Religion
In reply to the discussion: A Note on Tax Exemptions for Churches [View all]marylandblue
(12,344 posts)You don't seem to know anything about them, yet you insist they work the way you say they do. If you don't have any experience in these areas, that's fine. But don't make it like government agencies set the tax rate or decide who gets services based on an 1816 case that was about whether the State of Maryland could tax the federal government.
"Taxation is control" is a fine legal principle for some cases, but you pay income tax right? Does the government then "control" you? Could you use "taxation is control" to avoid paying income tax because it means you are a government slave? Absurd right? But you can bet some sovereign citizen somewhere already tried it and got laughed out of court.
Anyway, the exemption long predates "taxation is control." In #81 I traced it to colonial times, but actual goes back much further. It goes back through medieval times and it was a point of contention then too. It was actually started by the Emperor Constantine who gave a tax exemption to the Church in exchange for their support and help running the Empire. He understood he was getting a benefit from the Church. But he also understood he was giving one. I am sure the pagans weren't thrilled about it, but Constantine didn't ask them.