User not logged in - login - register
Home Calendar Books School Tool Photo Gallery Message Boards Users Statistics Advertise Site Info
go to bottom | |
 Message Boards » » The Charitable-Industrial Complex Page [1]  
0EPII1
All American
42526 Posts
user info
edit post

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/27/opinion/the-charitable-industrial-complex.html?smid=fb-share&_r=1&&pagewanted=print

Quote :
"The Charitable-Industrial Complex

By PETER BUFFETT

I HAD spent much of my life writing music for commercials, film and television and knew little about the world of philanthropy as practiced by the very wealthy until what I call the big bang happened in 2006. That year, my father, Warren Buffett, made good on his commitment to give nearly all of his accumulated wealth back to society. In addition to making several large donations, he added generously to the three foundations that my parents had created years earlier, one for each of their children to run.

Early on in our philanthropic journey, my wife and I became aware of something I started to call Philanthropic Colonialism. I noticed that a donor had the urge to “save the day” in some fashion. People (including me) who had very little knowledge of a particular place would think that they could solve a local problem. Whether it involved farming methods, education practices, job training or business development, over and over I would hear people discuss transplanting what worked in one setting directly into another with little regard for culture, geography or societal norms.

Often the results of our decisions had unintended consequences; distributing condoms to stop the spread of AIDS in a brothel area ended up creating a higher price for unprotected sex.

But now I think something even more damaging is going on.

Because of who my father is, I’ve been able to occupy some seats I never expected to sit in. Inside any important philanthropy meeting, you witness heads of state meeting with investment managers and corporate leaders. All are searching for answers with their right hand to problems that others in the room have created with their left. There are plenty of statistics that tell us that inequality is continually rising. At the same time, according to the Urban Institute, the nonprofit sector has been steadily growing. Between 2001 and 2011, the number of nonprofits increased 25 percent. Their growth rate now exceeds that of both the business and government sectors. It’s a massive business, with approximately $316 billion given away in 2012 in the United States alone and more than 9.4 million employed.

Philanthropy has become the “it” vehicle to level the playing field and has generated a growing number of gatherings, workshops and affinity groups.

As more lives and communities are destroyed by the system that creates vast amounts of wealth for the few, the more heroic it sounds to “give back.” It’s what I would call “conscience laundering” — feeling better about accumulating more than any one person could possibly need to live on by sprinkling a little around as an act of charity.

But this just keeps the existing structure of inequality in place. The rich sleep better at night, while others get just enough to keep the pot from boiling over. Nearly every time someone feels better by doing good, on the other side of the world (or street), someone else is further locked into a system that will not allow the true flourishing of his or her nature or the opportunity to live a joyful and fulfilled life.

And with more business-minded folks getting into the act, business principles are trumpeted as an important element to add to the philanthropic sector. I now hear people ask, “what’s the R.O.I.?” when it comes to alleviating human suffering, as if return on investment were the only measure of success. Microlending and financial literacy (now I’m going to upset people who are wonderful folks and a few dear friends) — what is this really about? People will certainly learn how to integrate into our system of debt and repayment with interest. People will rise above making $2 a day to enter our world of goods and services so they can buy more. But doesn’t all this just feed the beast?

I’m really not calling for an end to capitalism; I’m calling for humanism.

Often I hear people say, “if only they had what we have” (clean water, access to health products and free markets, better education, safer living conditions). Yes, these are all important. But no “charitable” (I hate that word) intervention can solve any of these issues. It can only kick the can down the road.

My wife and I know we don’t have the answers, but we do know how to listen. As we learn, we will continue to support conditions for systemic change.

It’s time for a new operating system. Not a 2.0 or a 3.0, but something built from the ground up. New code.

What we have is a crisis of imagination. Albert Einstein said that you cannot solve a problem with the same mind-set that created it. Foundation dollars should be the best “risk capital” out there.

There are people working hard at showing examples of other ways to live in a functioning society that truly creates greater prosperity for all (and I don’t mean more people getting to have more stuff).

Money should be spent trying out concepts that shatter current structures and systems that have turned much of the world into one vast market. Is progress really Wi-Fi on every street corner? No. It’s when no 13-year-old girl on the planet gets sold for sex. But as long as most folks are patting themselves on the back for charitable acts, we’ve got a perpetual poverty machine.

It’s an old story; we really need a new one.

Peter Buffett is a composer and a chairman of the NoVo Foundation."


I really like this oped piece. I really feel cynical and disgusted when I see big people gather for fancy charity dinners/balls in their 10k suits and gowns at the poshest addresses and arrive in fancy cars as if they are arriving at a casino or an upscale brothel.

As he said, the whole system needs to change from the ground up, not revised or refreshed.

ibtcapitalismhater

7/28/2013 8:32:57 PM

The Coz
Tempus Fugitive
24605 Posts
user info
edit post

Yeah, I really don't understand, endorse, or approve of functions to celebrate charity giving. I give through United Way just so my company won't nag me about it, but I earmark the donations to specific supported charities instead of their aggregate generic funding buckets. They send out invitations to annual banquets and galas and print it out in the nicest paper you can possibly find. All local company leaders are there in their Sunday finest. I find myself thinking about how much more money they could save and apply to true charitable causes if not for these congratulatory glad-handing conventions. I never attend.

7/28/2013 9:56:02 PM

moron
All American
33746 Posts
user info
edit post

^ I don't think the issue is that the galas are fancy, they're a drop in the bucket compared to the overall donations.

I think it's more the people who attend the galas are the people who cause the problems that many charities are trying to fix, and they feel their "giving" exonerates them from actually evaluating their actions in a holistic sense to see who they're screwing over, and how.

7/29/2013 12:10:05 AM

A Tanzarian
drip drip boom
10992 Posts
user info
edit post

^ ding, ding

7/29/2013 12:55:46 AM

0EPII1
All American
42526 Posts
user info
edit post

le duh!

7/29/2013 1:56:40 AM

mrfrog

15145 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
" My wife and I know we don’t have the answers, but we do know how to listen. As we learn, we will continue to support conditions for systemic change.

It’s time for a new operating system. Not a 2.0 or a 3.0, but something built from the ground up. New code."


Every word of the article is an appeal to people's egos and emotions aside from this one part - the part where he admits to not having a solution, and advocates the same mindset that his charities already have.

My apologies if I've ignored the unsaid undertone. Perhaps it would be more fair to paint him as a social revolutionary, no different from any other social revolutionary in history? What form of populism will it be this time?

It was a bit disappointing that he references the US liberal democratic talking point - that inequality is increasing. In global accounting of humans, this isn't obviously true, and probably outright wrong.

If any code is broken, it's most likely our code of morality. Systems-level thinking is advocated in roles of production, but no so much in roles of consumption. The rich are implicated in the problems of the world today through their consumption and investment habits. Acquisition of wealth is hardly the driving problem. CEOs aren't problematic because they have a large salary, the problem is that their investment goes on to prioritize CEO talent. It's the demand that creates the evil, not the supply.

I find it contradictory that innovation and rethinking our models of employing capital are the focus of his piece. Those aren't bad things by themselves, but the class society that he derides is built upon the monopolization of that business innovation.

7/29/2013 12:07:53 PM

0EPII1
All American
42526 Posts
user info
edit post

Are you saying that on a global scale, inequality (difference between rich and poor) *isn't* increasing?

7/29/2013 1:47:57 PM

mrfrog

15145 Posts
user info
edit post

That is correct.

http://youtu.be/hVimVzgtD6w?t=6m19s

Or, the thing itself:

http://www.gapminder.org/downloads/income-distribution-2003/

Surely, you must have a running hypothesis in your head that the decoupling of US productivity and wages (increases) had to do with lower cost production overseas. It's at least related, if nothing else. Public smashing of Japanese imported cars in the 1980s was obviously tied to an increasingly frustrated workforce. Even if we can't say exactly what that means, a connection is undeniable.

Belief of increasing standard of living doesn't necessarily have to go along with that, but the income argument does. Incomes in China (by global objective PPP) increased dramatically because they gained the ability to compete with Americans. The impact on Americans, or at least a large part of that, was rising domestic inequality, and the impact globally was decreasing inequality. The balance didn't have to fall that way. Inequality could have declined domestically and globally. But it didn't.

[Edited on July 29, 2013 at 2:31 PM. Reason : ]

7/29/2013 2:30:55 PM

The Coz
Tempus Fugitive
24605 Posts
user info
edit post

Quote :
"I don't think the issue is that the galas are fancy, they're a drop in the bucket compared to the overall donations.

I think it's more the people who attend the galas are the people who cause the problems that many charities are trying to fix, and they feel their "giving" exonerates them from actually evaluating their actions in a holistic sense to see who they're screwing over, and how."

I see. My response is what happens after only reading the bolded text in the OP. Sorry, my Soap Box skills are pretty rusty.

7/29/2013 11:52:48 PM

 Message Boards » The Soap Box » The Charitable-Industrial Complex Page [1]  
go to top | |
Admin Options : move topic | lock topic

© 2024 by The Wolf Web - All Rights Reserved.
The material located at this site is not endorsed, sponsored or provided by or on behalf of North Carolina State University.
Powered by CrazyWeb v2.38 - our disclaimer.