Thank you for the welcome, and your rambly thoughts. :-)
Yea, that makes sense. Rome wasn’t built in a day as the saying goes, and EA had to start somewhere, and it’s good that it did.
Sadly, some ancient institutions such as the Catholic Church seem to have become expert at demolishing their own moral authority, so it’s good that other means of reaching towards the same charitable goals are being established. I like it that EA appears to be ( a first impression) nether religious or secular, and instead just charitable.
All that said, it seems it would be wise for EA activists to keep in mind that the Catholic Church is, in spite of all it’s troubles, still truly massive, global, and very well established in the third world where so much of the need exists. If a partnership is not already being explored, there might be an opportunity there.
Thank you for the welcome, and your rambly thoughts. :-)
Yea, that makes sense. Rome wasn’t built in a day as the saying goes, and EA had to start somewhere, and it’s good that it did.
Sadly, some ancient institutions such as the Catholic Church seem to have become expert at demolishing their own moral authority, so it’s good that other means of reaching towards the same charitable goals are being established. I like it that EA appears to be ( a first impression) nether religious or secular, and instead just charitable.
All that said, it seems it would be wise for EA activists to keep in mind that the Catholic Church is, in spite of all it’s troubles, still truly massive, global, and very well established in the third world where so much of the need exists. If a partnership is not already being explored, there might be an opportunity there.