(December 20, 2020 at 12:23 pm)BrianSoddingBoru4 Wrote:(December 20, 2020 at 11:52 am)Brian37 Wrote: I think most reading this understand the need to fight climate change, and clean up our waters and oceans.
But I just saw an ad for an ocean cleanup charity. They offer you a product if you donate. Ok, here is what I don't get. If the idea is to clean up the ocean, then why offer anything. Even outside charity, the more we make as a species, eventually what we consume and use ends up in a landfill or in the ocean. Why are they making anything at all, why not simply ask for the donation?
As to whether the gift they’re offering ends in in a landfill or the ocean, it depends on what the product is. The last time we donated to an environmental cause, they sent us 25 biodegradable peat pots in biodegradable packaging. Didn’t mean much to me, but herself was over the moon about it.
As to why it’s being offered in the first place, people tend to be more likely to donate if offered a gift in exchange.
Boru
I agree. But why?
Transaction is what we expect in business. But with charity, the idea is altruism, not transaction.
I'd say that most charities are not charities, but businesses, because of what you just said. People are more likely to donate if they get something physical back in real time. To me, real charity isn't that. Real charity is when you give something up and don't expect anything in return.
I use to ask for the tax credit slip when donating money or physical things to charity. I don't anymore. I still donate, but I don't ask for the tax deduction. Why? Because if I get money back, that means others have to compensate for the money I get back.