- Thread Starter
- #21
This is true. Because VV pays smaller charities who don't have the scale to properly market goods donated to them. VV in turn sells what they buy for a profit. The charities get money back for what they sell to VV. How this hurts customers of VV, as claimed by Ferguson, is false. Because the customers don't care where the stuff comes from. If there is an implied notion that charities benefit, it's not a fiction. It's indirect but beneficial.Ironically, Value Village actually helps charities.