Well, the original spirit of non-profits was to fill any voids that were underserved by the government (federal, state, and local).
Assuming that was the "original spirit of non-profits" I think we're far enough from that in general that it's pointless to discuss. There are plenty of atheist non-profit organizations. There are non-profits for every niche cause you can think of - a quick Google search says there are 1.5 million of them in the U.S.
I just don't see how religion is something the government needed to spread, so their tax exempt status makes absolutely no sense.
Refer back to my first post. All of the stuff I mentioned, and so much more, is a direct result of all that "old gossip" you deride.
Not really. Religious organization should be taxed.
Only if we tax every other non-profit organization as well.
This is my point about it being a slippery slope. Who decides if a non-profit deserves to be taxed or not? Who decides if each 501(c)(3) benefits the community? There are plenty of 501(c)(3) organizations who will never do anything so worthy as feeding or clothing even a single homeless person, if our standard for tax exemption were how much a non-profit "benefits the community."
KSBJ promotes this kind of outreach. How about Pacifica? How many homeless people has KPFT sheltered? How many starving children has the station fed? KPFT purchased a new $130,000 transmitter not long ago with donated money. Should they have paid taxes on that donated money first? They are a 501(c)(3) after all - just like a church.
I personally see little to no value in KPFT, and if you look at the ratings, apparently very few people do.
But someone bought them that transmitter.
If we're going to apply a "benefits the community" standard to non-profits, can anyone legitimately say KPFT is anything but a colossal waste of resources? Its TPO is 30.36kW - less efficient than 90% of the commercial FMs in Houston. How much of a carbon footprint has that energy hog that nobody is even listening to generated over the last 50 years?
See, this is the problem with your argument that churches are tax exempt. You think churches are worthless. I have decades of quantifiable proof that KPFT is worthless, and actually harmful to the environment, given its very limited listenership.
I have a sneaking suspicion that if your worldview were to take root, and we started arbitrarily denying tax exempt status based on the relative value to the "community" each tax exempt organization provides, churches would fare far better than most.