|
lightshineon -> RE: South Carolina Pastor Questioned About 'Obama Osama' Church Sign (4/24/2008 11:26:00 AM)
|
Well of course, tax wrights hate speech CD's for sell, that would make it fair. agreed? quote:
ORIGINAL: cow451 quote:
ORIGINAL: Jhud quote:
Your histrionics notwithstanding, the tax-exempt regulations assume the church is operating in what a reasonable individual would consider a religious activity. The sign is clearly a political statement. If the church posted a sign opposing a change in a referendum on liquor laws, that could reasonably be considered within the religious realm since it is an issue in which a church could be considered acting on a religious belief. Or, a sign supporting Right to Life is within reason. Having John McCain or any candidate speak at the church is not a violation unless the offering is given to him. First off, the ‘reasonable person’ standard is a moving target. What would be reasonable to one community, or the people within it, wouldn’t be reasonable to another. And what is political is clearly contextual. If a local politician was a strong supporter of local liquor laws, and the opposing candidate was against them, then advocacy of those laws could be seen as ‘political’. In fact, of all the potential political issues that could be addressed, Obama’s Muslim sounding name is really the least political – indeed, it appeals to something much more base, that is xenophobia. quote:
This action is so clear-cut, the only way to justify it is to say that any religious organization can engage in any political activity, which is not the intent of the tax-exempt regulations as they apply to religious organizations. The original intent of tax exemption wasn't to prevent political activity, it was to prevent government entanglement with religion, and to acknowledge the benefit that religious and charitable organization are to communites. It was the amendment to the exemption that was an attempt to do this, but it in effect subverts the entire purpose of tax exemption. Basically, you are proposing churches have a free ride on political activity. This will lead to excesses like the founding of organizations like the Swift Boat Church, the St. Ron Paul Church of Liberty, etc. I'd prefer churches simply be taxed like any other business and nobody will care whether Pastor Dingledopper puts a political message on the church sign.
|
|
|
|