Would you be using Carnegie as an example if he didn't decide to donate to charity at the end? That wasn't a given when he was making that money, and who's to say the next Carnegie won't just buy up bullion and bury it in the backyard to dodge around inheritance taxes?Oh come on, that tired old thing? Plenty of people in non-profits deserve 6 figures.
Carnegie, in his old age, and possibly on review of a lifetime of shitting on people, decided to donate his vast wealth to charity. But he did not just give it away. No, he was a man of means, but also talent. So he not only donated his wealth, but he oversaw its expenditure. Because 1 million dollars in his hand was worth 10 million in the hands of someone lesser. Because he took direct control over so much of the expenses he was able to stretch it farther than it ever could have gone otherwise.
Labor in a non-profit works just the same. I could hire some shlub for 50k, and get 50k worth of work. Or I could hire a badass for 100k, and get 300k worth of work. Its also worth noting that there is a limit to how much of a pay cut anyone is willing to take. Very few people are willing to sacrifice their full earnings to put forward a cause, you need to give them something at least. So you aren't going to get that badass that can make the money go farther for a measly 50k, you have to give him something to pull him away from the competitive 250k he could be earning at the bank.
Don't get me wrong, these things need to be reviewed and monitored closely, and there are some salaries that get way out of hand (the head of the Portland United Way...or Goodwill, one of those). But if hiring a manager of a multi-million dollar organization you would be making a mistake to be offering anything less than 100k.
If it's that big a multiplier, maybe he's worth paying taxes for. Said the Libertarian, feeling filthy.My only point with the Carnegie thing is that labor, skill, has value that can often be a serious multiplier on cash. When you are getting that exec for 100k for a non-profit it may be worth it for his talents and their ability to provide a multiplier, and if it is, what's really going on is that he's donating his skill at a discount, because he could turn around and pull 300k in a heartbeat.
That'd be great, so long as being charitable doesn't get you a Rolls Royce and a mansion in the hills.haha. Self-burn.
I do hear you on the non-profit thing though. There are times when I think the whole nomenclature/tax-concept should be demolished. But then I think about how in a right wing paradise social services would be handled entirely by charitable giving. Shouldn't that be removed from the tax rolls?
I'm saying special protected status reserved for those labeled "not for profit" should not be applied to those who are clearly making a profit.Wait, wait, as a libertarian you're saying that a particularly skilled person at getting others the donate to charity shouldn't be paid well for their very real skill?
It's only a matter of time before the big 5 (and possibly one or two other) conferences strike out on their own and tell the NCAA to get bent.I definitely think, for example, the NFL and NCAA should lose their non profit status.
That's the thing though... Chelsey's stayed out of trouble, Bill's take accountability for his problems, and aside from Benghazi (which was a non-issue), what is there to talk about with Hillary? Her high profile relationships with international leaders? That helps her.Imagine what that list looks like for Hillary Clinton.
Smaller.Imagine what that list looks like for Hillary Clinton.
Just because her problems have been brought up before doesn't mean there still not there. As you said, Benghazi is one, there's still the unresolved fraud from Whitewater, the missing Rose Law Firm records magically appearing in her office years after they were subpoenaed, the suspicious death of Vince Foster, the White House travel office firings, her donors that went to prison, the mismanagement of the Clinton foundation, Sandy Berger, questions about her health and possible brain damage, the rise to power under her watch of a formerly crushed islamist movement, the culture of corruption and cronyism she's been surrounded with since entering politics, her constant saber-rattling including her unjoking assertion (that somehow got overlooked, unlike McCain's bomb-bomb-bomb-bomb-bomb-iran joke) that she would nuke Iran on Good Morning America... she's not teflon, she's wearing a teflon vest provided by a willing and compliant media who is on board with it being "her turn" - much like she got a New York Senate seat for not divorcing Bill in the 90s, she got Secretary of State and an option on a 2016 presidential bid for supporting Obama.That's the thing though... Chelsey's stayed out of trouble, Bill's take accountability for his problems, and aside from Benghazi (which was a non-issue), what is there to talk about with Hillary? Her high profile relationships with international leaders? That helps her.
Frankly, Hillary is teflon at this point.
Imagine if the press was as enthusiastic about digging up dirt on Democrats as they are on Republicans.Smaller.
--Patrick
I think it's more about "low-hanging fruit."Imagine if the press was as enthusiastic about digging up dirt on Democrats as they are on Republicans.
A great many of us think it should have been career-ending for all involved.Benghazi wasn't a non-issue for a large part of America. That kind of comment (which I've heard more than once) belies a real myopia on the left.
The fact that she is not in prison is one of the great failings of our nation.I kind of feel bad for her. She really is an incredible person, and would have made a great first woman President, but she's been too close to too many other democrats when very large mistakes have been made, and those incidents have really tarnished her.
As a Floridian, I have plenty of reasons to dislike Jeb Bush. But most of this list is dumb. Oh no, his 16 year old son had sex with a 17 year old girl. SCANDAL!
You could say that about a lot of people.The fact that she is not in prison is one of the great failings of our nation.
She's in no way responsible for the moral failings of her husband, I guess that was what I was really referring to. But yeah, she is partially to blame for Benghazi. Plenty of blame to go around on that cock-up.So you are asserting that she had not even a small part of any responsibility for the various mistakes, and is only guilty by association?
Several times over. She should have gone to prison for a number of things, like some of the things I listed above.Going to prison though? Come on.
Honestly, and I say this as a Democrat who is never going to vote for Jeb Bush given the likely political options, I have a hard time seeing more than half that list as something to be concerned about. It's like they go up to 10-12 and decided they just had to make it a big Buzzfeed-like list.
I would have said Elizabeth Warren for the dems, but she's explicitly said she's not running.Yeah Cheney's presidential chances would be more of a laugh than Ron Paul's.
That leads me to an interesting question though. Who do you think is a reasonable (within the party) candidate for the next election?
For republicans I'm seeing:
Rand Paul
Paul Ryan
Marco Rubio
Ted Cruz (no chance)
John Huntsman (possible dark horse?)
For dems
Hillary Clinton
....? I dunno.