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The Nonprofit-Activist World to Help Out and Get a Job

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The list of nonprofits can be almost anything like:

 

professional sports league like the National Football League

Most colleges and universities

private and publicly funded hospitals

relief organizations, charities

religious organizations

political

membership organizations like the American Bar Association and the National Rifle Association.

activist organizations

 

I’m cynical about the nonprofit world because of my experiences with it.  The needs of the world as in helping poor, homeless and unemployed people is urgent and desperate yet when I was involved in nonprofit/ activist groups, there was something unsavory about a lot of the people I worked with.

 

For them, it seemed to be a leisurely, sociable fun adventure while I was thinking there are seriously needy people that we should be fighting tooth and nail to help. 

 

These fields are full of phony liberals pretending to be kind, loving and compassionate towards the human race but they’re really there for:

 

the soft, cushy, well-paying jobs with no accountability like in the capitalist world where you have to produce profits

 

ego and vanity, many people calling themselves activists are failed rock stars, movie stars, professional athletes, etc. who want fame, popularity and admiration and could have a God Complex, kind of like I am the guru here, all you pleebes are my followers

 

friendship and romance for lonely people over 30

 

With the several nonprofit groups I was involved with, there was no sense of urgency and desperation there to help people.

 

A real activist has fire in their soul with an urgent sense of action.

 

Most people in the nonprofit sectors are basically wimps who aren’t tough enough for a capitalist job so they do their jobs as pacified and comfortably as they can because they’re jealous of their capitalist counterparts who make more money so they compensate by being lazy bums and stealing whatever they can on the side. 

 

Why do many NGOs have higher operating fees than the actual money that they spend helping people?  It’s largely a scam.  Look at what they did with all that money for Haiti after the earthquake.  If you ask the locals what they did after all that big talk with a nationwide TV pledge drive on all major networks, they say they did almost nothing.

 

There is another thing about the big nonprofits that is hidden from public view.  It’s who funds them.  Several people have done heroic reports about who funds the big nonprofits with flowcharts shoeing the big corporations and their foundations funding them but nobody seems to care.

 

It goes on and on.  Give the five people at the top of any activist or nonprofit organizations six-figure incomes and you have bought their silence.

 

When you get into this field, be ready for a lot of bureaucracy and hypocrisy. 

 

People in these fields should be desperate and urgent about helping people but most of them are comfortable with their easy jobs with no accountability like in the capitalist world where you either produce a profit or you’re out. 

 

Here it’s more like take off early when I can, do as little as I can, steal what I can and flirt with whoever comes along.  That was my experience. 

 

That’s why I don’t trust any so-called liberals anymore.  They’re phonies with their own agendas.  They make a few phony speeches a year to get funding and the rest of the time it’s easy living, screw the people we’re spozed to help.

 

Getting a nonprofit job can be as hard, cutthroat and competitive as getting a job anywhere else.

 

A nonprofit in the United States and in many other countries is a perfect cover for con-artists to make a lot of money tax-free.

 

The people in this field might delude themselves into thinking they’re morally better than everyone else but based on what I’ve seen, many are a bunch of lazy phonies who want a comfortable life.

 

Nonprofits attract good, naive lost souls and they also attract wolves in sheep’s clothing looking to exploit these good people.

 

If somebody really wants to help people, they can easily go to Nepal and help poor kids.  It’s not like some of the nonprofits around here where it seems more a social fun thing than helping people.

 

A lot of nonprofits take in multi-millions of dollars in donations but only spend a small part of that on their mission statement.  They get cushy jobs with no accountability, nice offices, expenses, etc.

 

Forget about a homey, comfy feeling.  It’s big business.

 

It’s competitive as hell.

 

Many evil people work for nonprofits.

 

Many nonprofit managers steal cash donations without ever declaring them.

 

Some people earn up to a million dollars a year in salary managing a nonprofit which doesn’t include what they steal from the fundraising take or the benefits like the big pension.

 

Many nonprofits are fronts for people trying to make money in the guise of doing something good.

 

A lot of people in the nonprofit sector are failed actors and rock stars looking to be admired as activists.

 

There are many scumbags working in the nonprofit field.

 

A lot of nonprofits are about bringing in money only while pretending to be good.

 

Many nonprofit employees are snobs, thinking they’re better than everyone else.

 

A lot of nonprofit people are as phony as a three-dollar bill.

 

If you want to get rich fast, study nonprofit management in college.  Get a master’s degree then get jobs with big NGOs with big budgets and start scamming and stealing.

 

If they think you’re a good person there for the cause, they’ll use you and work you to the bone if they can.

 

Don’t say I didn’t warn you when you see a lot of these people you’re working with in the nonprofit sector turn out to be a bunch of selfish, gluttonous, phony pigs.

 

The only nonprofits I trust are the ones in the trenches helping people hands-on all the time.

 

Books about nonprofit corporations are at #025.04, #361.70, #362.1-362.8 #658.15, 658.8, HD62.6, HF5415, HG4027 and HV41.2 at the library.  Legal books about nonprofits are at #346.430 or KF1388 at the library.


This is the biggest book on the nonprofit-charity-activist-social justice sector which means it contains thousands of websites on NGOs (non-government organizations). 

 

I cover the United Nations and worldwide nonprofit and international development organizations. 

 

The 74 volumes are as follows:

 

Volume 1. Why be an Activist?

Volume 2. Be an Activist

Volume 3. An Activist Resource Guide 1

Volume 4. An Activist Resource Guide 2

Volume 5. An Activist Website Guide at dmoz-odp.org/Society/Activism

Volume 6. Friendship Guide

Volume 7. A Morality Guide

Volume 8. Be a Good Person

Volume 9. Nonprofit Job Guide 1

Volume 10. Nonprofit Job Guide 2

Volume 11. Nonprofit Job Guide 3

Volume 12. Academic and Nonprofit Job Websites from imaginephd.com

Volume 13. Political Job Guide

Volume 14. American State-Local Government Job Guide

Volume 15. World’s Biggest Volunteer Guide

Volume 16. Volunteer with Animals Guide

Volume 17. The Nonprofit Business

Volume 18. The Socially Conscious Company

Volume 19. Fundraising Guide

Volume 20. Grant Guide

Volume 21. The U.S. Government Grants and Assistance Programs

Volume 22. A Job and Social Support Website Guide by U.S. State at careeronestop.org/ExOffender/Toolkit/find-state-resources.aspx

Volume 23. Nonprofit Organizations Guide 1

Volume 24. Nonprofit Organizations Guide 2

Volume 25. Nonprofit Organizations Guide 3

Volume 26. Nonprofit Organizations Guide 4

Volume 27. A Medical NGO Guide

Volume 28. A List of NGOs by Country from nira.or.jp/network/abroad/nwdtt/link/IDX2/index1.html and english.nira.or.jp/directory, Nippon Institute for Research Advancement

Volume 29. Canada Nonprofit Guide

Volume 30. United Kingdom Nonprofit Guide

Volume 31. Women’s NGO Guide

Volume 32. NGO Website Guide 1

Volume 33. NGO Website Guide 2

Volume 34. List of Nonprofit Websites in Alphabetical Order

Volume 35. A Nonprofit Website Guide at feedspot

Volume 36. A Philanthropy Website Guide at dmoz-odp.org/Society/Philanthropy

Volume 37. A List of Washington, DC Area Nonprofit Organizations at american.edu/ocl/volunteer/nonprofit-directories.cfm

Volume 38. World Nonprofit Guide

Volume 39. World Jobs in Government

Volume 40. The United Nations Guide

Volume 41. International Government and Development Organizations 1

Volume 42. International Government and Development Organizations 2

Volume 43. A List of Government and International Organization Websites by Country

Volume 44. Holistic-Spiritual Spas, Retreats, Communes

Volume 45. A Human Rights Guide

Volume 46. A Diversity Workplace Guide

Volume 47. New Media Activism Guide

Volume 48. Specific Activism Issues/ Activist Topics

Volume 49. Peace Book 1

Volume 50. Peace Book 2

Volume 51. Peace People Guide

Volume 52. Peace Job Guide

Volume 53. Peace Organizations and Websites Guide

Volume 54. Anti-War Guide 1

Volume 55. Anti-War Guide 2

Volume 56. The Middle East Fight Between Jews and Arabs

Volume 57. Worldwide Danger Guide

Volume 58. A Conspiracy Website Guide

Volume 59. Money Conspiracy Guide: Elitists use Money to Control Us

Volume 60. Police Encounter-Arrest Guide

Volume 61. Religious Knowledge-Beliefs

Volume 62. Feminism Guide

Volume 63. A GLBTQ Activist Guide

Volume 64. Eco-Environment Activist Guide

Volume 65. We Get Sick and Die from Chemicals Everywhere

Volume 66. My Idea for a Better World

Volume 67. True Democracy, Rule by the People Online

Volume 68. Get the Gut to Rule Ourselves Online

Volume 69. Don't Need Fake Representatives: Rule Ourselves Online

Volume 70. Peaceful Protest Guide: Egg Revolution, etc.

Volume 71. Blueprint for a Great Country and a Great World 1

Volume 72. Blueprint for a Great Country and a Great World 2

Volume 73. Blueprint for a Great Country and a Great World 3

Volume 74. Blueprint for a Great Country and a Great World 4

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