I didn't see any statement on their website about the issue or their policies on not accepting donations. I suggest you email CCF if you want to hear directly from them. There is plenty of evidence here to make a judgment on however.
No, there really isn't. There's a small, undetailed statement by one aggrieved party and that's it. Everything else is personal opinion and prejudice.
Even taking Gencon's statement with a grain of salt
Point of Order: I don't see any official statement on behalf of GenCon LLC regarding this matter. I see some Web site commentary by livegameauctions.com that been circulated and repeated. On the site it says, "Auction is sponsored by and run by The Partnership (Bruce Carson and TrollAndToad.com ) and managed by Catherine Fountaine." They copyright all the content of that site with the statement and do not attribute the statement to the GenCon LLC.
the other possibilities you posit as their motives should be evaluated for their plausibility, not just their possibility in evaluating the situation.
Plausibility is important in weighing the relevance of possibility, certainly.
Pulling Weeds out of Potholes: Reply from the Christian Children's Fund over the Gygax Auction
"Christian Children’s Fund made the decision to decline the gift from Gen Con, LLC after the review of numerous factors that in combination precluded our acceptance of the gift. These reasons include the possible misinterpretation of CCF’s role in regard to the event. CCF is selective in its endorsements or support because it must maintain the highest degree of integrity with respect to the use of its name and logo. The information presented to us gave the appearance that CCF (the organization) was an endorser or supporter of the event instead of a beneficiary."
While that makes the issue pretty much a moot point unless anyone provides contrary copy or statements from CCF, there are a couple of other details in the argument of possibilities worth pursuing.
For one thing, I found the action list:
http://livegameauctions.com/cons/Indy2008Files/AuctionItems.xls
It is pretty darn long but I found at least a couple of adults-only auction items include Hentai DVDs and lot #5040562 - the Book of Erotic Fantasy.
Lack of 100% knowledge is not a good reason to withhold judging a situation. It is very hard to get 100% knowledge and you need to judge situations all the time.
No one is arguing that 100% certainty is required for every judgment. Depending on necessities and consequences the burden of certainty shifts. Note your use of the word "need" here. You and I don't "need to judge" this situation. There's no gun to anyone's head here. We can keep the jury out on this until a sufficient burden of evidence is met.
I've heard plenty of disgruntled people pass off "because of D&D" as an explanation of stuff that, at its crux, was only incidentally involved with Dungeons and Dragons. It is even factually accurate to say, "They didn't want our donation because of the sale of Dungeons and Dragons products," when the actual dismissal addressed a specific Dungeons and Dragons product (BoEF), the publisher D&D (Hasbro), or an individual involved with the donation of the D&D products in question.
This is why I like to have both sides of the issue before taking sides.
I am not aware of any reason CCF would wish to boycott donations connected to Hasbro.
Responsible Shopper Profile: Hasbro
I'm not saying these folks are right (they seem like hippies to me), but I'm illustrating that there definitely some folks out there that object to Hasbro's involvement with child labor abuses - kind of a sore subject for a charity for children, no?
I think it unlikely to be over individual auction items.
You can feel it unlikely, but I've seen that kind of thing bite companies, charities, and politicians before. PR flaks and lawyers are paranoid folks for a reason. I think the statement from CCF illustrates this well too - they are fretting over the implications of just who is endorsing whom, definitely marketing wonk territory.
- Marty Lund