Marshall,

 

The Red Cross is a Globalist control scam. This is well documented. 

 

Jim

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Marshall Dudley [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, September 06, 2005 9:47 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: CS>Donating for Katrina

 

I went to a red cross meeting last night for those who will be coming to our
area last night. I was rather surprised they were refusing to take clothes,
food, toys and things, saying they had all they needed, and instead saying
to give them money instead.  They even said that if you already bought
anything, to take it back to the store, and give them them money instead. 

Marshall 

Linda Ellis wrote: 

I have a question, beyond the standard "donate cash" issue, which is a
given.  We know several people who have lost everything in New Orleans, and
who are now in our area temporarily.  They are taking matters into their own
hands in large measure, and local churches are helping to accumulate goods
to send back.  This seems like a great opportunity to clear out much of the
"way too much" stuff we have, but I wanted to ask if I'm off-base on a
couple of things. We're going through our clothes, and I can send new or
almost new stuff.  Most is of the T-shirt and casual pants variety, but I
also have a fair amount of stuff that people may find useful getting back to
a job.  It's just sitting in my closet because it no longer fits my life or
style, but it's nice stuff.  Will that be useful to send back? I also have a
frugal habit of saving clothes that have seen better days, or that I'm just
tired of, but are still serviceable for those days of heavy cleaning, or big
house projects like painting or something - but in my zeal for frugality, I
have way more of this stuff than I need.  I'm thinking of making a separate
box and labeling it well, that these are clothes suitable for wear while
cleaning up. I'm also thinking of sending along a box of rags.  I'm guessing
even those are in short supply - and desperately needed - and of course I
have way more than I need. I'm also going to make up some boxes of winter
clothes, because I'm guessing some of these people who are relocating to
Chicago area shelters won't be going back anytime soon, and winter can be
brutal here. Extra camping gear, grills, kitchen supplies, MREs and so on
are a given... I'm guessing many on this list have more experience in
disaster areas than I do, and I'd appreciate knowing if these items would be
welcomed, or just tossed to the side as not useful at this time.... 

Paula P Smith <[email protected]> wrote: 

 Dear Silver List,Please donate to the Salvation Army or directly to other
groups such as Baptist, Luthern or Menonite Disaster Relief. And don't
forget this will be a LONG TERM effort - years and years. I am scheduled to
go to Louisiana next week and Helen GA this week. I have been responding to
disasters since Mt St Helen. The Red Cross does great things, but the
Salvation Army stays till the job is done. The Red Cross literally is there
as long as the cameras are there and then their efforts are VERY low key and
their people are not as well trained. Also, in Georgia, the Red Cross turns
around and calls the GA Baptist Disaster Relief and THEY do the responding
and the Baptist are paying for it - 90% of the time. GA Baptist has the
equipment and volunteers for preparing meals, debris clean-up, childcare and
re-build. Just my 2-cents and I am actually on-scenePaula in N GA