Just think of all those
apparatchiks voting Labour and getting well paid jobs for their pains. It is an
average of £37,000 with
Christian Aid.
Of course it is run by a tax man who also runs a
Vulture Fund and it is safe bet
that he pays himself a lot more.
Charity Is An Industry With Tax Breaks And Bribes
Since its beginnings as a postwar reconstruction group,
Christian Aid has suffered from mission creep: gradually adopting a more
muscular political tone. In the 1980s it attacked banks for demanding high
interest payments for development loans. At the millennium, the charity
pushed for the reform of trade rules. But it wasn’t long before it was
flirting with anti-capitalism, printing posters comparing ‘free trade’ to
the Asian tsunami in 2005............ By comparison,
the left’s relationship with charity has been somewhat tortured, with many
seeing ‘good deeds’ as the domain of the state alone. Even by the late
1980s, Gordon Brown held to that view, describing charity as ‘a sad and
seedy competition for public pity’. All this changed under Tony
Blair. He
saw an opportunity to build a new constituency for his party — organisations
that would be Labour’s fellow travellers — and so forged relationships
between the large charities and Labour which were lubricated with cash. Our
cash. According to figures compiled by the International Policy
Network, between 2008 and 2011 the Department for International Development
will give £395 million pounds to non-governmental organisations (NGOs), most
of them UK-based charities. Few of those who receive the funds are subject
to any sort of tendering process and some of the projects are most odd. One
£10 million scheme involving Christian Aid sends ‘young British adults from
less advantaged backgrounds’ to volunteer, at taxpayers’ expense, in
developing countries. A noble cause, one might argue, but one which —
critics argue — turn the NGOs into QGOs: quasi-governmental organisations............ According to the National Council for Voluntary
Organisations, 25,000 British charities received more than three quarters of
their funding from government. Of the others, Oxfam received nearly £40
million in public funding — £35 million from the British and EU governments
alone, Christian Aid received more than £11 million from Britain and the EU;
the World Wildlife Fund £4.8 million, while the RSPB received nearly £20
million. So close to government are the RSPB that at the start of the month
they booked out the London Aquarium to host a party to ‘celebrate’ the
passing of the Marine and Coastal Access Act with Environment Secretary
Hilary Benn as the guest of honour. But the charities will do more than throw a party when
required. At the G8 summit in Gleneagles and even in the run-up to the
Copenhagen summit, they were out marching, bringing activists, waving
banners — all broadly supportive of the government’s position and calling on
the rest of the world to adopt it. Gordon Brown himself joined the G8 march.
It was a seismic moment: government strategists working with their
counterparts in big charities. In marketing they call this ‘Astroturf’ — it
looks like grassroots, but it’s synthetic. The leaders of these charities still make the claim that
they are independent, but this is nonsense when they are in receipt of
millions of pounds of government money and when Labour seeks to make
political capital from its relationship with them. In his speech to the
Labour party conference this year, the Foreign Secretary David Miliband
explained how it all works: ‘If you and your neighbours are supporters of
Save the Children, Christian Aid and Oxfam and you want funding for
development to continue for the next five years, tell them to trust the
people who raised the funding, not the Tories, who opposed it every step of
the way.’ The charities made no squeals of protest in being declared as part
of Labour’s campaign platform — united against the wicked Conservatives. There are signs that public opinion is turning. Three
years ago, a poll by the Centre for Social Justice asked, ‘If you only had
£200 to give to a good cause, who would you give to?’ Only 4 per cent opted
for a national charity such as Oxfam or Christian Aid. A full 31 per cent
said they would seek out a local charity or church working with needy people
— organisations too small to be politicised. But the poll, of course,
assumes that people have a choice. This year, each household will — through
the tax system — pay an average £200 to a charity of the Labour government’s
choice. So next time a Christian Aid volunteer comes to your door, do not
say, ‘I don’t give to charity.’ If you pay your taxes, you already do.
Christian Aid Against Pinstripe Pirates And Tax Evasion
[ 3 October 2009 ]
Charities
Errors
& omissions, broken links,
cock ups, over-emphasis, malice [ real or imaginary ] or whatever; if
you find any I am open to comment. Updated on Wednesday, 03 August 2022 22:06:15
QUOTE
Today’s big charities are slick operations that spend
huge sums on running costs and marketing, says Ed Howker. Worse, many of
them have been annexed by the government
UNQUOTE
The man is spot but did not take the point that Christian Aid is run by a
tax man who also runs a vulture fund. See the next one.
Christian Aid, a charity objects to tax
evasion by big business. Now why would that be?
QUOTE
Christian Aid says that every year the developing world is
cheated out of as much as $160bn in revenue by companies disguising their
profits –often by using tax havens - to lower their tax liability.
UNQUOTE
One of their board members is
Phil
Hodkinson of the well known vulture fund
Resolution Ltd. and also the Inland Revenue. The alleged
charity tells us
about our moral duty to pay tax, funding immigrants and
Cultural Genocide. The relations between
Big Government Big Business and Big
Charity are very cozy. It is just the tax payer that is being raped.
Have more of the dirt. The Irish are at it too.
Email
me at Mike Emery.
All
financial contributions are cheerfully accepted. If you want to keep
it private, use my
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key.
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