Charities Quotes

Quotes tagged as "charities" Showing 1-7 of 9
Kailin Gow
“Charity is Equal Opportunity. Anyone who wishes to give should be allowed to give. I once came upon an author hosting a charitable event who wouldn't allowed certain authors to participate in the event. Only the authors she wished to be associated with so she can ride on their coattails were allowed to participate. This is not charity. It builds resentment towards the charity she was supposedly representing. She became a NY Times bestselling author because of that association, but is it worth the deceit to get there? - Strong by Kailin Gow on Charities”
Kailin Gow

Selena I.R. Drake
“I am proud to say that I am not in it for the money. If I made a million dollars, I would donate most of it to various charities and libraries.”
Selena I. R. Drake, Dragon Diaries: The Return of the Dragon Keepers

Mokokoma Mokhonoana
“Not everyone who has helped or is helping you wanted or wants to help you.”
Mokokoma Mokhonoana

Christina Engela
“This was his first trip on the Ossifar Distana, his first real splash in life. Look what it got him. Mister Smiff liked anonymity. He kept a low profile, often traveling under assumed names, claiming to be anything from a banker to a (very) successful life insurance salesman. He’d never broken the law, at least not irreparably. He was quite generous, well liked, sponsoring many charities anonymously – which is why it was so surprising to find him floating face down in the private spa in his apartment, murdered. He had been murdered, unless it was a freak shaving accident. Those old razors weren’t called cut-throats for nothing. Yikes.”
Christina Engela, Dead Man's Hammer

“Charities or Non-Profit Organisations should have the interest of their target market at heart and not to enrich themselves”
Benjamin Kofi Quansah

Lisa Kleypas
“Since they had established a household at Riverton, Beatrix had increased the size of her menagerie, and was constantly occupied with animal-related charities and concerns. She had also compiled a report for the newly established natural history society in London. For some reason it had not been at all difficult to convince the group of elderly entomologists, ornithologists, and other naturalists to include a pretty young woman in their midst. Especially when it became clear that Beatrix could talk for hours about migration patterns, plant cycles, and other matters relating to animal habitats and behavior. There was even discussion of Beatrix's joining a board to form a new natural history museum, to provide a lady's perspective on various aspects of the project.”
Lisa Kleypas, Love in the Afternoon