Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search
 

DontTreadOnMe

(2,442 posts)
76. Those churches just need to pull up their bootstraps and survive by themselves
Wed Mar 5, 2014, 06:35 PM
Mar 2014

...someone once told me that

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

Thank "god"! Walk away Feb 2014 #1
First off, you are attributing the characteristics of a small subset of religious organizations to cbayer Feb 2014 #4
The 1.4 million dollar church down the street from me doesn't pay property taxes. AtheistCrusader Mar 2014 #65
Like I have said, there are some exemptions and I fully support better cbayer Mar 2014 #67
Charitable services can and do exist without churches. AtheistCrusader Mar 2014 #69
Of course there are and groups that provide charitable services cbayer Mar 2014 #71
Agreed. AtheistCrusader Mar 2014 #73
I believe, but am not sure, that the stadium could take a tax deduction cbayer Mar 2014 #74
Those churches just need to pull up their bootstraps and survive by themselves DontTreadOnMe Mar 2014 #76
Who might that have been? Did it help? cbayer Mar 2014 #77
There are all kinds of churchs el_bryanto Feb 2014 #5
Non Profits should end tax ememption immediately as well yeoman6987 Feb 2014 #33
My church uses it's money to feed homeless LGBT youth, feed people with HIV/AIDS, tutoring for hrmjustin Feb 2014 #49
Highly doubtful FBaggins Feb 2014 #2
Should a religion be allowed to deny marriage to same-sex couples el_bryanto Feb 2014 #6
We don't have the option of "allowing" them to practice their religion. FBaggins Feb 2014 #8
So the religion can deny the marriage service to people it feels are unworthy of it? el_bryanto Feb 2014 #9
Of course. FBaggins Feb 2014 #13
Well done! You blew up all of his "points", and ended it with the last part. cleanhippie Feb 2014 #21
The point i was trying to make was that the Tax Exempt Status of Churchs may be untenable el_bryanto Feb 2014 #24
! cleanhippie Feb 2014 #26
The rules about tax exempt status skepticscott Mar 2014 #62
As far as the state is concerned, the church ceremony is meaningless. stopbush Feb 2014 #31
'should' is different from 'is likely to' muriel_volestrangler Feb 2014 #34
It's fine and dandy for a church to refuse to marry anyone. LiberalFighter Feb 2014 #17
Well you may get your way fairly soon on the Tax Exempt front. el_bryanto Feb 2014 #18
No one, NO ONE, is advocating for or trying to force churches to marry anyone. cleanhippie Feb 2014 #22
From the post I was responding to. el_bryanto Feb 2014 #23
"... marriages that even applied outside their church." cleanhippie Feb 2014 #25
From your response above, el_bryanto Feb 2014 #28
-facepalm- cleanhippie Feb 2014 #35
You're just sad. Pathetic really. el_bryanto Feb 2014 #36
You must be looking in a mirror if you see sad and pathetic. cleanhippie Feb 2014 #37
GROW THE FUCK UP! nt el_bryanto Feb 2014 #38
Lol! Calm the fuck down and do try to act like an adult. cleanhippie Feb 2014 #39
Admit your mistake el_bryanto Feb 2014 #40
Admit your inability to comprehend larger points. cleanhippie Feb 2014 #43
OK - The larger point seems to be that Liberal Fighter feels that el_bryanto Feb 2014 #44
I would not support forcing churches to marry anyone. LiberalFighter Feb 2014 #46
Nods - I would agree with that myself - disentangle the two. el_bryanto Feb 2014 #47
As long as religious groups meet the criteria for 501(3)c corps, cbayer Feb 2014 #3
You are correct, but some are advocating for candidates and it's not enforced. longship Feb 2014 #7
There's doubt within the IRS whether the rule can survive a court challenge. FBaggins Feb 2014 #10
I'd like to see that battle happen. And it should. nt longship Feb 2014 #12
Not if we would lose FBaggins Feb 2014 #14
That is very true and I put that in the hands of the IRS. cbayer Feb 2014 #11
You have taken a more moderate position on this in the past here. longship Feb 2014 #15
As long as there are loopholes, some are going to find ways to use them. cbayer Feb 2014 #16
Churches need to lose their public charity status LiberalFighter Feb 2014 #19
Do you think the same should apply to all non-profits? cbayer Feb 2014 #30
It depends on the purpose of the non-profits. LiberalFighter Feb 2014 #45
You are treading on very thin 1st amendment ice here. cbayer Feb 2014 #50
How does it violate their freedom of worship or speech? LiberalFighter Feb 2014 #51
By not allowing them to benefit from the same rules as every other non-profit, cbayer Feb 2014 #52
They are only a non-profit because religion was included in legislation LiberalFighter Mar 2014 #53
I don't believe that is correct. cbayer Mar 2014 #54
How would it be a 1st amendment breach? LiberalFighter Mar 2014 #58
Because you would be excluding religious groups based solely on religion - cbayer Mar 2014 #59
Not every organization is tax exempt or qualifies for non-profit status. LiberalFighter Mar 2014 #60
That is correct, but they all have to meet the same criteria to achieve that status. cbayer Mar 2014 #61
No they don't LiberalFighter Mar 2014 #63
I do not believe that is the case. Can you provide any further information on that? cbayer Mar 2014 #64
Really? If you were standing on solid rock wouldn't you have LiberalFighter Mar 2014 #75
AGain, I have done some research on this and not found anything that would indicate cbayer Mar 2014 #78
It is the "exempt purposes" requirement where the issue arises. eomer Mar 2014 #79
It is obvious that you didn't even bother reviewing publication 1828. LiberalFighter Mar 2014 #80
So, I get to pay for all city services that feed into their building AND AtheistCrusader Mar 2014 #66
Well, I guess you could lobby for an increase in your taxes to cover the charitable and community cbayer Mar 2014 #68
Or, we could scale their non-profit status to just the charitable services AtheistCrusader Mar 2014 #70
They are bound by the same rules as any other non-profit or charitable organization. cbayer Mar 2014 #72
The government isn't dictating church "practices". kestrel91316 Feb 2014 #20
The tax exemption is useful in that it highlights the venality of organized religion Bluenorthwest Feb 2014 #27
So you favor preserving tax exempt status for Churches? el_bryanto Feb 2014 #29
It's useful to see that all large organized religions take 'religious exemptions' for Bluenorthwest Feb 2014 #32
It would seem to me that church rental income, completely unrelated to the 501(c)(3) purpose, struggle4progress Feb 2014 #41
As long as they keep dragging church into government libodem Feb 2014 #42
I don't the Churches will be loosing tax exempt status anytime soon goldent Feb 2014 #48
I think church tax exempt statuses should be left alone. hrmjustin Mar 2014 #55
I think stronger enforcement of established 501(c)3 regs would help a lot. (nt) pinto Mar 2014 #56
That is the bottom line. The problem is with the IRS. cbayer Mar 2014 #57
Latest Discussions»Issue Forums»Religion»Tax Exemption for Churche...»Reply #76