SAJ-99
Well-known member
Some do. I remember a lot of talk about this in 2018, article below. However, I think it is mostly a function of general economic strength. The problem with relying on private non-profits, faith-based or not, is that their receipts drop at the exact time the amount in need increases. That is part of what SS tried to fix. It wanted to stabilize that protection. Hence why it is considered insurance, not retirement.I agree. My point isn't to find out the exact split by dividing out the money by how much money is coming from other people's taxes vs other people's donations. Certainly many of those people receive government funding/money/food cards, etc. Absolutely.
It was a response to his comment that no one would help if SS didn't exist, as if there aren't groups of people on damn near every street corner that are helping...using money from people who voluntarily gave it.
His response was that most people who even give to a church or charity are doing it selfishly to save 30% on a tax write off.
How the tax overhaul contributed to a drop in charitable giving
Individual giving fell 3.4% in 2018 when adjusted for inflation, the first time that number had declined since 2013.
www.pbs.org