It's often said that charity doesn't work; that's undoubtedly not true absolutely, but there are certainly issues when, for instance, charities 'have' to step in where the state fails (as it currently does endemically); there's obviously no guarantee that charities will then get it right, with much less funding and manpower, etc.
I also found this very interesting:
https://www.theguardian.com/money/2020/jan/17/charity-gap-highlights-need-to-rebuilt-society-says-thinktank
It's often said that charity doesn't work; that's undoubtedly not true absolutely, but there are certainly issues when, for instance, charities 'have' to step in where the state fails (as it currently does endemically); there's obviously no guarantee that charities will then get it right, with much less funding and manpower, etc.