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letsdothis3 ago

Founders of Bright Horizons: Linda A. Mason and Roger H. Brown

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linda_A._Mason

Mason has held leadership positions on the boards of several non-profit institutions, serving as: chair of Mercy Corps,[17] co-founder of Horizons for Homeless Children,[18] trustee of Yale University,[19] chair of the Yale School of Management Advisory Board,[20] trustee of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,[21] and trustee of the Packard Foundation

Voat posts re Mercy Corps:

International Planned Parenthood Federation, the world's biggest sexual health charity, is accused of offering YOUNG volunteers to adults at events in Africa...Here's what we know..

IPPF works with Mercy Corps https://reliefweb.int/report/world/women-s-and-girls-rights-and-agency-humanitarian-action-life-saving-priority...

Mercy Corps is partly funded by George Soros https://voat.co/v/whatever/844243/4196832

Liberia: USAID Probes Mercy Corps Grant to More Than Me

Monrovia – The US Government, through its relief agency, United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has disclosed that it is reviewing documentation that enabled More Than Me (MTM) to receive a grant from Mercy Corps in 2014.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_H._Brown

Roger H. Brown (born 1956, Gainesville, Georgia)[1] is president of Berklee College of Music, cofounder of Bright Horizons Family Solutions, and an international relief agency manager.

Brown graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Davidson College with a degree in physics and public policy in 1978.[2] He then spent a year teaching science and math in Kenya before returning to the U.S. to attend Yale School of Management.[2] After his first year at Yale, he and his wife, Linda A. Mason, co-directed Land Bridge, a famine relief program on the Cambodia-Thailand border. Working under the auspices of CARE and UNICEF, the program served as many as 25,000 people a day and was the largest emergency food distribution effort ever attempted.[2] He then returned to Yale, earning a Masters in Public and Private Management in 1982.[3] He and Mason wrote a book about their experiences in Cambodia, Rice, Rivalry, and Politics.[2]

After graduating, Brown took a job with Boston management consulting firm, Bain and Company, but left in January 1985 to co-direct famine relief efforts in Sudan for Save the Children. The innovative program developed by Brown and Mason established many local food distribution centers, rather than a few centralized ones