Dear community,
As the title suggests, I wonder if you:
- support a charitable initiative. If so, which one(s)?
- do not support any nonprofits. If so, why not?<p>Being both inside and outside the charitable giving sector, this topic fascinates me: why and how does a person start their giving journey?
As well as: why not?<p>Looking forward hearing your thoughts!
I dont donate to any charity.<p>I worked for many years as a volunteer within the charity sector. In my case offering free psychotherapy to local communities. I did this for 10 years, three evenings every week, providing psychotherapy to those who could least afford it.<p>I do not financially donate to any charity because I have seen first hand the abuse that seems prevalent, of donations collected by charities being used to pay for corporate offices in central London and paying senior staff CEO wages.<p>Charity for me is using every penny that is collected via donations for the benefit of the people for whom the charity claims to support.<p>An recent example is of my 84 years old friend who lives in an Almshouse, The almshouses here in the UK are houses for the poor. You have to meet strict criteria to be deemed poor.<p>you are not considered a tenant or given a tenancy agreement so you have no legal protections. you are given a letter of occupation, sounds like something from world war 2.<p>A few years ago her home was taken over by another Almshouse charity. Upon taking over the Almshouse the CEO gave himself a congratulatory pay rise of £40,000 per annum on top of his already abscene annual salary.
Following my first successful business, I realized that no business can be successful without the support (knowing or not) of the community the business is part of.<p>So I started a kind of tithing, giving 10% of my gross revenue back to my local community as a form of repayment and thanks.<p>From years of doing this, I have evolved rules about it in order to avoid various problems.<p>1) The organization must be one that is usually overlooked for giving. So no big guys.<p>2) The organization must be local.<p>3) The organization has to have an obvious and tangible public benefit.<p>4) The organization must not ask me for money or engage in splashy fundraising.<p>5) The organization must keep my identity a secret. If they can't promise that, no donation. If they break their promise, no further donations.<p>That's about it!