| ▲ | falcor84 3 hours ago |
| If we look outside Christianity, what comes to mind is reading about the ultra-orthodox in Israel, and obviously about Iran. |
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| ▲ | graemep an hour ago | parent [-] |
| I was thinking of Christianity as I was responding to a comment that used the word "church". However, besides that, subsidies from general taxation are not the same as payments for a service received (i.e. going back to it being a "subscription service"), whereas something like the German system where the payment is linked to entitlement to services (if other comments here are accurate) can be reasonably characterised as a subscription service. |
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| ▲ | lotsofpulp an hour ago | parent [-] | | I disagree with the distinction between subsidies and payments. The math is zero sum, either way purchasing power is undesirably and forcibly reduced from one entity and given to another. | | |
| ▲ | graemep 41 minutes ago | parent [-] | | That is not the distinction I am making here. I even partly agree with you (with some nuances). I am making a distinction between being made to pay through general taxation (e.g. as a pacifist is forced to pay for the military, an extreme libertarian for public services in general) and being made to pay in order to use the service (e.g. like a Netflix subscription). Almost everywhere they exist, subsidies for religion are like the former, not the latter. |
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