MattParker said:The church gets a deal like that and they seem to manage.
Maybe you are not paying attention. The American church as we have known it is dying. From out here in Hooterville I drive 22 miles to be a part of one that may be surviving in the traditional sense.
What does seem to be surviving is the church-gone-Las Vegas with a live band and dancing Gospel Babes fronting the show. But once again, this is a product of your beloved cities. You don't "manage" with 200 to 300 member in one of those operations. You need a flock somewhere between 3,000 and 20,000 to pull that off. Out here in Hooterville some of them "seem to manage" with their hybrid of "Hard Rock Cafe meets the Original Bob Wills Texas Roadhouse Music" concept.
MattParker said:So do outfits like the United Way and the Red Cross and they just keep raking in the bucks.
In the city? Out here in Hooterville and Mayberry, we don't have either of those organizations. Now my version of Hooterville is nestled up close to one of Americas big cities, so at fund raising time both of those groups do find a way to put in their annual appearance here.
I've noticed that the American city-centric culture is not at all bashful about coming out and inviting the youngsters of Hooterville and Mayberry to join the military and wander off to some pretty tacky parts of the world in the name of "Saving the Bacon" for you folks who live where God intended people to live. And your not bashful about gathering up Mayberry's National Guard Unit for multiple trips to Iraq and Afghanistan. And when they come home injured and need the medical care a veteran is entitled to, you expect them to maybe drive 100-150 miles to a big-city-based Veterans Administration facility which means to get in line for 9:00 O'clock sign in they have to drive the night before and pay a hotel bill out of pocket.
But heaven forbid that you might have to spend 7-cents or $1.07 or maybe $7 of your annual tax bill on enabling Public Radio to exist out here.
Is this thread really the biggest problem you and I have to deal with today? I'm lucky. I get the big-city NPR station on the days the wind blows the right direction and sun spots are not doing the hoochy-koochy. But the folks over the next ridge north of me are just S-O-L.