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National Center for Public Policy Research

From dKosopedia

The National Center for Public Policy Research (NCPPR) began operations in 1982. It was created to present the "conservative" perspective on issues of significant public concern. As its first project, it exposed human rights abuses by the Soviet Union in Afghanistan. It then fought against a proposed "nuclear freeze" and began supporting the Reagan Administration's policies regarding Central America. It now calls itself a "communications and research foundation dedicated to providing free market solutions to today's public policy problems."

Contents

History

In 1997, NCPPR opposed action on global warming at an international summit in Kyoto, Japan. It established the Kyoto Earth Summit Information Center, issued an "Earth Summit Fact Sheet" and fed anti-treaty quotes to the media through a "free interview locator service" that offered "assistance to journalists seeking interviews with leading scientists, economists and public policy experts on global warming."

Following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, NCPPR began using the rhetoric of anti-terrorism to attack environmentalists. In May 2002, it created the Envirotruth web site, to attack what it called the "jihad" that environmental activists are waging against corporations. [1]

Personnel

Office bearers:

Staff:

Funders

In 2002 ExxonMobil donated $30,000 for "educational activities" and a further $15,000 for general support. [3] In 2003 the company boosted its general operating support to $25,000 with another $30,000 for 'global climate change/EnviroTruth website".[4]

According to the organizations 2002 IRS return total revenue was $6.6 million, with $399,080 spent on fundraising consultancy fees to a Virginia direct mail company, Response Dynamics.[5]

While NCPPR is keen to scrutinize the fundraising and advocacy of organizations it disagrees with it has come in for criticism itself. In 1998, the San Francisco Examiner reporter Diana Walsh reviewed the rise of direct mail campaigns using scare tactics to raise funds from senior citizens. Walsh reported that in one four month period, 86 year old senior citizen, Faye Shelby, received 685 letters from 78 organizations. 160 of the fundraising pitches were from NCPPR.

Amy Moritz Ridenour told the Examiner that anyone receiving more than a dozen solicitations in a month probably was on mailing lists the National Center "rented" from other organizations, which she said were outside her control. When lists are rented, a group pays to use the list but for proprietary reasons isn't allowed to look at individual names or cross reference for duplications on their own lists. Ridenour also said an emotional pitch was vital to raising funds. "People seem to respond better to emotion than they do with letters that have lots and lots of facts. You have to give something that is light enough that people will be willing to read it upon receipt. . . . If they don't read it right at that moment, all the studies show they never will."


Contact information

National Center for Public Policy Research
777 N. Capitol St. NE #803
Washington, D.C. 20002
Phone: (202) 371-1400
Fax: (202) 408-7773
Email: info@nationalcenter.org

Affiliations

Related artciles

Sources

External links

Retrieved from "http://localhost../../../n/a/t/National_Center_for_Public_Policy_Research_20b2.html"

This page was last modified 23:42, 27 October 2007 by Chad Lupkes. Based on work by dKosopedia user(s) Chrisindc and Lestatdelc. Content is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.


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