WinePusher wrote:The 'government definition' you keep referring to is actually the legal definition of religion. For purposes of law, the government defines religion in a certain way because our court system in America is apart of the government. In order for a society to have laws you have to have uniform and agreeable definitions.
McCulloch wrote:If the government cannot pass laws about religion, then there does not have to be a legal definition of religion, except only for the courts to decide whether any specific law violates the separation.
Because in reality there are many laws about religion, and as such there needs to be proper legal definitions. If the government were to subject religions to corporate taxation, or if they were to develop an entirely new tax just for religions, then there'd need to be an entirely new set of laws. I take it that since you don't think there shouldn't be a legal definition of religion, there also shouldn't be any taxation of religion as well.
WinePusher wrote:In America we already have a thorough understanding of what the separation of church and state entails. It is spelled out in our constitution.
McCulloch wrote:It may be stated in the constitution, but the details are spelled out in an accumulation of court decisions.
And which supreme court case supports your contention that churches should be taxed? Which court case states that the government ought to be 'blind towards religion?' I'm not so sure that the government 'being blind' towards religion is an ideal we should all be striving for in the first place. The separation of church and state in America explicitly states that the two entities are to be separate from one another. There is to be a wall between the two and one cannot pass over the wall into the other's territory. This is the ideal we should be trying to implement, not yours. Under your ideal, even if the government was blind towards religion and showed no impartiality it could still interfere and meddle in the affairs of religious organizations, which is clearly a violation of the principle of separation of church and state.
WinePusher wrote:The government cannot establish any religion and it cannot prohibit the free exercise of religion, that is the entire scope of the separation of church and state in the United States. There is nothing about being 'blind to religion' in the American constitution.
McCulloch wrote:My argument is that the best way for a government to have an effective separation of church and state is for the government to be blind to religion.
There is no need for the government to be blind to religion if the two cannot interfere with each other in the first place. Religions forcing government schools to sponsor prayer is an example of religious interference in government, government taxation of religious organizations is an example of government interference in religion. Both violate the principle of separation of church and state.
WinePusher wrote:Once again, for purposes of the law the government has set forth a legal definition of religion. Lawsuits and court proceedings would be impossible if people could just make up some arbitrary definition of religion.
McCulloch wrote:If the law did not regulate religion, then lawsuits and court proceedings could proceed quite well without a legal definition of religion. The only exception would be constitutional law testing the separation itself.
Which law are you talking about?
WinePusher wrote:Because one of the purposes of taxes is to discourage usage or behavior (the primary purpose being to generate revenue for the government). This obviously violates the free exercise clause and is a violation of the separation of church and state. If you just read the actual wording you'd see how untenable your position is. Separation of church and state, meaning that under this statute the church and the state must remain separate from one another. If the government taxes churches then clearly both entities are not separated from one another. I'm eager to see what your response will be.
McCulloch wrote:But governments do tax and regulate churches. Personal income for church staff is subject to income tax.
Of course it is, everybody in society is forced to pay income taxes regardless of what their profession is. Churches themselves, their earnings and revenues are not and should not be subject to taxation in the same way other non profit organizations are not subject to corporate taxes.
McCulloch wrote:If a church group wishes to use a government owned facility, a park, a ferry, a toll road, a museum that normally requires a fee, it is not exempt.
These aren't examples of religions interfering in government. These are just example of individuals, who may or may not belong to a church group, utilizing services that are government owned. If the government prohibited them from utilizing government services like a ferry or a road just because of their religious affiliation then that would clearly be discrimination based on religion, something that is not and should not be permitted.
McCulloch wrote:What there should be, in my opinion, is that in dealing with organizations, whether for tax purposes or regulatory purposes, the governments should treat religious organizations no differently from non religious ones. For if they did it that way, then they would be guaranteed to fulfil the requirement to neither promote nor prohibit religion. By giving religions preferential treatment, they violate that principle.
So there shouldn't be a hands off approach in your opinion. The government should be able to tax churches and, in turn, schools should sponsor prayer and there should be national days of prayer and monuments of Jesus and Moses in every capital. Or, did you just mean to say that the government can interfere with religious organizations as much as they desire but religious organizations will perpetually be prohibited from interfering with the government. I'm pretty sure your 'government being blind to religion' ideal is synonymous with the last description.