“I’ve always believed in full circle,” Bruner-Yang says, adding, “Some days we raise money and some days we don’t. But every day we make the food, and I think it’s awesome.” (Mirai, he notes, “has been really good at helping fundraise.”)
The future of life in the pandemic, or after, is hard to predict. But Bruner-Yang says he wants to continue to provide help through Power of 10, crisis or no.
“This is obviously a major wakeup call of how unstable a lot of people’s economic situations is, and hopefully Power of 10 can be a longterm safety net. … I don’t think the mission ends,” he says.
Says Mirai: “It feels really nice to be doing something for humanity, because we all need a little spark of hope right now.”
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