Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You give $20-30,000 to charity every year?!? Actual cash donations?
Wow, I'm impressed. I'm not that charitable, I guess.
yes, actual cash. HHI about $300K
Advice from your tax accountant...
Anonymous wrote:You could enroll your child in an EOTP school and then you could give a bunch to your kid's school and not feel yucky about it.
You could even move EOTP, enroll your kid in the IB school, and have more money to give to charity.
If you did this, you could also rent your WOTP house out at a rate affordable to Section 8 tenants so that a family got a chance to attend an excellent school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You give $20-30,000 to charity every year?!? Actual cash donations?
Wow, I'm impressed. I'm not that charitable, I guess.
yes, actual cash. HHI about $300K
Anonymous wrote:You give $20-30,000 to charity every year?!? Actual cash donations?
Wow, I'm impressed. I'm not that charitable, I guess.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is the auction less weird? I would think the public display of wealth that is inherrant in auction participation would be ickier.
it's a silent auction. No one knows what I spend.
Well the auction committee members know, the person doing the thank you notes knows, the person handling checkout knows.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you seem to be looking to pick an odd battle. If the best you can come up with in describing your views is that it "feels yucky" you must know your full of shit. Somehow have annual income that allows you to donate tens of thousands of dollars but your unwilling to recognize the value of throwing some money into a pot that helps your child. And his/her classmates? Ugh. Please just go private or move out of the District already. This might be a shocker to you, but DC does not typically pay for all the bells and whistles that many WOTP schools have been able to bring to their schools that to you seem like standard practice because families before you worked their butts off to get them. All you have to do is write a check, which you are clearly able to do. Please devote you energy to more worthy arguments.
OP here. I'm not "full of shit". I don't have some ulterior motive for not giving. I give money to several charities that work with women and children in DC. I just don't think that MY kid needs SMART boards or iPads in the classroom, etc.
White boards/dry erase markers and paper/pencils would be just fine. So I take the money I'd give to the student support fund and give it to other charities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is the auction less weird? I would think the public display of wealth that is inherrant in auction participation would be ickier.
it's a silent auction. No one knows what I spend.
Well the auction committee members know, the person doing the thank you notes knows, the person handling checkout knows.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is the auction less weird? I would think the public display of wealth that is inherrant in auction participation would be ickier.
it's a silent auction. No one knows what I spend.
Well the auction committee members know, the person doing the thank you notes knows, the person handling checkout knows.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you seem to be looking to pick an odd battle. If the best you can come up with in describing your views is that it "feels yucky" you must know your full of shit. Somehow have annual income that allows you to donate tens of thousands of dollars but your unwilling to recognize the value of throwing some money into a pot that helps your child. And his/her classmates? Ugh. Please just go private or move out of the District already. This might be a shocker to you, but DC does not typically pay for all the bells and whistles that many WOTP schools have been able to bring to their schools that to you seem like standard practice because families before you worked their butts off to get them. All you have to do is write a check, which you are clearly able to do. Please devote you energy to more worthy arguments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is the auction less weird? I would think the public display of wealth that is inherrant in auction participation would be ickier.
it's a silent auction. No one knows what I spend.