Jason Bourne wrote:
Last year Americans gave a record $302,000,000,000 to charity. That equates to roughly about $100,000,000,000 in taxes give or take some. I do not know how much of that went to religion but I am sure it was a large part of it.
Thanks for proving my point.
And what point was that?
Considering a small portion most likley ever helped the poor and needy, all of our taxes are higher to make up for the loss of that much in taxes.
Really? I think you don't have a clue of what went where to help whom. Most charities put a significant amount of their donations to whatever their stated causes are. Not all charities though are set up to assist the poor. Some fight cancer or heart disease. The causes these charities espouse are numerous. But some do assist the poor. But if you feel this way don't donate to charity or of you do don't deduct it on your tax return.
And one other point, it seems fairly certain that it is worth 100 Billion in taxes in order to facilitate charities doing what they do as a dollar spent there goes much further than a dollar taxed and redistributed through a government bureaucracy.
As for your taxes being higher, maybe and maybe not. A better place to get tax revenue is in the unreported income that happens to the tune of about 600 Billion in taxes every year. Another quick revenue raiser if you want to be fair is to disallow home mortgage interest which costs far more in tax revenue than charity does by far.