Glide Giveaway-People Behaving Badly
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All Comments (31)
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Man when I was homeless and staying in my friends building I saw this crap a lot. I hate Glide because Mr Williams is a hack. Good work but a hack.
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in the retail industry this kind of loss is called "shrinkage" if it's perfectly acceptable to the big corpoes why should the rev be bothered with someone elses greedy hands?!!!
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THE MAMASANS BUY THE TURKEYS..THEY ALSO USEDED TO BUY UP THE FOODSTAMPS
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haha! What a fucking tattletale this guy is!
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Great story. That guy is out of touch. At least speak out against the people profiting and doing wrong.
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HAHA REV WAS LIKE GET OUT OF HERE WITH YOUR BS. i see where the rev is coming from .
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REV , wasnt tired his message was, i aint no baby sitter i helped who wanted help. even rich people get greedy ... AINT NO DIFFERENT
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Well, I think Reverend Williams hadn't got much sleep as he was making titanic moves to organize this massive food drive so this may explain his moodiness. And the reporter seemed to be pushing Rev. Williams to go after the people that hustled the donations. I think the Reverend was correct in everything he said.
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Right on Reverend Cecil Williams. If all the world leaders were like Rev. Williams there wouldn't be any starvation or hunger in this world. You serve the people from your heart and I commend you sir.
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God can see that. This is just disgracful that people abuse the charity work that Glide has been doing. However if 95% of people are honest and 5% are bad, this ratio is acceptable.
Yeah, well, I don't blame him...the reporter was being kind of pushy. At any rate, what does it matter whether or not the pastor is being polite? He works hard. He's feeding people who need it. That's what counts.
ecooney58 4 years ago 6
No, the pastor didn't come after the reporter like he was the bad guy. He was expressing his exasperation at having the obvious pointed out to him. He's saying that the percentage of cheaters is small, and it's a price he's willing to pay to get the food to the overwhelming majority the ones who really need it. In the corporate world, it's called the "price of doing business."
ecooney58 4 years ago 5