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Previous comments... You are currently on page 3.
I keep it to myself
It's entirely voluntary and needs no applause.
I also, like many here, only support organizations that reflect our values and preferred behaviors and philosophies, Like Hillsdale College and Mercury One for instance.
However, as most of us have come to realize, as we are more and more forced to pay for everyone else, we have less and less to help others with if we so desire, not to mention, less and less for our own survival.
Altruism is a faux and bizarre concept: there is Not one cell in your body that would sacrifice itself for another cell...that's nature, however, what makes us amazing humans is the fact that once our survival needs are satisfied, just like every cell in your body, the excess value, what ever remains in abundance, is automatically shared or passed on.
I am sure everyone here has done this without thinking...like offering food to someone that unintentionally drops in at supper time.
Just one of many examples.
Occasionally a charity will stick a dollar bill or a coin or two to trigger a guilt trip.
That worked a couple of the very first times back during the 70s.
Then I resented the mind game being pulled and kept the money without donating anything.
Charities still send me money decades later. Last week I made $1.02 in cash just for opening two letters and tossing the rest into File 13.
I also save the strings of one cent stamps that aren't already pasted on a return envelope that hits File 13.
A decade ago I gave $20 or so to an American Indian charity though I was sent an unasked for "bad dream catcher" hoop with feathers hanging off of it.
I should have known better.
Next thing I know every freaking tribe in the southwest is sending me all kinds of stuff and pictures of cute children
Old Dino's big heart hardened like the pharaoh in Book of Genesis.
I have about 30 bad dream catchers and a cheap and thin Indian blanket hung by my bed.
Did I send back money for any of that? Just the first one buried under all the rest.
About five years ago some charity sent me a calculator with my name printed on it.
I sent back a small donation. Again,I should have known better.
One year later the same charity sent me another calculator with my name on it.
I realized that I would start piling up calculators with my name on it on an annual basis.
So I just kept it. Period.
A month later I was sent a complaining letter about how I was sent a calculator and please mark and pay us an amount by one of these boxes.
I threw it away.
This year history repeated itself.when I donated money to a sheriff deputy group. They rewarded my kindness by sending me a calculator that had a crooked sticker with my name on it.
Supposing I may get the same thing on an annual basis, I kept the calculator and sent back nothing.
Last week I received a letter of calculated calculator complaint with boxes to mark.
Tough luck, sheriff deputies.
Being manipulated matters.
How much a CEO makes also factors into a decision to help out this or that charity.
During 2014, the CEO of Wounded Warriors received a $100,000 raise to raise his annual income to $475,015,. If you wish, look that up like I did.
Mail from some charities I do not even bother to open. Hint, hint!
Together, these are what constitute my charitable giving...oh, there are also my donations of unused items to Habitat or Goodwill.
None of these give me a guilty feeling if I don't donate.
Call it charity if you wish. I call it a defense against the looter mentality.
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