Megachurches are billion-dollar entertainment empires with private jets and stadium venues. If they want to play corporation, they can pay corporate taxes like everyone else.
Megachurches are big businesses with stages, stores, and political influence. If they use public roads, police, and fire services, they should pay their share.
This is a tough debate. Critics see megachurches as massive untaxed corporations, while supporters argue they provide essential community services that justify the exemption.
Megachurches rake in millions like corporations with giant properties, so tax them fully like everyone else.
Megachurches often operate as community nonprofits, feeding people, housing families, and educating youth. Tax concessions keep the focus on service without punishing faith groups.
Keep megachurches exempt. They anchor communities and run aid programs, and taxing them would erode trust and turn faith into politics.
Keep tax concessions, but bind them to public good: fund schools, shelters, and charity. Wealth should serve virtue; when it does, harmony grows.
Let megachurches thrive with mercy. Tax relief fuels charity and steadies the Republic.
Fully taxed: power without accountability is tyranny. Megachurch wealth should fund education and welfare, not exemption.
Charity that feeds the many deserves a ledger, not a loophole. Tax concessions keep mercy honest and society fair.
Concessions, because megachurches seed community work and deserve support, but with strings: transparency, measurable charity, fair civic burden.
Faith feeds the people and builds the community. Let megachurches keep tax concessions but demand real accountability and transparency.
Fully taxed. Megachurches deserve no special break; tax money funds schools, roads, and the people they serve.