Author Topic: Hyde School Links to Conservative Think Tanks  (Read 5737 times)

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Offline Ursus

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Right-wing causes find a rich and ready paymaster
« Reply #15 on: March 31, 2010, 12:35:33 PM »
Here's an old article about the Canadian wing of the William H. Donner Foundation, that is, the Donner Canadian Foundation.

There is a snipped section out of the middle. I've been unable to find a complete version of this article online. Chances are, you might be able to get it from the Toronto Star pay-per-view archives.

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The Toronto Star
Right-wing causes find a rich and ready paymaster:
Canada 'too liberal,' so Donner family is taking foundation down a more controversial path
By Thomas Walkom
October 25, 1997


FOUR YEARS ago, a small but influential U.S. family decided that Canada had become simply too liberal.

The Americans were descendants of the late William H. Donner, a wealthy steel magnate who left the United States 39 years ago in a row over income taxes and ended up starting the Donner Canadian Foundation.

The foundation is still controlled by Donner's American heirs. With $134 million in assets and about $3.5 million to distribute annually, it is the third largest private charitable fund in the country.

Only the J.W. McConnell Family Foundation and Charles Bronfman's Chastell Foundation - both of Montreal - are bigger.

For the first 43 years of its existence, the Donner foundation was a typical Canadian charitable fund, donating its money to the kinds of uncontroversial mainstream projects that are generally, and often uncritically, deemed worthy - medical research, prison reform, studies on Canadian unity.

Now it is known as paymaster to the right, a source of ready cash for the favourite causes of the new, market conservatism.

A list of grants approved by the foundation over the past four years reads like a neo-conservative wish list.

  • More than $862,000 to the Fraser Institute, the British Columbia anti-union think tank, to, among other things, study unions.
  • $1.6 million to the Energy Probe Research Foundation to start up the right-of-centre magazine, The Next City, and the market-oriented Consumer Policy Institute.
  • $515,000 to the Atlantic Institute for Market Studies to look at issues such as privatization of the fishery.
  • $70,000 to consultant Martin Loney, a vocal critic of employment equity policies, to look at the impact of equity policies.
  • $286,000 to the Society for Academic Freedom and Scholarship to fight so-called political correctness at Canadian universities.
  • $700,000 to the Society for Advancing Educational Research, an organization interested in establishing charter schools to replace and/or supplement the public education system.
  • $400,000 to the Centre for the Study of State and Market to look at how best to privatize state institutions such as the Liquor Control Board of Ontario.
  • $185,000 to academics at the University of Toronto to look at ways to privatize the Canada Pension Plan and Ontario's social housing.
  • $325,000 to the Work Research Foundation, a group with a "Christian perspective'' on industrial relations, to promote its opposition to labour laws requiring the compulsory payment of union dues.
  • $190,000 to the National Foundation for Family Research and Education, an anti-child care organization based in Alberta.

What spawned the shift, says former foundation president Robert Couchman, was the ascendancy of the more right-wing, West Coast branch of the conservative Donner family.

The Donner heirs, all American, hold only four seats on the foundation's nine-member board of directors. But they appoint the remaining five outside Canadian directors.

By 1993 they already controlled an explicitly right-of-centre sister fund, the U.S.-based William H. Donner Foundation. Then, with the West Coast Donners in command, the family decided its Canadian charity should follow a similar path and enlighten people in this country as to the virtues of market discipline.

Patrick Luciani, now acting executive director of the foundation, openly acknowledges the shift.

"We changed emphasis in 1993. It had been a classic Canadian foundation, quite liberal. But the Donner family saw the country going through a fiscal crisis and they wanted to fund projects that looked at more competition and less government. . . .

"You don't want to do the same projects over and over again. You want to make a difference.''

Recalcitrant board members were replaced with those more amenable to a muscular right-of-centre approach. (The Donner board now includes former Canadian ambassador to Washington Allan Gotlieb and Saturday Night editor Ken Whyte).

The foundation also parted company with Couchman, former head of Metro's Family Services Association.

"I left largely because of that turn to the right,'' says Couchman, now a consultant based in Yukon. "The foundation was always fairly conservative. We did fund organizations like the Fraser Institute. But when I left it was clear the family was interested much more in moving into ideological issues.''

Now, four years later, Donner has become notorious within the small world of charitable foundations and their recipients.

Writing in the leftish cultural magazine Canadian Forum, journalist Krishna Rau refers to it as "the new sugar daddy for the right.''

Patrick Johnston, president of the Canadian Centre for Philanthropy, an umbrella organization for charities, chooses his words more carefully.

"In terms of having a very clear ideological position and shifting its funding toward that position, it is unique in Canada,'' Johnston says.

But, he adds, the Donner foundation may not stay unique. As governments get out of the business of funding research into public policy, the way is open to a more American system, one where wealthy individuals operating through private foundations determine the country's intellectual and political direction.

 ..... snip ........

But in part, Donner's unique position stems from the early recognition by conservatives that key political struggles must first be fought on the plane of ideas.

In doing so, the new conservatives took advantage of two elements of the Canadian landscape - the ease with which politically motivated organizations can qualify for charitable status under the federal Income Tax Act and the growing army of underemployed academics and others anxious for research money.

Canada is chock-a-block with dubious charities, from the near-penniless Red Maple Foundation, publisher of the small left-wing This Magazine, to the corporate-funded, right-wing Fraser Institute to the country's most elite private schools. All have won the right from Ottawa to issue tax-deductible charitable receipts.

In effect, the ability to issue such receipts allows organizations engaged in what is euphemistically known as political and economic education to have their activities subsidized by all taxpayers.

It also makes them eligible for money from bodies such as the Donner foundation that are allowed to fund only registered charities.

All come together in a pact of mutual convenience. The charitable sponsor, knowing the result it wants, will favour the underemployed academic or researcher sure to produce such a result. The charity can simply play the role of middleman, as the University of Toronto does for the Society for Academic Freedom and Scholarship.

Or the dubious charity can play a more active role by attracting to its bosom the kinds of researchers and academics sure to produce the results that will please potential donors.

The results (which, not coincidentally, tend to match the values and ideology of the sponsor) are then trumpeted to the general public through media which, by and large, accept uncritically anything a self-styled think tank produces.

"We aren't a mainstream Canadian foundation in that we do safe projects,'' says Luciani. "We fund projects that are a little more controversial.''

Luciani is careful to point out that the Donner's three staff members, who propose potential projects to the foundation's board and who are hired by that board, are all Canadian. He says the U.S. members of the board rely on the advice of the outside Canadian directors (who, he acknowledges, the Americans appoint).

And he notes that Donner has not abandoned entirely more traditional charitable and academic projects. For example, it is funding a five-year $440,000 project by the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research to help troubled teenaged girls in Montreal and has donated $183,000 to the Clarke Institute of Psychiatry to look at homelessness.

Carleton University is receiving $209,000 to study Canada-Russia relations and the Toronto Addiction Research Foundation $147,000 to look at the effect of the Niagara Falls Casino.

Nor must all applicants hew to a hard-right political line. In 1995, for example, the foundation gave $143,552 to University of Toronto professor Don Moggridge, an economic historian of Keynesian bent, to write a biography of the late Canadian economist Harry Johnson.

Still, there is a definite political flavour to the new Donner foundation - an emphasis on projects that promote a minimal role for government while maximizing the importance of free markets, private ownership and economic individualism. A look through the foundation's recent annual reports, for instance, shows these more libertarian projects receive by far the bulk of Donner's funding.

All of this probably would have been looked at favourably by William Henry Donner, the man who began the foundation.

In his 1953 obituary, the New York Times describes Donner as a multimillionaire, an associate of the great capitalist barons of early 20th century America and a man who, in 1938, abandoned his native land for the more congenial political climes of Canada and Switzerland "after a dispute with the federal (U.S.) government over income tax matters.''

As Luciani says: "The philosophy of this foundation is to encourage self-reliance, not look to government to solve problems.''


Contents copyright © 1996, 1997, The Toronto Star.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
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Offline Ursus

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Re: Hyde School Links to Conservative Think Tanks
« Reply #16 on: April 03, 2010, 01:46:40 PM »
Here's another piece from around the same time, perhaps the same day. It originally had the article from my previous post appended at the end.

I've no clue as to its original source; it was copied onto one of those news lists.

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NOTORIOUS FOUNDATION FUNDS TORONTO HOMELESS STUDY

A Toronto conference, Mental Illness and Pathways Into Homelessness, on November 3, organized by the Clarke Institute of Psychiatry, is funded by the Donner Canadian Foundation.
 
Today, Saturday Oct 25, the Toronto Star, Canada's largest daily newspaper, stated that:

    "... Donner has become notorious within the small world of charitable foundations and their recipients."

    (Donner) "...donated $183,000 to the Clarke Institute of Psychiatry to look at homelessness."

    "...it is known as paymaster to the right."

    "...an emphasis on projects that promote a minimal role for government while maximizing the importance of free markets, private ownership and economic individualism."

Appended at the bottom is the bulk of that newspaper article, entitled:

    "Right-wing causes find a rich and ready paymaster"

The Nov 3 conference focuses solely on mental illness as a cause of homelessness. No mention is made of the fact that 2 years ago the Ontario govrnment cut welfare by 21.6%, stopped the construction of 400 affordable housing projects, cancelled funding to shelters for abused women and has since thrown thousands off the welfare rolls, started fingerprinting the poor and introduced workfare.

Two weeks ago, Toronto officials reported a 67% increase in use of Toronto's homeless shelters in one year. Is that the result of a 67% increase in mental illness?

The conference's diagnosis seems to precedes an examination of the patient. Certainly our society is ill. There are thousands of homless people now sleeping on our streets. Is that because they are crazy or is that because they have no money and because there is no affordable housing?

Here is the official blurb on the conference:

    The aim of this conference is to present the findings of the "Pathways into Homelessness Project" in the context of prior policy work in Toronto. Focused primarily on single adult shelter users, the project was designed to gather information about the circumstances regarding housing loss, prevalence of mental and physical illness, characteristics of the population and, for some people, first person narratives. The conference will also feature a comparison of the efforts made in New York and Toronto to address homelessness. The day will consist of didactic presentations and discussion periods. Audience input will will be integrated into a summary of the conference proceedings.

You can reach the organizer of this conference, George Tolemiczenko, at gtolomic at hsru.clarke-inst.on.ca
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
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Offline Ursus

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Re: Hyde School Links to Conservative Think Tanks
« Reply #17 on: May 03, 2010, 08:19:45 PM »
Quote
Right-wing causes find a rich and ready paymaster:
Canada 'too liberal,' so Donner family is taking foundation down a more controversial path
The Donner Canadian Foundation was also a major funder of the 2003 "study" touted as evidence of the efficacy of the Hoffman Institute's Quadrinity Process in "mediating effects of forgiveness and spirituality." Lol.

Joe Gauld is currently heavily involved in bringing the Quadrinity Process to Hyde, perhaps also in marketing it, judging by the number of parents, staff, and alumni who have been pressed into forking over roughly $4000 for an 8-day journey in undoing the "negative love syndrome" allegedly imprinted on them by their parents.

Gotta wonder: Is that "forgiveness and spirituality" -- presuming you actually "get it"* -- supposed to assist in undoing the psychological damage brought about by a potentially toxic "Hyde experience?"  :D



* Hoffman Institute CEO Charles "Raz" Ingrasci has had a lifetime career of key executive and training positions in "self-improvement seminar companies," which include est and Lifespring.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
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