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I don't trust the Salvos anymore (Read 4541 times)
Schu
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Re: I don't trust the Salvos anymore
Reply #15 - Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:45pm
 
King FriYAY II wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:31pm:
Schu wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:23pm:
bogarde73 wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:19pm:
Actually they do some good works, for the homeless, just don't let these organisations near kids or the handicapped.

I'm sure they do Pansi, just as I know there are rotten apples everywhere.
But it's one thing to have rotten apples, it's another thing to employ pedantics to attempt to argue it away.
I would have thought a truly devoted organisation would not lend itself to legal word games, it would just come out and beg forgiveness for the wrongs done in its name.

Yes, you'd think so, wouldn't you, with the way they portray themselves?

The behaviour surrounding the child sex abuse scandals has just confirmed that these organisations are about control and money, not about actually doing any good.

Aside from the legal wrangling, the fact that many (if not all) of these organisations had policies of covering up the abuse and protecting the perpetrators dispels any idea that they actually care about humanity.


Myopic, obtuse....take your pick... Roll Eyes

Do you mean me or the organisations?
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King FriYAY II
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Re: I don't trust the Salvos anymore
Reply #16 - Apr 15th, 2014 at 3:46pm
 
Schu wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:45pm:
King FriYAY II wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:31pm:
Schu wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:23pm:
bogarde73 wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:19pm:
Actually they do some good works, for the homeless, just don't let these organisations near kids or the handicapped.

I'm sure they do Pansi, just as I know there are rotten apples everywhere.
But it's one thing to have rotten apples, it's another thing to employ pedantics to attempt to argue it away.
I would have thought a truly devoted organisation would not lend itself to legal word games, it would just come out and beg forgiveness for the wrongs done in its name.

Yes, you'd think so, wouldn't you, with the way they portray themselves?

The behaviour surrounding the child sex abuse scandals has just confirmed that these organisations are about control and money, not about actually doing any good.

Aside from the legal wrangling, the fact that many (if not all) of these organisations had policies of covering up the abuse and protecting the perpetrators dispels any idea that they actually care about humanity.


Myopic, obtuse....take your pick... Roll Eyes

Do you mean me or the organisations?


I'd say the organisations are more disgraceful...

Wink
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BatteriesNotIncluded
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Re: I don't trust the Salvos anymore
Reply #17 - Apr 15th, 2014 at 3:59pm
 
Ex Dame Pansi wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:00pm:
BatteriesNotIncluded wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 1:55pm:
Salvos act like gods gift.. Pride comes before what??


It's god's army isn't it? What the hell would a god need an army for anyway? snake oil salesmen.......

Actually they do some good works, for the homeless, just don't let these organisations near kids or the handicapped.

Treat centreline clients worse than crap: how much moolah do they get for that?

Those providers can be bad but the salvos are just shonky with dumb women you can't talk to running 'em!
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*Sure....they're anti competitive as any subsidised job is.  It wouldn't be there without the tax payer.  Very damned difficult for a brainwashed collectivist to understand that I know....  (swaggy) *
 
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cods
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Re: I don't trust the Salvos anymore
Reply #18 - Apr 15th, 2014 at 4:01pm
 
Schu wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 1:23pm:
My grandma was in a Salvation Army girls home and suffered the abuse talked about at the Royal Commission (she developed dementia in the mid 90s and died in 2006). It severely damaged her life and had an impact on her children and grandchildren.

It used to annoy me when I was younger that people saw the Salvos as different to all the other organisations when the abuse issues started becoming known. What was worse was when I would actually relay what I knew and people would have the gall to dispute me because the "Salvos are good people and a reputable organisation". These weren't people who were part of the Salvos, just sucked in by their reputation.

I'm glad that delusion has now broken down.



so sorry to read that Schu.. I do hope somewhere her family are getting some comfort to know its now out there with all its horror...

its been unbelievable reading about this and I am sure we are only getting small pieces.. maybe the whole Royal will be published.. these people need to know they have at last been listened too...

and anyone that has b een a part of any child abuse will be exposed no matter how long it takes.

I made up my mind I will not donate to the Salvos ever again..not my style as a rule, but I cannot accept there was any excuse any excuse whatever for this...to call themselves people of god..and to turn a blind eye, is despicable
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BatteriesNotIncluded
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Re: I don't trust the Salvos anymore
Reply #19 - Apr 15th, 2014 at 4:02pm
 
King FriYAY II wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:13pm:
Only a nice person throws the baby out with the bath water.

I’d say there are more people in these organizations that do more good than bad.

Honestly, some of you people are going to be in for a big surprise when everyone gets back to the fact that more abuse happens in the home, by people known to the family, than happens else where.

Of course that has to be true as groups of people are wary of who they affiliate with whereas family is random...
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*Sure....they're anti competitive as any subsidised job is.  It wouldn't be there without the tax payer.  Very damned difficult for a brainwashed collectivist to understand that I know....  (swaggy) *
 
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BatteriesNotIncluded
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Re: I don't trust the Salvos anymore
Reply #20 - Apr 15th, 2014 at 4:03pm
 
Schu wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:23pm:
bogarde73 wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:19pm:
Actually they do some good works, for the homeless, just don't let these organisations near kids or the handicapped.

I'm sure they do Pansi, just as I know there are rotten apples everywhere.
But it's one thing to have rotten apples, it's another thing to employ pedantics to attempt to argue it away.
I would have thought a truly devoted organisation would not lend itself to legal word games, it would just come out and beg forgiveness for the wrongs done in its name.

Yes, you'd think so, wouldn't you, with the way they portray themselves?

The behaviour surrounding the child sex abuse scandals has just confirmed that these organisations are about control and money, not about actually doing any good.

Aside from the legal wrangling, the fact that many (if not all) of these organisations had policies of covering up the abuse and protecting the perpetrators dispels any idea that they actually care about humanity.


http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/apr/15/salvation-army-officer-not-all-who-...
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*Sure....they're anti competitive as any subsidised job is.  It wouldn't be there without the tax payer.  Very damned difficult for a brainwashed collectivist to understand that I know....  (swaggy) *
 
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cods
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Re: I don't trust the Salvos anymore
Reply #21 - Apr 15th, 2014 at 4:06pm
 
... wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:23pm:
Roll Eyes

People trust people, not organisations.



disagree..

put on a uniform.. bang a drum.. telling everyone you are a soldier of the lord...

what do you expect anyone to think when they meet you dressed in the uniform of the army??...

if someone was putting you in a salvation army run home today...

would you go willingly knowing what you know now?....

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longweekend58
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Re: I don't trust the Salvos anymore
Reply #22 - Apr 15th, 2014 at 4:34pm
 
In most of these organisations they are guilty of no more than naivete and bad judgment. Up until relatively recently child sexual abuse was on no ones agenda at all.  Society not only didn't talk about it but in many ways even accepted it as 'inevitable'.   Haven't you yet worked out that perhaps the salvos and the scouts and the churches etc were TARGETED by paedos simply because that gave them access to children? The naivete was to not recognise this and of course the faillure to address it is another.

What we are seeing though is that pedos target any group that gives them access to children.  TV and media have come under scrutiny recently as well and there is no organisation that works with kids that HASNT had this problem. Now however, people are aware and what you may have noticed is that in most of these organisations the cases of abuse are decades old. The problem has been seen, identified and largely rectified. But the list of victims is not yet  dealt with.

everyone has been targeted. It would be foolish to label any group as 'pedo-friendly' without recnignising that they too were targets.
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AUSSIE: "Speaking for myself, I could not care less about 298 human beings having their life snuffed out in a nano-second, or what impact that loss has on Members of their family, their parents..."
 
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Schu
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Re: I don't trust the Salvos anymore
Reply #23 - Apr 15th, 2014 at 4:49pm
 
King FriYAY II wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 3:46pm:
Schu wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:45pm:
King FriYAY II wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:31pm:
Schu wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:23pm:
bogarde73 wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:19pm:
Actually they do some good works, for the homeless, just don't let these organisations near kids or the handicapped.

I'm sure they do Pansi, just as I know there are rotten apples everywhere.
But it's one thing to have rotten apples, it's another thing to employ pedantics to attempt to argue it away.
I would have thought a truly devoted organisation would not lend itself to legal word games, it would just come out and beg forgiveness for the wrongs done in its name.

Yes, you'd think so, wouldn't you, with the way they portray themselves?

The behaviour surrounding the child sex abuse scandals has just confirmed that these organisations are about control and money, not about actually doing any good.

Aside from the legal wrangling, the fact that many (if not all) of these organisations had policies of covering up the abuse and protecting the perpetrators dispels any idea that they actually care about humanity.


Myopic, obtuse....take your pick... Roll Eyes

Do you mean me or the organisations?


I'd say the organisations are more disgraceful...

Wink

I'd agree with that. Wink

I can't dismiss the behaviour as just myopic or obtuse. These are organisations that promote the sanctity of children and monogamous relationships, yet they dispensed with those principles when it suited. I think it was all nothing more than a deliberate tactic to avoid losing any power.

These organisations draw their power from the number of people who identify as part of them. I agree that a proportion of the people who are part of religious organisations are good people, because in my experience a proportion of the world are good people. If those people come to know about abhorrent practices they won't stand for it and then the organisation loses some of its support base from which it draws its power.

There is another component to that, which is that the people in support have to be controlled so that when they do find out about matters like the covering up of sexual abuse they don't question it.

I find it hard to state that a person is a good person, though, if they had knowledge and turned a blind eye because then they are indirectly contributing to the problem by being part of the base of supporters from which the organisation draws its power that enables it to continue with its atrocities. Even if you don't stand up to what's happening, you can still walk away.
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Schu
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Re: I don't trust the Salvos anymore
Reply #24 - Apr 15th, 2014 at 4:57pm
 
cods wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 4:01pm:
Schu wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 1:23pm:
My grandma was in a Salvation Army girls home and suffered the abuse talked about at the Royal Commission (she developed dementia in the mid 90s and died in 2006). It severely damaged her life and had an impact on her children and grandchildren.

It used to annoy me when I was younger that people saw the Salvos as different to all the other organisations when the abuse issues started becoming known. What was worse was when I would actually relay what I knew and people would have the gall to dispute me because the "Salvos are good people and a reputable organisation". These weren't people who were part of the Salvos, just sucked in by their reputation.

I'm glad that delusion has now broken down.



so sorry to read that Schu.. I do hope somewhere her family are getting some comfort to know its now out there with all its horror...

its been unbelievable reading about this and I am sure we are only getting small pieces.. maybe the whole Royal will be published.. these people need to know they have at last been listened too...

and anyone that has b een a part of any child abuse will be exposed no matter how long it takes.

I made up my mind I will not donate to the Salvos ever again..not my style as a rule, but I cannot accept there was any excuse any excuse whatever for this...to call themselves people of god..and to turn a blind eye, is despicable

Thanks. And yes, it does bring a sense of justice to know that the Salvos have been exposed as no different to the other organisations because that was what always frustrated me.

When I used to tackle every Salvos person who asked me for donations, every one of them told me I was wrong and, in some cases, crazy to think that (and inevitably used the fact that while other organisations had been exposed nothing had come out about them so they had to be in the clear). I wonder if any of those people remember our encounters and feel ashamed. I hope so.

I still tackle them. Now they don't challenge me at all.
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Schu
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Re: I don't trust the Salvos anymore
Reply #25 - Apr 15th, 2014 at 4:59pm
 
BatteriesNotIncluded wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 4:03pm:
Schu wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 2:23pm:
Yes, you'd think so, wouldn't you, with the way they portray themselves?

The behaviour surrounding the child sex abuse scandals has just confirmed that these organisations are about control and money, not about actually doing any good.

Aside from the legal wrangling, the fact that many (if not all) of these organisations had policies of covering up the abuse and protecting the perpetrators dispels any idea that they actually care about humanity.


Link

That link isn't working for me.
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longweekend58
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Re: I don't trust the Salvos anymore
Reply #26 - Apr 15th, 2014 at 5:08pm
 
Schu wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 4:57pm:
cods wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 4:01pm:
Schu wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 1:23pm:
My grandma was in a Salvation Army girls home and suffered the abuse talked about at the Royal Commission (she developed dementia in the mid 90s and died in 2006). It severely damaged her life and had an impact on her children and grandchildren.

It used to annoy me when I was younger that people saw the Salvos as different to all the other organisations when the abuse issues started becoming known. What was worse was when I would actually relay what I knew and people would have the gall to dispute me because the "Salvos are good people and a reputable organisation". These weren't people who were part of the Salvos, just sucked in by their reputation.

I'm glad that delusion has now broken down.



so sorry to read that Schu.. I do hope somewhere her family are getting some comfort to know its now out there with all its horror...

its been unbelievable reading about this and I am sure we are only getting small pieces.. maybe the whole Royal will be published.. these people need to know they have at last been listened too...

and anyone that has b een a part of any child abuse will be exposed no matter how long it takes.

I made up my mind I will not donate to the Salvos ever again..not my style as a rule, but I cannot accept there was any excuse any excuse whatever for this...to call themselves people of god..and to turn a blind eye, is despicable

Thanks. And yes, it does bring a sense of justice to know that the Salvos have been exposed as no different to the other organisations because that was what always frustrated me.

When I used to tackle every Salvos person who asked me for donations, every one of them told me I was wrong and, in some cases, crazy to think that (and inevitably used the fact that while other organisations had been exposed nothing had come out about them so they had to be in the clear). I wonder if any of those people remember our encounters and feel ashamed. I hope so.

I still tackle them. Now they don't challenge me at all.


and I guess you don't give them money to help endangered and poor families. right? Does that help you feel morally superior?
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AUSSIE: "Speaking for myself, I could not care less about 298 human beings having their life snuffed out in a nano-second, or what impact that loss has on Members of their family, their parents..."
 
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Schu
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Re: I don't trust the Salvos anymore
Reply #27 - Apr 15th, 2014 at 5:16pm
 
longweekend58 wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 5:08pm:
Schu wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 4:57pm:
Thanks. And yes, it does bring a sense of justice to know that the Salvos have been exposed as no different to the other organisations because that was what always frustrated me.

When I used to tackle every Salvos person who asked me for donations, every one of them told me I was wrong and, in some cases, crazy to think that (and inevitably used the fact that while other organisations had been exposed nothing had come out about them so they had to be in the clear). I wonder if any of those people remember our encounters and feel ashamed. I hope so.

I still tackle them. Now they don't challenge me at all.


and I guess you don't give them money to help endangered and poor families. right? Does that help you feel morally superior?

It's got nothing to do with moral superiority.

It has to do with not giving money to organisations that are dishonest and untrustworthy and that use at least a proportion of that money to further their own power structure not so they can more effectively help people but so they can more effectively further their own ends.

If someone asks me for money I expect them to be able to answer my questions and challenges to them.

When these organisations properly clean themselves up and can demonstrate that they actually place their principles of helping people about their own ends I will reconsider my position. At the moment if I was to give them money I would be contributing to the perpetration of possible crimes and their cover-up. I do not want my money used to build homes for children where they may well end up abused.
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longweekend58
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Re: I don't trust the Salvos anymore
Reply #28 - Apr 15th, 2014 at 5:39pm
 
Schu wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 5:16pm:
longweekend58 wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 5:08pm:
Schu wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 4:57pm:
Thanks. And yes, it does bring a sense of justice to know that the Salvos have been exposed as no different to the other organisations because that was what always frustrated me.

When I used to tackle every Salvos person who asked me for donations, every one of them told me I was wrong and, in some cases, crazy to think that (and inevitably used the fact that while other organisations had been exposed nothing had come out about them so they had to be in the clear). I wonder if any of those people remember our encounters and feel ashamed. I hope so.

I still tackle them. Now they don't challenge me at all.


and I guess you don't give them money to help endangered and poor families. right? Does that help you feel morally superior?

It's got nothing to do with moral superiority.

It has to do with not giving money to organisations that are dishonest and untrustworthy and that use at least a proportion of that money to further their own power structure not so they can more effectively help people but so they can more effectively further their own ends.

If someone asks me for money I expect them to be able to answer my questions and challenges to them.

When these organisations properly clean themselves up and can demonstrate that they actually place their principles of helping people about their own ends I will reconsider my position. At the moment if I was to give them money I would be contributing to the perpetration of possible crimes and their cover-up. I do not want my money used to build homes for children where they may well end up abused.


there are no childrens homes anymore and haven't been for decades. Ive hear these arguments all before and you are nothing new.  You just don't want to give and this is what you think is a nice convenient excuse.

Heard it all from bentnail about church groups 'only' passing on 95% of donations and using 5% in overhead while ignoring non-church groups that take 50%.

Heard it all before and it is always invariably lame. But the 'building childrens homes' is at least a new - if still fallacious - excuse.
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AUSSIE: "Speaking for myself, I could not care less about 298 human beings having their life snuffed out in a nano-second, or what impact that loss has on Members of their family, their parents..."
 
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Schu
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Re: I don't trust the Salvos anymore
Reply #29 - Apr 15th, 2014 at 6:02pm
 
longweekend58 wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 5:39pm:
Schu wrote on Apr 15th, 2014 at 5:16pm:
It's got nothing to do with moral superiority.

It has to do with not giving money to organisations that are dishonest and untrustworthy and that use at least a proportion of that money to further their own power structure not so they can more effectively help people but so they can more effectively further their own ends.

If someone asks me for money I expect them to be able to answer my questions and challenges to them.

When these organisations properly clean themselves up and can demonstrate that they actually place their principles of helping people about their own ends I will reconsider my position. At the moment if I was to give them money I would be contributing to the perpetration of possible crimes and their cover-up. I do not want my money used to build homes for children where they may well end up abused.


there are no childrens homes anymore and haven't been for decades. Ive hear these arguments all before and you are nothing new.  You just don't want to give and this is what you think is a nice convenient excuse.

Heard it all from bentnail about church groups 'only' passing on 95% of donations and using 5% in overhead while ignoring non-church groups that take 50%.

Heard it all before and it is always invariably lame. But the 'building childrens homes' is at least a new - if still fallacious - excuse.

You know nothing of how much I give of my resources to help others, so it's rather presumptuous of you to suggest that this is merely an excuse not to give. But nice way to attempt to shame me.

Moreover, I apply the same rigorous checks to any organisation that asks me for money. It baffles me that charities of any sort expect donations without often being willing to explain themselves. Reputation, as we now know, is quite often an illusion.

As for the comment about children's homes, whilst I might have expressed it inaccurately, it is not an inaccurate point. The Salvos do provide shelters for women and children and in those shelters there are times when the women leave the children in the care of the workers. Now if the Salvos had come clean about their abuse instead of trying to cover it up and only begrudging accept the bare minimum of responsibility when required to I would have had faith that they would take any and all measures in the future to prevent other harm. But they didn't so I have no confidence in them doing the right thing now.

I treat all organisations the same way. It just so happens that I knew about the Salvos before it was in the public domain and while many others were under the illusion they were different. When an organisation has nothing to hide they are very forthcoming about their practices and they can demonstrate what they have done when an individual has done the wrong thing.

There are plenty of non-denominational organisations around that do just the same work as the denominational ones without the same proportion of money being siphoned off to further the denomination itself. It is also the case that when people are out to do the wrong thing they tend to gravitate to environments where they will be protected and that culture still exists with denominational organisations. There are plenty of independent womens' shelters and homeless shelters, international aid organisations and counselling services.
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