> > and why should we believe they're the most effective?
> Whoever gave you that idea?
1. This quesiton makes no sense. 2. The question is how high the returns are--do they exceed the returns of investment. That would depend on the effectiveness of the charity.
> I believe most charities practice this, I saw a presentation on it with a bunch of accredited investors, don't have the source.
Charities report their opex. I've never seen one listed as 95%. Most are <10%. Some, like Mozilla and ACLU are split between Foundation and Corporation, but most are not.
> You can't will your alternate reality into existence.
So...you made some claims. I asked for evidence. You refused. I provided counter-evidence.
I'm pretty sure you're just trolling now. Or arguing in bad faith, at minimum.
Which charities do this, and why should we believe they're the most effective?