Dear Editor: It is indeed a sad day when a seemingly august publication like
Worth wastes its
valuable cover space on Al Gore, the poster boy for the global warming zealots,
trying to sell us on the investment potential of such alarmist blather ("Hot
Opportunities," July 2006).
Perhaps next month you will consider giving equal time and
space to Dr. Fred Singer, professor emeritus of the University of Virginia, or
professor Bob Carter of the Marine Geophysical Laboratory at James Cook
University in Australia, who have both published volumes debunking the specious
conclusions of Mr. Gore and his minions of data miners. Or even any one of the
17,000 scientists who signed the petition circulated by the Oregon Institute of
Science and Medicine stating: "There is no convincing scientific evidence that
human release of carbon dioxide, methane or other greenhouse gases is causing or
will, in the foreseeable future, cause catastrophic heating of the Earth’s
atmosphere and disruption of the Earth’s climate."
The global warming farce is nothing more than a giant
wealth-transfer mechanism foisted upon an uninformed public by our envious
detractors designed to tax the West, limit its progress and influence, and shift
resources from the private sector to government control.
James Martin Greystone Financial Group, Troy, Mich.
Dear Editor: At best, Douglas McWhirter’s "Hot Opportunities," featuring
former VP Al Gore, was a masterful display of casuistry. At worst, "Hot
Opportunities" was quotidian left-leaning demagoguery, if only for its
incendiary first-page pull quote courtesy of Mr. Gore: "Exxon-Mobil spends
millions of dollars per year to finance the spreading of disinformation designed
to prevent the formation of rational policies on global warming."
Talk about the pot calling the kettle black. A profusion
of dissenting opinions exist (beyond Exxon-Mobil), which Messrs. Gore and
McWhirter conveniently exclude, which would add to the formation of rational
policies on global warming. For instance, a survey of more than 400 German,
American and Canadian climate researchers conducted by the Meteorologisches
Institut der Universitat Hamburg and the GKSS Forschungszentrum found that 67
percent of those surveyed either disagreed or were uncertain about the
proposition that global warming will occur so quickly that lack of preparation
could prove disastrous.
Like acid rain, global cooling, unsupportable population
growth, SARS, mad cow disease and avian flu, global warming will prove to be
nothing more then a much-ado-about-nothing crisis du jour. Instead of
looking back on the way we handled transportation problems and marveling at how
long it took to come to our senses, we will look back at Mr. Gore and marvel at
his and the global warming fanatics’ fatuity.
S.P. Mauzy Brighton, Colo.
Noncash Contributions Dear Editor: The article "Underperformance Anxiety" (June 2006)
focuses on donations because it is aimed at the Worth reader, but there is more to
nonprofit board membership.
Granted, nonprofit board members are expected to contribute.
And I certainly agree that the recruiting pitch should be clear about financial
expectations. But, in some cases, a board member’s contribution of his or her
expertise, credentials and knowledge are as valuable as the next member’s
dollars. In structuring a good board, we recommend a combination of donors
(or getters), leaders in the field the nonprofit targets and skills in areas
such as finance, law and marketing. Rule number one in fundraising is 100
percent participation by the board, but the amount of each donation can, and
probably will, vary.
As for the two examples you present—the New York Center for
Financial Studies and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum—financial contributions
don’t appear to be a contributing factor to the outcomes. Chemistry among
board members, the ability of a board member to sell an idea, the politics of
the board and the traditions of the organization, the CEO and perhaps limited
staff resources are what probably resulted in these failures to create
change.
Phyllis McGrath Philanthropy Management, Fairfield, Conn. Worth welcomes your comments. Please direct your letters to letters@worth.com.
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