ChatterBank38 mins ago
Charity ‘Not Inclusive’ Enough For Funding
https:/ /www.th etimes. co.uk/a rticle/ womens- abuse-c harity- rise-lo ses-5m- contrac t-for-n ot-supp orting- men-2tz fxm28r? shareTo ken=0ab 286d5d3 79548a2 614cb78 97c6ebe 7
Hope the link works.
I’m all for LGBTQ+ rights, but I’m also for a charity being able to focus on whatever and whoever it likes. Not having its funding withdrawn because it chooses to help a particular part of society. What do you think?
Hope the link works.
I’m all for LGBTQ+ rights, but I’m also for a charity being able to focus on whatever and whoever it likes. Not having its funding withdrawn because it chooses to help a particular part of society. What do you think?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Cloverjo. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.// but I’m also for a charity being able to focus on whatever and whoever it likes...//
nope: you cant have a charity in favour of one Clove - cloverjo that is! and if you ARE a charity you have to focus on your stated charitable objects
( yeah read objaaaaay....)
as Prince Harry is finding - even in a country that does allow er a charity mainly for oneself, people may not wish to cough up
Brighton, having a battered spouse charity and saying only gurlz in a city with a large ( say the largest) gay pop...is a bit Dawinian to me
nope: you cant have a charity in favour of one Clove - cloverjo that is! and if you ARE a charity you have to focus on your stated charitable objects
( yeah read objaaaaay....)
as Prince Harry is finding - even in a country that does allow er a charity mainly for oneself, people may not wish to cough up
Brighton, having a battered spouse charity and saying only gurlz in a city with a large ( say the largest) gay pop...is a bit Dawinian to me
Not sure if it would help *or* hinder my argument, ZM. It should be pretty obvious that my initial reaction was, at the very least, more than a little kneejerk, and perhaps owes more to the framing of the story than the details itself. A headline of "Council awards contract to charity promising to aid more victims of domestic violence than ever before" may well be just as accurate, if not even more so, although presumably is a little less dramatic.
Pixie splitting it in half is not good business because then you are paying for two lots of infrastructure and less money will be used at the sharp end. This is a nusiness contract. Its not about protecting charities its about getting the best service and most service capacity to those who need it for the money that you have to spend on it. Councils have a legal duty to spend their customers money wisely when awarding contracts
I'm not sure if it's flawed, but I do keep going back and forth on this. Ultimately it comes down to what happens in practice. If this decision leads ultimately to poorer protections for domestic abuse victims, particularly for women, then that would retrospectively suggest it was a flawed decision; since a lot of people have feared that this is a likely outcome, it wouldn't even be that unpredictable.
I suspect, all the same, that I fell for the slant presented by the headline a little too easily.
I suspect, all the same, that I fell for the slant presented by the headline a little too easily.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.