Anonymous wrote:I'm weirded out by the ones for funerals. If you can't afford a funeral, then you need to cremate and do the cheapest thing possible. The person is dead - they won't care about what flower arrangement was there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think sometimes they are started by well-meaning people even if the subject doesn't need the money? Like it's just become so ingrained in our culture which I think is very weird. I'm sorry, but if you are UMC or above, you do not need a go-fund me. Unless I guess you don't have health insurance but then you probably aren't UMC.
Still, I would be absolutely mortified if something happened and a well-meaning person started a gofundme on my behalf. And I AM poor. But I have health insurance and some savings.
Also this reminds me of the time a family friend's 17 year old started a gofundme for her mom, because the mom's rent money was stolen from her purse. Unclear why she was paying rent in cash but w/e.
I had a well meaning friend start a GFM for my family after an accident. I didn't know about it for a weekish because I was so pre occupied with other stuff. I waffled quite a bit on shutting it down or not. Our friends wanted to help and we were incurring a ton of bills that we could afford, but still ate up a chunk of savings. Things add up quickly, parking at the hospital, food because no one wanted to cook and we were living at the hospital, unpaid time at work because recovery was long, etc. We did end up shutting it down because I just wasnt comfortable with it. Friends ended up giving money in other ways.
Anonymous wrote:I think sometimes they are started by well-meaning people even if the subject doesn't need the money? Like it's just become so ingrained in our culture which I think is very weird. I'm sorry, but if you are UMC or above, you do not need a go-fund me. Unless I guess you don't have health insurance but then you probably aren't UMC.
Still, I would be absolutely mortified if something happened and a well-meaning person started a gofundme on my behalf. And I AM poor. But I have health insurance and some savings.
Also this reminds me of the time a family friend's 17 year old started a gofundme for her mom, because the mom's rent money was stolen from her purse. Unclear why she was paying rent in cash but w/e.
Anonymous wrote:Yikes. It’s a blessing to be so privileged, OP
I gladly donate. And many times I will donate as much as possible. I can’t imagine what it would be like to lose a spouse and suddenly be on one income with kids. My cousin suddenly lost his wife. I was more than happy to donate
Enjoy your gilded existence
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Having to beg for money from strangers for medical care or burials is the bread and butter of r/ABoringDystopia
The reality is that, even in those perfect Scandinavian countries, no one individual is getting millions of dollars worth of medical care for “free.” They just let people die instead.
Much better to ration health care by the ability to pay
Or, worse, leave it to insurance companies trying to make a profit to decide.
https://www.propublica.org/article/unitedhealth-healthcare-insurance-denial-ulcerative-colitis
“But one student was costing United a lot of money. Christopher McNaughton suffered from a crippling case of ulcerative colitis — an ailment that caused him to develop severe arthritis, debilitating diarrhea, numbing fatigue and life-threatening blood clots. His medical bills were running nearly $2 million a year.“
In no country on the planet does one person get $2M worth of healthcare per year, unless that individual is literally paying $2M/year for it. Doesn’t happen.
Anonymous wrote:I think that 100% of them, regardless of the event that occurred, are tacky if the GoFundMe was started by the victim(s)’ family member or BFF. If I see one it better be for a life or death situation, and I don’t want to see any photos or videos attached that are gruesome, or I won’t donate. The “life or death” part generally excludes living expenses for a living, able individual, or costs of replacing inanimate objects.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was watching that 1,000 pound sisters show and I shudder at the money being spent on the one sister. She's been in a care facility for a YEAR. She has no means of making a living, she had the bariatric surgery, but then there's the skin surgery - it has to be millions on her, meanwhile there are kids in this country that can't see a dentist. I dunno. There has to be a limit somewhere.
As long as that limit isn't on you and yours.