Another wanna-be Make-A-Wish administrator. Your opinion of which wishes should be fulfilled is just that, your opinion. If you want to alter Make-A-Wish's mission statement from granting wishes to kids who faced life theatening medical condition to kids who are terminal, then knock yourself out. But that's not their mission. They reviewed this case and decided after two years of hell, the little girl deserved the trip. Why do you figure your opinion supercedes theirs? All of the wishes Make-A-Wish grants are at "their expense." What does that even mean?
I just can't believe otherwise intelligent people can't see through this prik's transparent effort to punish his wife and want to impose their own judgements on Make-A-Wish. The peole with the fiduciary relationship to the donors have decided she should get to go.
1. The girl deserves the trip, but at the family's expense, not MAW's. That's what I meant.
2. The dad is probably using this as warfare, as far as we know. It does not mean his given reasons are any less legitimate. The intent of the reasons are the difference.
3. So, if she ends up 100% in remission, or by miracle, cured, you'll change your stance? Given your strong will, I highly doubt it.
Is there an echo in here?
She meets Make-A-Wish's criteria for getting a wish granted, not yours. If you were paying for the trip, then you'd have a say in the matter and could deny her the trip based on your criteria that she has to be at death's door before she can go. But Make-A-Wish disagrees with you, and they were going to pay for the trip.
Certainly leukemia qualifies as a "life threatening" condition although it's not the death sentence I grew up with. Make-A-Wish granted her the trip based on her history. Her prognosis is irrelevant to that decision. If she winds up cancer free for the rest of her life, that too is irrelevant.
What possible business can this matter be for the father? His deep concern for the financial well being of Make-A-Wish is transparent crapola. And I'm amazed that all of you are saying, in effect, "yes, he's an a*shole, but he's making a valid point." What on earth makes you want to give this dipstick the benefit of the doubt? His point would be valid only if his money was involved. It's not.
I know it's off topic, buts it's amusing that you wrote this not long after you used the "another make-a-wish administrator" line for the second time.
Maybe, just maybe, we are all wrong and what he says is what he really feels? I doubt it, but maybe he is really being charitable. Both of our stances are our opinion. Why ridicule the other because of that? Either way, the reason he states (give the wish to a kid that is terminal) IS a valid point, him being a dbag or not. You may not agree with that point, and that's fine. Just don't ridicule others with a different opinion. I can see both sides of the story, I just choose to side with the one that you don't agree with. Let's leave it at that.
This is a matter for Make-A-Wish to decide. And they have. As to daddy's "sincerity," anything's possible. But I'd bet the farm he's trying to punish his ex-wife by hurting his daughter. His point is valid only if his money is involved. It isn't. This guy doesn't impress me as an altruist.
The question of whether Make-A-Wish should restrict wish fullfilment only to those kids who are terminal is a separate matter from whether this particular child should get a trip. Make-A-Wish has decided what to do in this case based on their criteria. Yet you all are lined up defending this prik father, and anxious to impose your standards on this charity.
Close, but not really. If the MAW's requirements include the parents' signatures, then this case is closed (which it is). You say "follow their requirements." Well, they are.
I'm not defending the father's supposed reasoning behind his statements. I'm just supporting his statement, which I think is a just one. His methods may be wrong, but his madness is correct.
Oh, come on, signing a permission slip for her to go on the trip, as our parents had to do for our field trips, is hardly germane here. The fact that this father is a putz who won't sign, hardly justifies your desire to force Make-A-Wish do things your way.
Hm. Forcing them. I am hardly forcing them to do anything. If I wrote a letter, made a phone call, or even *gasp* visited in person, I'd be told, "Thank you for your concern. We'll take it into account." I'm just asking to look at it neutrally. And don't ridicule those who don't see it your way, in this particular instance.
You know I have no personal or general beef with you. And with this issue, I still don't. I'm just asking for you to understand the opposing side's view. You may still disagree, but at least respect the others' opinions.![]()
Yet somehow you're not prepared to respect the opinion of Make-A-Wish as to who qualifies for wish fulfillment. You mean to suggest you don't care if Make-A-Wish alters its criteria? And wouldn't force them to stop fulfilling wishes for kids who aren't terminal if you could? Then what are we arguing about?
1. You said, "follow MAW's requirements."
2. MAW requires parental sigs.
3. One parent didn't sign off.
4. You cry foul.
5. See #2.
I feel creepy for saying this, but I agree with Old Pio.
-The "one more wish to a dying kid"? MAW just got donations covering her wish and ten more, because of this case's negative publicity. Now the father can go back and sign without fear of costing someone else a wish. If he's feeling guilty (as he should, almost certainly) he should advocate for donations as well, and her mother and grandmother will undoubtedly do the same.
-If she HAD gone in the first place, and continues getting better (hopefully!), she'd be a long-lasting advocate for MAW, and bring in more than enough donations to cover her trip. If she had taken the trip and takes a turn for the worse (hopefully not!) she and her family would still be advocates and poster children for why the foundation exists.
-Even if the fund wasn't replenished one cent after her wish, it still fulfilled its purpose: giving children with life-threatening diseases a reason to have joy in their lives. Maybe that even means giving them just a bit more willpower to overcome illness - I don't think anyone can deny that Make-A-Wish would love for all of its recipients to have that outcome.
-Finally, even if we take him at his word that he feels a wish should be reserved for someone dying, I question how a father could knowingly deny joy to his daughter after she'd been through hell. Even if he felt dirty "denying a wish to someone else" (and that's a crap reason, since donations and grants can cover the shortfall) his feelings are irrelevant, because his love for her should trump his reluctance at taking someone else's money to help her.
Woman calls 9-1-1 to complain about her mug shot
I agree with Old Pio, the girl should be able to go on the trip.
Make-A-Wish said she meets the criteria(and she most certainly does), end of story.
Only if you think the justice systems in America and the Middle East are comparable. . .and equally dedicated to due process. . .with U.S. presidents only too willing to turn to their stable of remorseless "button men" to commit murder on their whims. Next you'll be claiming some high ranking officers in the Pentagon were responsible for gunning down JFK. If you hurry, you might be able to find a space in Elizabeth Clare Prophet's Montana bunker. Don't forget to bring your guns.
If you want to make an ACLU "slippery slope" argument about the troubling precedent of a president ordering the deaths of U.S. citizens abroad, that's one thing. But with your customary flair for hyperbole, you've jumped to the conclusion government sanctioned killings in CONUS are inevitable.
You whined when I pointed out your prescripton for what should happen to Penn State was the one applied by the SS to Lidice. Well, your fears about what some POTUS may do to future accused terrorists bring to mind the SS solution for "enemies of the state" applied during the "night of the long knives." Sorry.