Who’s the Huckster?
by
Paul Hein
by Paul Hein
I
seldom watch televangelists. It annoys me that they seem to be hawking
religion like pitchmen selling some new kitchen gadget. ("But
wait!! Order your Save-A-Soul kit today for only $19.95, and we’ll
double your order! That’s right! We’ll send you, at no additional
charge, a second Save-A-Soul kit, so you needn’t pass through those
Pearly Gates alone!") So I was surprised to learn, from the
weekend newspaper, that we have, right here in the St. Louis area,
a TV evangelist of fame and fortune.
Her
name is Joyce Meyer, and she was shown holding what the paper called
"her trademark purple Bible" as she exhorted her devotees
at a conference in 2003. The headline read, "Meyer received
millions, records show." And the caption under the picture
got to the point: "The Jefferson County assessor’s office maintains
that Meyer and her family are personally profiting from her ministry."
Imagine that! Profiting from one’s work! Actually, it isn’t the
fact that she’s profiting that the government objects to; it’s the
fact that the government isn’t sharing in the fruits of her labors
to the extent that it considers itself entitled. (It’s "entitled,"
of course, because it says it is.)
The
article itself was a veritable litany of financial data, none of
which was likely to endear us to Meyer herself, or her family. You
know: the old class-envy ploy. We’re told that the ministry’s Board
of Trustees, of which she is head, pays her 900,000 yearly. The
same Board pays her husband 450,000, as vice-president of that board.
They are given the use of a corporate jet, luxury cars, and a 2
million home all bills paid by the ministry. And there’s
an additional 50,000 yearly housing allowance. The ministry also
paid almost 1.5 million for three homes for three Meyer children.
Mrs. Meyer also gets a portion of about $3 million in royalties
from publications, and tapes. It’s enough to make your blood boil!
She’s living as well as a Congressperson!
At
least that seems to be the attitude of the assessor, who believes
her property should not be tax exempt. Local government would lose
over 750,000 yearly if the church property were untaxed. It is this
principle in which the government has an interest; there’s no higher
principle involved.
The
picture painted by the newspaper is a sort of David vs. Goliath
tableau, but maybe it’s got it backwards. We’re told nothing of
the salary earned by the assessor, the perks of his office, or the
overall income of the corporation for which he labors. As far as
the State of Missouri is concerned, it’s annual "excess of
revenue," according to its own Comprehensive Annual Financial
Report, is about two billion. That’s well over a thousand times
more than the Meyer family business. We don’t know about the profits
of Jefferson County, where the ministry’s tax-exempt status is under
fire, but one thing should be kept in mind: whatever Mrs. Meyer’s
fortune, she earned it. That is, it came to her from people who
voluntarily paid her for providing them with something for which
they were prepared to pay. The County, on the other hand, doesn’t
need to earn its income: it simply demands it. It does render services,
but if you are not interested in those services, you pay anyway.
The collection technique involves threats and intimidation. The
government unit decides, unilaterally, the amount to be paid, and
how. Disagree, and you can argue your case in a court owned and
operated by your opponent, with one of his employees on the bench.
Disagree with Mrs. Meyer, and you can simply walk away.
A
watchdog group has reportedly asked the IRS to investigate the family,
to check on how they are using the ministry money. The clear assumption
is that, although the family IS the ministry, and it has earned
the money honestly, it cannot simply use that money as it sees fit.
After all, whose money is it? The idea of private property mustn’t
be taken too seriously unless it is the government’s private
property. Remember: there’s a principle at stake 750,000!
The
ministry may, as intimated, be making obscene profits from hawking
the word of God to the religiously naïve and gullible. (The
state, to be sure, never profits from gullibility and naïveté!)
The "watchdogs," however, are clearly the offspring of
female hounds. If I had to choose between them, I’d pick the religious
hucksters. No contest. I don’t want Mrs. Meyer’s services, purple
Bible notwithstanding, and I’ve paid her nothing. She hasn’t attempted
to collect from me, either. I am equally disinterested in the services
rendered by the state, and pay it nothing; but it simply steals
from my bank, with blithe disregard for due process. Which presents
the greater danger to the people of this state?
August
9, 2005
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is a retired ophthalmologist in St. Louis,
and the author of All
Work & No Pay.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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