Posted on 09/07/2010 4:13:44 PM PDT by nickcarraway
What charity, specifically?
And I don’t think it can be called “parting with your wealth” if you keep it until you die.
I want Oprah to donate all her wealth. (to me)
Hey batta batta..
Why wait until they die?
A true charitable act would be to donate while still living and making some sacrifice in their own lives.
Shrouds don't have pockets.
I don’t believe this.
Well, if you are Egyptian, you take your wealth, and cats, to the afterlife with you.
It's "charity" all righty, you betcha.
The parable of the rich fool?
That’s my pre-lookup guess - now I’ll go get the Bible.
Bingo.
Well, I was wrong ...
The “rich young man,” not “the rich fool,” although they both were foolish. “You fool, this night your soul will be required of you, and the things you have, whose will they be?”
Not that leaving your wealth to charity when you die is a bad thing, but it’s not Christian love. God could provide for everyone’s needs; charity is as much about our being willing to give, to the point that it affects us, as it is about the needs of the recipients.
That’s a hard question, actually. I like my catz, but do I really want them in the afterlife? They’re kind of a nuisance, especially when they hop on the baby while he’s asleep and yell “Meow!” in his ear.
. . .
Chen said in an open letter to Gates and Buffett posted on his company website on Sunday that he would donate his entire fortune of more than five billion yuan ($735 million) to charity when he dies
I'm shocked - you mean that you can join the billionaires' club if you only have $735 million?
What happened to "standards"?
Maybe he's a billionaire in yuan, but that's hardly the same. I'm easily a billionaire in nanodollars...
Many of these people in the West would have to donate their funds into charitable trusts, anyway, to avoid taxes (think: The Ford Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, etc.)
The question then becomes, who will be appointed trustees to administer these large sums, and what will be their goals?
By giving away one’s wealth after death to charity, isn’t the act depriving one’s progeny of the benefit, thus making the act a sacrifice?
Methinks it is prideful shallowness to look for faults in others’ acts of generosity.
How would you like to donate to the Human Fund?? Or the I want to be a Billionaire fund??? LOL
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