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These breakthroughs will make 2021 better than 2020 (gatesnotes.com)
85 points by pama on Dec 22, 2020 | hide | past | favorite | 35 comments



Has any other philanthropists in history appeared to care about the world (or part of the world) in a more profound way than Bill and Melinda Gates?

The question I have, though, is how about continuation? I can't find anything on their website about a (hopefully distant) future without Bill and Melinda. Are the covenants such that the organisation can continue and still have the same impact?

And the reason I care is that I always have doubts about the long-term effectiveness of charity contributions. It appears to me that their foundation has a more fundamental long-term impact than other charities. If I had some guarantees about the continuation, I'd be very interested in leaving my worldly possessions to this foundation, when my own time is up.

For reference: I'm in my 50s, have no children, and the thought about donating through my will is getting back to me more and more often.


I'm not convinced if Gates actually cares about the world. I find his transformation from one of the disliked CEOs of most despised companies into some sort of high tech messiah hard to believe. The phrase "Embrace, Extend, Extinguish" was coined in Microsoft when he was the CEO. Google bombing was invented to redirect to Microsoft homepage when searching "more evil than satan himself". Those are facts that confirm the sentiment I remember.

In my opinion, his philanthropy work is just another playground. Power is addictive and now he has way to exercise power over world outside the tech industry. Quick Google search shows he spent 45B$ on his foundation... and another search shows his net worth is still 119B$. This is still more money that I can imagine, even if he spent 99.9% of it he would still be richer than I can ever hope for. And honestly, his personal brand is so strong that even after zeroing on his account balance he could become multimillionaire in no time.

Maybe I'm overly cynical. Maybe my memory fails me and I'm mistaken about how bad reputation he and his company had back in the day. But it's hard for me to buy this 180 degree turn from ruthless CEO into great philanthropist. Now, I'm not saying his antichrist and he planned the pandemic 20 years ahead; I just would appreciate some healthy skepticism.


Just because you enjoy crushing business rivals doesn't mean you also want kids to die young. I think Gates simply enjoys the challenge and the technical side of things.


I'm not saying he wants kids to die young, please don't strawman me. I think Gates career as CEO points into direction he enjoys acquiring and wielding power. He stepped down from being CEO in 2008, this was long after Windows won. It's also possible that he enjoys both technical side of challenges and being powerful at the same time.


I assume you mean by dollar amount of personal fortune they’ve contributed because I can certainly think of quite a few philanthropists who have sacrificed more by percentage of wealth, time, or given their lives to support worthy causes.

This is by no means a dig at the Gates whom I admire greatly.

It’s hard to say if a foundation such as theirs can survive their loss. As much as they might clearly define the mission future leaders could still deviate from the founding principles like we’ve seen with many charitable organizations. There are no guarantees.


It's nearly impossible for a foundation like Gates to survive a loss of visionary leadership.

If it were handed to me with no checks-and-balances, and I were given absolute control, I'm pretty sure I could run Gates Foundation as well as Gates. That's not a statement about me; I know a few people who could run it BETTER than myself or Gates. The problem is finding them and the no checks-and-balances bit.

Beyond a founder/donor, no checks-and-balances is a really bad way to run an organization because although MANY people would do a great job, MOST people wouldn't. A good dictatorship beats a good democracy, but a typical democracy beats a typical dictatorship.

The sorts of arbitrary decisions "Let's dump a billion dollars into making a vaccine for COVID19 economical" become impossible once the founder of a foundation goes away, unless you are willing to accept that whomever comes into control might just as well say "Let's dump a billion dollars into buying paintings of myself at 10x markup." You move into competitive processes.

Competitive processes mean people apply for grants under standard criteria.

If grants have a strongly positive ROI, you have more people applying to the program, and if a negative ROI, fewer people. This means grant-funded organizations will spend a significant portion of their time applying for grants; grants become thin-margin beasts.

And the people who do run late foundations? They're connected people good at climbing corporate ladders.


Have you heard of effective altruism [1]? You might find it relevant about doing more good efficiently with your money

[1] https://www.effectivealtruism.org/


IIRC the Foundation is supposed to close up shop 20 years after both of them die. I guess Bill is aware of the potential for abuse. They do not accept donations anyway. Between Gates and Buffet, they have all the resources they need.


IMHO caring is giving what people want, not trying to do what you declare good for them.


Like, an end to malaria and food insecurity?


As long as "helped" people are objectively informed of any dependence and known side-effect thanks to some public debate, then accept the deal, and any individual remains free to refuse it for himself.


In an adjacent thread [1], you have presented the increasing diabetes and obesity in young people as a problem. According to your argument here, however, it would be 'caring' to assist the poor lifestyle choices that have caused this problem, so long as they are informed of the consequences. It is well-established, however, that this information has little effect, and your concept concept of caring looks to me more like facilitation.

[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25516165


People are entitled to their choices when it comes to themselves, and most problems arise when someone try to impose his views.

To care is to facilitate what is wanted by the beneficiary, honestly presented to him, and not threatening for anyone else.

Some over-consume refined sugar (=> obesity...), for example, because they are unhappy and compensate (some may even be committing a slow suicide), some just prefer an immediate pleasure (even knowing that they will suffer), and some are just dumb. "Such information has little effect" on them, indeed, however imposing anything on them "in order to save them" seems the worse approach to me, and IMHO some will eventually react to it dangerously for all parties.

Solving the underlying unhappyness of those who compensate, finding some substitute or a way to enlighten the dumb ones, seems more efficient to me. It is, however, more difficult than not interacting with them while claiming to "care" by selecting an approach then throwing money at projects aiming at imposing it.

A fair part of human misery is caused by people imposing stuff to others, I fail to see how it can be a way to "care".


> most problems arise when someone try to impose his views.

I think it would be very hard to make this argument in the specific cases that you chose for making your point with here (diabetes and obesity.)


Forbidding products causing those ailments (or using some more indirect similar way, for example over-taxing it) is counterproductive as 'helped' people then search for other ways, and their hostility towards the "helper" grows.

This illustrates effects of one of the strongest imposed ways, but is IMHO true for any imposed action.

Trying to honestly cooperate with the 'helped', instead of adopting a 'solution' defined by specialists in order to solve patent 'bad effects' then imposing it, leads to find and tackle at least some roots of the problem.

Making an argument for such an holistic approach seems possible to me because reductionist approaches aren't really efficient in the long term when applied to human beings.

Using abstraction in order to solve locally (<=> focusing on one problem at hand and neglecting the rest, even other parts of the life of its 'victims') leads to, later, discovering that the applied local solution isn't adequate, patching it, then having to patch the imperfect patch... (rinse and repeat).

This approach is popular because it makes wonders in a 'near-model' context (for example in order to develop software or even to build a bridge), but it seems less convincing to me when applied to human beings (especially when some make a living because the problem exists => they may not really want to solve it).


This is all very abstract; I am unable to identify one specific recommendation here as to how to reduce acquired diabetes and obesity in young people.

This discussion has drifted a long way from your original claim, "IMHO caring is giving what people want, not trying to do what you declare good for them." In the case of diabetes and obesity, patterns of consumption are formed in childhood. My wife knows a mother who took the position you are advocating here literally, and now that her children are in their late teens, it is resulting in all sorts of problems for both them and her.

For you, me, and everyone else, no matter what ideological position one holds, there are a lot of problems having no easy solutions.


We, indeed, brushed too many different topics.

The present thread was about the Gates Foundation (and similar institutions primarily targeting whole populations, that is to say adults and, through them, their children), and I answered 'give them what they want', meaning in this context 'when caring for adult people, give them what they explicitly ask for (not what you prefer)' and also (as such a Foundation has to aim for the greater good): 'if and only if you objectively think this will be good for them and not bad for others'.

Youngsters aren't mature, therefore we cannot merely give them what they want. We have to educate them, which is maintaining them in an adequate context while guiding them towards finding what they want and will be good for them and not bad for others. In my opinion our contemporary society very rarely offers such an adequate context. Hoarding kids in overpopulated classrooms where they sit for hours with adults having few (if any) personal interconnection with them is apparently the most efficient way... and (IMHO) a recipe for disaster (diabetes and obesity getting out of control being part of it).

I didn't wrote that my approach is simple and explicitly stated, above, ((that)) 'It is, however, more difficult' than the usual 'select a cure for the symptom and impose it'.


Sounds like an excuse to not tackle universally despised problems like disease.


This is also about the ways to do it, and their potential effects. In order to "control" malaria (see "youeseh" answer here) some dispersed tons of DDT. I, for one, sure prefer to tackle mosquitoes than to see "good samaritans" put such products everywhere near me, without my consent (even if they do so while chanting "this is for your own good".)


Gates has managed to increase his wealth more by "Philanthropy" than the pre Microsoft breakup days.

The business he was running was so cut throat that the government had to step in.


Is that mask in the photo accompanying the post photoshopped over an existing picture of Bill? Or is Gates actually wearing the mask that way? In either case, doesn't it appear to be OVER the bottom of his glasses? Don't mean to be too picky, but the post stresses the importance of wearing masks to "slow the spread of the virus and save lives," so one would want to avoid suggesting wearing masks in a way that has been noted to decrease their effectiveness. Btw, tried Googling for another photo of Bill wearing a mask for comparison purposes, but couldn't find any. Guess he's been pretty good about social distancing! :-)


I think its because of black frames over a black mask. When it was greyscaled the contrast was increased it seems to have merged the two


You can indeed see outline of the bottom of the frame on top of the mask on the right side of the picture. Also the shape of the top edge suggests some refractive distortion. Which is to say, I think your interpretation is correct - the mask goes under the glasses.


Right you both are (as is BillG!). Couldn't see it on my cheap-o laptop (1366x768 display), but the frame on the right side seems to be visible on an iPhone display. Thanks!


I wish I had as much time as you seem to


Call me cynical but I'm not convinced by Mr Gates or his foundation. Like many of us on here, I too lived through 'the Microsoft years', I watched Microsoft under his leadership effectively dominate their competition using fair means and foul. Case in point, Microsoft are the first to be mentioned in the Examples section of the Wikipedia page on FUD.

I've subsequently listened to him in interviews over the last 10 months, and the man cannot stop himself, he sees a large mound of money and his old cutthroat competitive spirit comes surging back.

In some interviews it's like he's out of breath just getting out his own way, to rubbish his rivals and convince us to buy 'his vaccine'.


It sounds like you are cynical? He's pledged the vast majority of his money to charity, and he's working on important problems. I haven't listened to him in interviews (is it a tone you're picking up?), but in the things he writes his focus seems very much in the right direction. The investments in vaccines (https://abcnews.go.com/Technology/bill-melinda-gates-foundat... ?) seem to be made by his foundation, and I can't tell if it's to the companies themselves or to fund distribution and operational costs (which would be free money for the world). Is there more to this?


I'm disappointed that he both mentioned George Floyd and refers to his death as a killing.


What would you characterize it as? Would execution work better? It definitely wasn't an accident, nor was it self-defense. Literally over $20, all the turmoil that followed, this guys life, everything this ignited shows that one life is worth more than a measly $20, the fact that it's caused billions of police dollars to be re-directed says he's at least worth all those billions of dollars that WERE earmarked for cops, and now will go to mental health, social workers, and others to deal with less dangerous mental health issues. As well as hopefully more/better training on what is acceptable and what is not.


A criminal and drug addict took a massive overdose of drugs shortly before being arrested, while behind the wheel of a car. He was uncooperative with the police, they called an ambulance as they could tell he was high on drugs. He refused to get in the police car, instead asking to lie on the ground. He lay there, being restrained in the standard way, and had a heart attack caused by the 4x lethal dose of drugs he had taken, possibly in an attempt to avoid being charged with their possession. The pathologist report proved that the cause of death was due to the drug overdose. Then, lawyers got involved, paid for a second pathologist to create a phony report, and spun a false narrative that the media swallowed up, and this inspired massive amounts of racists to riot, murdering cops and other citizens, rapes, assaults, arson, looting etc, and then these rioters organized and joined forced with another domestic terrorist organisation with similar aims called antifa.


Isn’t it sort of dystopian that rich people in developed countries get to have vaccines with 95% effectiveness while we give poor people in developing countries the vaccine that’s only 70% effective?


Whole Europe is getting the 70% vaccine as well so I don't think it's just a matter of GDP. EU made deals with all companies who finished their trials successfully


No, dystopian would be only providing the mRNA (95% effective) vaccines. The storage and distribution requirements are already an issue in the US due to a lack of refrigerators needed to move the vaccines around.


[flagged]


Does clean living and healthy lifestyle help much with malaria and starvation?


Oh, so gates big push to heal us all, with this convid vaccine, in the same breath says lockdowns are going to carry on till 2022, killing and starving far more than the third world coountries ever experienced. Please, this man is evil.




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