I think it would be good if someday we had a President that actually needed the money.
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Thursday, May 31
by
PB
on Thu 31 May 2007 10:58 AM CDT
Wednesday, May 30
by
PB
on Wed 30 May 2007 06:43 PM CDT
Another reason to love Barry Bonds:
We just couldn't ask for a better role model for the kids.
by
PB
on Wed 30 May 2007 06:23 PM CDT
I really think this is the exception rather than the rule, although I think Perla's post is largely accurate in that foundations tend to come up with a bureaucratic solution to every compliance challenge. I do think she's a bit wrong here, though:
Sure, there's no collective code of ethics that nonprofits and foundations adhere to, and if someone manages to make that happen they deserve a Nobel Prize. Many nonprofits, and quite a few foundations, have codes of ethics which they make public. Do they adhere to them? Good luck finding out.
by
PB
on Wed 30 May 2007 06:00 PM CDT
Joe links to advice for those nonprofit brand managers to whom pithiness comes as a challenge.
by
PB
on Wed 30 May 2007 05:53 PM CDT
The Capital Research Center Web site has fallen silent. How are we supposed to keep ourselves from our anti-free market big government communist tendencies?
by
PB
on Wed 30 May 2007 04:41 PM CDT
The Rockefeller Foundation has posted a niftly little form in which you can submit a brilliant idea. Here's a sample:
by
PB
on Wed 30 May 2007 04:16 PM CDT
PND:
Glad they jumped right on that. Tuesday, April 17
by
PB
on Tue 17 Apr 2007 09:25 PM CDT
Sean Stannard-Stockton on how the growth of individual philanthropy could [or couldn't] diminish the influence of large philanthropic institutions:
I respectfully disagree. We live in a quick response world. The faster we can make something happen the more impact we can have. Individuals can do that. Foundations can't. Sure, there's always room for well-thought-out solutions to seemingly intractable problems, but private foundations think themselves to death. In the current age, private foundations are the dinosaurs, for the most part unable and unwilling to adapt to how the world works, hoping they can still throw their weight around enough to maintain influence. They may continue to have a big piece of the pie, but it'll be so stale it won't be worth eating.
by
PB
on Tue 17 Apr 2007 08:53 PM CDT
Joe highlights this article in the Wall Street Journal about reality teevee philanthropy. My take: no nudity, profanity, or violence and it's a tough ratings getter.
by
PB
on Tue 17 Apr 2007 08:41 PM CDT
The Council on Foundations 2007 Annual Conference will take place in a few weeks in Seattle. The theme is a typically bland "Philanthropy and the Challenges of Our Time: Making a Difference at Home and Abroad." The challenges of our time are defined by COF as poverty, public health, the environment and disaster preparedness. All well and good. But one would think that "making a difference at home and abroad" might involve some discussion about the most pressing issue of our time: the war in Iraq. Nope. A search of PDFs on COF's site of the various days' agendas turns up just one reference to Iraq. A "meet the filmmaker" event on Sunday, April 29 with documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras. Other than that, nothing. COF President and CEO Steve Gunderson couldn't even be bothered to pull together a one-sided panel discussion involving his fellow Republicans Bill Kristol and Ann Coulter, moderated by Brit Hume. Today's foundations have been woefully silent on the policies of the Bush Administration. Those that purport to support civil society abroad have stood by and watched the disintegration of civil society at home -- from a botched war to domestic spying to a President who feels no compulsion to adhere to the law. Foundation leaders have been cowed by a political environment that demonizes dissent; their fortitude [if they had any in the first place] sapped by a need to not be seen as partisan or unpatriotic. They've turned their backs on one of the tenants of private foundations: providing an independent voice unfettered by government or profit-making influences. That COF can't hold even a single open discussion about the war in Iraq simply confirms how foundations have lost their way entirely when it comes to looking honestly at how government policies impact the lives of those individuals foundations claim to help. In a word: disgraceful. UPDATE: I'm not suggesting foundation leaders embark on Bush-bashing speaking tours, and I understand the war is a toxic subject for any public figure to talk about. What I see is a lack of discussion/analysis in foundationland about the ongoing impact of the war on our society. This thing's been going on for more than four years; you'd think by now at least some foundations would've found their voice on the subject.
by
PB
on Tue 17 Apr 2007 08:08 PM CDT
Now I'm back.
Thursday, March 8
by
PB
on Thu 08 Mar 2007 01:21 PM CST
Andrew Sullivan has been bashing the Human Rights Campaign Fund for its lack of accomplishments. He cites Charity Navigator's rating. My favorite bit [quoting an e-mail from a reader who had contributed to HRC]:
Ouch.
by
PB
on Thu 08 Mar 2007 11:54 AM CST
Trent Stamp says:
Nothing wrong with setting high bars, Trent. I'm all for it. I think what we've got in this case, however, is an oversight on the part of Mrs. Clinton. Not much evidence that this was a "blatant display of arrogance and contempt for playing by the rules." Nothing's been unearthed that would indicate Mrs. Clinton had anything to hide. I understand Trent's a single-issue advocate, and getting charities to play by the rules is a worthy endeavor. Charity Navigator provides an important service to donors. Every now and then, though, a little context is helpful.
by
PB
on Thu 08 Mar 2007 10:55 AM CST
The DC Examiner examines the surge of foundation leaders on Capitol Hill last week. The answer to the nonprofit sector's problems? A caucus:
I'd file this under "be careful what you wish for." A platform to discuss "sector needs" can quickly become a platform to discuss "sector abuses." Sunday, March 4
Saturday, March 3
by
PB
on Sat 03 Mar 2007 08:41 PM CST
White Courtesy Telephone riffs on the Ford Foundation's search for a new CEO by giving us four fundamental questions of philanthropy. In WCT's spirit of thoughtful consideration of the state of the sector, I offer up these ten potential candidates for any current or future foundation CEO opening. Pros and Cons are provided for each. Donald Rumsfeld: Pros: Wants a lot of bang for the buck. Speaks incomprehensible language. Cons: Stubborn [a nightmare for the board of directors]. Newt Gingrich: Pros: Resilient. Ruthless [could easily inform grantees that commitments wouldn't be met due to the foundation going in a "different direction"]. Cons: No moral authority. Lynn Cheney: Pros: Past grantmaking experience. Quite magical with the keyboard. Cons: Bedmate [will require time off to be by husband's side during impeachment proceedings]. Jesse Ventura: Pros: Independent thinker. Board management skills. Cons: Nightmare for PR department. See here, here and here. Scooter Libby: Pros: Understands the fundraising challenges of grantees. Cons: Could be unavailable until 2017. Laura Bush: Pros: Can charm the socks off you [great for a community foundation post!]. Cons: Budget management. Would require a driver. Simon Cowell: Pros: Keen evaluator of talent. Sharp wit. Cons: Perhaps better suited for hooliganism. Donald Trump: Pros: Fires people, and god knows nobody ever gets fired at foundations [except me, when they find out who I am]. The Donald blogs! Cons: Comb-over. Nightmare for the PR department. Katherine Harris: Pros: Understands donor intent. Cons: Undergraduate education funders beware. May have staff morale issues. Terrence Scanlon: Pros: Runs non-partisan, unbiased think tank on philanthropy. Role as Chairman of Consumer Products Safety Commission under Reagan could improve in-kind giving program. Cons: If founding donor is deceased, could spend large sums on mediums to determine donor intent. Thursday, March 1
by
PB
on Thu 01 Mar 2007 08:51 PM CST
I'm all for getting out the whipping stick when it comes to excesses in compensation within the nonprofit sector, particularly for nonprofits that have a truly charitable mission. And I understand why Stephanie Strom, as the nonprofits beat writer for the Times, covered this story:
But I must say I'm a bit weary of this type of coverage when, comparatively, there's very little coverage of this issue in the for-profit sector. Perhaps it's because business reporters tend to fall in love with their subjects or they don't know enough about the issues they're trying to cover. There's enough corporate cheerleading on a daily basis on CNBC to make free-market purists blush. And don't give me the line about nonprofits being tax-exempt and thus should be "more accountable" for their actions than for-profit corporations. The current administration has done it's best to make the corporate sector tax-exempt; finding creative ways to avoid paying corporate taxes has become brilliant beltway fun. Those organizations obviously deserving of tax-exempt status ought to have a special and inscrutable place in the heart of the current version of the IRS. Tuesday, February 27
by
PB
on Tue 27 Feb 2007 08:28 PM CST
Frumkin [from SocialEdge]:
Interesting points. When foundations really get the ownership bug, they do a Pew. In one way foundations are like venture capitalists [a tired metaphor, I'm aware]; they want to share the investment risk. I think foundations are becoming less reticent to "disturb the competitive landscape," and to let the nonprofit marketplace play itself out. I see fewer missions to rescue nonprofits [excluding those close to home and soul] that aren't performing. Frumkin's right, though, that foundations' priorities, as currently defined, don't involve helping their grantees grow strategically. That's unfortunate.
by
PB
on Tue 27 Feb 2007 11:58 AM CST
WaPo:
As had been widely blogged, Washington Post reporter John Solomon has perfected the art of taking a relatively minor story [or nonstory] and hyping it to earth-shattering levels. Note to the idiots who run the Post and front-paged this "story": It's a fucking foundation that gives hundreds of thousands of dollars away to charities. I'm sure all that cash would've brought so much ill will the Clintons' way that they purposely didn't disclose it. And, as Josh Marshall points out, the Clinton Family Foundation's tax returns have, as required by the IRS, been publicly available since its inception. Next up for tomorrow's edition of the Post: Hillary's eighth-grade report card not signed by parents and returned to teacher
by
PB
on Tue 27 Feb 2007 10:50 AM CST
Tactical Philanthropy on pain-in-the-ass givers:
Can we come up with some sort of metric that measure the ROI on the interactions with such donors? Three phone calls from a donor in one week complaining about how their name wasn't in large enough type on the donor recognition plaque: -$2,000. Two outbursts during a donor gathering about feeling "marginalized": -$2,350. Four threats to "pull my generous, heart-felt support for this damn organization" if junior doesn't get that marketing internship: -$3,700? Shoving donor into their Jaguar and telling them never to come back: priceless.
by
PB
on Tue 27 Feb 2007 10:29 AM CST
Foundations do the government's job:
This, of course, is the "traditional philanthropy" conservatives love. When you've got charities available to paint over capitalism's flaws, your belief in the stock market as the arbiter of right and wrong can remain firmly intact. Sunday, February 25
by
PB
on Sun 25 Feb 2007 11:33 AM CST
There's no entry for "philanthropy" in the exciting new Conservapedia, a conservative counterpunch to that left-wing online conpiracy known as Wikipedia. Here's all you need to know:
Let me offer up an entry for "philanthropy" that complies with Conservapedia's philosophy:
UPDATE: Conservapedia has apparently been swallowed by submissions mocking it. Shame. Saturday, February 24
by
PB
on Sat 24 Feb 2007 11:36 AM CST
WaPo:
OPM=other people's money=corporate grants. Nice. Friday, February 23
by
PB
on Fri 23 Feb 2007 10:31 PM CST
by
PB
on Fri 23 Feb 2007 04:53 PM CST
Jeff Brooks makes some interesting observations about how nonprofits should -- and should not -- advertise to potential donors. I disagree on one point: We need much, much more nudity in nonprofit advertising.
by
PB
on Fri 23 Feb 2007 04:41 PM CST
but the Supremes will be hearing a case on the constitutionality of the spectacular failure otherwise known as the Faith-Based Initiative:
I wish Gaylor the best of luck, especially when Scalia starts spewing his bullshit about how George Washington was a born again Christian. Tuesday, February 20
by
PB
on Tue 20 Feb 2007 09:56 AM CST
From the Washington Examiner:
It's usually pressure from outside -- some bad press, a congressional hearing, a grantee uprising -- that gets foundations to act. I wish the best of success to those trying to get foundations and nonprofits to voluntarily adopt a set of best practices. I won't be holding my breath. Monday, February 19
by
PB
on Mon 19 Feb 2007 10:32 PM CST
Tom Watson at Onphilanthropy gets a little philanthropic motivation from Daytona:
Hopefully, there'll be a little less carnage than there was yesterday.
by
PB
on Mon 19 Feb 2007 10:22 PM CST
I disagree, respectfully, with Lucy. The mere fact that a grantseeker can express criticism of a grantmaker in a public forum sponsored by criticized grantmaker is a noticeable sign of progress. Lucy pooh-poohs that it's as "far as it goes." Perhaps, but from inside the private foundation prism this seems to be a pretty big leap. Hat tip: Phil.
by
PB
on Mon 19 Feb 2007 09:19 PM CST
My take is that foundation CEOs get to play the role of corporate CEO when it comes to managing their investment portfolios, and in that role they think no differently than your average shareholder-value-obsessed executive. There's a fair amount of penis envy [with all due apologies to Susan Berresford] among the larger foundations when it comes to asset size and growth, in part driven by a news media that cares more about dollar amounts than anything else [and that includes the philanthropic trade media, perhaps the worst offenders]. On one count Manzo is exactly right. When a number of foundations stick their necks out and adopt uncomprising socially responsible investment policies, other foundations will follow. Especially when "those peers recieve praise and recognition for doing so." Never underestimate the power of the ego stroke. It may be the best motivator for change in the world of institutional philanthropy.
by
PB
on Mon 19 Feb 2007 08:16 PM CST
From the Feb. 19 & 26 issue of the New Yorker:
What? No poetry in grantwriting? Monday, January 29
by
PB
on Mon 29 Jan 2007 09:26 PM CST
Those keenly interested in the issue of "donor intent" may want to check out Capital Research Center grand poobah Terrence Scanlon's Webcast on the matter, part of a series of seminars sponsored by the right-wing Washington Legal Foundation. It will help if your idea of fun is watching a medium shade of beige paint dry on the inside wall of an unheated garage during a polar cold watch.
by
PB
on Mon 29 Jan 2007 04:33 PM CST
Where'd those three months go? Full disclosure: I've been participating in a secret Bradley Foundation program [still in beta - yet to be announced] designed to properly educate individuals who don't have a complete understanding of the economic theory that dictates big companies require large sums of federal tax dollars to stay competitive while at the same time the poor sucker making minimum wage will actually be screwed by a federally mandated pay increase. I now feel like I can be a high-functioning contributor to this great capitalistic society of ours. * * A joke. Wednesday, October 11
by
PB
on Wed 11 Oct 2006 07:13 AM CDT
The Wall Street Journal reports [sub req.] on the lengths to which Bill Daniels went to preserve his intent for his foundation:
Then there's this little tidbit:
I presume conservative religious charities -- groups that promote the idea that marriage is between one man and one woman and that sex is for making babies -- can consider themselves ineligible. Thursday, October 5
by
PB
on Thu 05 Oct 2006 08:09 PM CDT
Phil points to this piece in the LA Times about a church that offers its congregants the option to donate via an ATM. Just what type of church might do such a thing?
A theological debate for our times.
by
PB
on Thu 05 Oct 2006 07:55 PM CDT
Robert Reich in the American Prospect:
Two more years and we may be batting 1.000.
by
PB
on Thu 05 Oct 2006 07:41 PM CDT
Dick DeVos is running for Governor of Michigan against Democratic incumbant Jennifer Granholm. Michigan's economy -- dependent as it is on the auto industry -- is in the toilet. It's a tight race. The mainstream Michigan media, however, don't seem all that interested in reporting on Devos's philanthropy, which is surely an indication of where his heart lies. Leave it to the alternative weekly Metro News:
A little philanthropy to help ensure a 12-year-old victim of incest can't get an abortion. Monday, September 25
by
PB
on Mon 25 Sep 2006 09:45 PM CDT
The Ad Council launches a new ad campaign. Philanthropy about "nothing," at least for right now.
The culprit: media fragmentation:
The Ad Agencies kick it off:
Maybe not such a good idea.
by
PB
on Mon 25 Sep 2006 09:08 PM CDT
Phil at Gifthub ponders the right wing's philanthropic association. Since Bushmania took over Washington in 2001, the Philanthropy Roundtable has become the hip little W Hotel for mainstream foundations. "We're so cool. We're super-liberal and we joined the Roundtable!" Saturday, September 23
by
PB
on Sat 23 Sep 2006 08:51 PM CDT
Forbes list of the 400 richest people in the world includes none of those pathetic little millionaires:
Clearly, Mr. Miller relies on some economic indicators to represent "progress" more than others. And here's your new trickle down economy:
Let's promote economic policies that benefit the super rich so they, in turn, can get a tax deduction to help those who are unhelped by our economic policies.
by
PB
on Sat 23 Sep 2006 08:11 PM CDT
Back from my bender. My esteemed colleague at White Courtesy Telephone has provided some literary criticism of the Google press release announcing its new giving arm:
WCT also accuses the New York Times reporter I mentioned in my post last week [and who I stated wrote what I thought was an "insightful" piece on Google's new philanthropic venture] of hyping the story. There are innovations in marketing and there are innovations in philanthropy. Sticking all of the "good" a company does, whether it be tax-deductable or not, under some corporate philanthropic umbrella is nothing new. I've never thought the tax code was much of a motivator for a company to cut checks to the local soup kitchen. Perhaps the Times, by sending a business reporter off to cover the Google.org story [is there a segment of the news media that kowtows to the institutions it theoretically covers in an objective fashion as much as the business media?] made too much of it. And maybe Google's PR honchos are looking for some wet kisses for the company's newly conceived mechanism for generosity. I'd say Google's corporate track record of innovation bodes well for its philanthropy. Thursday, September 14
by
PB
on Thu 14 Sep 2006 10:08 PM CDT
Maybe the New York Times should let reporter Katie Hafner cover philanthropy instead of the reporters who shot blanks at Wal-Mart. In one of the more insightful pieces about the "new" philanthropy, Hafner gives us an analysis of Google's approach:
Google's latest innovation: Rendering the charitable tax-exemption uncool.
by
PB
on Thu 14 Sep 2006 09:42 PM CDT
I generally fall in the category of people who think, when the history is written, Wal-Mart will have done more harm than good to the overall well-being of the country. But if you're going to actually go after the big-box demon at least bring some logic and a few relevant facts. I read the New York Times story last Friday insinuating Wal-Mart was paying off conservative think tanks with grants from the Walton Family Foundation, the private giving arm of the family that owns the company. The story alleged that, in exchange for grants, the think tanks placed Op-Eds in newspapers stating support for Wal-Mart's business practices. The evidence was pretty thin. Two-and-a-half-million over six years went to conservative groups; this from a foundation that gave away more than $100 million in 2004 alone. All the grants cited in the story were, as the article states, tiny percentages of the recipient organizations' overall fundraising for any given year [$100k to the American Enteprise Institute over three years; AEI raised $24 million in 2004]. Every other graph contained a fact that eroded the underlying premise of the story. The only element of the story that seemed to have relevance was the "fact" that the Op-Ed contributors didn't disclose they had received some dough from the company. That is, until this classic correction appeared today:
Way to stick a fork in any credibility in your future reporting of Wal-Mart and its corporate giving. A little ecstasy for the wingers. Thursday, September 7
by
PB
on Thu 07 Sep 2006 08:26 AM CDT
The Getty Trust is the gift that keeps on giving to the editors of the LA Times:
I'll bet. Wednesday, August 30
by
PB
on Wed 30 Aug 2006 01:59 PM CDT
Selfish Giving goes through the rebranding tunnel and emerges with savvy.
I'd agree that "savvy" is much easier on the philanthropic palate. Best of luck, SG, with the new venture.
by
PB
on Wed 30 Aug 2006 11:24 AM CDT
Kiplinger's reports:
As WCT highlighted a few months ago, what philanthropy researchers predicted may turn out to be something of a hoax.
by
PB
on Wed 30 Aug 2006 09:05 AM CDT
A bit off topic, but I had to link to this post about recent efforts of "conservative fake nonprofit foundations" to kill some legislation in California. Hilarious.
by
PB
on Wed 30 Aug 2006 08:48 AM CDT
It appears we'll now be getting all the bloody details. Stay tuned.
Tuesday, August 29
by
PB
on Tue 29 Aug 2006 06:24 PM CDT
I have a shiny new set of crayons and will use all the brightest colors to respond to David Hogberg's post at the American Spectator about my criticisms of the latest eye-opener from the Capital Research Center. Despite evidence to the contrary, I can muster up enough intelligence to understand the point that "all the giving is a matter of public record." I wasn't questioning the data itself, but rather how it was interpreted. Foundation grants are generally made for specific projects. As I wrote, if a corporate foundation gave a grant specifically to the Brookings Institution for the publishing of a book extolling the virtues of welfare reform, categorizing those dollars as "left" is misleading. Having some indication of why specific organizations received their categorizations would have made the study much more transparent. What data was used for categorizing the organizations? Web sites? Annual reports? A survey? Word of mouth? Given the entirety of one organization's work, what tipped them to one side or the other? I dared offer my opinion [while calling out CRC for its subjectivity] on the accuracy of its categorization of Focus on the Family. Whatever one believes constitutes a "traditional value," Focus on the Family was quite vocal about its support for the Bush tax cuts and even more so for privatizing social security. Excluding [if indeed it was considered - more on that below] Focus on the Family's support for more government regulation of the television industry, my point, delivered however inelegantly, was that Focus on the Family is an example of a pretty straightforward call. After some reconsideration [god forbid!], with the exception of "traditional values," and its leftie counterpart, "liberal values," I don't have a problem with CRC's criteria. The rest are fairly obvious. But did the Parents Television Council get an appropriate allocation of "left" points for its pressuring companies to pull their ads from a television show [how anti-free market can you be, really?] like Rainbow Push received for, as CRC's article calls it, Jesse Jackson's corporate "shakedowns?" And did the many organizations listed on the "right" that feel the FCC needs to play the role of television and radio censor get any "left" points for that particular little love affair with government regulation? And of the many, many environmental organizations on the "left" list, none was doing anything that might have landed them on the "right" [these guys and these guys seem to be straight down the political middle]? As to my "distortion" of the Bank of America matching gifts, CRC states on its Web site that "Bank of America's charitable arm unapologetically funds ecoterrorism." Even if, for a mere $300, that statement is true, nothing about it indicates the authors feel the matching gift to the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society is an example of "indifference" on the part of the Bank of America Foundation. Yes. I'm a lousy speller. Monday, August 28
by
PB
on Mon 28 Aug 2006 08:26 PM CDT
White Courtesy Telephone highlights the fact that the story that was the great liberal campaign finance reform conspiracy [otherwise known as "Pewgate"] has had all the legs of this little guy:
As WCT points out, Pewgate turns out to be very little to do with nothing. Conspiracies in the right-wing blogosphere tend to die quickly and quietly.
by
PB
on Mon 28 Aug 2006 04:53 PM CDT
The New York Times weighed in last week on Judge Anna Diggs Taylor, who ruled against the Bush Administration's NSA spying program. Judicial watch is accusing Judge Taylor of having a conflict of interest because she sits on the board of the Community Foundation for Southeastern Michigan. Seems the foundation has made grants to the A.C.L.U., which opposes the NSA program. The grants were not related to the NSA. Just one question for Judicial Watch. Say, hypothetically, Judge Taylor had ruled in favor of the Bush Administration's NSA policy. Would we be hearing from you?
by
PB
on Mon 28 Aug 2006 03:53 PM CDT
Say it ain't so. Businessweek examines competition among donor advised funds, community foundations, and [post-Buffetmania] private foundations:
The community foundation vs. donor advised fund discussion has been happening for quite awhile. The idea that private foundations may offer a third option for would-be philanthropists is no doubt a nightmarish scenario for your average community foundation CEO. I await the announcement of the opening of the Ford Foundation's development office.
by
PB
on Mon 28 Aug 2006 03:27 PM CDT
The kind folks over at CRC have updated their post and pointed out an egregious error in my latest post about CRC's earth-shattering new study that uncovered liberal bias in the grantmaking of the foundations of Fortune 100 companies. I wrote:
Page two of the print article detailing CRC's research says:
It's always helpful, especially when employing the somewhat delicate art form of sarcasm, to get the facts right. Maybe I was distracted by the high-school-yearbook-quality of the adjacent photo of JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Diamond. Whatever the case, I've been sufficiently, and deservedly, chastised by CRC for my error. CRC is free to use this oversight on my part as reason to dismiss me as a "self-marginalizing" critic. I'll continue to keep a look out for the release of a "study" from CRC that does anything other than confirm the organization's liberal conspiracy theories. Until then, CRC will continue to influence only its ideological soul mates. Friday, August 25
by
PB
on Fri 25 Aug 2006 11:04 PM CDT
I am forever grateful to Matthew Vadum at the CRC-Greenwatch blog [those greens need watching, you know; we might all end up with some clean air to breathe] for his thoughtful consideration of my post about the Capital Research Center's recent article detailing how many Fortune 100 companies are, through their corporate grantmaking foundations, inadvertantly [or secretly] aiding the regimes of Castro and Kim Jong Il. I'll concede on a couple of points, and my responses to Vadum are detailed below: 1] I did, in fact, offer in my criticism a simplified explanation of the academic research process. I found it difficult to outline the many flavors of academic research models in a less-than-500-word blog post. However, if there's a single research project during which CRC suddenly realized theory A was totally off the mark ["the federal government can't find its ass in the bathroom"] and published the evidence in the form of an argument for theory B ["gee, maybe the federal highway system thingy is ok"], I can't find any evidence of it. I'm open to suggestions. 2] I was not aware that CRC published on its Web site the entire list of the recipient organizations of the corporate foundations it examined. As standard practice, it's helpful to mention in a print article the fact that additional data is available online. Then I'll know to go and look for it. Vadum did not respond to my point about two of the organizations listed in the article. The Cato Institute, defined as "right" for purposes of CRC's study, recently published a book castigating the Republicans for their less-than-sound fiscal policies. The Brookings Institution, defined as "left" for purposes of the study, recently published a book praising welfare reform. If, say, the Bank of America Foundation funded Cato and Brookings specifically for these book projects, right is left and left is right. 3] Given CRC's mission statement, it's very difficult to believe that as researchers were going about categorizing organizations as "left" or "right," the "left" bucket wasn't a lot bigger than the "right" bucket. It would've been some extra work, but having some indication of just why the organizations received their designations would've been helpful. It's not that I don't like the definitions themselves. Large organizations, in particular, are involved in a variety of issues; sometimes they side with conservatives and sometimes with liberals. Given CRC's political philosophy, it's not too far-fetched to believe that the tiniest of liberal indicators landed an organization on the "left" side of the fence regardless of the organization's overall focus. 4] Maybe the reason corporations won't give CRC data on their contributions that aren't made through their foundations is that if they do CRC will find a $50 employee match as reason to call them eco-terrorists. Kind of saps the veep of public relations' desire to truthfully fill out the CRC survey. Finally, it's always helpful to have a free spell check service. We bloggers are well aware that our credibility is rooted in our grammatical correctness. Wednesday, August 23
by
PB
on Wed 23 Aug 2006 09:16 AM CDT
Link:
Philanthropic humorist [or humorous philanthropist] is not an oxymoron. Tuesday, August 22
by
PB
on Tue 22 Aug 2006 07:34 PM CDT
The Capital Research Center, which is to objective research what most congressional election campaigns are to truth in advertising, has released some new "research" on corporate philanthropy. We should not be "shocked, shocked" that CRC has determined corporate foundations to be the secret tools of Castro and Kim Jong Il. In the world of real academic research, most study is conducted by bringing together all the evidence and allowing such evidence to determine the thesis that is put forward. In CRC's case, the process seems to be just the opposite. The authors of the subtly titled article detailing the research, "Funding Liberalism with Blue-Chip Profits: Fortune 100 Foundations Back Leftist Causes," are thoroughly perplexed that corporate foundations would rather give dollars to environmental organizations that may have some appeal to soccer moms concerned about their kids' breathing soot from a nearby smokestack than to think tanks trying to rescue America from a descent into socialism. CRC neatly arranged the recipient organizations of the corporate foundations it examined into "left" and "right." In CRC's world, there is no "center." Not surprisingly, CRC offers a very very partial list of the organizations and their categorizations. On the left are the Brookings Institution [which just published a book, written by a Republican, extolling the virtues of welfare reform legislation passed in the '90s], and those evil, aged communists at the AARP Foundation. On the right are the Cato Institute [which just published a book titled, Buck Wild: How Republicans Broke the Bank and Became the Party of Big Government], and [correctly] James Dobson's Focus on the Family. It offers a convoluted explanation of what constitutes "right" and what constitutes "left," saying "we also put on the right groups that defend traditional values..." Now, that's objective. Perhaps the most glaring inadequecy of CRC's research is that it only examined the foundations of Fortune 100 corporations. Corporations give boatloads of money away directly, sometimes much more than they do through their established foundations. Using this limited sample to determine political intent is like trying to determine the annual beer consumption of Americans while excluding Budweiser and Miller. Also playing a role in the liberal corporate philanthropy conspiracy, according to the article, are matching gifts programs, which allow employees to give to their favorite charities while having their employers provide a match. As evidence the article offers up a single $300 and a single $50 matching gift processed through the Bank of America Foundation. The $300 gift went to the Sea Sheperd Conservation Society, which CRC accuses of sinking fishing vessels, and the $50 went to International A.N.S.W.E.R., the leaders for which CRC accuses of "supporting the communist dictatorships of Cuba and North Korea" [note: this may be true]. The point is, $350 does not a conspiracy make. But when you're trying to prove a point ...
by
PB
on Tue 22 Aug 2006 09:53 AM CDT
Lucy Bernholz on regulatory improvements for foundations:
While I'm not sure I agree that the suits in Washington can implement regulations that make foundations behave, I think Lucy is exactly right. Foundation executives are like NCAA coaches who commit recruiting violations. They don't lose their jobs, but the kids involved get booted off their teams. The only way a coach loses his or her job is if the university's students, faculty and/or community put pressure on the administration. Perhaps an imprecise analogy, but I think communities can do a better job keeping foundations in line than any regulations on the books. The problem, of course, is that people or organizations that criticize foundations greatly decrease their chances of getting funding from the foundations they criticize. Unfortunately, it's the way the game is played. Monday, August 21
by
PB
on Mon 21 Aug 2006 05:26 PM CDT
Just a hunch that the Contra Costa Times won't be doing investigative reporting on the Gates Foundation anytime soon:
Program-related investment, anyone?
by
PB
on Mon 21 Aug 2006 03:07 PM CDT
It goes without saying that over the past few years the Getty Trust was managed like a cookie jar in a household run by five-year-olds. Just when you think nothing else embarrasing could possibly be unearthed, the LA Times gave us this over the weekend:
Gardner is keeping 78 grand he was paid for the project. To date, he's produced an "outline" but hasn't conducted any interviews. Which makes this announcement last week even more perplexing:
You'd think The Getty, having become a complete clusterfuck over the past three years, would look to someone outside the organization to chair its board. It's tough letting go of that cookie jar. Thursday, August 17
by
PB
on Thu 17 Aug 2006 01:56 PM CDT
Mitt:
The donations were not, apparently, illegal. Monday, August 14
by
PB
on Mon 14 Aug 2006 07:50 PM CDT
The Nonprofit Times includes Roy Williams, head of the Boy Scouts of America, on its list of the top 50 nonprofit leaders in the country:
Forget that Williams stands up for discrimination. Hate-monger James Dobson of Focus on the Family is also on the list.
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