Rupert Murdoch recently left Cato's board, because he never attended any board meetings. Beyond that, all the arguments about Cato's corporate support are nearly meaningless, because, as was already mentioned, the majority of Cato revenues (80+ percent according to its annual report) comes from individuals' annual donations, with thousands of sponsors giving anywhere from $50-$500, and several hundred above that range. Compared to other think tanks, it's corporate support is very small (8% or so according to their annual report), and in fact most large corporations HATE Cato's work, which is highly critical of corporate welfare in all its forms.
Well one would hope the store network requires a login with username and password.
Rupert Murdoch recently left Cato's board, because he never attended any board meetings. Beyond that, all the arguments about Cato's corporate support are nearly meaningless, because, as was already mentioned, the majority of Cato revenues (80+ percent according to its annual report) comes from individuals' annual donations, with thousands of sponsors giving anywhere from $50-$500, and several hundred above that range. Compared to other think tanks, it's corporate support is very small (8% or so according to their annual report), and in fact most large corporations HATE Cato's work, which is highly critical of corporate welfare in all its forms.