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Campaigns

Campaign One : Anticharity

Introduction

News Resources

Downloadable Materials

Introduction

Increasingly, governments are, by policy, using charities to accomplish those acts of social intervention which concerns for public appearance or other constitutional reasons prevent them doing overtly.

These interventions are almost always against the interests of Opus Diaboli – providing services to drug addicts, the homeless and other so-called ‘vulnerable people’ and keeping corrupt third world governments in business under the guise of ‘famine relief’ - in short, separating people from the consequences of their actions.

The purpose of this Opus Diaboli campaign is to start a viral tide of information and disinformation which will affect the perception of the charitable sector, discourage confidence in it, and ultimately dry up donations to the detriment of their operations.

This will be accomplished in a number of ways

i.) e-mail campaigns outlining how much executives earn in the leading charities and pointing out how many ‘widow’s mite’ donations are needed to pay one inflated salary. Trade journals and the executive recruitment pages of the better newspapers are excellent sources for these stories.

ii.) The circulation of stories defamatory to charities, such as newspaper or internet stories about incomepetence or money wasting in charities, or large salaries for executives.

iii.) Development of literature which can be photocopied or faxed and then left on noticeboards (particularly church noticeboards) or work, college or community centres etc.

Notes:

1. The intention of this campaign is to create an antipathy against charities involved in social intervention. This cannot be achieved under the name of Satanism, and all references to Opus Diaboli or anything which could identify the campaign as Satanic should be carefully removed.

2. A variety of tones will be used for these messages. • Factual: when disseminating stories about overspending, incompetence and high salaries. • Humorous: when mocking some campaigns, i.e. making Bob Geldof seem pompous and ill-informed, and thereby discrediting the End Poverty Now campaign. • Outrage: over government intervention with charities, implying that charities are mired in politics.

3. It is not intended that charities which benefit animals should be targeted by this campaign – only those involved in compassionate interventions with human beings. How to get involved: E-mail Opus Diaboli here to be included in mailing lists of stories to be disseminated. Material for download will be added to this page soon. Print it out and use it appropriately.

News Stories

These stories about misappropriation of aid funding are all from reliable sources and should be copied as widely as possible

How Comic Relief was ripped off
- how charity money was spent on fancy cars and houses

Indian aid money 'goes missing'
- company pockets aid money taken off employees

Eerie hush over missing Tsunami money
Aid money for Tsunami relief 'missing'
Link to story from another source

Cash missing from the Lucie Blackman Trust

Charity candy ripoff story from Sydney Australia

WHO slams 'crisis junkies'
Smaller aid agencies parachute into disaster zones with an inflated opinion of their own usefulness and very little idea of how to help, said Dr Claude de Ville de Goyet, the director of the WHO

A groundswell of public opinion against giving to Africa on the Independent's web site

And most importantly, this from the Director of the Royal African Society
Aid is not the answer for Africa
Interesting to hear from someone who knows Africa inside out making exactly the same points as the Opus Diaboli campaign.

Downloadable Materials

Anticharity letter one - Aid is not the answer

Anticharity letter two - Charity Fat-Cat Salaries

Anticharity letter three - How 'charity' is moving from donation to taxation