To the Editor:
The recent op-ed by David Callahan (“Stop the Tax Breaks to Donors Who Give to Influence Policy,” March 29) lays out a case against philanthropic freedom as a way to achieve better “civic equality,” including a proposal to end the charitable deduction for giving aimed at influencing public policy. But his attack on philanthropic freedom would leave us all worse off.
Organizations working to change public policy with support from wealthy individuals have made some of the most significant strides in achieving greater civic equality. For example, it was a small band of wealthy philanthropists, such as Sears Roebuck & Company co-owner Julius Rosenwald and Madam C.J. Walker, a successful African-American entrepreneur, who helped fund the NAACP in its early years.
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