You missed the point of my comment — donors contemning the less fortunate by throwing them scraps.
It was not an argument about the minimum technical specifications of donated goods. Nor was it an argument about donated goods needing to be brand new.
This reminds me of the Seinfeld episode when the homeless rise up and reject Elaine's castoff "muffin stumps". This is not food! We are too dignified to eat the stumps left by the customers of your Muffin Top Cafe!
That "Only donate what you would buy" dictum is just as misguided.
I did buy it once. I just don't need it anymore. Maybe someone else can find some use for it.
―The food bank sometimes receives items with virtually no nutritional value -- "candy and crap" says Aason, which are sometimes tossed, and sometimes used as "filler items." It's not stuff that they want, but the junk food is part and parcel with reclamation.[1]
―"There are things that are not even usable. We can't sell it in the store."[2]
―"We want saleable donations only," a Red Cross spokeswoman said[3]
―"What people take out of our store, we would actually wear ourself."[4]
―“Every Monday, we waste time sorting other people’s rubbish instead of preparing clothing and furniture for sale for people in need,” Mrs Barrett said.[5]
―"A good donation is something which is unbroken, complete, clean and sellable."[6]
―“If people are trying to get rid of stuff, use the tip; we only take items that are in good condition and that people can use.”[7]
―Barbara Cunningham, Sails Outlet's volunteer manager, said people dump unusable items at the thrift store two to three times a week. Recently, they found a queen-size mattress tossed outside the door.[8]
―McLellan suggests donors ask themselves, “would I buy this?”[9]
―“They wouldn’t buy it themselves, but they think other people will.”[9]
―“The appliances and that kind of thing, we want them working. We don’t them to come in without a cord, or a broken anything. There are standards — you can’t sell things that aren’t in good order.”[9]
―“These are things that should be taken to the dump,” said Thrift Store Manager Sheila Combs. “Who wants half a pool table — and a broken one to boot?”[10]
―“We couldn’t get rid of the TVs if we slapped a $2 sticker on them,” Combs said Wednesday. “As for these computer things… we don’t even have a computer so we don’t know if they work.”[10]
I feel like you're cherry picking examples to prove a somewhat dubious point.
I would like clarification: Are you advocating we shouldn't donate used items to charity, or that we shouldn't donate unusable items to charity?
If the former, then how do you propose those less fortunate purchase items outside of their budget? I've gone to thrift and goodwill stores; many of the electronics and clothing there are perfectly usable.
If the latter, I completely agree, though am not sure why this is pertinent to the discussion. Broken junk isn't generally sellable except as scrap.
It was not an argument about the minimum technical specifications of donated goods. Nor was it an argument about donated goods needing to be brand new.