View Full Version : Separation of Church and State Sucks.
sukie
11-12-2008, 02:23 PM
Tax churches. Tax the land they are on and all the buildings they own. Christ ... The fucking Glass temple that Robert Schuller preaced at could fund alot of programs.
Hit up the religious right. They make income but pay squat. Churches should also be off the Charitable contributions list unless (by audit) they actually do charity.
Acoustic-Fury
11-12-2008, 02:26 PM
There is supposed to be a separation of church and state...but there never is...
sukie
11-12-2008, 02:27 PM
Is the separation between the Church and the State or the Church and the rest of us since we pay taxes and the Church doesn't
Smashingt
11-12-2008, 02:59 PM
I agree that they should be taxed.
FaggotPig
11-12-2008, 03:01 PM
Have you seen that church in Houston owned by Joel Olsteen?? It's an ex sport arena for christ sakes. If you can afford that you could pay some damn taxes.
Smashingt
11-12-2008, 03:19 PM
Have you seen that church in Houston owned by Joel Olsteen?? It's an ex sport arena for christ sakes. If you can afford that you could pay some damn taxes.
When you drive out to lockport theirs something like that next to geico. "super" churches.
LALALALALALAFONTAINE
11-12-2008, 10:21 PM
Separation of church and state doesn't mean they shouldn't pay taxes.
buffalofan19
11-13-2008, 02:44 PM
There would have to be some other qualifications. While there are some palace churches, there are a lot of churches that don't make squat. And if you started taxing churches, you'd have to start taxing other not-for-profits that aren't charities as well.
Acoustic-Fury
11-13-2008, 02:46 PM
There would have to be some other qualifications. While there are some palace churches, there are a lot of churches that don't make squat. And if you started taxing churches, you'd have to start taxing other not-for-profits that aren't charities as well.
Let's only tax those that make more than $250,000 dollars a year!
buffalofan19
11-13-2008, 03:07 PM
Let's only tax those that make more than $250,000 dollars a year!
250,000 isn't that much for any entity that isn't an individual.
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