http://www.precaution.org/lib/06/prn_financing_activism_ourselves.060315.htm
www.adbusters.org
March 15, 2006

The Secret To Being As Radical As We Want To Be

[Rachel's introduction: The secret to being as radical as we want to 
be is to finance the revolution ourselves.]

By Michael Shuman and Merrian Fuller**

If Mohandas Gandhi were a typical North American activist these days, 
he would probably be wearing a three-piece suit and working in a 
plush office with his law degree prominently displayed. He would have 
little time to lead protests, since every other week would be spent 
meeting with donors -- and those power lunches would hardly go well 
with fasting. He would be careful to avoid salt marches or cotton 
boycotts, so as not to offend key donors. To sharpen his annual pitch 
to foundations, he would be constantly dreaming up new one-year 
projects on narrowly focused topics, perhaps a one-time conference on 
English human-rights abuses, or a documentary on anti-colonial 
activities in New Delhi. To ensure that various allies didn't steal 
away core funders, he would keep his distance and be inclined to 
trash talk behind their backs. In short, there's little doubt that 
the British would still be running India.

The problem with activism today is that it is largely funded by 
grants and gifts from rich foundations and individuals. The 
long-standing assumption that you can take the money with few strings 
attached, and then run, needs to be fundamentally reexamined.

Building a philanthropic base of support can cripple an 
organization's mission and wreck it altogether when the well runs 
dry. Most nonprofits have engaged in a kind of fundraising arms race 
in which our best leaders focus more time, energy and resources, not 
on changing the world, but on improving their panhandling prowess to 
capture just a little more of a philanthropic pie that actually 
expands very little from year to year. Armies of "development" staff 
spend as much as a third of an organization's resources, not to 
advance the poor, but to cultivate wealthy donors. Significant 
numbers of our colleagues create campaigns, direct-mail pitches, 
telemarketing scripts, newsletters and other products exclusively to 
"care and feed" prospects and to frame positions that will not offend 
the rich.

Nonprofit structures dictated by this mode of funding also burden 
organizers with the heavy regulatory hand of the state. To qualify 
for tax-deductible contributions, for example, US nonprofits must 
agree to limit lobbying and not to campaign for political causes of 
candidates.

We believe it's time for North American progressives to break free 
from the philanthropic plantation. Those of us serious about social 
change increasingly must get down to business, figuratively and 
literally. Every social change group may not be able to generate all 
its funding through revenue-generation, but every nonprofit certainly 
can generate a greater percentage than it is doing now. In other 
words, we should become our own funders. Once we start generating our 
own resources, we can invest them politically -- as corporations do 
now - largely without limitation, without wasting our time on 
fundraising appeals, without worrying about that next grant, without 
apologies.

To get a sense of the possibilities, check out Cabbages & Condoms, a 
popular restaurant in Bangkok. As your senses become intoxicated by 
the aromas of garlic, ginger, basil, galangal and lemongrass, you 
cannot avoid noticing the origins of the name. On top of each heavy 
wooden table is a slab of glass, under which are neatly arranged rows 
of colorful prophylactics. Posters and paintings adorn the half-dozen 
large rooms, all communicating the restaurant's central message: the 
AIDS epidemic afflicting Thailand can be checked only through the 
unabashed promotion and use of male contraception. With balloon 
animals made from carefully inflated and twisted condoms and the 
after-dinner candies replaced with your own take-home "condom-mints," 
even teens cannot escape the message prominently framed on the wall: 
"Sex is fun but don't be stupid -- use protection."

What makes the five "C&C" restaurants unique, along with an 
affiliated beach-front resort and numerous gift shops, is that they 
are all owned by the Population and Community Development Association 
(PDA), a rural development organization that has been a leader in 
promoting family planning and fighting aids in Thailand. Seven out of 
every ten dollars spent by the PDA on such activities as free 
vasectomies and mobile health clinics are covered by the net revenues 
from its 16 subsidiary for-profits. Were the PDA dependent on funding 
from the Thai government, the World Bank or even the Rockefeller 
Foundation, it no doubt would be told to tone down the message. Jokes 
on its website - like "the Cabbages and Condoms Restaurants in 
Thailand don't only present excellent Thai food, the food is 
guaranteed not to get you pregnant" -- would certainly be discouraged.

The cash flow gives the PDA a measure of confidence and boldness. The 
founder, Mechai Viravaidya, has no qualms about his decision to 
employ for-profits: "Unlimited demand is chasing limited supply [of 
charitable donations]. No longer are gifts, grants or begging enough. 
 From day one, thirty years ago, we have been acutely aware of 
sustainability and cost-recovery."

Consider some US examples of social entrepreneurship:

* Housing Works in New York uses its Used Book Cafe to generate more 
than $2 million annually for its work, which prioritizes advocacy for 
homeless people with HIV. The organization runs clinics, conducts 
public policy research, lobbies federal and state officials, even 
leads sit-ins. It is fearless, aggressive and stunningly effective - 
and its $30 million of annual work would be impossible were it not 
for its vast range of real estate, food service, retail and rental 
companies that help pay the bills.

* Pioneer Human Services is a community development corporation based 
in Seattle that assists a wide range of at-risk populations, 
including the unemployed, the homeless, ex-convicts, alcoholics and 
addicts. The organization serves 6,500 people a year and generates 
nearly all its $55 million budget through a web of ambitious 
subsidiary nonprofit businesses: cafes and a central kitchen facility 
for institutional customers, aerospace and sheet-metal industries, a 
construction company, food warehouses, a real-estate management group 
and consulting services for other nonprofits. Most of the jobs in 
these businesses are awarded to its at-risk clients, allowing it to 
further its mission to integrate clients back into society.

* The Rocky Mountain Institute, a leading promoter of alternative 
energy technology in Snowmass, Colorado, created E-Source in 1986 to 
provide in-depth analysis of services, markets, and technologies 
relating to energy efficiency and renewable energy production. In 
1992 RMI secured a program-related investment from the MacArthur 
Foundation to move the work into a for-profit subsidiary. By 1998 it 
was generating about $400,000 for the parent nonprofit, but rmi 
decided it could do even better under new management, so it sold the 
company to Pearson plc in Britain for $8 million. Today, RMI assists 
and benefits from other for-profit spinoffs, such as Hypercar, Inc., 
which aims to create a lightweight body architecture to improve the 
efficiency of the entire US automobile fleet.

* Judy Wicks' White Dog Cafe in Philadelphia is as much a community 
organizing center as a restaurant. Radical speakers from around the 
country provide a steady stream of public lectures. An adjacent store 
sells fair trade products and will soon be introducing a line of 
locally made clothing. The White Dog itself embodies principles of 
social justice and environmental stewardship by paying all employees 
a living wage, insisting on humanely raised meats and eggs, using 
locally grown ingredients and running on wind electricity. Twenty 
percent of profits from the restaurant go to the White Dog Cafe 
Foundation, carrying on the cafe's mission through nonprofit 
activities.

These examples embody many possible models. A for-profit subsidiary 
can generate money for a parent nonprofit. Or, better still, a for- 
profit can become the change it seeks, by producing and selling 
socially important goods and services.

While we reject the libertarian argument that every human problem has 
an economic solution, many social-change issues clearly have economic 
dimensions that are susceptible to creative business plans. Hate 
nuclear power? Launch energy-service companies to spread conservation 
measures, or build local wind farms to take control of your own 
electricity future. Concerned about the poor, minorities and women 
having equal access to credit? Create more community banks, credit 
unions and micro-enterprise funds. Troubled by pharmaceutical prices 
that make life-saving drugs unattainable for impoverished people 
across the globe? Start, as several companies based in the developing 
world did, companies that mass-produce affordable generic versions of 
high-priced American drugs.

Socially responsible business should be not just a boutique sector of 
the private economy, but its mainstream. We have been impressed in 
recent years by the growing number of local businesspeople who not 
only "walk the walk" of social justice in the small details of their 
operations and products but also tout the virtues of local ownership. 
This third generation of entrepreneur-organizers is being led by 
groups like the Business Alliance for Local Living Economies (BALLE) 
and by the American Independent Business Alliance (AMIBA). Each 
promotes local ownership of business, champions social justice and 
neighborhood revitalization, and pushes for new public policies that 
remove the tilts in a playing field that favors badly behaved big 
business.

Sooner or later, the concepts of social-change organization and of 
social-responsibility business should become indistinguishable. Truly 
responsible businesses would be owned by all members of a community 
(rich and poor), hire locally, expand local skills, comport with 
local labor and environmental standards, produce goods and services 
that meet urgent local needs and become allies of social justice 
movements. What better way to help the poor than to transform them 
into the captains, worker-bees, shareholders and customers of 
community- friendly business?

If foundations and donors had never existed and professional 
panhandling had been outlawed, social-change groups would have been 
forced to turn to creating and running new enterprises or new 
networks of local businesses, and our movement would be considerably 
healthier than it is today. Progressives have become the classic 
20-something kid still living at home, expecting an allowance from 
deep-pocket parents for a few basic chores, while agreeing, as a 
condition for the chump change, to obey someone else's rules on 
social change. It's time to grow up and strike out on our own.

Here's a challenge to activists (one we take seriously ourselves): 
let's try to wean ourselves from the charity habit, say by three 
percent per year. Think about just one piece of your agenda that 
could be framed as a revenue generator, dream about it a little, 
develop a business plan and give it a try. If you lack the skills, 
skip your next fundraising class and instead attend one of thousands 
upon thousands of entrepreneurship programs around the world. Or hire 
someone who might start the entrepreneurial subsidiary of your 
nonprofit.

Gandhi understood that the key to freeing India was to transform his 
fellow citizens into economically productive agents by spinning their 
own cloth and taking their own salt from the sea. Martin Luther King 
Jr. implored African Americans to form their own credit unions and 
community development corporations. The secret to being as radical as 
we want to be -- and as radical as we need to be -- is to finance the 
revolution ourselves.

** Michael Shuman is the vice president for enterprise development 
for the Training and Development Corporation in Bucksport, Maine. 
Merrian Fuller is a managing director of the Business Alliance for 
Local Living Economies. This article was adapted from "Profits for 
Justice," which first appeared in The Nation.


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