Education: Charity Corporations

Charities are the world’s most profitable business model. They get their products via donations. This means at no cost, i.e., free stock. They usually have one paid store manager, all other employees are forced “volunteers”, usually under a government scheme for long term unemployed people.

So from the charity’s point of view, they receive free labour from the poorest members of the community. And we all know what forced free labour really is, that’s right, slavery.

Some charity corporations also exploit people with slight learning disabilities, as they can hire them outside of the minimum wage laws. Enabling them to pay under one dollar an hour. The American charity, Good Will was taken to court for these types of human rights violations.

Most charities operate under a “not for profit” business model so they can avoid paying tax. Some have religious affiliations as an added protection to make sure they can successfully engage in tax evasion.

The charity business model has also been very lucrative for the super-rich. Setting up private charity foundations has long been a common strategy for plutocrat families, in order to conceal the act of funneling large sums of money through the tax system. These tax dodging tactics, mainly to avoid paying estate tax, are a very popular choice for the 1%.

Consider this: money makes poverty and charities make money. This vicious cycle is self-defeating.

If we take the time to think logically we would realise that charities rely on money, and as such, they can never be expected to solve any problems. They actually need poverty to be maintained in order to guarantee their very existence.

In a Resource Based Economy charities, plutocrats, and the associated corruption would not exist because everything is free.

The most pure form of education is the truth. It can be confronting at times, but it will ultimately set us free.

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