So, is this advocacy for taxing schools, churches and hospitals?Warren Dew wrote:I don't think the article is talking about the Vatican itself. I think the "about 100,000 properties, classed as non-commercial, including 8,779 schools, 26,300 ecclesiastical structures and 4,714 hospitals and clinics" the article mentions are the ones scattered throughout Italy that are owned by the Catholic Church.Seth wrote:Is the Vatican (being a sovereign state) a signatory to the EU?
The reason that we in the US do not generally tax religious schools, churches and religious hospitals is because the benefits of having them far, far outweighs the potential revenues which would be realized by burdening them with taxes...in addition to the free exercise considerations I mentioned before. This is why there is such a thing as a non-profit tax exemption on income to begin with. The Congress and the States have long recognized that the benefits to the public and the costs avoided by government (which would require increases in taxation) produced by non-profit charitable entities supported voluntarily by their members, which includes not just the Catholic church but every other church non-profit in the US, are substantial, important and valuable to the nation. Therefore, Congress and the States have decided to encourage charitable giving, charitable works, and non-profit activities by exempting all of them, secular and sectarian, from income taxation and various other taxes.
In short, foregoing taxation of such entities saves the government enormous amounts of money that it would otherwise have to spend itself, and get from taxpayers to do so by force, for services to help the poor, protect the environment and otherwise benefit society.
Because the Catholic Church is a non-profit organization (and each diocese and parish is independently organized as a 501c3 non-profit under US tax law), it qualifies just like every other legally organized non-profit organization for tax exemptions...SOME tax exemptions. Not everything the Catholic church does is not taxed, and they are still subject to regulatory fees and other government exactions for their ordinary non-religious activities such as building and zoning approvals.
The only reason anyone argues for taxing the Catholic church and not every other church or non-profit is simple anti-Catholic bigotry and mindless hatred. Catholics have been facing this bigotry and hatred for thousands of years, and yet the church endures. I'm sure it'll endure the opprobrium of the small-minded, petty bigots here and elsewhere and will continue to do it's good and charitable works worldwide serving not just Catholics, but the poor and downtrodden everywhere.
The Catholic church's contribution to civilization and succoring the poor and helpless is manifest and undeniable and has been since its beginning. Whatever its failings, the Catholic church has done more good and Catholics have given more money, love and personal labor to the poor and oppressed than almost any nation on earth, and has done so consistently for two millennia.
What have YOU, or any Atheist done that comes anywhere near the magnitude of love, charity, personal sacrifice and altruism shown by Catholics worldwide over the centuries?
Nothing, that's what.
In balancing the scales between the benefits to society, culture and civilization of the Catholic church and the benefits of atheism and Atheists there is simply no comparison whatsoever and the Catholic church tips the balance so conclusively and abruptly that the weight of history and truth against them ejects Atheism and atheists from the atmosphere at orbital speed and hopefully into the cold depths of intergalactic space forever, never to be seen or heard from again.
Even as a non-theistic Tolerist™ who does not believe any of what Catholics believe insofar as God is concerned, I find them to be far, far better people than any Atheist I've ever met, and I'd much rather hang around with Catholics than intolerant, bigoted Atheists any day.