Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
When I'm asked to donate to a food drive, I go to Aldi's and buy 2 cardboard flats of something like canned spaghettios ($1 each) or a big flat of macaroni and cheese.
My kids love those foods, and though I don't serve them often (not particularly healthy) I know that kids like them and they are filling and EASY to make, which is why I think that people with kids will like them, too.
I don't understand this. Why donate something with no real nutritional value and something that will cause health problems later on? You may serve those once in a while but chances are the kids you are donating to eat that sort of stuff all the time.Anonymous wrote:
When I'm asked to donate to a food drive, I go to Aldi's and buy 2 cardboard flats of something like canned spaghettios ($1 each) or a big flat of macaroni and cheese.
Don't let the haters make you feel bad. Good for you for taking the time to donate food and in quantity, also. Fewer kids are going to be hungry due to your flat of spaghettios than if you had purchased few boxes of organic noodles for the same amount of money. People need to get a clue.
Anonymous wrote:I go through my son's clothes and throw away the really stained ones. If i wouldn't let him go out in it, I don't donate it
You do know that places like Goodwill sell these damaged items to recyclers were the fibers are turned into other goods and the charity receives money. I guess you would rather clog up a landfill as a "matter of respect."
Anonymous wrote:
When I'm asked to donate to a food drive, I go to Aldi's and buy 2 cardboard flats of something like canned spaghettios ($1 each) or a big flat of macaroni and cheese.
My kids love those foods, and though I don't serve them often (not particularly healthy) I know that kids like them and they are filling and EASY to make, which is why I think that people with kids will like them, too.
I don't understand this. Why donate something with no real nutritional value and something that will cause health problems later on? You may serve those once in a while but chances are the kids you are donating to eat that sort of stuff all the time.Anonymous wrote:
When I'm asked to donate to a food drive, I go to Aldi's and buy 2 cardboard flats of something like canned spaghettios ($1 each) or a big flat of macaroni and cheese.
I go through my son's clothes and throw away the really stained ones. If i wouldn't let him go out in it, I don't donate it
Anonymous wrote:When I'm asked to donate to a food drive, I go to Aldi's and buy 2 cardboard flats of something like canned spaghettios ($1 each) or a big flat of macaroni and cheese.
My kids love those foods, and though I don't serve them often (not particularly healthy) I know that kids like them and they are filling and EASY to make, which is why I think that people with kids will like them, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know what's frustrating, when your donations are considered not good enough. Since when are old clothes and sweaters not considered good enough. Does everything donated have to be brand new?
ITA. My kids wear their older siblings' hand me downs, so if it's good enough for me, it's good enough for you.
Beggars can't be choosers.
Beggars?????
Beggars wear newspaper to keep moist away from their skin so they won't freeze.
We're talking about the mom whose husband left and she needs to find a job and has no clothes to wear for an interview. Have you ever had to explain to HR why you're wearing athletic shoes to an interview? It's HUMILIATION!
My wife tried to donate some older work clothes that were too big for her that she wore many years a go. It was rejected because it appeared to be out of style.
No in america, beggars have cell phones. The other day I even saw a homeless guy watching netflix on a laptop (he was homeless not part of occupy wall street, I have seen him a few month prior).
. The following are facts about persons defined as “poor” by the Census Bureau:
•80 percent of poor households have air conditioning
•Nearly three-fourths have a car or truck, and 31 percent have two or more cars or trucks
•Nearly two-thirds have cable or satellite television
•Two-thirds have at least one DVD player and 70 percent have a VCR
•Half have a personal computer, and one in seven have two or more computers
•More than half of poor families with children have a video game system, such as an Xbox or PlayStation
•43 percent have Internet access
•One-third have a wide-screen plasma or LCD television
•One-fourth have a digital video recorder system, such as a TiVo
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You know what's frustrating, when your donations are considered not good enough. Since when are old clothes and sweaters not considered good enough. Does everything donated have to be brand new?
New or gently used. What's more likely going to help someone feel confident enough to go for that job interview? A newish, fairly in style sweater or something the cat has torn to shreds and used as a litter box? What will keep a child's feet protected better, a gently used pair of sneakers or ones with the soles falling off? I've never seen naked people in the street because they have no access to even rags. But I know a lot of people who don't have the means (like decent, appropriate clothing) to go to work or to get through school without being humiliated or worse.
Anonymous wrote:
My wife tried to donate some older work clothes that were too big for her that she wore many years a go. It was rejected because it appeared to be out of style.
No in america, beggars have cell phones. The other day I even saw a homeless guy watching netflix on a laptop (he was homeless not part of occupy wall street, I have seen him a few month prior).
. The following are facts about persons defined as “poor” by the Census Bureau:
•80 percent of poor households have air conditioning
•Nearly three-fourths have a car or truck, and 31 percent have two or more cars or trucks
•Nearly two-thirds have cable or satellite television
•Two-thirds have at least one DVD player and 70 percent have a VCR
•Half have a personal computer, and one in seven have two or more computers
•More than half of poor families with children have a video game system, such as an Xbox or PlayStation
•43 percent have Internet access
•One-third have a wide-screen plasma or LCD television
•One-fourth have a digital video recorder system, such as a TiVo
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