buckeyeintn
Legend
I didn't know what their mission was until just before I made my post so I also checked. I spent almost 35 years working for a 501(c)(3) corporation in the area of development and I can't imagine a marketing piece of any kind that doesn't focus on the mission of the organization. Charity Watch is spot on with their analysis. The entire marketing effort is deceitful. The area of automobile gifting has been fraught with abuse for decades and the IRS (of which I am NOT a fan) has tried multiple times to amend the rules to limit the abuse. The latest 990 I saw for the organization showed moderate salaries for the highest paid employees but much higher legal fees (well over $1 million) than you posted. There are various ways to hide compensation in legal fees and consulting fees. For instance, a spouse could be the attorney or consultant receiving the fees. But thanks for doing some research and posting the link.I don't know if you expected a serious answer, but you're gonna get one.
I hate their commercials so much that I wanted to see what their deal was. And I found out that it has nothing to do with cars, and has everything to do with specifically orthodox Jewish children. I don't have an issue with that, I do have an issue with the marketing. It says they're racking up $500k in legal fees, per year as of when this was written (2017). So it sounds like if you donate a car, it's going to pay for the legal fees first and might help some kids too.
https://www.charitywatch.org/charit...ars4kids-ads-disguise-charity39s-real-purpose
Also, the fact that someone covered Blue by Eiffel 65 makes me feel rage inside unlike anything other than a left-lane-cruising asshole.
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