Google excludes churches from its non-for-profits discounts

ntg

ntg

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According to this:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-...hurches-beg-commentary-by-stephen-carter.html

A number of non-for-profits received discounts and perks when using google to gather money from charitable individuals. Google has recently changed its policy though, excluding "places of worship" from its non-for-profit discount programme.

In short, churches are not allowed and special discounts as a non-for-profit businesses through google.

I haven't made up my mind about this, seems odd that it excludes them from the non-for-profits in such a way but I would be interested to see opinions. I would tentatively consider it a positive step as I don't believe in anything and consider religion to have more negative than positive effects on people.

Your thoughts?
 
I think its a brilliant step in the right direction and is the start of people noticing that churches do more harm than good, and are at heart, act purely in the name of self interest.

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While I may agree with their reasoning, acts like this often do the companies repitation more harm than its worth.
 
I think its a brilliant step in the right direction and is the start of people noticing that churches do more harm than good, and are at heart, act purely in the name of self interest.

[/QUOTE]

Did anyone else read that as Robert Pattinson? :o

Am I the only person to never have heard of Pat Robertson?
 
Did anyone else read that as Robert Pattinson? :o

Am I the only person to never have heard of Pat Robertson?

He comes from a country where Christianity dominates and is taken closer to its natural end state. A country where it is acceptable that a local church leader or pastor can drive this

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and still demand money from his congregation every day to help fund the church.

A country where if you are successful in running a Church, you can amass a wealth in the billions, and people will still think you are a good Christian.
 
LOL hurpdurp

Two rich men and a nutjob I've never heard of [IMG][/QUOTE]

Just did a quick google for "What good has Christianity done for the world":

[quote]The first hospitals were started by Christians, as well as soup kitchens and homeless shelters. Christian groups are generally among the first to help rebuild after a disaster. Christianity was the first organized religion to make females equal.
[/quote]


[QUOTE]What has Christianity done for the world? Christianity led to the end of murder of slaves in the coliseums of the Roman world, the beginning of healthcare for the masses and education for the common man. It brought an end to the slave trade and slavery itself. It brought workers rights through Lord Shaftesbury, and child protection agencies, like the RSPCC by William Wilberforce and other Christian leaders. Christianity also birthed the Civil Rights Movement with the leader being the preacher Martin Luther King Jr. and the end of Apartheid in South Africa, thanks to the leadership of Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Nelson Mandela.

Christianity in addition has had a major impact upon all European languages, adding words, spelling, grammar and shaped what we say - the phrases, our idioms, and the Christian names of people, places and organisations. Great authors like C.S. Lewis and freedom fighters like John Knox were also inspired in the Christian tradition and helped change our world.

Christian leaders like Elizabeth Fry fought for prison reform and the first Workers Union was set up by a Christian preacher and his friends, fighting for fair pay, better working conditions and a day of rest.

Modern democracy is in huge debt to non-conformist Christianity, from Magna Carta with its Christian author, to the Rev. John Ball, the first great leader of a mass revolt, to Cromwell who ended the absolute rule of the Monarch and Christian parliamentarians who fought for the right for all to vote. In the U.S., Rick Warren said, “It was Christians who helped abolish slavery, achieve women’s suffrage, lead the civil-rights movement and drafted the Bill of Rights.”

Without Christianity, the story of Europe, the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand and other nations would be totally different. The same could be said for modern Africa, where 60% of the people are Christians and a large majority of the states are now Christian. In Africa, it was Dr. David Livingstone, the missionary who worked to end slavery and introduce Christian values to much of the continent. He is one of the world’s greatest explorers and humanitarians.

In addition, Christian leaders in their fight to end the slave trade set the template for all modern campaigning, and mass education was a significant step towards the people calling for democracy and human rights.

In the field of science, many of the founding fathers of many areas were Christians, with a devout belief in the God of the Bible and the same is true for the leaders of the Industrial Revolution, which shaped the world we live in. Michael Faraday was a scientist and evangelical Christian whose pioneering work changed the modern world, in that he helped give us electricity and the founder of the Greenwich Observatory that gave us the world’s first great star map, was of course a preacher as well. Many of the people who put man on the moon, working in NASA, were also believers.

Christianity in addition shaped politics, which gave us laws that protected the common man, as the Bible’s teaching on the equality of all men shaped our civilisation. Then missionaries spread these values around the world, turning entire nations into new realms to be shaped by the Christian message.

Today churches still provide clubs for young people, for the elderly, mothers and toddlers clubs and a deep sense of community in a broken world. They are also fighting for a better world - being a key force behind Make Poverty History and over campaigns. In 2005, the British Prime Minister Tony Blair said, “...churches are among the most formidable campaigning organisations in history” and “...faith communities have always played a significant role in social action in Britain - in education, in welfare, in support for so many of the most vulnerable and needy in our society.”

What has Christianity has done for the world? The answer is all around us, from the laws that protect us, to the principles that guide us. It has shaped every area of our lives, yet because its influence is so huge, we take its heritage for granted and forget that Christianity was the source of this civilisation![/QUOTE]

[quote][LIST]
[*]Antiseptic surgery, Joseph Lister
[*]Bacteriology, Louis Pasteur
[*]Calculus, Isaac Newton
[*]Celestial Mechanics, Johannes Kepler
[*]Chemistry, Robert Boyle
[*]Comparative Anatomy, Georges Cuvier
[*]Computer Science, Charles Babbage
[*]Dimensional Analysis, Lord Rayleigh
[*]Dynamics, Isaac Newton
[*]Electronics, John Ambrose Fleming
[*]Electrodynamics, James Clerk Maxwell
[*]Electromagnetics, Michael Faraday
[*]Energetics, Lord Kelvin
[*]Etomology of Living Insects, Henri Fabre
[*]Field Theory, Michael Faraday
[*]Fluid Mechanics, George Stokes
[*]Galactic Astronomy, Sir William Herschel
[*]Gas Dynamics, Robert Boyle
[*]Genetics, George Mendel
[*]Glacial Geology, Louis Agassiz
[*]Gynecology, James Simpson
[*]Hydrography, Matthew Maury
[*]Hydrostatics, Blaise Pascal
[*]Ichthyology, Louis Agassiz
[*]Isotopic Chemistry, William Ramsey
[*]Model Analysis, Lord Rayleigh
[*]Natural History, John Ray
[*]Non-Euclidean Geometry, Bernard Riemann
[*]Oceanography, Matthew Maury
[*]Optical mineralogy, David Brewster
[/LIST]
And on it goes. All of these ground-breaking scientists were Bible believers.
[/quote]

While I would never claim that they've never done anything wrong and don't have a very spotted history, claiming that the followers of Jesus Christ have never done anything good is stupidity to the highest level.
 
The thing that annoys me most about religion as a whole is that if you are born to a religious family, then it's drilled into your skull at birth. Most of these people brought up in religious families will believe what they were told growing up and blindly follow that, they don't get to make their own decisions.
 

Still trying to legalize the Vatican's refusal to pay the tax, the Christian Democrats in the government wrote a bill—Law No. 1773—that would exempt Vatican dividends and slipped it through Parliament during the presidential crisis that followed the resignation of President Antonio Segni. But before the bill could be promulgated, the Socialists read it and blocked it.

That made the Vatican furious. A spokesman hinted that unless the harassment ceased, the Holy See would sell its Italian stockholdings. The dumping of millions of shares of stock on the already shaky Italian market would precipitate a financial crisis and bring down the Italian government. Under the threat, the Moro government will probably give final approval to Law No. 1773.


Don't tax us, or we will collapse your country.
Doesn't sound like the RC teachings I was brought up on.
 
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