They're also set up on commercial frequencies. They are set up to be for-profit operations and have been for a very long time. KSBJ and hundreds of stations like it have been set up on the non-commercial model for a very long time. If they were suddenly forced to operate as for-profit entities on non-commercial frequencies, the impact would be catastrophic, unless you're also advocating for allowing them to operate as commercial stations in the non-comm band. That would still result in a catastrophic change, but one I suspect most could recover from.
That's something every religious organization would have to figure out, not just religious broadcasters.
They've dodged taxes long enough. The market for religion is a lucrative one, so many won't suffer like you think they will.
Sure. They can - if that's the game plan from the start. The overwhelming majority of Christian stations are in the non-comm band.
They'll figure themselves out.
Thankfully, I the odds of that happening are slim to none. The last thing Washington needs is more money to waste, as David pointed out earlier in the thread.
It won't happen today.
But with the growing number of people who are religiously unaffiliated, there will at least be talks about for younger generations as they take over.
We'll have to agree to disagree. As others pointed out earlier in the thread, some of the least religious areas of the country have devolved in recent years into cesspools of crime, drug abuse and homelessness.
There's absolutely no correlation between the lack of religion and violence. Some of those areas are simply economic hubs that attract people of all backgrounds.
For example, the woman who lured a man to be killed with machetes by MS-13 gang members members was initially captured with a cross pendant on her necklace.
Government clearly isn't stepping up to help with those issues, and apparently, nobody else is either. Some Christian outreach would likely help. Government appears to be failing them.
And those christian groups can still help like some for-profit organizations do today. For example, Chevron, HEB, and United Airlines are all corporate partners of the Houston food bank.
Funny how our most obvious social ills are most prominently displayed in areas largely void of ministry.
Again, there's no proof of this. If anything, you can link religion to almost every war this world has seen.
But alas, nobody is talking about banning religion, so I'm not sure what your point is.
Changing the rules of the game decades into it would create chaos. That appears to be your intent.
You keep jumping to conclusions on what my intent is for some odd reason.
My real intent is for churches to pay their fair share so parks, roads, and schools can continue to be improved everywhere.
Because you won't have the opportunity to enact your vision without debate, and any debate of the topic would include analysis of the other types of organizations that enjoy tax-exempt status.
Well, I did say earlier that there were a lot of shady non profits that need to be further regulated.
But for the purpose of our argument, that is irrelt since the discussion really boils down to just religion.
Nobody is just going to give you what you want simply because you whined about it or because you said so. You're going to have to debate the merits of your position with people who take the opposing position if you want legislation.
That exactly how religion got its tax exempt status.
Religious non-profits. It's censorship for the reasons outlined above. Changing the rules of the game decades in is, in this case, de facto censorship.
But of course, you know that.
It's not censorship. Nobody right now is stopping you going out to the street and handing out Bibles, pamphlets, or even preaching with a loud megaphone (since apparently that's popular in some parts of town).
If taxes were a violation of freedom of speech, then that means every one of us is being censored.
And as a tax paying citizen, I don't feel censored. Do you feel censored right now?