Anonymous wrote:Around $2 per year – occasionally I get roped into rounding up my grocery purchase to the nearest dollar for charity. But I’ve gotten pretty good about putting myself in the proper headspace to say no in those situations.
I also don’t tip for DoorDash and similar services. Sorry but life is hard and I need my money. Income currently $175K (single) but it was $70K not too long ago.
You're a bad person. You need to tip delivery people.
Giving to your church isn't particularly generous. It only means you give to people who think like you do. It doesn't mean you're giving to anyone or anything in need.
+1. Giving to your tax-exempt church isn't charity, it's you trying to buy your way into heaven.
Around $2 per year – occasionally I get roped into rounding up my grocery purchase to the nearest dollar for charity. But I’ve gotten pretty good about putting myself in the proper headspace to say no in those situations.
I also don’t tip for DoorDash and similar services. Sorry but life is hard and I need my money. Income currently $175K (single) but it was $70K not too long ago.
Anonymous wrote:Tax time reminded me once again how little my family gives to charity. HHI $400k. We give to any friend / family raising money, we give to our kids’ school charity drives, we round up at the store, etc. That typically adds up to, say, $1k per year. Are we outliers or are you all giving about the same to charity? (I mean straight up 503(c) charity, not what you pay in taxes or spend on your family and friends…).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I give 10% of my gross income (increase monthly donations every time I get a raise). The part of that goes through a church (a small part) goes directly to a free breakfast program for our local community. I used to volunteer with the program before kids but I can’t get a baby sitter for 5am on Sunday morning so I now donate instead.
I agree that redistribution of wealth should be a societal policy driven by the government but until that time comes, the food banks and other charities get a chunk of my pay check.
sounds like socialism.
Yes. I believe that part of the government's job is to ensure that no one is priced out of basic needs (food, shelter, health care, education) and to do that they need funding which necessarily must come from the richer members of society aka taxes aka redistribution of wealth aka socialism. This can be done in a democratic state (and some of it was done in this country in the mid-20th century) and I think we should get back to that. I'm not advocating for a totalitarian government but I would love to see the US swing a little more towards socialism and away from unrestrained capitalism. Personal preference, of course. I vote for this and if the majority don't agree with me then it won't happen, and I'll just keep donating to the food bank. Such is democracy -- you don't always get your way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I make a slightly higher HHI and give slightly less than you. I am very, very passionate about the idea that if some portion of society needs funding, the government should do it - through both more efficient spending and cutting waste, as well as through raising taxes.
Would you consider giving to your college scholarship fund? Or World Central Kitchen?
This "government should do everything" mentality is selfish.
Anonymous wrote:Charity? I’d not characterize my kids private and public school as a charity. We donate about 12k to each divided equally between the 2 schools.
All other charity does not make it on our tax form. We help my sister heavily.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I give 10% of my gross income (increase monthly donations every time I get a raise). The part of that goes through a church (a small part) goes directly to a free breakfast program for our local community. I used to volunteer with the program before kids but I can’t get a baby sitter for 5am on Sunday morning so I now donate instead.
I agree that redistribution of wealth should be a societal policy driven by the government but until that time comes, the food banks and other charities get a chunk of my pay check.
sounds like socialism.
Anonymous wrote:Charity? I’d not characterize my kids private and public school as a charity. We donate about 12k to each divided equally between the 2 schools.
All other charity does not make it on our tax form. We help my sister heavily.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I give 10% of my gross income (increase monthly donations every time I get a raise). The part of that goes through a church (a small part) goes directly to a free breakfast program for our local community. I used to volunteer with the program before kids but I can’t get a baby sitter for 5am on Sunday morning so I now donate instead.
I agree that redistribution of wealth should be a societal policy driven by the government but until that time comes, the food banks and other charities get a chunk of my pay check.
sounds like socialism.