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<blockquote data-quote="GT Chillin' It" data-source="post: 709080" data-attributes="member: 1516"><p>Not so sure how much I agree with statements like this either. If you paid the school $30M in exchange for some sort of privilege then yes I would agree that you are entitled to whatever the transaction entailed. A gift/donation in its purest form does not come with any strings attached and therefore carries no sort of unspoken entitlement. If the donation program has levels with benefits, ie you give X amount you get benefit 1 or you give Y amount you get benefit 2 then yes, you are entitled to that benefit, but this is again more of a purchase and not a gift.</p><p></p><p>I understand that this is a simple/naive way of looking at things and that people with large amounts of money expect special treatment but the idealist in me likes to think that a gift can simply be just that.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="GT Chillin' It, post: 709080, member: 1516"] Not so sure how much I agree with statements like this either. If you paid the school $30M in exchange for some sort of privilege then yes I would agree that you are entitled to whatever the transaction entailed. A gift/donation in its purest form does not come with any strings attached and therefore carries no sort of unspoken entitlement. If the donation program has levels with benefits, ie you give X amount you get benefit 1 or you give Y amount you get benefit 2 then yes, you are entitled to that benefit, but this is again more of a purchase and not a gift. I understand that this is a simple/naive way of looking at things and that people with large amounts of money expect special treatment but the idealist in me likes to think that a gift can simply be just that. [/QUOTE]
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