Looking for the High Moral Ground on an Ethical Nullarbor Plain
Churches have the right to publicly opine on matters of public policy. Even when such opinions happen to have startling alignment with certain political parties' platforms.
But here's an idea: when a religion starts actively campaigning for one party or another, they lose the right to be recognised as a tax-exempt entity. Squared if they're doing it by lying.
You want to play partisan politics? You get to pay tax on your property and income, like the rest of us.
But here's an idea: when a religion starts actively campaigning for one party or another, they lose the right to be recognised as a tax-exempt entity. Squared if they're doing it by lying.
You want to play partisan politics? You get to pay tax on your property and income, like the rest of us.
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The other part gets taxed like a business, like everybody else. If they don't like the open and transparent bit, they don't have to comply - but then, they don't get the tax deduction.
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(Anonymous) 2012-07-19 05:48 am (UTC)(link)Today noncatholics are funding catholic organisations to create their religio-political propaganda.
It's a profound unfairness of the Aussie Tax Office (ATO) rules that "the advancement of religion" is listed as a charitable purpose.
That item isn't helping needy individuals! It's greatly self-serving, it's their PR & Marketing department.
By waiving taxes the Aussie government publicly funds a religious organisation's mission. Typically gossiping about biblical characters, spreading their favourite church fictions as facts, moralising, retrograding to a bygone era, putting the breaks on civil progress, etc.
And on the topic of the politico-religious, the well-funded Aussie Christian Lobby have become so astoundingly one-eyed that their recent efforts are flying in the face of all empathy and fairness, http://thatsmyphilosophy.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/acl-graph.jpg
@blamer on twitter
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I remember thinking much the same thing when Catholic priests were "requested" to read out an anti-gay-marriage statement to their congregations in church a few weeks ago. A statement in which they asked members of the congregation to contact their political representatives to decry same sex marriage and demand that it remain illegal. If that's not participation in politics, I don't know what is. Separation of Church and State should be maintained and bolstered, and religious orgainisations should be required to play by the same tax rules as any other business, with the exception of the portion which acts as a charitable organisation, which should be subject to the same tax rules as any other charitable organisation.
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(NB: Personally, I'm an old DOGS supporter... )
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