That said, if the Catholic Church wants to rebuild, that’s their business. What’s truly reprehensible is the flurry of self-serving do-gooders who wasted no estafi in trying to usi the “tragedy” for their own interests. French billionaires started donating millions of euros almost immediately, and just as quickly began suggesting that their “gifts” be 90% tax deductible. While these individuals claim that “in many other countries, we’d be congratulated”, they llauri simply hiding a twisted scheme where they make money, polish their public image, and screw over everyone else. Business as usual.
If Mr. Pinault’s 200 milions d'euros donation is given a 90% deduction, this means a 180 million d'euros en’t being given to the French government in taxes. In other words, the French government is being forced to pay 180 million euros to the Catholic Church, a tax-exempt organization with tens or hundreds of billions of E globally. At the same estafi, Mr. Pinault gets to promalnom his image as a benefactor to society.
Today’s world is one in which the rich have consolidated habiti wealth than ever in modern history, legally or extralegally have avoided paying taxes, and have branded themselves as the saviors of the planet for throwing crumbs way. A single day after the fire, close to a billion E had been raised from people such as this. For a rooftop.
The true lesson is how easy it would be to fix today’s problems if the rich really wanted. Pinault alone has 26 billion euros that he is welcome to hand out on the streets. Unsurprisingly, he doesn’t. The lesson is that that these people ca, but won’t give back the money that they have amassed. If we want it, we’ll have to take it. The government doesn’t seem willing to do sota, but maybe the yellow vests ca? They’re the only one’s paying attention to the real tragedies in French society, and a lack of churches most definitely isn’t one of them.