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76 KiB
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Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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**** ****
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LITTLE BLUE BOOK NO. 1502
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Edited by E. Haldeman-Julius
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WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
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By Joseph McCabe
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HALDEMAN-JULIUS PUBLICATIONS
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GIRARD, KANSAS
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Copyright, 1930,
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Haldeman-Julius Company
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**** ****
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WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF
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CHURCH PROPERTY
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A week or two ago I stood before the Cathedral of Notre Dame
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at Paris, enjoying one more both the superb skill of the builders
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an the joyous cynicism with which they had mingled piety and
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impiety in the sculpture. Paris always has surprises for me but the
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most singular was that a French woman of mature years, apparently
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normal intelligence, an fair education came to me and asked: "Can
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you tell me, sir, what church this is?" I had just been explaining
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to a friend how the large island in the Seine in which the
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cathedral stands was once Paris; how half of it had been occupied
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by the spacious palace and the soaring cathedral, and the citizens
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||
had Just tucked their dark little homes into such odd corners as
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God and the king did not require. Sixty years ago the French booted
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their last monarch across the frontier, and now, it seem some of
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them have so far forgotten religion that they have to ask
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foreigners the name of a church for which America would probably
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pay a billion dollars.
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Few countries have advanced as rapidly as France, which is one
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of the least sentimental and most logical of nations, but we have
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||
all advanced so far that one-half of our life is anachronistic to
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the other half. The exemption of churches from taxation is one of
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the worst anachronisms. It meant originally that the church was a
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state within the state, having its own law and deciding itself when
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and in what measure it might, in times of pressure; contribute to
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the public treasury. When this arrogant claim was disallowed,
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church property still evaded taxation on the ground that it served
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a high public purpose, like, charitable or educational
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institutions, which were then entirely voluntary, and it ought
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||
therefore, to have at least this subsidy of an exemption from
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taxation. There was no need in those days to inquire very closely
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into the soundness of the public service. Practically the whole
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community used the churches and, if a tax were imposed on them, the
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community would have to pay it. The church was exempt on pretty
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much the same grounds as the civic hall. It was like transferring
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your money from one pocket to another. Now considerably less than
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half the adults of any Community use the churches, and the last
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argument for exempting them from taxation is quite discredited.
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1
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WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
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RICH AND EMPTY CHURCHES
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Church property in the United States is said to be worth about
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four billion dollars, and it is increasing rapidly in value. Drive
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round the fringes of any growing town or City and see how eligible
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sites have been secured for the building of new churches; how old
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sites that have risen ten or twenty fold in value are quietly sold;
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how the clergy can hang on to city sites until the value is
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colossal, while any other concern doing so little business would
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have been driven out long ago by the fair incidence of taxation. In
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the inner ring of large cities there are churches with fifty or a
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hundred worshipers while business men pay appalling prices for the
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land all around them. And the majority of us are supinely
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protecting the business. Of the majority of church-users the great
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bulk are women and children, and of the genuinely religious male
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taxpayers the enormous majority live in the country or small towns.
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We do not much miss the taxes on their Little Bethels. The
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anachronism is that city property of immense value is used by only
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about a tenth of the taxpayers of this city, yet the nine-tenths
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lazily subsidize it by remitting taxation. Even business men seem
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never to reflect that in remitting, say, a million dollars in
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taxation on buildings which nine-tenths of them do not want they
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are paying out of their own pockets a million dollars a year to the
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people who do want them.
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Sometimes they tell us with an air of sweet reasonableness
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that the churches are "doing good work" and that, after all, the
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individual misses only a few dollars a year by agreeing to the
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immunity. It is sheer mental laziness. If we taxed the churches,
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and they then appealed to these non-churchgoers who appreciate
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their good work to find the tax for them, probably none would
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contribute a dollar. There would be a speedy revaluation of the
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services of the churches. Take Paris. The total church-going
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population is only about one-tenth of the entire community, and it
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consists mainly of women and children. Now, no matter how much we
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may admire the French woman, she is more rigorously excluded from
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public life than woman is in any other advanced civilization. Yet
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these men, nineteen of twenty of whom are not in the slightest
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degree influenced by the churches, have, most particularly since
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they ceased to go to church, purified the city of the last traces
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of its ancient savagery. It is, proportionately, the law of the
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world. There are two sets of men whom we would like to see
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influenced, and we would not mind paying a few dollars for the
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influence. They are the dishonest hypocrites and the honest
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criminals. The churches flatly refuse to influence the first and
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are quite incapable of touching the second class.
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SWEEP OUT MENTAL RUBBISH
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Amongst my many eccentric and utopian ideas there is one that
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calls for a sort of mental sanitary service in a modern city. I
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loathe the idea of compulsory education after the age of twenty,
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yet in some form we ought to have a public service that will sweep
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and dust our minds periodically and provide a very large
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incinerator for the rubbish. Even the most cleanly-minded of us
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occasionally. discover that we have for years harbored a piece of
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mental junk. There lies on my desk, as I am writing, a little work
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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2
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WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
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on the Stoics by that very distinguished Hellenist, well-known
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skeptic, and most nimble-minded and charming of men, Prof. Gilbert
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Murray, and I open it to see if I can find any nonsense. Here it is
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at once. Murray likens the Stoic "God' to a "Friend behind
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phenomena," and he Says that we all have a "yearning" for this and
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an "almost ineradicable instinctive convietton" of its existence.
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I doubt if one man in a hundred who got beyond what one might call
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the convalescent stage after recovering from religion has the least
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trace of such a yearning and conviction. Murray is no man in the
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street but a very distinguished scholar of particularly alert mind
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and acquaintance with men. One can imagine how easily less clear-
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headed men will let these illusions accumulate in their minds,
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especially in connection with religion.
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We cannot, of course, get my intellectual sanitary service,
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and so those of us who feel impatient about it must do the sweating
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and dusting as we can. And one of the best and most promising
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||
opportunities ought to be a public discussion of the immunity of
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the churches from taxation. How many of us -- I do hot mean by "us"
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the militant and vigilant folk who read the Haldeman-Julius
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Publications, but modern men generally -- genuinely regard the
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black-coated gentleman we meet in the street as so valuable a
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person that we will pay his taxes for him? Very few, surely. Some
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of us, it is true, listen to the periodical Bolshevik scare and
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persuade ourselves that all chance of making a million dollars will
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disappear with the church steeples, but it is a poor fallacy. My
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Bolshevik friends, and they are numerous, are the last persons in
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the world to listen to sermons, and any stockbroker who sends a
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hundred dollars to the nearest church with the idea that he is
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protecting Wall Street ought to sit down and think a little. A
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Preacher in Fifth Avenue, where the danger of the spread of
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Bolshevism is not acute, can most eloquently vindicate our present
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economic order. But a preacher in a district where the workers show
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some inclination to listen to radicalism either does not open his
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mouth or he proves that Jesus was the forerunner of Lenin.
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PRIVATE INSTITUTIONS
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We ask people only to use common sense. The churches are today
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private institutions in which certain people say prayers and sing
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hymns and listen to dissertations on sin. It is a free country, and
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even the Communist or the Fascist does not want to prevent them.
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But why in the name of all that is wonderful should the rest of us
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pay them some $200,000,000 a year for doing it? A moderate tax on
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church property would raise that, so we are meantime funding it
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ourselves. You may suggest that it is not very onerous for us
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individually, but that is not the issue. The burden we bear is a
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just charge of intellectual laziness, of docility to usurpers, of
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a confusion of thought which, if we generally tolerated it, would
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wreck our homes or businesses in six months. We smile at the ladies
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who put on an extra foot of frock because some hidden mandarins of
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fashion say that this is now "the thing." Most of us men are just
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as bad. If it is the fashion to exempt churches from taxation we
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acquiesce without even inquiring what the real motives or who the
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real dictators are.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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3
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WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
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To many of us, of course, a rigorous campaign for the taxation
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of church property would mean immeasurably more than a financial
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readjustment, just as the present immunity of the churches means to
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them immeasurably more than the two hundred million dollars at
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which the product of a tax is estimated. The immunity means that
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they have state-sanction, which is supposed to be the sanction of
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everybody except a few cranks, for their profession of rendering
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valuable services. A very long stride will be taken in the
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direction of rationalizing the country when we remove this public
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endorsement of the claims of the churches. I do not suggest that
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there will be a serious diminution of worshipers in a chapel when
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they are told from the pulpit that in future they have to find a
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new fund of a thousand dollars or so, but we shall meet them on
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more equal terms, as one body of citizens differing from another.
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The chief thing that prevents me from lapsing into that comfortable
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mental sleepiness to which a man of my age is entitled, is the
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||
stimulation of fighting the prosperity of humbugs, the way in which
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the clergy and the aristocracy and all sorts of people with
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improper privileges seem to smile at me. I dream occasionally, as
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||
I smoke my last four pipes at night, of forming a League of Youths,
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a Thundering Legion of young folk who will go out into the streets
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with me looking for lies to scotch, for usurpers to dethrone, for
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hypocrites to unmask, for injustices to set right...
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MAKE THIS A REAL FIGHT
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Dreams, of course, I am always dreaming. But it seems that my
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energetic friend and colleague Haldeman-Julius is going to do
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||
something of the kind and to begin with this valuable campaign to
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||
rouse the nation to some sense of this absurd and anachronistic
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immunity of church property. Let me urge those many readers whom I
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have found in America not merely to support him but to make it a
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real and live campaign. Never mind the size and wealth of the
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churches, Never mind, the contrast between the forty million
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perfectly drilled and organized and doped churchgoers and the sad
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||
disorganization and scattering of the eighty million non-
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churchgoers. Talk about it. Make people read about it. Teach people
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||
the joy of fighting, of being a personality, of raising one's head
|
||
above the stream. It is as good an issue as any to start with, and
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||
sooner or later the start has to be made. Get young folk to blot
|
||
out of their Birthday Books that pernicious maxim: Great is Truth
|
||
and it will prevail, Great is the average man -- if you can
|
||
persuade him to make a great nuisance of himself. A reader of my
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||
Little Blue Books wrote to tell me how he propped one against the
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||
cruet at his lunch-shop day after day, and how religious folk who
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||
recognize those mischievous little explosives at twenty yards'
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||
distance got the manager to ask him to go to some place of which I
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||
forget the name. That's the spirit. My milkman asked my housekeeper
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||
the other day on what subject I am writing at present. "On God,"
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||
she said, "and he guesses he'll knock him off his perch." The good
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||
news spread in the dairy world. The girl at the circulating library
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||
...
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||
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||
In short, quite ordinary folk can, if they just know when to
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||
be quiet and when to be noisy, when to be Polite and when to curse,
|
||
but to keep on doing whichever is advisable, help the world along.
|
||
The work depends more and more on such folk. Societies and leagues
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||
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
4
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
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and associations either prosper and fatally degenerate, like some
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on Which I have wasted decades, or reach too small a number. I
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suggest that readers of the Haldeman-Julius Publications try the
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||
experiment of making this a live campaign. Do not expect to convert
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Mr. Hoover in the first month. That is not the Point. The idea is
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that here is a chance of rousing great numbers of people to a sense
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of one foolish anachronism that we tolerate in connection with
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religion, and it will reverberate in the mind and make people
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||
perceive a dozen others. Get out the figures, if you can, for your
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||
own town. Look up the churches with hundred-thousand-dollar sites
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and a hundred worshippers. let the press know that there are live
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||
men and women reading it as well as Rip Van Winkles. Make editors
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||
realize that in the majority of towns today the majority of readers
|
||
do not go to church and do not really care a cent about the work of
|
||
the churches. it might load to the disappearance of those Saturday
|
||
and Sunday features that linger from the days when America was a
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||
Christian country, to a bolder note about encroachments on our
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||
liberties, to real news about the thought-currents of the modern
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||
world. Editors know quite well that the bulk of people are not
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||
seriously interested today in church work, at least in any town
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that is more than a mile in diameter, but they have to listen to
|
||
the noisy folk. Let them have a noise. Blessed are the peace-makers
|
||
for of such is the kingdom of heaven. Let them have it. Say rather:
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Blessed are the fight-makers, for they shall possess the earth.
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||
|
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A CAMPAIGN OF SANITY
|
||
|
||
Seriously, a lively, rousing, country-wide discussion, the
|
||
sort of discussion that makes the editor of a daily call for a
|
||
symposium and the editor of a weekly or monthly wire off for the
|
||
opinion on the matter of Babe Ruth, Clara Bow, and Calvin Coolidge,
|
||
would be a good opening for a new campaign on behalf of sanity. The
|
||
pretext that we want to tax the house of God is hardly like to be
|
||
raised. It might provoke the Catholic to tell the Protestant, and
|
||
vice versa, what precisely he thinks of his preposterous claim that
|
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God is in his church. The only argument that can plausibly be
|
||
raised against taxation is that the Churches do so much good that
|
||
civilization depends upon their exertions. Have Your machine-guns
|
||
ready for that. It is just the sort of plea we should like them to
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||
set up. A good broadside of facts from history and about the
|
||
relation of modern progress and decay of religion, would open the
|
||
eyes of large bodies of readers whom we cannot ordinarily lure into
|
||
reading truthful statements. I wish I were in it, but a mere
|
||
foreigner could be bluffed into silence -- especially such a small
|
||
and modest foreigner -- and here in England the organizations that
|
||
ought to start a fight have dwindled into mutual admiration
|
||
societies and refuges for homeless mystics.
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||
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||
Many will, no doubt, have recourse to the plausible cry that
|
||
we are stirring up sectarian strife. Do they mean that only
|
||
political strife is to be permitted in a prosperous community? Or
|
||
do they mean that dervishes shall be encouraged to roam the country
|
||
with frantic denunciations of science, and professors encouraged to
|
||
encourage them by prostituting their learning, and the rest of us
|
||
hold our tongues? Or do they mean that the only subject on which
|
||
people cannot behave themselves when they begin to dispute about it
|
||
is religion? We people who seriously hold that religion has nothing
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
5
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
|
||
to do with the progress or maintenance of civilization are very
|
||
numerous today. But no one talked of sectarian bitterness and civic
|
||
strife when, quite recently, we were, apropos of the imaginary
|
||
atrocities in Russia, denounced violently from Boston to San
|
||
Francisco. Certainly we should smile if anybody suggests that we
|
||
must not mention a tax on churches for fear of stirring up
|
||
sectarian strife. On the contrary, we should see such sectarian
|
||
amity as has never before been seen on this planet. We should
|
||
probably see the Archbishop of Baltimore arm in arm with the
|
||
Fundamentalist leader, Bishop Manning linked with Aimee, leading a
|
||
great procession along Michigan Boulevard, and calling for the
|
||
lightning of the Lord upon these ruffianly people who want to make
|
||
them pay their own taxes.
|
||
|
||
That is all that it amounts to. That particular ten million
|
||
dollars that the churches of the city would yield if they were
|
||
taxed is paid at present by the citizens, most of whom profit
|
||
neither directly nor indirectly in the work of the churches. The
|
||
threat might even drive them into making themselves useful. They
|
||
might cease to talk for a time about our wills and have a look at
|
||
our crimes. They might discover that it is not entirely
|
||
inconsistent with the principles of the Christian Church that its
|
||
ministers should unite to rid a city of its gunmen and dishonest
|
||
officials instead of talking picturesquely about them in the
|
||
pulpit. I see an endless prospect of good results. ... But I see
|
||
most clearly of all that this is a transparently just and sound
|
||
plea, one that could unite millions of men and women, one that can
|
||
enlist the sympathies of practical people, yet one that would be an
|
||
excellent beginning of teaching a nation to think seriously on the
|
||
new conditions of our age.
|
||
|
||
OUR COMPLETE PROGRAM AGAINST CLERICALISM
|
||
|
||
1. We demand the taxation of ALL Church property.
|
||
|
||
2. We demand that church lobbying be resisted by free men as
|
||
one of the major evils that threaten the principles of secular
|
||
freedom, human rights and realistic Progress in government.
|
||
|
||
3. We demand that the Bible be kept out of the public schools
|
||
and that the public schools shall not join in any scheme of
|
||
religious propaganda.
|
||
|
||
4. We demand the complete rejection of the principle of
|
||
Christian morality -- religious dogma and doctrine -- in the making
|
||
of our laws, with special reference to the religiously inspired
|
||
intolerance of our laws concerning sex and censorship.
|
||
|
||
5. We demand the repeal of all anti-evolution laws and the
|
||
vigilant prevention of all attempts by clericalism to dictate, even
|
||
though under the treacherous guise of "democracy," the course of
|
||
teaching in our state schools and universities.
|
||
|
||
6. We demand the repeal of blue Sunday laws, and the absolute
|
||
rejection by government of the dogma that this day is sacred or
|
||
that it is to be dominated by preachers and pious zealots.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
|
||
7. We demand the repeal of all blasphemy laws and all laws
|
||
prohibiting Atheists from testifying in court or from holding
|
||
public office.
|
||
|
||
8. We demand that government shall cease the employment of
|
||
chaplains in the national congress, in the state legislature. and
|
||
in state institutions.
|
||
|
||
9. We demand that government shall strictly refuse financial
|
||
aid to sectarian, religious institutions -- whether schools,
|
||
hospitals or whatnot -- and that religion, in all its enterprises,
|
||
shall pay its own way.
|
||
|
||
10. We demand the ending of all favoritism to religion or
|
||
recognition of religion by government -- that is, we demand the
|
||
complete secularization of government both in form and function.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
A PREACHER ADVOCATES CHURCH
|
||
TAXATION
|
||
|
||
THE Rev. L.M. Birkhead
|
||
|
||
(Minister, All Souls' Unitarian Church, Kansas City, mo.)
|
||
|
||
One of the most amazing and paradoxical of modern Political
|
||
situations is that of the United States committed fundamentally to
|
||
the absolute divorce of church and state, and yet contributing
|
||
indirectly, by means of the exemption of church property from
|
||
taxation, more than $250,000,000 annually to the support of the
|
||
church.
|
||
|
||
Theoretically in America we maintain that the aim of taxation
|
||
is "to secure the equal distribution of the burden of civil
|
||
society." Theoretically we maintain that our government is founded
|
||
on the principle of the separation of church and state. The
|
||
fundamental law of the land states explicitly that "Congress shall
|
||
make no laws respecting an establishment of religion, or
|
||
prohibiting the free exercise thereof." But it is pure hypocrisy to
|
||
maintain that we carry out these principles in practice. The
|
||
exemption of church property from taxation is a plain denial of
|
||
these principles.
|
||
|
||
And Incidentally we might mention many other evidences of a
|
||
too close connection between Christianity and government in
|
||
America, as, for instance, the employment of chaplains in
|
||
legislative bodies, in the army, and in other government
|
||
institutions, the appropriation of public money for charitable and
|
||
educational institutions of a sectarian character, the compulsory
|
||
reading of the Christian Bible in the public schools of a number of
|
||
states, the appointment of religious festivals and holidays by the
|
||
President of the United States and governors of the various states,
|
||
laws compelling the keeping of Sunday as the Sabbath, and many
|
||
other such regulations.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
|
||
It is claimed for the church that it ought to be exempt from
|
||
taxation because of the, valuable social service which it renders
|
||
to human suffering. It is well just to keep in mind two facts:
|
||
first, that very few churches are actually engaged in ministering
|
||
to the poor (other agencies render such services much more
|
||
efficiently), and, second, that the churches so engaged never do so
|
||
from the highest motives; they are always thinking of winning
|
||
supporters and members.
|
||
|
||
But granting that the church is a useful institution, " if you
|
||
were to exempt that which is useful," to quote the wisdom of
|
||
Ingersoll, "You would exempt every trade and every profession." Or,
|
||
to use the words of James F. Morton, Jr., In his recent book
|
||
'Exempting the Churches,' "Our great philanthropists, scientists,
|
||
inventors, and educators are not exempt from taxation on the ground
|
||
of the great good they are doing."
|
||
|
||
The church contributes services to the state as a police power
|
||
more valuable than the mere pittance it might pay on its tax exempt
|
||
property, the friends of religion claim. But does it? I ask this
|
||
question in all sincerity. It may be there was a time when people
|
||
could be frightened into being good by the fear of hell. It may be
|
||
that Voltaire was right in his day when he said that he didn't
|
||
believe in hell, but he wanted his servants to believe in It. But
|
||
that time is gone, for hell has been abolished and the church has
|
||
lost its power (if it ever possessed it) to keep "bad people" in
|
||
order. It is illuminating in this connection to read the statistics
|
||
with respect to the religion of criminals confined in our
|
||
penitentiaries.
|
||
|
||
To tax church property would put many churches out of
|
||
existence, the defenders of the exemption of church property say.
|
||
If an organization cannot pay its way, if it hasn't members and
|
||
friends who believe in it sufficiently to support it, why should
|
||
those of us who do not believe in it at all, who believe, in fact,
|
||
that it is a vicious, superstitious institution, be compelled to
|
||
support it?
|
||
|
||
We all agree that there may be some excuse for exempting
|
||
schools, orphanages, and hospitals from taxation, for they are
|
||
performing functions the state would be obliged to perform. But
|
||
religion is another matter -- a very personal and private matter
|
||
which is no affair of the state.
|
||
|
||
It cannot be said too frequently to the American people that
|
||
religion is a strictly private affair, and that it is never the
|
||
duty of the state to interest itself in either the life or death of
|
||
the church. The church is not a public institution in the sense
|
||
that it performs any duties which the state would have to perform
|
||
in the absence of the church,
|
||
|
||
To tax church property is "robbery of God," we are told by the
|
||
defenders of the faith. But which God? The Methodist, Baptist,
|
||
Catholic, or Jewish, Fundamentalist, or Modernist?
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
|
||
Since the churches are subsidized by the whole community -- by
|
||
means of tax exemption -- one would suppose that they would be
|
||
community institutions. But such is not the case -- they are very
|
||
exclusive and are quick to deny their privileges to the public
|
||
except upon very exacting conditions.
|
||
|
||
It is rather illuminating to note that, though all of the
|
||
states of the Union exempt church property. from taxation, there is
|
||
expressed in the legislation (pertaining to this matter of church
|
||
property) in many states a suspicion that religions institutions
|
||
might speculate in land or might use their buildings and property
|
||
for profit in the name of religion.
|
||
|
||
in many states, limitations are placed upon the amount of
|
||
church property which can be exempted from taxation. In some
|
||
states, churches are limited to one acre (on which exemption can be
|
||
claimed) within the city, and to five acres a mile or more from the
|
||
city,
|
||
|
||
In the state of New Hampshire, the amount of church property
|
||
exempt from taxation is limited to $150,000. In Iowa, church land
|
||
is exempt up to, but not exceeding, 160 acres; in North Dakota, the
|
||
limit is one acre. In Missouri, the exemption is restricted to one
|
||
acre within the municipality or within one mile of the
|
||
municipality, and to five acres if one or more miles from the
|
||
municipality. In Kansas, exemption applies only to buildings used
|
||
exclusively for religious purposes and "grounds not to exceed 10
|
||
acres." Montana places the exemption of church property on the
|
||
following basis: "Such property as is used exclusively as places of
|
||
actual religious worship, but no more than is necessary for such
|
||
purposes."
|
||
|
||
The state of Washington exempts all churches, built and
|
||
supported by donations, whose seats are free, and ground not
|
||
exceeding 120 feet by 200 feet, together with parsonage. and "the
|
||
area of unoccupied ground exempted in connection with both church
|
||
and parsonage shall not exceed 120 feet by 120 feet and the grounds
|
||
are to be used wholly for religious purposes."
|
||
|
||
Some of the states place no limit on the property exempted if
|
||
the property is used exclusively for religious purposes. The
|
||
statutes in such states read; "all buildings and grounds, when used
|
||
solely and exclusively for religious purposes," or "when not used
|
||
for profit," or "when not held by way of investment."
|
||
|
||
It would be interesting to investigate the enforcement of
|
||
these statutes, to discover, if possible, how law-abiding church
|
||
organizations (so loud in their defense of the 18th Amendment and
|
||
the Volstead Act) really are. I dare say that it would be very easy
|
||
to find many instances of religious organizations exceeding the
|
||
limit of church property exempt or evading taxes on property used
|
||
for other than religious purposes,
|
||
|
||
What one of our leading weekly magazines called "saintly
|
||
profiteering" is quite common among religious organizations. Look
|
||
at New York City, for instance, where more than $500,000,000 worth
|
||
of church property is exempt from taxation! The Madison Avenue
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
|
||
Methodist Episcopal Church of New York City recently made $650,000
|
||
profit by selling its church property for an apartment house site.
|
||
A Jewish synagogue, Temple Emanu.El, made $1,000,000 clear from the
|
||
sale of its property a few years ago. St. Patrick's Cathedral, New
|
||
York City, is said to be located on property worth $10,000,000. The
|
||
fabulous wealth of Trinity Church, located at the head of Wall
|
||
Street, is familiar to everyone. But New York is not the only city
|
||
where such conditions prevail, though its case is extreme. There
|
||
is, for instance, the case of a great midwestern religious
|
||
organization which recently won from the Federal government the
|
||
right to have its income exempt from taxation -- and the income
|
||
involved in this contest with the government amounted to several
|
||
million dollars. I refer to the Unity society of Practical
|
||
Christianity with International headquarters in Kansas City, Mo.
|
||
|
||
A commission on taxation reported to Governor Pinchot of
|
||
Pennsylvania a few years ago that in the city of Philadelphia,
|
||
14.77 percent of the total property was exempt from taxation, and
|
||
of this 14.25: percent consisted of churches, parochial schools,
|
||
and buildings for teachers of parochial schools. The commission
|
||
reported that it was convinced that this condition constitutes a
|
||
subtle and dangerous form of securing a state subsidy for religious
|
||
institutions. "However commendable the purposes of these
|
||
institutions may be," the committee recorded, "it is nevertheless
|
||
a fact that the rapid increase in welfare facilities and the
|
||
generous donations to welfare work are gradually creating a non-
|
||
taxed class of property which is increasing more rapidly than the
|
||
wealth of the community, thereby forcing additional tax burdens
|
||
upon the taxable wealth to an unfair degree."
|
||
|
||
The commission recommended, therefore, that religious and
|
||
charitable institutions be required to pay taxes on their land
|
||
values, leaving improvements exempt.
|
||
|
||
Very few of our political leaders have ever had the courage to
|
||
speak out on this matter of taxing church property. Be it said to
|
||
the glory of General Ulysses S. Grant that while he was President
|
||
he gave expression to prophetic wisdom in the following words
|
||
contained in a message to Congress (in 1875):
|
||
|
||
I would call your attention to the importance of
|
||
correcting an evil, that if permitted to continue, will
|
||
probably lead to great trouble in our land before the close of
|
||
the nineteenth century. It is the acquisition of vast amounts
|
||
of untaxed church property. In 1850, I believe, the church
|
||
property of the United states which paid no taxes, municipal
|
||
or state, amounted to $87,000,000. in 1860 the amount had
|
||
doubled. In 1870 it was $354,483,587. BY 1900, without a
|
||
check, it is safe to say, this property will reach a sum
|
||
exceeding $3,000,000,000. So vast a sum, receiving all the
|
||
protection and benefits of a government, without bearing its
|
||
proportion of the burdens and expenses of the same, will not
|
||
be looked upon acquiescently by those who have to pay the
|
||
taxes. In a growing country, where real estate enhances so
|
||
rapidly with time, as in the United States, there is scarcely
|
||
a limit to the wealth that may be acquired by Corporations,
|
||
religious or otherwise, If allowed to retain real estate
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
|
||
without taxation. The contemplation of so vast a property as
|
||
here alluded to, without taxation, may lead to sequestration.
|
||
without constitutional authority, and through blood. I would
|
||
suggest the taxation of all property equally.
|
||
|
||
It would be almost impossible to get any sort of a political,
|
||
intellectual or social leader of today to speak with such boldness
|
||
concerning the church and its failings.
|
||
|
||
"One of the clearest and most audacious of the few recent
|
||
utterances on the taxation of church property has been made by
|
||
Professor Harry Elmor Barnes in his 'The Twilight of Christianity.'
|
||
If he is not severely punished by the church for so forthright a
|
||
condemnation of the church, then I am no prophet. Barnes wrote:
|
||
|
||
One aspect of the economics of religion is the economic
|
||
waste connected with the maintenance of ecclesiastical
|
||
edifices and their operation. One could conceive of a type of
|
||
religion for which large expenditures would be economically
|
||
justifiable on the ground that the churches were rendering a
|
||
very valuable social, economic and ethical service to the
|
||
community, but the activities of orthodox churches in America
|
||
must be regarded as rather worse than useless.
|
||
|
||
The hypothetical adjustment of man to an imaginary
|
||
supernatural world and the salvation of mankind from a non-
|
||
existent hell cannot be regarded as a service of any merit
|
||
whatever. The churches may incidentally offer some relief to
|
||
the poor, but it is a moot question as to whether, in the long
|
||
run, this sort of charity is not socially disastrous.
|
||
|
||
By 1926, the annual expenditures of religious
|
||
organizations in America for salaries, repairs. payments on
|
||
debts and benevolence were $814,370,000. To this sum should be
|
||
added large donations to the cause of foreign missions. The
|
||
writer of these lines is well known to be a person of pacifist
|
||
leanings who earnestly deplores our present excessive
|
||
expenditures for modern armaments, but it is certainly more
|
||
justifiable to expend large sums of money to protect ourselves
|
||
against potential earthly enemies, than to appropriate
|
||
infinitely greater amounts to protect ourselves from wholly
|
||
imaginary enemies in the postulated spirit world. We may be in
|
||
no danger from Japan or Great Britain, but they certainly
|
||
menace us more than the devil.
|
||
|
||
In 1926, the value of church edifices was $3,842,500,000.
|
||
These are free from taxation, though they benefit by all sorts
|
||
of public expenditures such as fire protection, transportation
|
||
facilities, police protection and the like. Probably no other
|
||
step would be allowed with such definite practical
|
||
consequences as the reasonable taxation of church property.
|
||
|
||
In addition to the churches, we must consider the
|
||
parochial schools which are maintained at great expense by the
|
||
faithful, though in many cases parents can ill-afford to make
|
||
the necessary contributions.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
|
||
The annual expenditures in America today for this purpose
|
||
of adjusting Americans to supernatural powers certainly total
|
||
far more than a billion dollars. One can scarcely refrain from
|
||
remarking upon what might be done with this money if wisely
|
||
and directly expended for the secular betterment of mankind,
|
||
or even used to support modernized religious cults and
|
||
organizations whose aims are chiefly related to social
|
||
improvement and aesthetic appreciation.
|
||
|
||
The present economic status of the American Church -- rightly
|
||
characterized as "a tax-dodging and tax-eating institution" --
|
||
defies the courage and sagacity of liberals. As liberals --
|
||
theists, atheists, agnostics, humanists -- we are contributing to
|
||
the support of religious institutions which are founded upon
|
||
superstition and whose influence is vicious. This is certainly a
|
||
violation of the fundamental human liberties and decencies. By no
|
||
sort of sophistry can we establish any significant difference
|
||
between appropriating money for a sect and relieving it of
|
||
taxation. The church at present is enjoying a form of legalized
|
||
graft, for it is in no sense rendering a service equal to the
|
||
benefits it enjoys under our liberal laws. The separation of church
|
||
and state is, so far, merely theoretical. The church is subsidized
|
||
to the extent of more than $250,000,000 annually by relief from
|
||
taxation. Its property has increased in value until today it totals
|
||
more than $6,000,000,000, though some conservative students put the
|
||
figure at $4 000,000,000.
|
||
|
||
If the church hasn't the decency to come forward and confess
|
||
that it has been enjoying special privileges which it did not
|
||
deserve, and voluntarily give up these privileges, have we liberals
|
||
the courage to say that the church's abuses of our liberties must
|
||
cease? And have we the boldness and skill to put the church in its
|
||
proper place?
|
||
|
||
This is one of the most challenging labors confronting
|
||
liberals today.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
WHY CHURCHES ARE EXEMPTED FROM
|
||
TAXATION
|
||
|
||
A WEIRD LIST OF THE "USEFUL PUBLIC SERVICES"
|
||
PERFORMED BY THE TEMPLES OF SUPERSTITION
|
||
|
||
PRESBYTERIAN -- Exempted from taxation for "useful public
|
||
service" of teaching the doctrine that God in the mystic beginning
|
||
of things settled the destination of each human being, scheduling
|
||
some of them inevitably to heaven and most of them unescapably to
|
||
hell.
|
||
|
||
METHODIST -- Exempted from taxation for the "useful public
|
||
service" of teaching that all men are sinners, that Jesus Christ
|
||
died to Save from sin all men who believe in the Said Christ, that
|
||
such believers are "made new creatures in Jesus Christ" and thus,
|
||
according to the rule that things which mean nothing are equal to
|
||
anything else, are "adopted as the children of God."
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
|
||
BAPTIST -- Exempted from taxation for the "useful public
|
||
service" of teaching that baptism by means of total ducking is the
|
||
only device by which men can keep out of hell.
|
||
|
||
CAMPBELLITE (Disciples of Christ) -- Exempted from taxation
|
||
for the "useful public service" of teaching that "while both Old
|
||
and New Testaments are equally inspired, both are not equally
|
||
binding upon Christians;" that "the old was God's will with
|
||
reference to the Jews, the New is his will with reference to
|
||
Christians."
|
||
|
||
JEWISH -- Exempted from taxation for the "useful public
|
||
service" of teaching that the Old Testament is the only part of the
|
||
Bible that is the authentic word of God, that the true Christ is
|
||
yet to come, and that Jews alone are "the chosen people" of God.
|
||
|
||
CATHOLIC -- Exempted from taxation for the "useful public
|
||
service" of teaching that priests can grant confession and
|
||
absolution of sins, that the sacramental wine and wafers are
|
||
magically turned into the blood and flesh of Christ, and that the
|
||
Pope is the supreme official representative of God.
|
||
|
||
LUTHERAN -- Exempted from taxation for the "useful public
|
||
service" of teaching that the miraculous Christ of the New
|
||
Testament explains all the problems of man -- "creation, man,
|
||
faith, the Word of God, the sacraments, prayer, the Church, the law
|
||
and the gospel, sin and grace."
|
||
|
||
EPISCOPAL -- Exempted from taxation for the "useful public
|
||
service" of teaching that the Nicene Creed, formulated by the early
|
||
Christian fanatics centuries before the modern age of science and
|
||
culture, is "the sufficient statement of the Christian faith" and
|
||
an explanation of the sacred mystery of mystical hocus-pocus; and
|
||
that great "spiritual" value flows in a sly and imperceptible
|
||
manner from "the two sacraments -- baptism and the supper of the
|
||
Lord -- ministered with unfailing use of Christ's words of
|
||
institution and of the elements ordained by Him. ..."
|
||
|
||
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE -- Exempted from taxation for the "useful
|
||
public service" of teaching that the material world is an illusion,
|
||
that mind (completely divorced from reality) is the only reality,
|
||
and that all minds are in mortal error that do not agree with the
|
||
extravagant effusions from the mind of old "Mother" Eddy.
|
||
|
||
The other churches -- countless, disputatious, futile and
|
||
intellectually obscure -- perform "public services" that are
|
||
equally "useful." intelligent Men and women should ask themselves
|
||
whether the dissemination of these foolish rags and tags of ancient
|
||
theology is entitled to the special sanction, favoritism and
|
||
amazing tax exemption granted by the state.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
|
||
THE CHURCH IS A BURDEN,
|
||
NOT A BENEFIT, IN SOCIAL LIFE
|
||
by
|
||
E. Haldeman-Julius
|
||
|
||
I have no doubt that many persons -- a minority but a
|
||
zealously vociferous group -- would have so little feeling of humor
|
||
and anachronism as to claim that churches should be exempted from
|
||
taxation because they are "houses of God." It does seem that it
|
||
would be hard on a God, if any God there were, to learn a different
|
||
set of manners, beliefs and tricks in each of his denominational
|
||
"houses." But this "house of God" claim is not the reason generally
|
||
alleged for church tax exemption. The average man or woman, making
|
||
pretensions to intelligence and fairmindedness, would say that the
|
||
churches should be free from the obligation of taxes because they
|
||
have a communal usefulness of a moral and enlightening and refining
|
||
nature. Churches, these apologists would argue, have a vital place
|
||
in the social fabric and help hold men together in the texture of
|
||
civilized ethics and behavior.
|
||
|
||
This claim on behalf of the churches is not really a thin
|
||
shade of a degree better than the claim of supernaturalism. It may
|
||
have an appearance or an intention of reason, but it is easily seen
|
||
to be untenable. We have only to inquire, with specific
|
||
seriousness, what the church (taking it in general as to the
|
||
institution of religion) contributes or has ever contributed to
|
||
civilization. In what field of life, for example, does the church
|
||
usefully instruct or guide men?
|
||
|
||
It is not necessary to have a broad understanding of history
|
||
to realize that the church is the foe of knowledge. One realizes
|
||
this intellectual obscurantism and tyranny of the church more
|
||
vividly when one sees it against the background of dramatic
|
||
centuries; but, history aside, one can See this church antagonism
|
||
to knowledge operating today. The attacks upon the teaching of
|
||
evolution, culminating in several states in laws forbidding this
|
||
scientific instruction, show very clearly what the church thinks of
|
||
knowledge: it thinks that knowledge is very bad for religion and,
|
||
therefore, it sets all possible obstacles in the way of knowledge.
|
||
An uproar such as that occasioned by the sex questionnaire at the
|
||
University of Missouri reveals the hand of the church and the
|
||
influence of narrow church morality striking against the modern
|
||
scientific effort to learn soundly and sanely the art of living.
|
||
The church is compelled to compromise a good deal with the modern
|
||
spirit; but, given half an opportunity, it springs forth as the
|
||
enemy of culture.
|
||
|
||
It would be impossible for any one to maintain with any show
|
||
of plausibility that the church is beneficial in the broader
|
||
cultural life of mankind. Whatever subject the church touches, that
|
||
subject the church inevitably obscures and corrupts and reduces to
|
||
nonsense. Concerning science, concerning history, concerning
|
||
ethics, concerning literature, concerning the affairs of government
|
||
-- in one field and in all fields, the church is engaged in the
|
||
promotion or the artificial bolstering up of decadent, empty,
|
||
luridly false notions. In every branch of learning, our gains have
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
|
||
been made through secular agencies; and, naturally, this has been
|
||
so, for the church has never been interested in the development of
|
||
knowledge, regarding (in this showing its shrewdness of self-
|
||
interest, at least) the spread of culture and free thought and
|
||
realistic curiosity as unfavorable to the purposes of the church.
|
||
|
||
As a moral influence, the church has been notoriously lacking
|
||
and indeed marred with definite viciousness and error. It has
|
||
supported all the social evils (monarchy, slavery, intolerance, the
|
||
oppression of women, and the like) that shame the record of man --
|
||
and some of these evils the church has not merely supported but has
|
||
inaugurated: the appalling slaughter and vileness of bigotry and
|
||
the punishment of heretics must, as a red-splashed feature, be laid
|
||
at the door of the church. The moral notions of the church have
|
||
been at once brash and puerile. Ethics, in the view and preachment
|
||
of the church, have been subordinated to theology. No institution
|
||
has done less good and more harm in the moral sphere than has the
|
||
church. The student of history cannot avoid the conclusion that,
|
||
had it not been for the distorting influence of the church, mankind
|
||
would today be immeasurably farther advanced along the Path of a
|
||
progressive, humane, intelligent code of behavior. The church's
|
||
pronouncements on morality have always been corrupted (that is to
|
||
say, weakened and broken and rendered futile) by its refusal to
|
||
understand that morality is solely a consideration of human, social
|
||
adjustments and is, from first to last, a worldly concern. The
|
||
church's preoccupation with "sin" has disabled it from approaching
|
||
moral questions sensibly.
|
||
|
||
The church has contributed nothing to civilization. It has
|
||
progressed somewhat, and it has become a little more decent, in
|
||
reflection of the movements of civilization that have taken place
|
||
outside of the church and usually in the face of the strong
|
||
opposition of the church. But the church has always resisted the
|
||
process of civilization. It has struggled to the last ditch, by
|
||
fair means and foul, to preserve as long as it could the vestiges
|
||
of ancient and medieval theology, with all the puerile moralities
|
||
and harsh customs and medieval styles of belief.
|
||
|
||
Our gains in culture, in humanity, in social law, in
|
||
scientific achievement -- in all the practical and in all the
|
||
gentler sides of life -- have been impressively due to the efforts
|
||
of secular thinkers and workers laboring outside the church. The
|
||
church hasn't led in civilization. It has always lagged behind the
|
||
march of civilization. It has been a burden to mankind. It is a
|
||
burden today, so that to speak of its social usefulness is to
|
||
express notoriously the opposite of the truth.
|
||
|
||
There is no valid, not even a faintly plausible basis, for any
|
||
sort of claim in defense of the exemption of churches from
|
||
taxation. When the last church disappears, civilization will be
|
||
relieved of a serious and sinister burden. Meanwhile, the churches
|
||
should be made to pay their honest share of the cost of public
|
||
services which they, now enjoy freely and to which they contribute
|
||
nothing.
|
||
|
||
Why should an atheist pay more taxes so that a church which he
|
||
despises should pay no taxes? That's a fair question. How can the
|
||
apologists for the church exemption answer it?
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
A BIT OF CHURCH HISTORY
|
||
|
||
John W. Gunn
|
||
|
||
One thousand Years ago, the church (Roman Catholic) claimed
|
||
and, on the whole, effectually maintained supreme power in the
|
||
affairs of Europe. The church punished with torture and death those
|
||
who disagreed with its teachings. The church was the biggest
|
||
grafting Institution -- or, more plainly, robbing institution -- in
|
||
Europe, and it grew tremendously wealthy. The church admitted for
|
||
itself no obligations. It laid stern commands upon the people. It
|
||
was a vast machine of exploitation.
|
||
|
||
With the growth of independent kingdoms and monarchs who ruled
|
||
genuinely and with no light hands within their own domains, the
|
||
church still held the major share of its original power. It
|
||
maintained its "spiritual" rule, which meant, in gigantic effect,
|
||
that all rival beliefs about religion were crushed and that the
|
||
masses were compelled to continue in their submission to
|
||
ecclesiastical robbery. The state and the church were closely
|
||
united machines of tyranny and exploitation.
|
||
|
||
When secularism advanced (although it was far from complete)
|
||
and innumerable protestant sects came forth with new and strange
|
||
doctrines, established (state) churches were for long upheld both
|
||
in Protestant and Catholic countries and, frankly enough, these
|
||
churches were regarded as bulwarks of the oppressive governments
|
||
that patronized them. The church was not so powerful, but it was
|
||
still very powerful; and it was as greedy as ever.
|
||
|
||
When religious toleration (for the various believers in
|
||
religion but not equally for, opponents of all religion) was won,
|
||
the church was less powerful, although it continued to be rich. In
|
||
countries (both Protestant and Catholic) where there were
|
||
established churches, those institutions were burdens upon the
|
||
state -- in other words, centers of graft and favoritism. They were
|
||
always taking from the state (which meant from the people) -- never
|
||
contributing to the public good.
|
||
|
||
In the early days of American colonization, the church
|
||
maintained its privilege and power as it did in Europe. In
|
||
Virginia, for example, the Episcopal church (or Church of England)
|
||
was the ruling ecclesiastical machine, its doctrines absolutely
|
||
supreme and its financial demands supplied by taxation of the
|
||
citizens. In Massachusetts the sect of Calvinism held this strong,
|
||
favored position. In the early colonies, church and state were
|
||
practically the same, at any rate united in a close conspiracy of
|
||
oppression.
|
||
|
||
After the American revolution and the legal separation of
|
||
church and state, the churches were all on an equal footing and
|
||
they did not directly control nor participate in the affairs of
|
||
government. But they were favored by tax exemption, blue laws
|
||
upholding religious bigotry were enforced (although they could not
|
||
be enforced regularly and consistently) and preachers retained a
|
||
very considerable, often a commanding influence upon the opinions
|
||
of the citizens. There was no strong opposition to the church;
|
||
religion held sway intellectually; and the argument that church and
|
||
state were mutually dependent and helpful was not disputed, insofar
|
||
as it implied special privilege, (though not political power) for
|
||
the church.
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
|
||
Throughout the nineteenth century, the preachers were very
|
||
influential, but their actual power of creating or guiding opinion
|
||
slowly but certainly dwindled, as politicians and newspaper editors
|
||
grew more powerful and as secular affairs, beyond the control of
|
||
the church, grew in recognized importance. At the beginning of the
|
||
twentieth century, preachers still had a great deal of prestige and
|
||
influence, and the churches held on to their special privileges,
|
||
chief among these being the privilege of tax exemption.
|
||
|
||
Science and liberalism have added, in the first decades of the
|
||
twentieth century, to the brilliancy and power of secular history.
|
||
The supremacy of religion per se has long since been overthrown:
|
||
that is to say, there are no professedly religious doctrines in
|
||
which we must believe and there is no professedly religious control
|
||
over our lives. However, the churches have turned to operating
|
||
under the guise of moral reform organizations; and such a group as
|
||
the Methodist Board of Temperance, Prohibition and Public Morals
|
||
wields a very alarming, though in many ways an indirect and
|
||
insidious, power in our government. Yet the majority of Americans
|
||
do not attend church, do not believe in church doctrines and are
|
||
not interested in supporting the church. Skepticism grows steadily.
|
||
Secular affairs are foremost. Religion is dying, although the
|
||
church flourishes as a social and business institution.
|
||
|
||
And let students of history reflect that, after all these
|
||
centuries, during which the power and greed of the church have been
|
||
manifested in every conceivable shape -- after all these centuries
|
||
the church is still an institution of special privilege and it is
|
||
at its old game of taking money from our pockets. Throughout all
|
||
its hanging history the church has been distinguished by its two
|
||
ruling motives of bigotry and greed. The church is still demanding
|
||
laws to enforce its bigotry (though it now commonly calls such
|
||
bigotry moral rather than religious) and laws to uphold it in its
|
||
financial privileges.
|
||
|
||
There has been a series of significant revolutions within ten
|
||
centuries; mainly within the past two centuries, the world has
|
||
progressed sensationally. This progress has been secular in
|
||
character. Our age, in all that is beneficent and hopeful and
|
||
civilized, is irreligious. But the fact remains -- the stern fact
|
||
-- that the necessity of war on clericalism is not ended. It is a
|
||
serious problem in this modern age and until it is solved, until
|
||
clericalism is deprived of all its powers and privileges (retaining
|
||
only its rights of private propaganda), civilization will not be
|
||
safe.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
THE RIGHTS OF MAN
|
||
|
||
Among the clearest declarations in the historic rights of man
|
||
is the principle that all citizens shall be treated with equal
|
||
Justice and that no group of citizens shall be favored in any way
|
||
to the disadvantage of other groups. This means that no set of
|
||
private opinions shall be honored or subsidized by the state. It
|
||
means, logically and fairly, that the opinions of atheists are as
|
||
much entitled to respect and protection as the opinions of
|
||
Christians.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
|
||
Yet our governments, state and federal, violate amazingly this
|
||
clear principle of the rights of man. Special privileges are
|
||
extended to religion. Religious holiday proclamations are issued by
|
||
presidents and governors. Religious chaplains are employed in
|
||
legislative bodies, in the army and navy, and in other state
|
||
institutions. Public money, collected from the people in the form
|
||
of taxes, must pay for this gross favoritism that is shown to
|
||
religion. And the most flagrant injustice of all is the exemption
|
||
of church property from taxation.
|
||
|
||
This exemption is doubly contrary to the principle of secular
|
||
freedom and equality of rights. It places a government sanction
|
||
upon the ideas of religion; it is an admission by government that
|
||
it favors the opinions of Christian citizens or citizens who
|
||
believe in religion and discriminates against the opinions of
|
||
atheists, agnostics, and all unbelievers in organized religion.
|
||
And, again, this tax exemption is not merely a moral sanction but
|
||
is a material aid given to the church. The state, in plain effect,
|
||
helps to pay for the upkeep of religion although, constitutionally,
|
||
church and state are supposed to be entirely apart and unrelated.
|
||
|
||
The state helps to pay? What we should say is that millions of
|
||
non-religious citizens, millions of citizens who have no kind of
|
||
use for the church, are compelled to pay for this unjust
|
||
favoritism. As firm believers in the rights of man, as opponents of
|
||
inequality and tyranny in all forms, we demand the fair taxation of
|
||
all church property.
|
||
|
||
STATE GIFTS TO RELIGION
|
||
|
||
A Cleveland, Ohio, reader sends us a clipping from the Press
|
||
of his city which reflects the interest shown in the church
|
||
taxation question. It seems that there has been some argument in
|
||
the section of the Press devoted to letters from its readers and
|
||
one of the disputants, signing the initials V.F.P., has stressed
|
||
the old fallacy that churches do educational and charitable work
|
||
and for this reason should be exempted from the payment of public
|
||
taxes and rates. A secular-minded reader, W. Mortimer, answers that
|
||
fallacy very clearly, and capably in the following communication to
|
||
the Press:
|
||
|
||
The thing that V.F.P. and other religionists do not seem
|
||
to grasp is the principle, of separation of Church and State.
|
||
The amount of money is not so important as the principle
|
||
involved.
|
||
|
||
To say that because the parochial schools relieve the
|
||
burden on the public schools they are therefore entitled to
|
||
free water is indeed a flimsy argument. The secular authority
|
||
establishes certain public activities that are essential to
|
||
modern life, such as schools, libraries, police, parks, etc.
|
||
These are all owned and used in common. Every citizen is
|
||
justly required to contribute his or her share in support of
|
||
all public activities.
|
||
|
||
The law does not prohibit me from owning my own private
|
||
library or sending my children to a private school, yet I do not
|
||
expect free water on that account.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
18
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
|
||
Some corporations and individuals maintain their own
|
||
police and fire depots. Yet they are not entitled to public
|
||
money because of it. V.F.P. and myself, being citizens of the
|
||
same country, must support the things we own in common. He or
|
||
she belong to the Christian church, while I am an atheist.
|
||
Neither of us can justly desire that the other financially
|
||
support our private opinions or institutions. If V.F.P. feels
|
||
the parochial schools are necessary to his or her well-being
|
||
V.F.P. is at liberty to support them, but I cannot be expected
|
||
to support a private institution in which I do not believe.
|
||
|
||
By, non-payment of water and taxes, the churches are
|
||
receiving public money as surely as if a like amount had been
|
||
donated from the public treasury.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Exactly. Mr. Mortimer, didn't waste time on sophistry. He just
|
||
cut right through it with sharp common sense. This talk of the
|
||
educational and charitable work done by the churches is an evasion
|
||
of the real issue. Plainly the interest of the churches is in
|
||
maintaining the beliefs and worship of religion. Any other alleged
|
||
purpose is remotely secondary and in modern society, unnecessary.
|
||
Education and social justice (as it should be considered rather
|
||
than charity) are essentially secular activities. To let the
|
||
churches go tax-free is to make gifts to religion: it means that
|
||
the state is granting public support to one set of private opinions
|
||
and thus unjustly burdening those who hold contrary private
|
||
opinions.
|
||
|
||
CHURCH AND PUBLIC
|
||
|
||
The apologists for church tax exemption say that the church is
|
||
a public institution. Just what do they mean? The church is devoted
|
||
to the propaganda of religion, which is strictly a private and not
|
||
a public affair. It may be called public in the sense that anyone
|
||
may attend church meetings; but 80,000,000 out of the 120,000,000
|
||
don't want to attend church meetings, so evidently the church is
|
||
not offering a public service that is even popular; it is
|
||
unnecessary and is wanted only by the minority of church members.
|
||
|
||
If the church were, in another and more valid sense, a public
|
||
institution -- that is, a building for use of the people without
|
||
discrimination -- there might be something in the argument for tax
|
||
exemption. But this consideration runs up against facts that cancel
|
||
it entirely. In the first place, the Church is not available to the
|
||
community or to various groups of the community on equal terms.
|
||
Atheists, for example, would not be permitted to hold meetings in
|
||
a church. The church doors would not be opened to admit a mass
|
||
meeting of protest against blue Sunday laws. A demonstration of
|
||
public sentiment against Prohibition would not be permitted in a
|
||
church. Dances, band concerts and like public recreational
|
||
activities are not usually permitted in a church.
|
||
|
||
On most nights, the church buildings are empty and are put to
|
||
no use whatever. They never serve as genuine community centers.
|
||
Their use is limited strictly to religious and propaganda and the
|
||
promotion of movements which have a pious, puritanical character.
|
||
Public questions are not discussed freely in the church, They are
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
19
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
|
||
discussed from the narrow viewpoint of religious bigotry. Public
|
||
interests are not served by the church. The specific purpose of the
|
||
church is to serve the interest of religion and to gain support for
|
||
the particular creed of each church organization.
|
||
|
||
Under these plain circumstances it is impossible to argue
|
||
convincingly that the church is a public institution. There is no
|
||
good reason why the public generally should be compelled to share
|
||
in the cost of maintaining church institutions. These institutions
|
||
are conducted in the narrow interests of sectarian groups and these
|
||
groups should entirely pay the cost of them, including fair
|
||
taxation of every bit of property owned by the church.
|
||
|
||
Let those who use the church, let those who believe in the
|
||
purposes of the church, produce every penny for the upkeep of the
|
||
church. This is the demand of justice.
|
||
|
||
Exemption of the church from taxation is a tyrannical
|
||
compulsion upon millions of citizens to pay for something in which
|
||
they are not interested, in which they do not believe, and to which
|
||
many are profoundly opposed.
|
||
|
||
Here is a fraud that is outrageous on its face and in every
|
||
feature. It is indefensible. All Americans who have a real sense
|
||
of justice and who are candid enough to recognize the facts will
|
||
join in our demand that all church property shall be taxed.
|
||
|
||
"HOLY" BEGGARS
|
||
|
||
The churches are always begging money. And there is little
|
||
pretense that this money is wanted for a public purpose. It is
|
||
wanted for the propaganda of religion. It is used to maintain
|
||
temples of superstition. It is a form of beggary that is sometimes
|
||
called "holy" (and that, to be sure, is always defended by the
|
||
allegation of good purposes;) but that is really a continual,
|
||
exasperating nuisance.
|
||
|
||
Many who contribute to the churches are unwilling but feel
|
||
that they dare not refuse: these are men who, for business or
|
||
professional reasons, fear to offend the church element, or any
|
||
element, and make a practice of being agreeable to all groups.
|
||
There are many others who do refuse the begging requests of the
|
||
churches but who are irritated again and again by the repetition of
|
||
such appeals for help.
|
||
|
||
In their begging, the churches are a nuisance. Yet, legally,
|
||
they have the right to get money from all who are willing to give.
|
||
We don't object to the extortion of money by the churches. But we
|
||
do object to the extortion of money for these begging institutions.
|
||
A state tax exemption for churches is in reality a form of
|
||
extortion, taking money from millions of citizens without so much
|
||
as a "by your leave,"
|
||
|
||
The churches beg -- and if we don't give them money, why, they
|
||
take it anyway, forcibly, by means of this unjust state tax
|
||
exemption.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
20
|
||
|
||
IS THE STATE CONSISTENT IN SUBSIDIZING,
|
||
CHURCH ERRORS?
|
||
|
||
One argument for the exemption of church property from
|
||
taxation is that religion is a socially valuable hind of activity
|
||
and that it is an instrument of righteousness which the state, as
|
||
a measure of public welfare, does rightly in subsidizing.
|
||
|
||
Take a good look at that argument. It is really funny.
|
||
Religion is divided into many creeds. It is a patchwork of errors.
|
||
One sect contradicts another, and every church member is a heretic
|
||
in the view of members of other church organizations. What is it,
|
||
then, that the state can be sure of in religion to guide it in its
|
||
assumption that religion is useful?
|
||
|
||
It cannot be a particular idea of God, for the religious sects
|
||
are sharply disagreed about the identity and the Character and the
|
||
opinions of God. It cannot be a particular notion of another life,
|
||
because the sects are luridly confused in their contradictory
|
||
notions of heaven or paradise or the hereafter or what you please
|
||
in the way of crude or fancy absurdity. It cannot be a particular
|
||
view of morality which the state thinks it publicly useful to
|
||
encourage by tax exemption -- for here, again, the sects are not in
|
||
agreement. Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians, Catholics,
|
||
Lutherans Episcopalians, Christian Scientists, Holy rollers,
|
||
Modernists and Fundamentalists all have their hotly different
|
||
notions about what constitutes righteousness.
|
||
|
||
There is no clear, agreed, indisputable program of religious
|
||
morality. If there did exist such a program, it would be brazenly
|
||
tyrannical for the state to enforce or even encourage it -- such a
|
||
measure would be a flagrant repudiation of the terms of secular
|
||
freedom in government (and, remember, good people, that secular
|
||
freedom is a phrase not to be shortened -- secular freedom is the
|
||
only freedom, for religion in government means tyranny) But our
|
||
point at the moment is that the state cannot pretend that it is
|
||
favoring, in a definite and intelligent way, a theory of social
|
||
usefulness in religion.
|
||
|
||
TO be logical in this argument, the state would have to single
|
||
out one religious, creed and favor it as being the true and useful
|
||
creed, As matters stand, the state favors, by tax exemption and
|
||
other means, a perfectly ridiculous stew of irreconcilable and
|
||
indigestible religious errors. It can't say what is true in
|
||
religion. It can't say what is useful in religion. The supporters
|
||
of the various religions can't say wherein they are right: but each
|
||
sect maintains that it is right and the others are, on important
|
||
points, very wrong. In exempting the churches from taxation, the
|
||
state is subsidizing, most inconsistently, a medley of errors and
|
||
aberrations that are socially distracting and confusing, rather
|
||
than socially useful.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
The only excuse for state favoritism would be an open
|
||
declaration of support for a particular state church, a particular
|
||
state creed, a particular state system of errors officially
|
||
proclaimed as the truth. A state church is inconceivable in this
|
||
modern age, and, aside from the higher principle of intellectual
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
21
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
|
||
liberty, the fact is that the churches couldn't agree among
|
||
themselves, There is no sensible argument, then, of truth, or
|
||
usefulness which justifies the state in favoring religion. Let the
|
||
believers in religion pay for their ceremonies and controversies of
|
||
error.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
The churches can well afford to pay fair taxation. But
|
||
supposing they couldn't. Would not that be a very significant
|
||
evidence that the churches were not really wanted?
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
How can a preacher talk with a straight face about political
|
||
graft? He is, himself, profiting by one of the most notorious
|
||
political grafts in this country.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
A free, secular government has and should have no interest in
|
||
the church. The church is interesting only to its partisans. They
|
||
should bear the whole cost of supporting the church.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Why should the residence of a preacher be untaxed? Useful
|
||
citizens must pay taxes on their homes. Yet the Preacher --
|
||
actually and notoriously the least useful member of the community
|
||
-- lives in a tax-free dwelling.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
"Would you tax God?" asks a defender of church tax exemption.
|
||
Well, if there were a God he should be able to pay his own way and
|
||
support his own business. If not, then he should do like other
|
||
business men and close up shop.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Church tax exemption means that we all drop our money in the
|
||
collection boxes, whether we go to church or not and whether we are
|
||
interested in the church or not. It is systematic and complete
|
||
robbery, from which none of us escapes.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
It is an absurd fiction that the churches are useful. They are
|
||
nothing more than propaganda centers for superstitious faiths and
|
||
doctrines. Church members have a right to believe in and propagate
|
||
their various doctrines. But they should pay every item of the
|
||
cost, of this propaganda, including fair taxation for all church
|
||
property.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
22
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
|
||
When priest and king conspired in medieval tyranny, the church
|
||
did its bloodiest to suppress all freedom of thought. We live in
|
||
the modern age and we believe in liberty. We don't ask that the
|
||
churches be destroyed or religion suppressed. We ask only that the
|
||
churches be taxed fairly, as other property is taxed. In resisting
|
||
this very fair demand, the churches will only expose their motives
|
||
of greed and Injustice.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Churches are private institutions. Their members should
|
||
support these churches out of their own private resources.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Those who want the churches should pay for them. Nobody else
|
||
should be taxed, directly or indirectly, to support the churches.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
There can be no perfect freedom unless the church and state
|
||
are separated. But the church and state are not separated in
|
||
America so long as the state grants a subsidy to the church in the
|
||
form of tax exemption.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
It is surely enough that the clerical grafters are permitted
|
||
by law to drum up trade among many credulous victims. But it is
|
||
outrageously too much that the rest of us, who oppose the clerical
|
||
grafters, should have to pay for the maintenance of this graft.
|
||
|
||
We think that men and women who pay for listening to sermons
|
||
are being cheated. But if they are satisfied, well enough. They can
|
||
spend their money as they please. The point is that we don't want
|
||
to continue paying for sermons that offend us with their bigotry
|
||
and non-sense.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
The American colonists fought against taxation without
|
||
representation. We are fighting against what is ironically much
|
||
worse, namely, taxation for the benefit of churches in which we
|
||
don't want to be represented and which are inimical to all the
|
||
civilized public purposes in which we do want to be represented.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Is a church too small and too poor to pay taxes? That means
|
||
that not enough people want the church seriously enough to pay for
|
||
its upkeep. Then, why should such a church exist? Why should
|
||
atheists, agnostics and non-churchgoers be forced to maintain such
|
||
a useless, unwanted church by granting it tax exemption?
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
23
|
||
|
||
WHY I BELIEVE IN FAIR TAXATION OF CHURCH PROPERTY
|
||
|
||
Religion is matter of private opinion. And, similarly,
|
||
religion should be a matter of private support, There is no good,
|
||
honest reason why it should have the sanction of the financial
|
||
favoritism of the government. Legally and in its fundamental policy
|
||
(as set forth in the Constitution) ours is not a religious
|
||
government and, therefore, it should not in any way subsidize
|
||
religion.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
It is a ludicrous notion -- ludicrous and outrageous -- that
|
||
the 80,000,000 Americans who don't go near the churches and who are
|
||
not interested in the churches should pay, in the form of state tax
|
||
exemption, so that the 40,000,000 of churchgoers can have houses in
|
||
which to play. After all, these 40,000,000 could do their praying
|
||
cheaply at home -- and it would do them no more and no less good.
|
||
If they want special houses of prayer, let them contribute all of
|
||
the money for this odd purpose. We object to paying a cent for
|
||
praying institutions which are ridiculous in our sight.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Rev. John Haynes Holmes argues that the churches shouldn't pay
|
||
taxes because, amid the towering city skyscrapers, they afford
|
||
needful light and air. But now the churches are growing into
|
||
skyscrapers. And, anyway, parks and tennis courts and the like are
|
||
much better for light and air than churches are. To put it more
|
||
emphatically, the churches spread gloom and the air in and around
|
||
them is unbearably stuffy.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
"God hasn't quit" says a theological illogical professor. That
|
||
might be an interesting statement if there could be adduced the
|
||
tiniest bit of proof that God ever began anything, including
|
||
himself. What this professor means is that a few men, who have
|
||
worse than idle minds, haven't quit talking aimlessly about a
|
||
mythical God.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
"The atmosphere is literally charged with religion" says 'The
|
||
Literary Digest," referring to radio sermons. We should call it a
|
||
spreading of intellectually poisonous gas
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Martyrs have been sincere. And so have tyrants. Wise men have
|
||
been sincere. And so have fools.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
||
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
||
and information for today. If you have such books, magazines,
|
||
newspapers, pamphlets, etc. please contact us, we need to give them
|
||
back to America.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
24
|
||
|