http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/27/opinion/the-charitable-industrial-complex.html?smid=fb-share&_r=1&&pagewanted=print
7/28/2013 8:32:57 PM
Yeah, I really don't understand, endorse, or approve of functions to celebrate charity giving. I give through United Way just so my company won't nag me about it, but I earmark the donations to specific supported charities instead of their aggregate generic funding buckets. They send out invitations to annual banquets and galas and print it out in the nicest paper you can possibly find. All local company leaders are there in their Sunday finest. I find myself thinking about how much more money they could save and apply to true charitable causes if not for these congratulatory glad-handing conventions. I never attend.
7/28/2013 9:56:02 PM
^ I don't think the issue is that the galas are fancy, they're a drop in the bucket compared to the overall donations.I think it's more the people who attend the galas are the people who cause the problems that many charities are trying to fix, and they feel their "giving" exonerates them from actually evaluating their actions in a holistic sense to see who they're screwing over, and how.
7/29/2013 12:10:05 AM
^ ding, ding
7/29/2013 12:55:46 AM
le duh!
7/29/2013 1:56:40 AM
7/29/2013 12:07:53 PM
Are you saying that on a global scale, inequality (difference between rich and poor) *isn't* increasing?
7/29/2013 1:47:57 PM
That is correct.http://youtu.be/hVimVzgtD6w?t=6m19sOr, the thing itself:http://www.gapminder.org/downloads/income-distribution-2003/Surely, you must have a running hypothesis in your head that the decoupling of US productivity and wages (increases) had to do with lower cost production overseas. It's at least related, if nothing else. Public smashing of Japanese imported cars in the 1980s was obviously tied to an increasingly frustrated workforce. Even if we can't say exactly what that means, a connection is undeniable.Belief of increasing standard of living doesn't necessarily have to go along with that, but the income argument does. Incomes in China (by global objective PPP) increased dramatically because they gained the ability to compete with Americans. The impact on Americans, or at least a large part of that, was rising domestic inequality, and the impact globally was decreasing inequality. The balance didn't have to fall that way. Inequality could have declined domestically and globally. But it didn't.[Edited on July 29, 2013 at 2:31 PM. Reason : ]
7/29/2013 2:30:55 PM
7/29/2013 11:52:48 PM