Maxiton said:OK, I've been following this thread but haven't had time to contribute until now. Formerly it was thought self-evident that there must be an impregnable wall between charitable endeavors for the social good, on the one hand, and for-profit efforts on the other. Beginning approximately with the Reagan-Thatcher era and increasingly since then, this thinking has changed, at least on the part of some.
Nowadays there is an unmistakable current of thought that says we don't need this wall and never did. Ayn Rand acolytes who regard selfishness as the greatest characteristic of man and the so-called market as man's most efficient mechanism for progress - these people say the separation between profit and non-profit is only needed if profit is a bad word. According to this thinking more money can be made for good causes if the approach to raising it is as "market-oriented" as possible.
The Livestrong setup is a really textbook example. Thus we have Livestrong, the 501(c)(3) organization, taking an equity stake in Livestrong.com, the profit maker, as well as in Nike's for-profit Livestrong apparel line. The "market" is "turned loose" on the fundraising side, in theory raining maximum dollars on the social cause, while Armstrong and others get richer, and guilt-free to boot! Milton Friedman, siting in his lofty perch in Heaven alongside the aforementioned Ayn Rand, Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher (and their friend Augusto Pinochet)*, reaches down to pat Armstrong on the head in warm approval, and everyone is smiling all around.
*To mods and others concerned: these political figures are mentioned only for context; i.e., insofar as their philosophies and policies directly lead to issues (conflict of interest between Livestrong.org/.com) discussed in this thread.
JRTinMA said:To the bold. Start by reading this thread, plenty of negative comments right here and I have seen many stating it does no good at all. You spend a lot of time here so I'm sure you recall a thread where Aussie Goddess defended her experience with the foundation. If I recall that thread offered many negative opinions. In this thread alone you will find two typical posts. The "what about me" posts. What has LAF ever done for me. In one a poster describes their experience in oncology and never seeing a pamphlet or poster. Two individuals who presumably know how to find LAF for F's sake. Yet there obvious indolence had them expecting a personal invitation to all 28MM cancer patients, or probably just to them individually. If this were the case I'm sure they would be on here bemoaning the expense of printing such garbage and self promotion.
Regarding charity ratings 3 = 3.
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AussieGoddess said:Just to defend myself here.... I did beleive (and still do) that Livestrong DOES do good work.
BUT - I also actually agree with the others. Lance himself has blurred the line between promoting for the good of his charity and his own personal financial future.
I was prepared to overlook some of the somewhat average financial reviews of the charity in the knowledge that they do good work, and the belief that the world is better off for Livestrong. BUT ... sorry to say I have reviewed my position.
1 - more harm to charities in general is done because of dodgy deals such as the Livestrong.com v Livestrong.org stuff. People question whether their money actually goes to the charity or not - and that isnt good. There should be a VERY clear line - and Lance crossed it.
2 - Lances comeback was 'all about promoting cancer', and that is fantastic. But the actual reality is that it definitely was not. Its the false promotion of himself that I object to. His comeback was all about him and earning money (there is nothing wrong with that btw .... just that I despise the false 'how great am I' rhetoric). If he was truly doing it for the cause - all of his videos and directed web traffic would have gone directly to the .org web site where the LAF could have made enormous profit from advertising or could have received far more donations from through traffic. Instead he chose to direct this traffic to his .com for-profit web site .....
3 - the people who are talking about never seeing a pamphlet or a poster ...(the second bolding) - actually the whole purpose of the LAF/Livestrong is to support and offer information to cancer survivors. If the LAF is doing ANYTHING it should be giving them information. These foundations do (and should) seek out newly diagnosed patients to help them through the minefield of information and support. If they are not getting help - the foundation isnt doing what it is raising money for.
4 - for every $1 raised - that is $1 less to another cause or another foundation - one that might spend its money more wisely or raise it ethically.
and finally - 5
Livestrong raised $31m last year, and got an overall rating of 53. The Susan G Komen for the cure foundation raised $298m ....and got an overall rating of 63. Personally - I know which charity I would rather donate to.
Race Radio said:Very good post.
Certainly after raising $350 million at least some of it has done some good....but it is hard to know how much was use productively and how much went to jet fuel......and what the $3,000,000 line item for "Other" is for.
The charity rankings can be deceptive. They only look at the ratio of fundraising and program expenses. If the "Programs" include flying Armstrong around on his Jet and money publicizing Lance and his sponsors in the name of "awareness" the results are worse.
thehog said:I had the same experience in 3 separate cases of cancer. Never saw anything related to LAF..
Race Radio said:Very good post.
Certainly after raising $350 million at least some of it has done some good....but it is hard to know how much was use productively and how much went to jet fuel......and what the $3,000,000 line item for "Other" is for.
The charity rankings can be deceptive. They only look at the ratio of fundraising and program expenses. If the "Programs" include flying Armstrong around on his Jet and money publicizing Lance and his sponsors in the name of "awareness" the results are worse.
Glenn_Wilson said:Race can you post a link for the financials for the LAF.org? I am assuming that you have posted it here before but can you put it up again? I would like to see the line item for Other.
Maybe one of the “founding fathers errrrr board members” of the LAF could help fill in the blanks?
miloman said:Charity Rating and information from the BBB web site: http://www.bbb.org/charity-reviews/national/cancer/lance-armstrong-foundation-in-austin-tx-3996
Again, you have every right to hate the guy and think he's a cheat, but it looks like things check out with the charity, including uses of funds: Total Expenses Programs: 81% Fund Raising: 12% Administrative: 7%
Polish said:But the Red Cross is a better charity than Macmillan and LAF combined.
LAF...30million$
Macmillan...300million$
Red Cross....3,000million$
Red Cross kicks ****.
Race Radio said:So you are OK with the $2,000,000 in annual travel expenses and the over $3,000,000 line item for "Other"?
Thank you for the link.miloman said:Charity Rating and information from the BBB web site: http://www.bbb.org/charity-reviews/national/cancer/lance-armstrong-foundation-in-austin-tx-3996
Again, you have every right to hate the guy and think he's a cheat, but it looks like things check out with the charity, including uses of funds: Total Expenses Programs: 81% Fund Raising: 12% Administrative: 7%
thehog said:I'm waiting for the Red Cross to release their Nike Red X range before I compare them to Livestrong.
Race Radio said:So you are OK with the $2,000,000 in annual travel expenses and the over $3,000,000 line item for "Other"?
Glenn_Wilson said:Thank you for the link.
No need to think that I have any "hate on" for Lance Armstrong. Many will tell you the exact opposite about me.
Polish said:http://www.redcrossstore.org/dp.aspx?pgid=576
The LAF does have the edge on the Red Cross in terms of style....
I would guess the Red Cross sells more though.
miloman said:Where is the link? I would like to see it. I think until someone more informed can interpret those numbers, I will rely on The Better Business Bureau’s recommendations . . . no offense!
patricknd said:shameless fanboy!!!!
thehog said:Where's the $3000 treadmills? and nothing over $100! what are they thinking? and 50% of full retail price goes straight to the purchasers chapter!
Get Lance in there to drive those profit margins.
miloman said:Travel: Total: $1,922,995 Programs: $1,652,246 Management and General: $83,069 Fundraising: $187,680
Where is it that it states Armstrong spent 2 million on jet fuel? This is travel for the entire organization. I would assume that is employees, health practitioners, program directors, etc. and yes, probably Lance too. You have to send people places once in a while. Especially if you are operating programs, services and yes, fundraising events. Who do you think oversees all of that? It is employees with the aid of volunteers.
miloman said:Travel: Total: $1,922,995 Programs: $1,652,246 Management and General: $83,069 Fundraising: $187,680
Where is it that it states Armstrong spent 2 million on jet fuel? This is travel for the entire organization. I would assume that is employees, health practitioners, program directors, etc. and yes, probably Lance too. You have to send people places once in a while. Especially if you are operating programs, services and yes, fundraising events. Who do you think oversees all of that? It is employees with the aid of volunteers.
miloman said:Travel: Total: $1,922,995 Programs: $1,652,246 Management and General: $83,069 Fundraising: $187,680
Where is it that it states Armstrong spent 2 million on jet fuel? This is travel for the entire organization. I would assume that is employees, health practitioners, program directors, etc. and yes, probably Lance too. You have to send people places once in a while. Especially if you are operating programs, services and yes, fundraising events. Who do you think oversees all of that? It is employees with the aid of volunteers.
