Who do you give to, and why?
- Blind groper
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Who do you give to, and why?
On the subject of personal culture.
Do you donate money regularly to charity?
What charity do you donate to?
Why do you choose this charity?
Personally, my favourite charity is the Fred Hollows Foundation. I give several times a year to them. The reason is that my donation can do more good, than with other charities. Fred Hollows is a specialised charity that does nothing but cure cataracts in impoverished nations. Cataracts make literally millions of people blind each year, in third world countries. This charity uses cut price methods of fixing them (they own their own lens factory, for example, making lenses for a few cents each, compared to hundreds of dollars, if bought through western sources). Thus, a donation of $25 can restore a blind person's sight. If I give $500 a year to them, there will be 20 people who are now blind who will see again.
Do you donate money regularly to charity?
What charity do you donate to?
Why do you choose this charity?
Personally, my favourite charity is the Fred Hollows Foundation. I give several times a year to them. The reason is that my donation can do more good, than with other charities. Fred Hollows is a specialised charity that does nothing but cure cataracts in impoverished nations. Cataracts make literally millions of people blind each year, in third world countries. This charity uses cut price methods of fixing them (they own their own lens factory, for example, making lenses for a few cents each, compared to hundreds of dollars, if bought through western sources). Thus, a donation of $25 can restore a blind person's sight. If I give $500 a year to them, there will be 20 people who are now blind who will see again.
- Gallstones
- Supreme Absolute And Exclusive Ruler Of The World
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Re: Who do you give to, and why?
The NRA
Gun Owners of America
To increase lobbying strength and keep the pressure on any who would try to curtail gun rights in the US.
United we stand and all that.
Gun Owners of America
To increase lobbying strength and keep the pressure on any who would try to curtail gun rights in the US.
United we stand and all that.
But here’s the thing about rights. They’re not actually supposed to be voted on. That’s why they’re called rights. ~Rachel Maddow August 2010
The Second Amendment forms a fourth branch of government (an armed citizenry) in case the government goes mad. ~Larry Nutter
The Second Amendment forms a fourth branch of government (an armed citizenry) in case the government goes mad. ~Larry Nutter
- Warren Dew
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Re: Who do you give to, and why?
I give to a wide range of charities, but the biggest donation is usually to MIT, my alma mater. I started doing that back when tuition didn't pay for most of the cost of an MIT education, and I figured I should pay the rest of the cost from the presumed benefit to my salary. Recently I've started diverting that money to other educational charities because I think MIT has not been spending its money as wisely or frugally as in the past.
I also give to a bunch of environmental charities - including some which are not legally "charities" because they are too activist, like Greenpeace - the ACLU foundation, and the Heritage foundation.
I also give to a bunch of environmental charities - including some which are not legally "charities" because they are too activist, like Greenpeace - the ACLU foundation, and the Heritage foundation.
- Warren Dew
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Re: Who do you give to, and why?
I used to joke that I was an NRA member to defend my second amendment rights, and an ACLU member for the other nine amendments.Gallstones wrote:The NRA
Gun Owners of America
To increase lobbying strength and keep the pressure on any who would try to curtail gun rights in the US.
United we stand and all that.
I don't actually pay for my NRA membership any more, having plunked down four digits for a life membership when the NRA was gearing up for Heller. Best money I ever spent.
Meanwhile, despite their saccharine politically correct rhetoric, the ACLU continues to come down on the side of constitutional rights for everyone, not just for leftists, in cases like Skokie and Citizen's United.
- Hermit
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Re: Who do you give to, and why?
My latest donation went to the Wikipedia. Unfortunately it's not tax deductible. The one before that went to Ron Williams. He took the federal government to high court about its funding of evangelists to work among children in government schools and won. The government changed the laws and kept ploughing on with that scheme regardless. So, now he is taking it to court again, and I chipped in again. This too is not tax deductible. Previous to that I donated to Community Aid Abroad / Oxfam and Greenpeace. Since donations to both of those is tax deductible, I have records of them, and they are easy to look up on a spreadsheet I set up for budgeting and bookkeeping purposes when I did some subcontracting. I just had a look. The amount is well into four-digit territory.
The Fred Hollows Foundation is a very good organisation to contribute to. It gets audited on a regular basis from outside. The reports are publicly available and they show that it is run with minimal overheads and very effective. The benefit goes chiefly to those most in need and least able to access medical facilities to have their trachoma treated. Hollows, a New Zealand born ophthalmologist, set up the foundation a year before his death, and it is continuing the programs he started. Be warned, though: As if being an atheist wasn't bad enough, he also was a member of the communist party in the 1950s and 60s.
The Fred Hollows Foundation is a very good organisation to contribute to. It gets audited on a regular basis from outside. The reports are publicly available and they show that it is run with minimal overheads and very effective. The benefit goes chiefly to those most in need and least able to access medical facilities to have their trachoma treated. Hollows, a New Zealand born ophthalmologist, set up the foundation a year before his death, and it is continuing the programs he started. Be warned, though: As if being an atheist wasn't bad enough, he also was a member of the communist party in the 1950s and 60s.
I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein’s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops. - Stephen J. Gould
- Warren Dew
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Re: Who do you give to, and why?
I don't know if it's a different legal entity from Wikipedia, but donations to the Wikimedia foundation are tax deductible in the U.S.Hermit wrote:My latest donation went to the Wikipedia. Unfortunately it's not tax deductible.
Donations to Greenpeace are not tax deductible, although I think they were a couple decades ago:Previous to that I donated to Community Aid Abroad / Oxfam and Greenpeace. Since donations to both of those is tax deductible
http://www.greenpeace.org/usa/en/suppor ... tions/#tax
However, apparently there's an organization called the Greenpeace Fund, to which donations are tax deductible.
- Hermit
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Re: Who do you give to, and why?
Differences between the USA and Australia, I suppose. The Australian Taxation Office maintains a list of Deductible Gift Recipients. It also allows tax deductibility for donations to political parties. Greenpeace is not a political party in Australia (though we have one that represents and advocates the aims laid out by Greenpeace, formally named Australian Greens), but it is listed as a GDR. The Australian branch of the Wikimedia Foundation is neither a GDR nor a political party.
I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein’s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops. - Stephen J. Gould
- FBM
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Re: Who do you give to, and why?
Somaly Mam Foundation in Cambodia. They rescue child prostitutes from abusive situations and give them education and vocational training. I can't remember how/when I discovered them, but it struck me as something that needed to be supported and encouraged, seeing as how the Cambodian gummit doesn't support them.
"A philosopher is a blind man in a dark room looking for a black cat that isn't there. A theologian is the man who finds it." ~ H. L. Mencken
"We ain't a sharp species. We kill each other over arguments about what happens when you die, then fail to see the fucking irony in that."
"It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions in favor of vegetarianism while the wolf remains of a different opinion."
"We ain't a sharp species. We kill each other over arguments about what happens when you die, then fail to see the fucking irony in that."
"It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions in favor of vegetarianism while the wolf remains of a different opinion."
- Warren Dew
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Re: Who do you give to, and why?
Possibly more sensible than the U.S. policy.Hermit wrote:Differences between the USA and Australia, I suppose. The Australian Taxation Office maintains a list of Deductible Gift Recipients. It also allows tax deductibility for donations to political parties. Greenpeace is not a political party in Australia (though we have one that represents and advocates the aims laid out by Greenpeace, formally named Australian Greens), but it is listed as a GDR. The Australian branch of the Wikimedia Foundation is neither a GDR nor a political party.
- Pappa
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Re: Who do you give to, and why?
It's been a while since I last donated, but the only charity I regularly gave money to was Survival International. They help tribal peoples around the world gain ownership of the land they live on, and lobby governments on their behalf.
For information on ways to help support Rationalia financially, see our funding page.
When the aliens do come, everything we once thought was cool will then make us ashamed.
- Svartalf
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Re: Who do you give to, and why?
I can't even afford to support Rationalia, No way I can find charity budget in my empty purse.
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- laklak
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Re: Who do you give to, and why?
NRA, of course. A couple of police and firefighter benevolent organizations, because despite what they say those stickers on the back window do get you better treatment at a traffic stop. ASPCA, Napier Horse Rescue, Save Our Seabirds and Mote Marine Laboratory.
Yeah well that's just, like, your opinion, man.
Re: Who do you give to, and why?
Living in a Nordic welfare state, my favourite charity is definitely taxes. The old Swedish proverb "love your taxes" isn't as stupid as it looks, as those taxes pays us a whole lot in return.
Wikipedia is on my regularly funded list. They do more good in this world than anyone can imagine.
Wikipedia is on my regularly funded list. They do more good in this world than anyone can imagine.
The first principle is that you must not fool yourself, and you are the easiest person to fool - Richard Feynman
- Blind groper
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Re: Who do you give to, and why?
I used to support Greenpeace but stopped about 30 years ago. The reason for stopping is the Greenpeace opposition to a lot of essential development. For example : to nuclear power. More recently (the last 18 years) Greenpeace have been opposing genetic modification, which I think is one of the waves of the future, which will help to make a better world. I do not like any charity I support to get too political.
- JimC
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Re: Who do you give to, and why?
There is a somewhat Luddite tendency running through the extremes of the Green movement...Blind groper wrote:I used to support Greenpeace but stopped about 30 years ago. The reason for stopping is the Greenpeace opposition to a lot of essential development. For example : to nuclear power. More recently (the last 18 years) Greenpeace have been opposing genetic modification, which I think is one of the waves of the future, which will help to make a better world. I do not like any charity I support to get too political.
Nurse, where the fuck's my cardigan?
And my gin!
And my gin!
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