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Cards Against Humanity donates $250,000 to Sunlight Foundation

By Aileen Graef
Cards Against Humanity. Photo by Brett Jordan/Flickr/CC
1 of 2 | Cards Against Humanity. Photo by Brett Jordan/Flickr/CC

CHICAGO, Dec. 22 (UPI) -- Chicago-based card game maker Cards Against Humanity is donating $250,000 from their holiday sale to the Sunlight Foundation to track money in politics.

Cards Against Humanity had 250,000 people subscribe to their Holiday Bull[expletive] Campaign and they decided to use $1 per subscriber to see how lobbyists spend their money "to sell their bull[expletive] to Congress."

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The 2014 campaign was called the Ten Days or Whatever of Kwanzaa. Keeping their tradition of sardonic humor, Cards Against Humanity detailed their imaginary $250,000 gifts for politicians, to highlight some of their greatest political gaffes or controversial opinions.

For Democratic Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper, for example, they recommended a gold casket for his feelings about drinking fracking fluid with Halliburton representatives.

"You can drink it. We did drink it, around the table, almost ritual-like," he once said.

To which Cards Against Humanity responded, "Fun fact: Fracking fluid includes lead, uranium, radium, hydrochloric acid, and formaldehyde."

Rather than buying these gifts, the game-makers decided to spend the money monitoring who actually was sending money to elected officials.

"Instead of bribing our elected officials, we gave $250,000 to the Sunlight Foundation -- a nonprofit that lets us see who's spending money in politics and how much they're spending," they wrote on their website.

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