…the entire premise of my argument is that religious institutions should be taxed. Why the fuck would I care about non-religious charities being taxed? You’re literally crying the sky is blue.
I made a comparison between two food charities one a church and the other an anarchist one. You want the church to pay and not the anarchist org because you agree with the anarchist org and disagree with the religion. That means the only difference is that one charity is religious.
If you have a problem with religions to the point where you want them to engage in less charity because they are religious then you are bigoted against religions.
This isn’t hard to follow rather it is hard for you to accept your bigotry.
I don’t need to accept anything besides you trying to equate two inequal concepts. A system of government/political philosophy doesn’t equal a religion. I was very open in my initial comments on taxing religions. You’re the one trying to manipulate things into a gotcha to say things I’m not.
I made it abundantly clear that I feel religious institutions should be taxed. You are the one trying to say that it makes me bigoted somehow. You are also assuming I agree with an anarchist group, when I have said no such thing. I just think they should be able to spread their views as they help people, because they aren’t a religion. I think anarchism in practice is usually a stupid concept. Don’t worry though, I’m not going to use your assumptions about me to presume bigotry.
If a religious group has a charity branch that doesn’t proselytize or encourage people to attend services, that specific branch shouldn’t be taxed.
If there is a group that feeds hungry people or builds homes, while also pushing for people to vote and participate in our electoral processes, then I don’t think they should be taxed. It doesn’t make me bigoted to say that trying to convince someone of something practical they can use in their life or to change their society is different than preying on people with your unverifiable beliefs. There are thousands of religions. A lot of them do a ton of charity work, but that isn’t their main goal. Just as we tax businesses and allow them tax breaks for charitable work, we should do the same for religions.
Yes you think the religious org should be taxed and the non-religious org should NOT be taxed.
Do ypu need it made clearer? The only difference is religion. You want the religious org “punished” by having to pay taxes because of your bias against religion. That is called bigotry.
Your view of taxes is strange. Is it “punishment” when businesses pay taxes? What about private citizens? I think it’s just the government getting it’s due to serve the population. Institutions whose sole purpose to serve the population, and also want to find ways to make sure they are served better, shouldn’t be taxed. Institutions that try to push their version of the afterlife, while just happening to randomly serve society, should be taxed.
If one food bank has to pay taxes because it is a religious organization and the other does not because it is not religious then the taxes are being used to punish the religious group for being a religious group. Normally taxes aren’t a punishment but in this case they would be.
If you’re going to be telling the hungry people you are feeding that they are going to hell if they don’t convert to your religion (or the equivalent) then you should be taxed. If you don’t do that, then you have nothing to worry about! I already said I believe branches of religious institutions that don’t proselytize or encourage seeing sermons shouldn’t be taxed, so I’m not sure what you want me to say. I’m sorry I fit your definition of a bigot, but I don’t think enough people agree with you for it to ever matter. Have a nice life.
…the entire premise of my argument is that religious institutions should be taxed. Why the fuck would I care about non-religious charities being taxed? You’re literally crying the sky is blue.
I made a comparison between two food charities one a church and the other an anarchist one. You want the church to pay and not the anarchist org because you agree with the anarchist org and disagree with the religion. That means the only difference is that one charity is religious.
If you have a problem with religions to the point where you want them to engage in less charity because they are religious then you are bigoted against religions.
This isn’t hard to follow rather it is hard for you to accept your bigotry.
I don’t need to accept anything besides you trying to equate two inequal concepts. A system of government/political philosophy doesn’t equal a religion. I was very open in my initial comments on taxing religions. You’re the one trying to manipulate things into a gotcha to say things I’m not.
Im not trying to manipulate anything. You want the religious charity that does the same work as the non-religious charity because they are religious.
There’s no false equivalence being made here despite your desire for that to be the case.
I made it abundantly clear that I feel religious institutions should be taxed. You are the one trying to say that it makes me bigoted somehow. You are also assuming I agree with an anarchist group, when I have said no such thing. I just think they should be able to spread their views as they help people, because they aren’t a religion. I think anarchism in practice is usually a stupid concept. Don’t worry though, I’m not going to use your assumptions about me to presume bigotry.
If a religious group has a charity branch that doesn’t proselytize or encourage people to attend services, that specific branch shouldn’t be taxed.
If there is a group that feeds hungry people or builds homes, while also pushing for people to vote and participate in our electoral processes, then I don’t think they should be taxed. It doesn’t make me bigoted to say that trying to convince someone of something practical they can use in their life or to change their society is different than preying on people with your unverifiable beliefs. There are thousands of religions. A lot of them do a ton of charity work, but that isn’t their main goal. Just as we tax businesses and allow them tax breaks for charitable work, we should do the same for religions.
Yes you think the religious org should be taxed and the non-religious org should NOT be taxed.
Do ypu need it made clearer? The only difference is religion. You want the religious org “punished” by having to pay taxes because of your bias against religion. That is called bigotry.
Your view of taxes is strange. Is it “punishment” when businesses pay taxes? What about private citizens? I think it’s just the government getting it’s due to serve the population. Institutions whose sole purpose to serve the population, and also want to find ways to make sure they are served better, shouldn’t be taxed. Institutions that try to push their version of the afterlife, while just happening to randomly serve society, should be taxed.
If one food bank has to pay taxes because it is a religious organization and the other does not because it is not religious then the taxes are being used to punish the religious group for being a religious group. Normally taxes aren’t a punishment but in this case they would be.
If you’re going to be telling the hungry people you are feeding that they are going to hell if they don’t convert to your religion (or the equivalent) then you should be taxed. If you don’t do that, then you have nothing to worry about! I already said I believe branches of religious institutions that don’t proselytize or encourage seeing sermons shouldn’t be taxed, so I’m not sure what you want me to say. I’m sorry I fit your definition of a bigot, but I don’t think enough people agree with you for it to ever matter. Have a nice life.