I have never understood the argument that anyone is footing a bill for taxes not collected. It's not as though the federal government is living within its means and can't spend money they don't have. If anyone is getting the bill footed for them, it's the poor. They are costing tax payers actual money. To say that anyone is footing the bill for taxes the churches are not paying is to presuppose that wealth belongs to the government to begin with.Troy wrote:What's the current tax exemption per year we are footing for religious groups? The groups that are essentially the driving force behind defunding basic reproductive healthcare for women.
I can't find exact figures - maybe $70-80 billion?
I'm seeing $500m for planned parenthood within the US(that won't last). $600m just removed for reproductive healthcare worldwide. It's maddening to me - super important that these children are born - but after that, fuck em. If they are unfortunate enough to live in Trump's "inner city nightmares" or have to go to one of Besty DeVos' future public schools where they can major in bear hunting - them's the breaks kid. Bootstrap harder.
e: I watched the PC today, Spicer did do much better.
All that being said, I believe that churches should be taxed for anything they do that is not a direct charitable giving. All the "community centers" being built should be taxed. The food pantries for the poor, not. In exchange, I think the government should be out completely of the church's dealings. They get to endorse and even campaign for candidates that are aligned with their beliefs if they so choose. Personally, I don't think the government would take that trade off. I suspect the churches would become a hell of a lot more fiscally conservative if they were paying taxes as well.