because for ALCOR alone there is a multi-million dollar trust fund (two of them, actually) plus a 501(c)3 charity charged with taking care of existing cryonics patients
Now why couldn’t you just reply with that, alone and in the first reply, instead of raging? And how does the existence of a separate trust fund change the fact that a nonprofit is a still company, just with a different tax scheme? Try responding like an adult next time.
Now why couldn’t you just reply with that, alone and in the first reply, instead of raging?
Because I am tired of people who, after 5 seconds of thought, think they’ve come up with a decisive refutation because apparently they think cyronics people must be idiots and the organizations involved have survived by sheer luck, and can’t be bothered to so much as read a Wikipedia article (the ALCOR Wikipedia article mentions in the infobox the patient trust fund as a source of revenue!).
And how does the existence of a separate trust fund change the fact that a nonprofit is a still company, just with a different tax scheme?
It makes all the difference in the world, as I’ve already explained.
Now why couldn’t you just reply with that, alone and in the first reply, instead of raging? And how does the existence of a separate trust fund change the fact that a nonprofit is a still company, just with a different tax scheme? Try responding like an adult next time.
Because I am tired of people who, after 5 seconds of thought, think they’ve come up with a decisive refutation because apparently they think cyronics people must be idiots and the organizations involved have survived by sheer luck, and can’t be bothered to so much as read a Wikipedia article (the ALCOR Wikipedia article mentions in the infobox the patient trust fund as a source of revenue!).
It makes all the difference in the world, as I’ve already explained.