Lawfare News

Ten Good Reasons to Support Lawfare in Your End-of-Year Giving

Benjamin Wittes
Monday, November 30, 2015, 4:37 PM

Here are ten good reasons you should not forget to include Lawfare in your end-of-year giving plans:

  1. Lawfare is far less irritating about asking you for money than your local NPR affiliate.

  2. The Lawfare Institute is a 501(c)(3) tax exempt non-profit.

  3. You read Lawfare. You rely on it. You value it. You'd feel guilty being a freeloader.

  4. Lawfare adds rigor to the conversation.

  5. Lawfare annoys the people who annoy you most.

Published by The Lawfare Institute
in Cooperation With
Brookings

Here are ten good reasons you should not forget to include Lawfare in your end-of-year giving plans:

  1. Lawfare is far less irritating about asking you for money than your local NPR affiliate.

  2. The Lawfare Institute is a 501(c)(3) tax exempt non-profit.

  3. You read Lawfare. You rely on it. You value it. You'd feel guilty being a freeloader.

  4. Lawfare adds rigor to the conversation.

  5. Lawfare annoys the people who annoy you most.

  6. Lawfare makes you think, even when you disagree with it.

  7. Lawfare is sometimes even funny.

  8. You can read Lawfare at work without your colleagues knowing that you're wasting time.

  9. Lawfare has big plans for the coming year that you really want us to be able to afford.

  10. Every dollar you donate between now and December 30 constitutes a separate entry into our drawing for this year's grand prize: Lawfare's special "Handmaiden of Power" Starter Pack.

You can support Lawfare with a contribution of any size. Our mailing address for checks is:

P.O. Box 33226
Washington DC 20033-3226

You can also contribute using credit cards or Paypal by clicking on this button.

UPDATE: Many thanks to the alert reader—and generous donor—who alerted us to the fact that this donate button was not working. It is now fixed, so you no longer have that excuse.


Topics:
Benjamin Wittes is editor in chief of Lawfare and a Senior Fellow in Governance Studies at the Brookings Institution. He is the author of several books.

Subscribe to Lawfare