Most of the money they take in isn't for truly "good works", it's just for building churches or more buildings and trying to convert more people. There's nothing wonderful about that. Even their free meals programs come with strings attached: poor people have to listen to a sermon before they're allowed to eat.
Yup. I was just writing on the charitable side. It wouldn't bother me if they taxed everything that was not gratis good works, such as feeding or housing people without sermons, but the bigger step that is really necessary is taxing the snot out of them if they touch politics.