User Panel
Given the stories about how they actually treat our troops (charging for stuff) for decades, I certainly will not have anything to do with them.
|
|
|
|
I gave last week. When getting on the recliner I had to adjust my CCW a bit, the lady attending me struck up a conversation about CCW and what she and her hubby carried when she noticed it. Two others piped in about having their CCW as well. God Bless Idaho.
|
|
Quoted:
Quoted:
Given the stories about how they actually treat our troops (charging for stuff) for decades, I certainly will not have anything to do with them. seriously???? Yes. Folks here have reported their fathers/grandfathers being charged a nickel for a pencil stub to write home with, for writing paper, for coffee and donuts, and so on. Same for vets of korea, nam, and yes, middle east conflicts. All while the Salvation Army does that stuff for free. Someone here even told about RC stealing baked goods from their company kitchens and selling them to the troops. Another story was about the salvation army arrived several days ahead of hurricanes to help with evacuations, while the RC didn't arrive for several days AFTER. |
|
Are the red cross the guys who like to sell shit to soldiers on the field and were always in line on payday to collect their "donations".
I remember a thread about them and people were saying they stole food and coffee off the trucks (.mil) and sold them to the soldiers themselves. Am I daft or does anyone else remember that? |
|
Quoted:
Lots of folks are like that. You really do get used to it though. So very few eligible people donate it's really a shame. AFAIK people don't die from a lack of blood, but I know it's a constant struggle to maintain supplies. Now they lost a reliable donor--over stupidity. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
I'm VERY afraid of needles getting put in me to the point where I can get so anxious I puke(sometimes). But now I can just say I don't donate because they don't allow conceal carry Lots of folks are like that. You really do get used to it though. So very few eligible people donate it's really a shame. AFAIK people don't die from a lack of blood, but I know it's a constant struggle to maintain supplies. Now they lost a reliable donor--over stupidity. Sell your plasma instead. Double win, people get their plasma and you get beer/ammo money. |
|
Quoted:
Are the red cross the guys who like to sell shit to soldiers on the field and were always in line on payday to collect their "donations". I remember a thread about them and people were saying they stole food and coffee off the trucks (.mil) and sold them to the soldiers themselves. Am I daft or does anyone else remember that? View Quote I remember reading multiple accounts in that discussion. It made me disgusted. Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile |
|
Quoted:
I carry at the doctor's office. Why wouldn't you carry at the doctor's office? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
Just curious, who goes to the doctor's office CCW for their annual physical? I carry at the doctor's office. Why wouldn't you carry at the doctor's office? In SC it's written into the CC laws that you can't carry in medical offices and hospitals. My doctor would be cool with it but not some of her partners in the practice. My dentist don't care and I CC there. When I go to the skin doctor I carry because he wants to see if I have a new weapon. We end up talking until the nurses make him go to his next appt. |
|
|
TRUTH - I went over with our Blood Banking Officer a couple of years ago to be a fly on the wall while a deal was to be made for standby units for a liver surgery. I was the enlisted guy so I was to clam up while the BBO did her thing.
One thing stuck out, the RC dude said he would be glad to help us, but we had to allow him to hold a blood drive on base FUCK!!! We already do those all the time to support ourselves, dependants, and retirees!! They fucking want to take our blood and charge us for it to save our friends, families, and those who already served No love for RC, at all!!! |
|
Those ass hats have been gun haters at least since when Bob Dole was running for POTUS.
|
|
I don't recall LifeSouth having that policy.
They're local to Georgia, Alabama and Florida. Maybe there's a regional one in Illinois that you can go to instead. Isn't the Red Cross some kind of public - private partnership kinda like Fannie Mae? Are they allowed to restrict you since it's a quasi-government facility? |
|
Quoted:
Given the stories about how they actually treat our troops (charging for stuff) for decades, I certainly will not have anything to do with them. View Quote I agree fully with that, but honestly, it has nothing to do with the blood donations. As an aside, I was shocked to see the overhead percent versus assistance percent of their funds. 91% being used for the intended purpose is an astoundingly high number for a modern charity. Many are 10% or less. Not that I will donate $$ to them when they SELL coffee and donuts at disaster scenes often right next to the Salvation Army giving stuff away. |
|
Quoted:
<snip> So yes, it is a little personal to me. Because I am one of the people who deals with the fallout of real or manufactured blood shortages. And sometimes it wears on me. I've seen an awful lot of people bleed to death, and I've seen quite a few saved. I've also spent many hours lying awake in bed staring at the ceiling playing the dangerous "what if there were just one more trauma" game. I again publicly apologize if I unintentionally slighted TBK1 or any other donors in my inarticulate attempt to point out the ability of an organization to sidestep and transfer any impact from a donation boycott. Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
<snip> So yes, it is a little personal to me. Because I am one of the people who deals with the fallout of real or manufactured blood shortages. And sometimes it wears on me. I've seen an awful lot of people bleed to death, and I've seen quite a few saved. I've also spent many hours lying awake in bed staring at the ceiling playing the dangerous "what if there were just one more trauma" game. I again publicly apologize if I unintentionally slighted TBK1 or any other donors in my inarticulate attempt to point out the ability of an organization to sidestep and transfer any impact from a donation boycott. Posted Via AR15.Com Mobile Well, thank you for that. Please understand this is what set me off, as I don't think I deserved it: OP, if you feel so strongly about not giving blood due to the sign, that's your right. Please be so kind as to carry a properly witnessed card next to your driver's license that refuses blood transfusion, lest someone accidentally give you blood steeped in the anti-gunnery of the Red Cross.
There are lots of reasons not to donate. This one takes some impressive mental gymnastics. Obviously I'm glad you and those like you are saving lives, and have a genuine concern for people, but please don't let that override your good sense. If you've continued reading this thread, you have seen I'm actively seeking another way to donate, or (ideally) effecting a change at the RC office, as it is very convenient. The RC is available every Tues. and Thurs. all year long, while this other place is only here every few months. Hopefully it will work out in a positive way and I can continue to donate every sixty days. |
|
Having grown up in Europe, they won't me donate my blood. Something about having mad cow disease. Makes me feel bad because i sure don't feel mad, or bovine-ly... ;)
Some day, perhaps http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2012/09/12/cjd-and-mad-cow-blood-test_n_1877360.html |
|
Quoted:
Perhaps I'll do that--but with your permission I'll make sure it says to stop after 3+ gallons is reached. I'd like to say more. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
<snip> OP, if you feel so strongly about not giving blood due to the sign, that's your right. Please be so kind as to carry a properly witnessed card next to your driver's license that refuses blood transfusion, lest someone accidentally give you blood steeped in the anti-gunnery of the Red Cross. There are lots of reasons not to donate. This one takes some impressive mental gymnastics. Perhaps I'll do that--but with your permission I'll make sure it says to stop after 3+ gallons is reached. I'd like to say more. Yeah, I was bumping on 6 gallons with UBS when their sign went up after Sandy Hook. I was adamant about why I quit. O-,CMV- baby donor, which is split 4 ways because newborns are so small. Sorry kids, its UBS's call. I think I've a pint or two back from the system that gave me nothing more than a tee shirt for years and years. |
|
|
You should write to them, so there's a record. Just telling the phone person isn't going to generate much of a record of outcry.
|
|
|
|
They don't want my blood. Ever. I apparently spent too much time in Europe during the 90s and may spontaneously break out with mad cow disease at any moment.
Oh well, fuck them. Unfortunately every blood bank uses their "guidelines" so I can't even donate to the Armed Services Blood Program. |
|
Quoted:
Sell your plasma instead. Double win, people get their plasma and you get beer/ammo money. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
I'm VERY afraid of needles getting put in me to the point where I can get so anxious I puke(sometimes). But now I can just say I don't donate because they don't allow conceal carry Lots of folks are like that. You really do get used to it though. So very few eligible people donate it's really a shame. AFAIK people don't die from a lack of blood, but I know it's a constant struggle to maintain supplies. Now they lost a reliable donor--over stupidity. Sell your plasma instead. Double win, people get their plasma and you get beer/ammo money. When I worked as a phlebotomist in a plasma lab, most of it was sold to cosmetic companies. |
|
A google search brings up some interesting articles, too; http://www.damninteresting.com/retired/can-we-trust-the-red-cross/ According to Richard M. Walden (president and CEO of Operation USA), it is estimated that 70% of the $1.2 Billion donated to Katrina-related donations went to the Red Cross, yet the Red Cross is fully reimbursed by the government for any shelters or emergency services they provide. Repeatedly, the Red Cross has run into trouble for spending much less on disaster recovery than they collect, shuffling the extra funds into their "national disaster account," where it can be used for purposes other than that it was collected for. That's the sort of trouble they saw in the aftermath of the 1989 San Francisco Bay Area earthquake, and after 9/11.
Despite landing in trouble for soliciting more donations than they need and squirreling the rest away, the Red Cross continues to operate this way. The organization makes a total of about $3 billion annually, about half of which is from selling donated blood. Some of this surplus money ends up in disaster relief, but it seems that much does not. Last year alone, the Red Cross spent $111 million in fund raising, and their CEO Marsha Evans made just under $652,000. It seems the the main value they offer is the free help of their volunteer force. http://abcnews.go.com/2020/story?id=123956 A wildfire in Alpine, just east of San Diego, destroyed homes, killed horses that panicked and ran into the fire, and injured one fireman. The Red Cross appealed for funds, and raised $400,000 for disaster relief. But months after the fire, little money had gone to victims.
Some fire victims received a few hundred dollars, but they say when they asked where the rest of the money was going, they couldn't get straight answers from the Red Cross. So they complained to County Supervisor Diane Jacob. "The fire victims in Alpine feel they've been used," said Jacob, who started demanding answers from the Red Cross. This led to publicity, and only then did the San Diego Red Cross tell the public the truth: Of the more than $400,000 raised, only $159,000 — less than half — was spent on the relief effort. Even worse, of the $159,000 that was to support the victims, $105,000 went to general chapter expenses and overhead, like upgrading the office phone system and Red Cross vehicles. |
|
I'm O-, get called about twice a week it seems.
Hmmm.... Thanks for the update TBK. |
|
I clicked on the link thinking this would be another one of those "OP had sex with a monkey, for money, in Zimbabwe, since 1986" threads, or whatever the questions they ask again on the blood donor checklist
|
|
This is my Fathers experience with the Red Cross. This if from an email that he sent out last year.
I know that the TV Ads are emotional and give you the impression that they are helping people, however, from my own personal experience with the
Red Cross in 1969, let’s just say they have never gotten a dime from me since. I was in the Army and trying to get home to be with my dying Grandfather -I went to the Red Cross for some kind of help, not only did they not help but got in the way and made it harder for me to get home. -they didn’t feel this was in their guidelines and caused interference with my Company Commander - I had to get a Sergeant Major to be my advocate to the Company Commander to counter what they had communicated to the CO in order to get home. Red Cross – NOT A DIME FROM ME – THEY CAN ROT IN Hxxx!!!!! View Quote 20 |
|
Try a private donation? There might be a docs office that would take it, and be ok with the CCW.
|
|
Not for profit my ass. Pint of blood avg $200-600 for patients. - - - - Relative was working as an RN for a blood donation drive. Incentive was 4 hours vacation time for every pint donated and credited to that person. You get a t-shirt and get nagged from here on out....they get vacation time. !@#$ that altruistic bs. Pay me bitches! - - - - Blood Money: what you didn't know about your blood donation http://www.wptv.com/news/local-news/investigations/blood-money-what-you-didnt-know-about-your-blood-donation Red Cross to Charge More for Blood http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=117431 |
|
Just put your blood in a ziplock bag and leave it at the door, problem solved.
|
|
The red cross blood donation process and the setup as a whole has always been fine for me.
Red cross disaster relief has been a different story. During Katrina, they were not one of the first on the scene and on the ground. Credit goes to the SALVATION ARMY for that. My father got helped by the Red Cross International to immigrate to America and also find his relatives after the end of WWII and after the crushing of the 1956 revolution. The Red Cross International......has been good overall, the American red cross has been 50/50 so far. |
|
Bumping this to say I finally heard from the American Red Cross Blood Services Division. This must be some kind of record for them NOT calling, as they usually pester me twice a day until I get in to donate.
I've been checking the caller ID and this is the first time, but luckily I was here and took the call. I listened to the nice young lady's spiel, then said, I'm sorry, but I cannot. Looooooong pause. I told her I attempted to donate, but was stopped at the door by a sign that said, "NO FIREARMS ALLOWED." I explained about CCW, what it is, what it means, who has a CCW license, the background checks, fingerprints, training, CONCEALED means CONCEALED, etc. I told her if my blood is sufficient to donate, but my life is not worthy of protection, then I will not donate. When I finished she was shockingly pleasant, said she understood completely, and DIDN'T BLAME ME AT ALL. Color me surprised. I said I'm glad you agree, but obviously telling you all this accomplishes nothing, so what would you suggest? A letter to the local office? She said that would be fine, but they are concerned and she would like to pass this on to her supervisor, who will then pass it on to the local office manager who will call me and "get this resolved." I'll report back what "resolved" means in this case. Again, I was pleasantly surprised by her warm and understanding response. Oh, I was also surprised to learn I have donated a total of 40 units--exactly five gallons. That is always good for warm treatment. *At least by RC personnel--no accounting for good manners by internet denizens. |
|
Thanks for the update; hers is not the kind of response I would have expected from someone doing drone calls. I hope your situation becomes a positive motivator for change at the local office.
|
|
Site staff with 100,000+ posts, and he doesn't know to put the updates in the original OP
|
|
Quoted:
Yes. Folks here have reported their fathers/grandfathers being charged a nickel for a pencil stub to write home with, for writing paper, for coffee and donuts, and so on. Same for vets of korea, nam, and yes, middle east conflicts. All while the Salvation Army does that stuff for free. Someone here even told about RC stealing baked goods from their company kitchens and selling them to the troops. Another story was about the salvation army arrived several days ahead of hurricanes to help with evacuations, while the RC didn't arrive for several days AFTER. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
Quoted:
Given the stories about how they actually treat our troops (charging for stuff) for decades, I certainly will not have anything to do with them. seriously???? Yes. Folks here have reported their fathers/grandfathers being charged a nickel for a pencil stub to write home with, for writing paper, for coffee and donuts, and so on. Same for vets of korea, nam, and yes, middle east conflicts. All while the Salvation Army does that stuff for free. Someone here even told about RC stealing baked goods from their company kitchens and selling them to the troops. Another story was about the salvation army arrived several days ahead of hurricanes to help with evacuations, while the RC didn't arrive for several days AFTER. My uncle told me similar stories - one about paying for smokes from them in the Pacific during WWII only to find a note stuffed inside the wrapper from a soldiers family. |
|
Being a Brit and having visited there several times since I moved here 23 years ago, I am not allowed to donate. Good for you on trying to find a way to be able to donate and maybe get them to remove their signs.
|
|
|
|
I need to start donating blood. I'm 32 and have never donated. I don't even know my blood-type.
|
|
At least your objection is on record and they have a note of it. If enough people say the same thing they might reconsider.
|
|
Quoted:
I need to start donating blood. I'm 32 and have never donated. I don't even know my blood-type. View Quote It will really make you pause and think when someone you know has their life saved with a blood transfusion. Thinking about a loved one, or even just a friend or acquaintance, who would have died without someone else's gift, is just an awe inspiring thing. It only costs an hour of your time. They have the technique down well enough it is virtually painless. Just don't look when they slide the needle in, as that bothers some people (me!)--even if you don't know it in advance. Just chat with the staff and look away. Five minutes afterward you are done. And someone(s) has their life saved. All the politics and BS of the Red Cross is forgotten when that happens. |
|
|
Sounds like you explained it rationally and when it's put like that, it's hard to argue with.
|
|
|
Quoted:
Sounds like you explained it rationally and when it's put like that, it's hard to argue with. View Quote Thank you. I even used the Wayne LaPierre quote--"The only way to stop a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun." I said, "Obviously a bad guy, intent on harming others, will ignore that silly sign, as they don't have the same thought processes, or respect, I do. But if anything horrible like that should ever happen, then I quickly become the best friend in the world to everyone there." She actually got excited and enthusiastically agreed with that. I could hear her excitement and she said, "That's RIGHT!" |
|
|
Beekeeper, thanks for the update. I don't donate blood. Never have. Never will. My veins are tricksy things. Whenever I've had to go for blood work I end up with bruises up and down my forearms, making me looking like a junkie, after 20-30 minutes of them trying to find a halfway decent vein. It's especially awkward in the summer to have all those bruises.
|
|
|
And with their reluctance to say how they spent Katrina donations ...
|
|
Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!
You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.
AR15.COM is the world's largest firearm community and is a gathering place for firearm enthusiasts of all types.
From hunters and military members, to competition shooters and general firearm enthusiasts, we welcome anyone who values and respects the way of the firearm.
Subscribe to our monthly Newsletter to receive firearm news, product discounts from your favorite Industry Partners, and more.
Copyright © 1996-2024 AR15.COM LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Any use of this content without express written consent is prohibited.
AR15.Com reserves the right to overwrite or replace any affiliate, commercial, or monetizable links, posted by users, with our own.