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KJIM said:Pallister, you might can give it away on Craigs List. I did that with my old 19" just yesterday. It still worked, and the dude who got it seemed genuinely grateful.
21 said:Anyone who does charitable work expecting a 'happily ever after' ending is going to be sorely disappointed.
People who are truly in need have so many needs--not just financial, but emotional and psychological and medical and so much more. It's not a Disney movie, where the panhandler saves every dollar so he can go to college.
So if you were starving, and someone asked what you wanted to eat, you might just ask for a giant chocolate cake instead of an egg white omelette, because you never know when someone might ask you again, ever.
My friend has a foundation that benefits homeless women--she gets a hundred calls a year from well-meaning and wealthy friends who have stuff to give away. They drop off endless bags of broken toys, ripped up books, clothes you would not wear to paint your house, rusty pots and pans. She throws it all away. 'We're trying to help people,' she says, 'not tell them they only deserve garbage.'
One more thing: if you typically get charitable at this time of year, caught up in the annual holiday spirit, think about saving your efforts for another time of the year. Charities are inundated in December--and forgotten during the other 11 months. There's just as much need in June as there is during Christmas.
BYH said:Thirty-one posts in and Hondo hasn't chipped in with how this is all the Democrats fault and how the woman is a lazy sack of ship.
It's a Festivus miracle.
Sadly, this one is from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, not The Onion.Sly said:This topic reminds me of one of my favorite all-time stories in The OnionL
"As You Can See From My Clothing, I Am Not Poor"
http://www.theonion.com/content/node/33490
Just because I happen to live with my four brothers and sisters in my mom's two-bedroom South Side apartment, work at Taco Bell, and don't have a car, some ignorant types ashume that I don't have much money. But, as you can clearly see from my $220 Fubu jacket and $95 Tommy Hilfiger sweatshirt, I could not possibly be poor.
old_tony said:Sadly, this one is from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, not The Onion.Sly said:This topic reminds me of one of my favorite all-time stories in The OnionL
"As You Can See From My Clothing, I Am Not Poor"
http://www.theonion.com/content/node/33490
Just because I happen to live with my four brothers and sisters in my mom's two-bedroom South Side apartment, work at Taco Bell, and don't have a car, some ignorant types ashume that I don't have much money. But, as you can clearly see from my $220 Fubu jacket and $95 Tommy Hilfiger sweatshirt, I could not possibly be poor.
http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=535960