There are many bad causes out there these days that you can donate your money to if you really want. Here in my own town center, for several years now there has been a distinctly alien-looking female in a hijab sitting in the middle of the street hawking copies of The Big Issue, a national magazine sold by the homeless, whose profits are subsequently redistributed amongst the vendors to help them get back on their feet and/or buy more crack.
A good cause? Maybe, but I am left to consider: why was this woman homeless in the first place? Because she had left her rightful homeland and came over here, looking for free handouts from the natives, presumably. It was self-evident she was not born in the country and had zero familiarity with our culture and customs, as her chosen tactic to gain favor from passers-by was to loudly wish them an ill-pronounced “Merry Christmas!!!” every single day of the year, even during the height of summer. She seems to have finally disappeared of late, but for the rest of her kind in today’s West, it really does seem to be Christmas every day now.
Formerly apolitical charities to whom you could once donate your dollars, yen, pounds and renminbi safe in the knowledge it would be spent on useful things like homeless shelters, iron lungs for paraplegic nuns, or airlifting pies into Ethiopia, are now increasingly taking your cash under false pretenses, before spaffing the lot away on far-left causes intended to actively destroy the social well-being of the duped charitable giver. The list is now endless. The Salvation Army funding Critical Race Theory sessions, for instance, or Oxfam demanding the “Global North” (i.e., white people) dismantle their “dominance of the global economy in all forms” before agreeing to pay India $5trillion every year as “reparations” for colonialism and climate change. Once we’ve successfully bankrupted our treasuries in this way, who will give us any charity, once America and Europe have successfully been reduced to India-style Third-World shitholes themselves? Certainly not the Indians.
A particularly egregious example is the UK National Lottery, which lures people into gambling away their coins not simply by promising them the vague statistical improbability of becoming millionaires, but also by virtue of a certain percentage of their entrance fee being redistributed to good causes, by which the average person immediately thinks “babies with cancer.” But no, if you look into it, the true “good causes” being bankrolled actually include:
- £250,000 on celebrating the 1981 black Brixton race-riots
- £527,000 to the National Coalition of Anti-Deportation Campaigns
- £500,000 to Mermaids, a pro-trans charity which proselytizes gender-changes to kids
In short, when you hand your pennies over to do-gooding tin-rattlers right now, you just don’t know where it’s going to end up. I recall three little girls knocking on my door one day, asking for a donation and begging me to sign their petition. “What’s it for?” I asked. They looked at one another with blank faces, then replied “We’ll decide that later.” Now all grown up, I suspect they may well be running the UK National Lottery Community Fund.
Counter-Currents isn’t like that. We use all money generously donated for one thing and one thing only: running this website. Like our valuable but creaking welfare states, it’s free to use, but not free to run. So, we need your help to keep things going. Unlike educational initiatives centering around 1980s black race-riots, or the facilitation of the surgical mutilation of innocent children, sites like these receive zero funding from State-backed bodies like the National Lottery, or charities like Oxfam. We barely get any subsidy from advertising either. So, we need your help. Tell the Salvation Army to sod off and save themselves, we’ve got an entire civilization and rightful homeland in need of urgent genuine salvation here, and your cash is much better spent on doing that.
Ideas can change the world, and this publication is full of them. It’s also full of news and information you won’t read anywhere else – which, naturally, is precisely why it’s deliberately starved of funding by established media, financial, and advertising gatekeepers. Still, this does have its advantages: it makes us entirely free from censorship. Counter-Currents may not technically be a legal charity, but its cause is certainly far more worthy than certain other outfits which do possess that official status; those mentioned directly above, for example.
As a wise man (who probably had never heard of Lucy Connolly) once said, “The truth will set you free.” In order to ascertain empirically whether or not that is really true, please keep funding us to go on telling it to you.
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9 comments
Check went out this morning! 🙃
Phony charities is a brilliant communist psychwar tactic. Charity is meant to give utility to excess wealth. When the rich stop giving because you can’t trust that the money will be spent soundly, then it can be said that they hoard wealth and don’t care about the citizens.
Well done! 100 clams on the way!
$5 for Steven, & another $25. has been sent to Counter Currents.
Thanks so much
“Counter-Currents isn’t like that. We use all money generously donated for one thing and one thing only: running this website.”
I’d like to believe – and I think I’m right – that Counter-Currents does more and sets its sights higher than that!
“Counter-Currents may not technically be a legal charity, but…”
… but it has a 501(c)(3) educational organization that you can make tax-deductible donations to. (Doesn’t that make it a legal charity?)
Never heard of The Big Issue, but if it’s in print, at least a few copies of it will exist 100 years from now, stuffed away in a drawer or maybe even unearthed from a landfill. Nonprint things on the web like what I am typing will most definitely not exist 100 years from now, unless someone printed them out on that ugly 8 1/2 by 11 office paper. Around 2000, the Library of Congress did a landmark study about digital preservation. They found that it is impossible to preserve any computer document, and that the only chance it would have to be preserved is to have it printed out on paper, as imperfect as that is.
Does Counter Currents have a paper print archive? It should.
I wonder what Leonidas would think that there isn’t 300 Americans that can come up with $1,000 each to save what is left of their country? The Spartan king might even settle for 30,000 who could come up with ten bucks each.
Anyway, enough whining, a cheque for $100 is in the mail.
Thank you very much!
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