• ik5pvx@lemmy.world
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    26 days ago

    Many years ago, I was with some fellow volunteers outside a popular shopping mall, raising money for a new ambulance. There were many people who could have obviously been able to spare a bill or two, but they were too full of themselves to even look at our faces, let alone the fliers we were handing out.

    Then one old guy with a bottle of beer in one hand and dressed like that was his only dinner came out of the shop, looked at us, and put his beer change in our bucket, saying something along the lines of “you do something important”.

    Made our day.

    • Cybersec@piefed.social
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      26 days ago

      Those people who were “too full of themselves” might have their own problems, and they might also donate in other places unseen by you.

        • shane@feddit.nl
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          26 days ago

          This seems plausible, so I searched and found this on the Wikipedia:

          Various studies have examined who gives more to charity. A study in the United States found that as income decreases, charitable giving increases as a percentage of income. For instance, the poorest fifth of Americans donated 4.3% of their income, while the wealthiest fifth donated 2.1%. In absolute terms, this translated to an average donation of $453 from an average income of $10,531, compared to $3,326 from an income of $158,388.

      • MediumGray@lemmy.ca
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        26 days ago

        Ya, and I can only speak for myself, but I don’t have a lot to give to charity so when I do it sure as heck isn’t random. There’s far too many scammy charities out there for that, I don’t donate anything without at least a little researching first.