I found a document that discusses the Canadian Tax law for religions.
http://www.carters.ca/pub/seminar/church/2010/kjc0824.pdf
I have long held the view that the org/WTS says that it is non-political yet they behave like a political organization. And it bothers me that religions are restricted from political activity yet the org has always been political. This is what the CRA says about religions that get involved in politics:
PART IV: POLITICAL ACTIVITY
Political Purpose
– All religious institutes with charitable status are required by law to have exclusively charitable purposes (as determined at common law)
– An organization established for a political purpose cannot be a charity
– The courts have determined political purposes to be those that seek to:
Further the interest of a political party or support a political party or candidate for public office, or
Retain, oppose, or change the law, policy or decision of any level of government in Canada or a foreign country
– CRA will look at the stated purpose of a religious institute, as well as its activities to determine whether it has adopted political purposes
So that is what has me curious. The line I bolded:
Retain, oppose, or change the law, policy or decision of any level of government in Canada or a foreign country
The Org/WTS does exactly what the CRA says they aren't allowed to do and still retain tax status. I can think of many times that the WTS has opposed the law in both Canada and a foreign country. And not only that, but the WTS' big cheese in the law department is the Glen How firm in Canada.
In fact, it was/is Canadian lawyers who represent the org in Russia and in the European courts. Opposing the law of foreign countries and challenging court decisions in Russia and elsewhere, trying to change laws. And disregarding court decisions.
How is the org/WTS not political according to the CRA definition?
For background reading on the org's legalistic structuring and activities, this is a good paper:
And another good paper:
The Jehovah's Witnesses and their plan to expand first amendment freedoms