PittsburghAfterDark
CAGiversary!
I volunteered some time at the Salvation Army for a friend of mine to help with their "Giving Tree" program.
For those of you that don't know what it is needy families register their names with the SA with a gift(s) their family says they need. Usually it's pretty safe stuff like a toaster oven/microwave, kitchenware, kids clothes, diapers/baby stuff, heaters, winter coats etc. All the things you'd pretty much think poor people would need. Which is great, I'd rather help a charity support such programs than pay more taxes where 8% of the money gets to the end recipient and the other 92% gets eaten by government bureaucracy.
So anyways this is the scene. Designer bags on roughly 40% of the women. A female working with us estimated the bags from $400-1,200. The same percentage if not greater (Say half.) have ostentacious jewelry and diamonds. 60% or more are wearing designer clothes.
There are some truly hardship cases where they had a church member drive them to the pickup because they had no car. They had kids in tow and were generally the ones picking up children's items. Great, glad to help.
At the end of it a guy in his late 50's or so asks for help with his family's things. Super, glad to help. That's the theme of the day. So I take the stuff out front and there's some dumb bitch with nails that make her look like Wolverine that pulls up in a brand new Mercedes M Class (Their SUV.) I politely ask the guy, "So how do you like the "M" class?".
He goes on and on about how nice the car is, how great the dealership is, how he doesn't owe anything on it YADDA YADDA YADDA.
My reply was "Great, glad you enjoy your $50,000 car. I think you can load your own presents now, you certainly don't need anyone's help here from the looks of it."
And people in this country wonder why poverty statistics are viewed with great skepticism.
For those of you that don't know what it is needy families register their names with the SA with a gift(s) their family says they need. Usually it's pretty safe stuff like a toaster oven/microwave, kitchenware, kids clothes, diapers/baby stuff, heaters, winter coats etc. All the things you'd pretty much think poor people would need. Which is great, I'd rather help a charity support such programs than pay more taxes where 8% of the money gets to the end recipient and the other 92% gets eaten by government bureaucracy.
So anyways this is the scene. Designer bags on roughly 40% of the women. A female working with us estimated the bags from $400-1,200. The same percentage if not greater (Say half.) have ostentacious jewelry and diamonds. 60% or more are wearing designer clothes.
There are some truly hardship cases where they had a church member drive them to the pickup because they had no car. They had kids in tow and were generally the ones picking up children's items. Great, glad to help.
At the end of it a guy in his late 50's or so asks for help with his family's things. Super, glad to help. That's the theme of the day. So I take the stuff out front and there's some dumb bitch with nails that make her look like Wolverine that pulls up in a brand new Mercedes M Class (Their SUV.) I politely ask the guy, "So how do you like the "M" class?".
He goes on and on about how nice the car is, how great the dealership is, how he doesn't owe anything on it YADDA YADDA YADDA.
My reply was "Great, glad you enjoy your $50,000 car. I think you can load your own presents now, you certainly don't need anyone's help here from the looks of it."
And people in this country wonder why poverty statistics are viewed with great skepticism.