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scipio337
Guest
See Bob Jones University v. United Statesthat’s good, because this ‘losing their tax exempt status’ is bogus. While it is true that the CoJCoLDS is the ONLY church in US history to have American armed services after them, and the only church in US history to be threatened with having all their property confiscated, that was in the 1800’s, not the 1900’s. As it happens, there has never been a church that has lost its tax exempt status for any reason. It is unconstitutional. What HAS happened is that the IRS might rescind the ‘letter’ that is issued to non-profit organizations. This letter must be given to any non-church non-profit group, and if that letter is rescinded for them, that tax exempt status does indeed go bye bye. However, no church need apply for one in order to be tax exempt; it simply needs to exist.
Even if a church is dumb enough to apply for one (and a few are) having the IRS rescind the letter (and that’s only been done…twice, i think?) means that the church might have to pay a token (and I do mean ‘token’) excise tax–and even that’s doubtful. The following year the tax exempt status is automatically assumed to be in place because it is a church. In other words, the IRS would have to go through the process of rescinding the tax exempt letter every single year. If the church doesn’t apply for one, the IRS has no jurisdiction at all. The only thing it can do is attempt to prove that the church isn’t actually a church…that it is simply calling itself a church for the specific purpose of avoiding taxes. Since there is no chance at all of doing that for the CoJCoLDS, I think we can put this piece of stupidity to rest, don’t you?
law.cornell.edu/supct/html/historics/USSC_CR_0461_0574_ZS.html
Officially, the IRS revoked the University’s tax exempt status on January 19, 1976. The University paid $21 in unemployment taxes for one employee for tax year 1975 and then filed for a refund in the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina. The Government counterclaimed for unpaid federal unemployment taxes for the taxable years 1971 through 1975, in the amount of $489,675.59, plus interest.
That sets the legal precedent that the Internal Revenue Service could, without the approval of the United States Congress, revoke the tax exempt status of organizations that are contrary to established public policy.
Its now case history, and legal precedent.
Stupidity? Hardly.
A big fat “tu quoque” argument.I believe that we have continuing revelation; that God guides us, and if we go off the rails, He’ll pull us back on them. So, if there is a thing He doesn’t like, He will talk to the prophet and we will fix it.
Which is why we were ‘racist’ for 138 years, and then instantly, at the word from a prophet, were not. Just think: if Catholics had continuing revelation where God …<edited for sanity’s sake>
Are you capable of honest debate? You’ve been told time and again that these acts were NOT part of Catholic DOCTRINE, yet still seem incapable of grasping this fact. And even if what you propose is true, Catholic atrocities do not somehow override the racist doctrinal past of the LDS faith.
On a side note, I wish I had $1 for every time you said “Crusades”, or used the tu quoque fallacy.