providing inferior propagandistic Marxist indoctrination in the schools and they want to keep their jobs and keep indoctrinating and propagandizing our children at taxpayer expense. They know that if voucher are allowed, the public schools will very, very quickly cease to exist because they provide such a grossly inferior educational product, and the teachers will be out on their asses looking for real jobs.
Seth wrote:
In Britain, church schools get practically the same state funding as state schools. And the churches pay practically no tax.
That's a matter of UK social policy I suppose. If you don't like it, change it. Churches are merely taking advantage of what the government permits, and people, who make up the churches, want their children given a religious education, not a secular one. That is their right. So, the government, which serves the people (or is supposed to) is merely doing what the majority want. Welcome to democracy. If you don't want your kids educated in a religious school, then by all means send them somewhere else. But parents who do want a religious education for their children have a right to put them in a religious school.
And, they have the right to pay for it. In my view, the citizen has a right to expect the government not to fund religious institutions, including schools. This is not a matter of democracy, but of constitutional limitations on government action.
School voucher money following a student to a religious school is not funding a religious institution, it's paying for the state-mandated school curriculum that the child is entitled by law to receive. That those secular elements of the entire school curriculum happen to be being taught in a religious institution that may offer ADDITIONAL religious education is hardly relevant. The child is entitled to state money towards that child's basic secular education to the same extent that every other child is. To deny that child that tax money allocated for his or her basic education is to violate that child's right to a state-sponsored education. To deny it to that child merely because the secular curriculum is being taught at a religious school, thereby forcing the child to attend a public school, is to infringe on the religious rights of the child to be educated in a religious school far from the corrupting influences of the Frankfurt School Marxists in the public schools.
In the same way that government may grant taxpayer money to religious institutions to fund the secular charitable activities they perform, like soup kitchens, shelters, medical clinics and hospitals, the government may constitutionally grant taxpayer money TO THE CHILD towards his secular education, which may be provided by anyone qualified to teach that secular curriculum. The amount is exactly the same as would be given to the public school, so it cannot be said that the money is going towards sectarian education so long as the state-mandated curriculum is being taught, which it must be by law, even in religious schools.
So no, vouchers are not funding religious education or institutions, they are funding secular state-mandated curriculum and nothing more.
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