Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

You can help instead of waiting for politicians to "do something about it". It's not that hard to find a reputable organization that helps Ukraine and send it some money.


Unless that’s Musk or Bezos’s alt account, that’s like fighting a forest fire with a squirt gun.


In 2024, charitable giving in the US was $592 billion. $392 billion of that was from individual donations.

The US is a rich and (despite all you may hear) generous country. If 1% of our donations went to Ukraine, that's not a number to casually dismiss.

Interestingly, $35 billion of that went to 'International affairs'. I would assume Ukraine was a significant part of that, but I don't know for sure.

https://givingusa.org/giving-usa-2025-u-s-charitable-giving-...


> In 2024, charitable giving in the US was $592 billion. $392 billion of that was from individual donations.

That's a single-digit percentage of the US Federal budget.

Some of that goes to "family foundation" sinecures. Some of it goes to 10% church tithes. Quite a bit of it is spent on… raising funds. (https://www.cbsnews.com/news/when-giving-to-charity-ask-wher... - "Of the more than $1.3 billion raised by charities in the [New York] in 2018, about $369 million — or 27% — went to pay professional fundraisers' fees")

> If 1% of our donations went to Ukraine, that's not a number to casually dismiss.

I think that's wildly optimistic, but that'd be somewhere between $3-5B. The US alone has earmarked something like $200B thus far. The EU has given a similar amount.

Every bit undoubtedly counts, but a single Patriot battery costs $1B.


you would be surprised how capable and resilient an army of squirt guns can be.


I would be surprised if they could manage to keep refilling their squirt guns and deal with all the logistics required to keep an army available to use them




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: