No, there’s nothing noble about them, and in fact they are doing a lot of evil.
[Friday-morning update]
The Non-Profit Industrial Complex and the corruption of the American city.
And Jeffrey Carter says it’s time to blow it up.
[Bumped]
No, there’s nothing noble about them, and in fact they are doing a lot of evil.
[Friday-morning update]
The Non-Profit Industrial Complex and the corruption of the American city.
And Jeffrey Carter says it’s time to blow it up.
[Bumped]
Comments are closed.
Too many ‘non-profits’ are salary machines for the c-level execs…
Want to do good for the public? Take vows of poverty
This likely dates back a long time, but the March of Dimes probably exemplifies it for modern non-profits.
Intended as a charity to help eradicate polio, which it pretty much did in the States. It needed to either disband or find a new mission. One guess what they did.
The SPLC then weaponized it, since they were never really needed for their ostensible mission. They most likely named themselves to get people to mistake them for the SCLC after all.
For profit organizations I prefer to think of as Tax-Chevys.
As opposed to non-profits, which I prefer to think of a Tax-Dodges.
YMMV…
They have been abused, especially after Citizens United, along with other dark money networks. Many stereotypical “right” leaning nonprofits have been taken over by the commies, even the religious ones.
I’m in favor of what I call Outcome Based Altruism, where intentions meet measurement and accountability. I’m not sure where taxes fall in all of that and I don’t know if it even matters
Our local electric company is a non-profit (501 (c) 12). They serve an area in south Mississippi that includes most or parts of seven counties. They operate very admirably.
They produce something useful which would be painfully obvious if it stops. A lot of these “non-profits” don’t produce anything but cash for their officers.
I’ve started and run a couple of non-profits. Not on purpose…
Yeah, have a depressing wallpaper collection too.
I ran across an interesting example of how seedy these non profits can get.
I’ll note that first, there’s this weird mention of a “survey” that appears nowhere else in the story. Perhaps it’s described in the links in the story somewhere? But it does seem to indicate to me that the journalist has an undisclosed familiarity with the Worker’s Justice Project.
Anyway, the story does establish that there’s this non profit called the Worker’s Justice Project which advocates for a high minimum wage for gig economy businesses. So what is the Worker’s Justice Project?
We see that it’s run by another non profit, The Legal Aid Society and has a mission completely unrelated to gig economy minimum wage. So let’s follow this rabbit hole a little further.
So they get some money to act as public defenders? Doesn’t sound too bad, right? Turns out it’s on the order of $108 million a year.
So an organization that receives over $100 million a year just for representing the indigent happens to also be attacking gig economy companies, particularly Uber and Lynx who are responsible for massive declines in the NYC taxi medallion market. When I looked at the minimum wage law in question, if it were possible to restore medallions to their peak pricing (I think it’d take more than that, but consider this calculation a demonstration of the stakes at play), that would mean $10 billion increase in capitalization.
As I noted in that link, it’s awful convenient that non profits with the appearance of independence are doing wonderful things for clients of the NYC machine.
Sorry, link to the story responsible for the first quote.
Where I live, the Democrats imported all of these homeless people and bought them all the exact same tent and plopped them down in front of city hall. They wouldn’t leave until the city gave a Democrat NGO millions of dollars to deal with the homeless people.
They never got dealt with and the NGO is still hoovering money from the city council.
Least shocking of all, they were doing voter drives at the homeless camp the NGO set up.