I've seen that in real life. 2 women were raising money for this cancer kids charity, in their defense they did help a lot of kids but my wife noticed that they had extremely luxurious houses, kids in private schools that I can't afford and one of the woman's husband is not even working while the other had an average paying job.
Is easy to take your share when the sums are large enough and you can set your own salary without having to make a profit, problem in the article is that they appear to have taken most of the money from the charity.
The "CEO" of the Good Shepherd Soup Kitchen in Ottawa that created the fake hoax about the Freedom Convoy truckers stealing food from the homeless, makes 140k a year and only 26% of the charity's revenues ever reaches the downtrodden.
26% of the charity's revenues ever reaches the downtrodden.
26% go to programs. There's not even a guarantee that it reaches anyone in need. Programs have a wide latitude, things like "free job training" and "life skills coaching" are valid 'programs' that don't help anyone other than the person paid to put them on.
Non profit organizations are really difficult to keep non-corrupted.
I've seen that in real life. 2 women were raising money for this cancer kids charity, in their defense they did help a lot of kids but my wife noticed that they had extremely luxurious houses, kids in private schools that I can't afford and one of the woman's husband is not even working while the other had an average paying job.
Is easy to take your share when the sums are large enough and you can set your own salary without having to make a profit, problem in the article is that they appear to have taken most of the money from the charity.
The "CEO" of the Good Shepherd Soup Kitchen in Ottawa that created the fake hoax about the Freedom Convoy truckers stealing food from the homeless, makes 140k a year and only 26% of the charity's revenues ever reaches the downtrodden.
26% go to programs. There's not even a guarantee that it reaches anyone in need. Programs have a wide latitude, things like "free job training" and "life skills coaching" are valid 'programs' that don't help anyone other than the person paid to put them on.
Excellent point