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Re: [ARSCLIST] well, this might explain why so many sonic treasures languish in government warehouses



I think that we're a little astray from the intent of this list, don't you?
Maybe there's  ExecutiveMalfeasance-L where this discussion can be
continued.

Thanks, Sam

On 2/26/07, Tom Fine <tflists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Red Cross has been pretty thoroughly discredited. First, they misrepresented their fund-collecting post-9/11 and then they botched completely their response to Katrina. So whatever their executives are paid, it's too much. After the way they lied about what they were doing with post-9/11 contributions, they shall never see another dime from my pocket. For disaster relief, I happily contribute to the Salvation Army (see the MANY mainstream media articles about how much better they responded to Katrina).

United Way is another bloated gravey train that has been thoroughly
discredited.

-- Tom Fine

----- Original Message -----
From: "Andes, Donald" <Donald.Andes@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, February 26, 2007 4:01 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] well, this might explain why so many sonic
treasures languish in government
warehouses


>>I guess it comes down to the notion of whether or not you trust the trustees and their motivations...and perhaps their >>priorities.

>>Karl


Karl, you hit the nail on the head. We cannot blindly allow things to happen, but if the level of TRUST is diminished to a point of widespread concern, then I'm sure the public (or the board) can and will take action. And as a result the "offending" person(s) will have to re-act.

At this point, a writer raised a flag by writing a story. Someone hired
by the Smithsonian, spent a lot of money (relative to the writers
opinion), perhaps selfishly, and perhaps foolishly. But as someone else
pointed out, this is not a gross Enron like scandal. It seems as this is
a small percentage of his overall salary. A salary which the Smithsonian
agrees to pay.

If a larger issue arises, then perhaps I'll give it more thought. But if
anyone thinks that a major non-profit would be run "properly" by a guy
willing to do it for peanuts, I'd have to strongly disagree. At that
level of the hierarchy, there's a lot more politics and a lot less depth
of knowledge about products or services.

What do guess the Director of the Red Cross makes? And what do you think
his expenses look like?

Non-profit is a company filing status regardless of whether it has a
utopian conceptual idea attached.


Don Andes Director of Archives EMI Music North America




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