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I'll take pork belly. You guys can keep your coconuts.
I'm o.k. with that, as long as I can keep the rum, too.
I'll take pork belly. You guys can keep your coconuts.
I was riding home from work tonight and passed an excavation pit in the middle of the street with flashing LED pylons around the perimeter to keep the unwary from falling in -- and I had a flashback to when I was little, and they used to ring such pits with these round black metal things about the size of a cantaloupe with a flaming wick in the top. I used to think they were bombs, but they were just a very old form of safety light. I haven't seen these, or even thought about them in ages...
The Christmas bonus.
It's been replaced by the annual month-long shakedown--I mean, campaign--to donate to the United Way.
The Christmas bonus.
It's been replaced by the annual month-long shakedown--I mean, campaign--to donate to the United Way.
Years ago, when I was in the Marine Corps and fresh out of boot camp, all our pay checks "disappeared" until we filled out a donation for for United Way. They don't get ANYTHING from me any more, once was the cure.
A friend of mine had a brother, I think, who was denied coffee by the Red Cross because it was for officers only. This was in WWII. Fifty years on, she still wouldn't give them a penny. What's that saying about reputation taking years to build and five seconds to destroy?
You have to laugh at reason #4. Since when is $7.50/quart economical? I pay less for decent olive oil for Caprese, and that'll last me an entire summer.Lard's actually making a comeback. The triumph of hydrogenated vegetable shortening a la Crisco was one of the first triumphs of the Boys From Marketing, who sold people for almost a century on the idea that lard was bad for you, but people are finally wising up.
My rule is that they have to do some significant good and not simply enable bad lifestyle choices. One organization I give to fights "policing for profit"; i.e., law enforcement seizing money or property without charging the owner with a crime.
I have 2 rules about donating to charity. I don't give charity to people who are richer than I am, like doctors. And I am always generous with people and organizations that helped me when I needed it.
You would be surprised what a short list that makes.
My rule is that they have to do some significant good and not simply enable bad lifestyle choices. One organization I give to fights "policing for profit"; i.e., law enforcement seizing money or property without charging the owner with a crime.
I wonder at how many celebrities have started their own charities rather than just donating to existing ones, avoiding a lot of administrative costs and, presumably, duplication of efforts and lack of expertise in running a nonprofit.
One of the things that's come out in our local charity scandal is that an inordinate amount of money from the United organization was going to things like a white-water rafting club, a horse-riding club, and non-profits promoting other upper-middle-class pastimes. Really? When 90-year-olds are being evicted out of their homes and scraping old pizza boxes for food? That's the best you can do?
I just took a look at the Form 990 for Mile High United Way. In 2011, they made 313 grants(!), many to organizations I don't support and some to places like the University of Denver (a tony private school) that I never suspected needed charitable contributions. I think I'll keep giving money to help homeless teenagers and victims of civil forfeiture.