If you use Surefish Search everytime you want to search the internet then you'll raise money for Christian Aid. It's easy.
When I started this blog nearly 4 years and nearly 300 posts ago one of the labels I used for it/me was "radical." Perhaps I used it a little unreflectively. Recently I've been pondering what radical means. A couple of things have made me think of this. Firstly this blog series from my friend Jeremy, which explores a distinction between "radical progressives" and "rational progressives." There is also this definition of radical, liberal and conservative from Terry Eagleton quoted at Young Anabaptist Radicals : “Radicals are those who believe that things are extremely bad with us, but they could feasibly be much improved. Conservatives believe that things are pretty bad, but that’s just the way the human animal is. And liberals believe that there’s a little bit of good and bad in all of us.” What interests me is finding a way to express the tension I feel sometimes between myself and the wider Unitarian movement. One way to express this is to say I tend
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The web form posts itself directly to ask.com, so the only people who know you have searched are ask.com themselves (your web browser sends no data to Surefish at all when you search).
Not only that, I cannot see any source of revenue whatsoever, other than ask.com's normal adverts.
In short, the only way this could work is if Surefish or Christian Aid have convinced ask.com to donate portions of their own advertising revenue to Christian Aid whenever they receive an HTTP_REFERER from surefish.co.uk. Which I doubt.