I
                        went around and interviewed folks I know through working
                        with Youth on Board (where our work is helping young people
                        get on nonprofit boards and develop as leaders). I looked
                        for people who don't have much money, under age 25, with
                        a variety of outlooks on life. It was fun to call them
                        up and ask, "What would you do with two million dollars,
                        no strings attached?!" I expected them to say: "Get a
                        big house, a big car," and that would be it. But they
                        didn't forget their families and friends, and they also
                        wanted to give a lot to nonprofits, especially ones they
                        were involved with. These people rarely give themselves
                        space to dream. So it was awesome to call them up and
                        have them dream out loud about having money. When people
                        have a chance to use their imaginations, they have more
                        energy to go after their dreams. One of the guys I talked
                        to later said, "You know, I got to thinking that I really
                        want to make that nonprofit I was fantasizing about happen!
                        I've started to do some grantwriting to get funding for
                        it." 
Here
                        are samplings of the responses to"What would you do if
                        you suddenly had two million dollars?" 
Megan,
                        14, on the board of directors of Girls Incorporated:
                        "I'd pay off my parents' mortgage, and send money to my
                        grandmother for all her medical bills. I'd set up college
                        trust funds for all my siblings. I'd take a trip with
                        my mom to Africa and with my dad
                        to Europe. I'd donate to Girls
                        Incorporated, of course, and the two churches that I belong
                        to." 
Don,
                        17, works with Hampshire Youth 2000:
 "I'd put half
                        of the money in the bank. I'd invest the rest in a small
                        business so I could continue to make enough money so I'll
                        never have to work again. I'd also put some away for friends
                        who might need financial help." 
J.,
                        23, staff of Do It Yourself, a youth run program that
                        puts together music concerts and festivals:
 "I'd take
                        my closest friends on a road trip across the United
                        States. Then I'd donate
                        the rest to organizations doing AIDS research and treatment,
                        because AIDS is a disease that can annihilate large numbers
                        of people almost before we have blinked." 
Mark,
                        24, with the 
Massachusetts
                        Youth Service 
Alliance
:
                        "I would take a ten year trip around the world, as expensive
                        and lush as one can imagine. When I came home I'd start
                        my own activist summer academy that would mobilize youth
                        to take over the world." 
  
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