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The Almighty Buck

Bill Gates Gives $20 Billion To Stem 'Significant Suffering' (apnews.com) 130

Bill Gates, concerned about the "significant suffering" caused by global setbacks including the COVID-19 pandemic, announced Wednesday that he will donate $20 billion to his foundation so it can increase its annual spending. The Associated Press reports: The donation, combined with longtime board member Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett's $3.1 billion gift last month, brings The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation's endowment to approximately $70 billion, making it one of the largest, if not the largest in the world, depending on daily stock valuations. In an essay on the foundation's website, Bill Gates said he hopes "others in positions of great wealth and privilege will step up in this moment too."

The Gates Foundation plans to raise its annual budget by 50% over pre-pandemic levels to about $9 billion by 2026. The foundation hopes the increased spending will improve education, reduce poverty and reinstate the global progress toward ending preventable disease and achieving gender equality that has been halted in recent years. "Despite huge global setbacks in the past few years, I see incredible heroism and sacrifice all over the world and I believe progress is possible," Bill Gates, the foundation's co-chair, said in a statement. "But the great crises of our time require all of us to do more... I hope by giving more, we can mitigate some of the suffering people are facing right now and help fulfill the foundation's vision to give every person the chance to live a healthy and productive life."

In his essay, Bill Gates wrote that polarization in the United States makes battling global crises tougher. "The political divide limits our political capacity for dialogue, compromise, and cooperation and thwarts the bold leadership required both domestically and internationally to tackle these threats," he wrote. "Polarization is forcing us to look backwards and fight again for basic human rights, social justice, and democratic norms." While achieving gender equality has long been one of the foundation's primary investment areas, in his essay, Bill Gates singled out the Supreme Court's overturning of Roe v. Wade as "a huge setback for gender equality, for women's health, and for overall human progress." "The potential for even further regression is scary," he added. "It will put lives at risk for women, people of color, and anyone living on the margins."
You can read the full essay via Gates Notes.
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Bill Gates Gives $20 Billion To Stem 'Significant Suffering'

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  • for a functional civilization instead of building one ourselves? Gate's net worth is so huge that he can't (or won't) give it away fast enough to keep from being one of the top 3-5 richest men on the planet. At a certain point it's not money anymore, it's power, and he can and does use that power to tell you and me what to do. And we do it. Whatever he wants. Because if we don't he'll wreck us.
    • by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Wednesday July 13, 2022 @06:01PM (#62700722) Journal
      No sane person is begging billionaires to do that, though quite a few would be willing to rob them so they can spend the money on "doing good". Personally I think it's great when rich people pend on causes that matter to them, whether it's better education, fighting malaria, supporting the arts, or space exploration. As a society, we should not have to rely on such generosity... and we don't. These programs achieve successes not because of the vast amounts of money spent, but because the money is often spent on projects that are underfunded or ignored. If we as a society would want to fund them ouselves, we could; the money spent by billionaires is a drop in a bucket compared to nation's budgets. And robbing a billionaire to pay for something we want would only yield a very temporary result.
      • by ewibble ( 1655195 ) on Wednesday July 13, 2022 @06:14PM (#62700748)

        Rob or tax its a matter of opinion. Also I don't believe we can fund everything that we want as a society, there are plenty of things most people say need to be funded but are not. This is mainly because the political system is set up in a way that means the rich own it. Just running for president costs in the millions this means instantly rich people get a vastly disproportionate say.

        It seems to me we fund the minimum so the rich have a work force.

      • I'm talking about basic infrastructure. Flint, Mi never did get clean water. And the entire American Southwest is about to run out of the stuff.

        And you can bet your ass there's no shortage of people begging for money. 90% of GoFundMe accounts are people trying to pay medical bills to live. Stuff like insulin and cancer meds.

        Finally, if you think it's a drop in the bucket you're objectively wrong. Watch this. [youtube.com]

        Billionaires are starving us of the money we need to run a functional civilization. You h
        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          by eaglesrule ( 4607947 )

          So it's probably not a coincidence that it is also billionaires like Gates and Soros and Bezos that pumps money into "social justice" and "progressive" groups.

          Lure people in with the real issue of wealth inequality, and then before long the useful idiots spend all their time looking for nazzis and racists where there isn't any and actually trying to redefine what a woman is.

          I'd like to think that if not for that, we've have taken "In God We Trust" off our currency by now and have moved on to the serious iss

          • and good press. They pump many times that into right wing groups, but you don't hear about it because funding crap like the Heritage Foundation and other borderline hate groups is bad for their image, so they funnel the cash through dark money groups.
        • by cusco ( 717999 )

          On the other hand, Gates and Buffet have been trying to get taxes on the wealthy raised since the 1990s, unfortunately everyone in Congress is either rich, or will be rich soon.

        • People with ties to billionaires (*cough cough Pelosi Newsom Cough*) also go into politics and push the increasing reliance of the population upon distributed aid from the state. Who then, in turn, MUST elect them back to office. Everyone I know has at least one relative/cousin/person in their family who contributes absolutely nothing to society ( other than complaining about it), but in turn receives disability/food/housing/medical aid from the state. Hell, my nephew has better state funded medical care th
          • but I'll take hot garbage to being tossed head first into the dumpster fire that is her opponents. I can wash the garbage smell off. Can't do anything about third degree burns except wait to die.
    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      Because if we don't he'll wreck us.

      He can spend his money on what he wants. If we want something, we should pony up for it ourselves rather than depending on the generosity of the wealthy. So, explain how he can 'wreck us'. I mean other than preventing us from booting the OS of our choi... [No bootable OS found] [theregister.com]

      • It's not his money (Score:2, Insightful)

        by rsilvergun ( 571051 )
        For starters he used illegal monopolistic tactics to get it. The department of Justice didn't clear him of wrongdoing they just gave up when a pro corporate president got installed.

        Beyond that he's single-handedly held back computing by at least 20 years maybe longer. I remember seeing BeOS doing things on a 400 MHz AMD back in the late 90s that Windows 10 and 11 can't do to this day. It's not just that he didn't earn the money fair and square it's that he actively retarded the development of technology
        • by PPH ( 736903 )

          For starters he used illegal monopolistic tactics to get it.

          Then the DoJ needs to claw those profits back. Not spend them on pet projects that the rightful owners of those funds might not agree with.

          That's one of the reasons why antitrust fails. It's easy to turn a blind eye toward unethical/illegal behavior if the end result is a big pile of money somewhere that the politicians couldn't have justified collecting based on the merits of their own favorite programs.

          • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday July 13, 2022 @09:02PM (#62701076)
            once you have a certain amount of money it's not money or profit anymore, it's just power. Raw power. The ability to make you do whatever they say.

            Little surprised to find you in support the gov't of seizing private property like that though.
            • by PPH ( 736903 )

              Little surprised to find you in support the gov't of seizing private property like that though.

              Not really. It was a facetious remark. There is no way that the government is going to hamper the accumulation of ill gotten gains if they think that they can guilt trip people into contributing part of those gains to political campaigns or pet projects.

      • by Truth_Quark ( 219407 ) on Wednesday July 13, 2022 @07:20PM (#62700892) Journal
        I remember when Digital Research brought out a much better DOS than MS. MS just lied that it had the same capabilities (in particular the more efficient drive formatting), and patched it later. DR went out of business.

        I remember when shops tried to sell Linux pre-installed alongside windows machines. MS sold them their OS at a much greater cost, so that they would go out of business.

        I remember when governments went to cut their MS costs, so gates flew to them to undercut the free product, and ensure the monopoly.

        I remember when MS was convicted of leveraging their OS monopoly to get a monopoly on browsers, office and main.

        I remember when MS and Google were convicted of colluding to keep the salaries of Developers down.

        I remember when MS was sitting so comfortably on their monopoly that they had invested so little in development that when AMD stopped making their 32 bit chips, windows had not yet moved to 64 bit. Probably keeping software about 20 years behind where it would have been with competition.

        The reason it's his money is because the legal system isn't good enough to recover the proceeds of white collar crime. It stands on the destruction of a billion staff or small businesses that failed on a knife edge that better competition would have been enough to save.

        But sure, if the good friend of Epstein doesn't want to be generous we should forgive his transgressions: He's now trying his level best to vaccinate the world. His MO of being a monopoly might be counterproductive [msf.org] in actually vaccinating the world [nature.com], but his criminal activities gathered the money, so he chooses how it's managed. His ex wife still seems to work with him even after she left him shortly after Epstein's arrest. That must take spine if she found out what we must suspect she found out.
  • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Wednesday July 13, 2022 @05:58PM (#62700714)

    Having foisted Windows on us for decades and caused suffering on a global scale, the man's conscience is torturing him.

    • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

      by suss ( 158993 )

      Common Core is a far more evil thing to have pushed upon America than Windows...

    • Having foisted Windows on us for decades and caused suffering on a global scale, the man's conscience is torturing him.

      Conscience? When the hell did Bill Gates acquire one of those?

      • It doesn't matter, under him Microsoft ruined everything it acquired. Presumably if he found one somewhere, he'd ruin it anyway.

    • His conscience really does seem to be bothering him. This $20bn is just the start - he plans to give away most of his wealth: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/bus... [bbc.co.uk]

      It does seem rather ironic (yeah, I know I'm losing the yank crowd with this) that the guy should have spent so much of his life super-focussed on being an utter arsehole to so many people, and that such behaviour ended up making him the richest person in the world - but now he doesn't want it. For him now to decide that he doesn't want all that wealt

      • You might want to look a little more into The Gates Foundation before you start thinking that Bill Gates has a conscience at all. You really don't have to dig very deep to understand that The Gates Foundation is just Bill's form of power to try to control the world.

        Yay, he's pouring money into something he controls, some of which gets funneled back into his own bank account.

        They are cleaning up water in places. In some of those places they polluted the water by making factories.

        They are controlling th
    • Haha. No not conscience. Megalomania. And most journalists are on board with him being our Great Savior.

  • Tax dodge (Score:2, Insightful)

    This has less to do with "philanthropy" than it has to do with wielding political power with large sums of money while avoiding paying taxes. They want to override democratic government & channel public money into their own pet issues & projects, regardless of whether they're actually beneficial, needed, or wanted by the electorate. Look into what the Gates Foundation's "philanthropy" has already done to US education & educational research. They've channelled money away from effective projects
    • Re: (Score:1, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Another moron that doesn't understand how tax deductions work. If you give away a $1b, you don't get $1b in tax relief, you get the taxable portion, you lose more money by donating.
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Jack9 ( 11421 )

        > Another moron that doesn't understand how tax deductions work

        *Sigh*
        You are the prime example of a useful idiot. Not only does it work that way, it's even worse.

        It's HIS foundation. He gets the tax benefits AND gets to use the money anyway.

        https://privatebankingconcepts... [privateban...ncepts.com]

        Same as the Clinton Foundation. The only wastage is in the overhead of the foundation.

        • Re:Tax dodge (Score:4, Interesting)

          by DamnOregonian ( 963763 ) on Wednesday July 13, 2022 @08:15PM (#62701000)
          Yes, but how the money can be used once it's in a 501(c)(3) is statutorily defined.
          Don't treat it like it's his piggy bank, it's disingenuous.

          Doing so is illegal. [ny.gov]

          The site you linked has great difficulty understanding the difference between assets and income.
          • It's not a piggy bank, but he can direct its investment in ways that are profitable for him. Also, saying things are illegal is irrelevant. It was illegal for Bill Gates to willfully operate Microsoft in an anticompetitive fashion, but the US government didn't punish him or Microsoft for it. That's literally why he had enough money to endow the foundation. Suggesting that they're going to hold him accountable for abusing his position atop the Gates Foundation when they didn't hold him accountable for abusin

            • It's not a piggy bank, but he can direct its investment in ways that are profitable for him.

              No, that's literally illegal.

              Also, saying things are illegal is irrelevant.

              No, it's not.

              It was illegal for Bill Gates to willfully operate Microsoft in an anticompetitive fashion, but the US government didn't punish him or Microsoft for it.

              Yes, they did. You disagree with said punishment. That's not the same as not punishing.

              That's literally why he had enough money to endow the foundation.

              The opinion you are delivering here as fact, is that Microsoft could not have become a major business as literally the sole provider for a competitive operating systems on PCs, without anticompetitive practices. This doesn't pass the smell test.

              Suggesting that they're going to hold him accountable for abusing his position atop the Gates Foundation when they didn't hold him accountable for abusing his position atop Microsoft seems foolish.

              Nonsense. There are 50 states a and a Federal government, and violation of 501(c)(3) rules will get 51 prosecuting agencies after you.
              Tha

              • It was illegal for Bill Gates to willfully operate Microsoft in an anticompetitive fashion, but the US government didn't punish him or Microsoft for it.

                Yes, they did. You disagree with said punishment. That's not the same as not punishing.

                No, they really didn't, this was acknowledged by AG John Ashcroft, who stated that it wasn't in the nation's best interest to prosecute.

                • No, they really didn't, this was acknowledged by AG John Ashcroft, who stated that it wasn't in the nation's best interest to prosecute.

                  Come on, dude.
                  They did prosecute. In fact, Microsoft was ordered to break up.
                  They won on appeal, and then entered into a consent decree.

                  That consent decree barred them from doing things with their operating system that would make someone laugh today.
                  That consent decree was definitely a "slap on the wrist", but that's what happens when you win your appeal.

          • by Jack9 ( 11421 )

            > Don't treat it like it's his piggy bank, it's disingenuous.

            I'm certainly being honest about the world, insofar as the Gates Foundation board is full of Gates (and/or Gates Foundation)-funded organizations like Tom Tierney, etc. I think it's more like a piggy bank than you're implying, so I'm not being disingenuous. In theory the law constrains reality, in practice it does not. You seem to think the opposite. That's delusional, but I'm sure it's a nicer reality. Good luck.

    • I wish everyone would understand this, or at least understand that only a subset of a foundation like this is truly charitable.

      • Fucking nonsense.
        501(c)(3) requirements are that all money must go to an exempt purpose, and may not be used for the benefit of any of its shareholders or their families.
        Running afoul of that is a crime, as Trump found out the hard way.

        Operations costs are obviously allowed, and it's true that there's room to give yourself a healthy salary via operations costs, but for someone like Bill Gates, the salary he took would be meaningless, and beyond that, it's publicly available: Bill Gates earns 0 dollars f
        • Re:Tax dodge (Score:4, Informative)

          by systemd-anonymousd ( 6652324 ) on Wednesday July 13, 2022 @10:09PM (#62701202)

          No one said Gates got money from the foundation. They said he used his foundation as political leverage and to channel money into pet issues and projects. Which is true. Gates has identified things he thinks are problems and is channeling money into it using his very powerful and very well-financed tax-exempt foundation. If you happen to disagree with those things being issues, or with the way he's trying to address them, that to you would seem like abuse.

          • Your claim is that only a subset is charitable.
            Rather, only a tiny fraction is not charitable. Your beef is with what you define as charitable.
            Please explain the method, and an example, by which he uses his tax-exempt foundation to force public policy.
            Keep in mind that 501(c)(3)s are explicitly forbidden from using money for this purpose, and doing so is a crime.

            I've often seen the fact that they utilize partnerships (like nearly any large charitable foundation) to leverage their money, as if their rel
            • You could compile a massive list. Here's an item from that list: Common Core. Is that not political? Being instrumental in modifying the curriculum of what every K-12 US student would be exposed to?

              As The Washington Post put it: "What followed was one of the swiftest and most remarkable shifts in education policy in U.S. history."

              "The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation didn’t just bankroll the development of what became known as the Common Core State Standards. With more than $200 million, the foundati

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      They want to override democratic government & channel public money into their own pet issues & projects, regardless of whether they're actually beneficial, needed, or wanted by the electorate.

      Oh no, how terrible. Bill Gates wants to end malaria and give people clean drinking water. What is that sick bastard going to do next?

      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        My biology textbook from the 1980s notes that malaria was the largest killer in the world, and that global spending was just $5 million. Meanwhile spending on cancer research just in the US was over $445 million that same year. The only reason that malaria, snail fever, rural sanitation, and a host of other issues are being addressed at all is because of the Gates Foundation.

      • Oh no, how terrible. Bill Gates wants to end malaria

        No, he wants to spread strong IP law on behalf of Big Pharma. If your nation doesn't have it, you can't get vaccinations from the Gates Foundation.

        and give people clean drinking water.

        We'll see. I presume he only wants that because he can profit from it somehow, like nuclear power that he's pushing as an AGW solution even though it won't help.

  • Wasted (Score:3, Insightful)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Wednesday July 13, 2022 @06:23PM (#62700762)

    He is spending money on the front end UI when the backend is horrible. For example, spending money on Alzheimer's diagnostics instead of trying to cure it is really stupid. We don't need a diagnostic for Alzheimer's, there is no cure. At best a diagnostic will only reveal that a person has (or will get) Alzheimer's instead of some other dementia. How is that useful in any way? The other thing is spending money on farming the same old crops with the same old technology is a giant toilet for money. The money should go towards how to generate food/protein. Building disease treatment centers is stupid when if you cured the disease you won't even need the treatment center.

    • We don't need a diagnostic for Alzheimer's, there is no cure. At best a diagnostic will only reveal that a person has (or will get) Alzheimer's instead of some other dementia. How is that useful in any way?

      Earlier detection could lead to new discoveries about the causes. It could also lead to new treatments. You know, basic fucking research.

    • Diagnostics matter, because right now, we try to treat the disease. The later it is caught, the less you can do to slow its progression.

      Is curing it also a goal? You bet. But acting like early diagnosis doesn't matter is pure fucking idiocy. Whoever moderated you up should be kicked in the teeth.
  • This is not a gift to charity, this is moving money from one account to another account. He gets huge credit for something that is basically three keystrokes by his accountant. And gives him a nice tax advantage, too.
    • OK, so you're saying that no money goes to benefit anyone else other than Bill Gates?
      Mind sending me a link to back yourself up here?

  • by dschnur ( 61074 ) on Wednesday July 13, 2022 @06:43PM (#62700834)
    Here's a *tiny* fraction of the silliness:

    $4.8 Billion - DOD duplicating computer systems
    $100,000,000 on a harbor and airport for a town with 75 people in it.
    $2,000,000 for an intern program that only hired 1 intern.
    $16,400,000 paying for food stamps for dead people.
    $8,500,000 for Bio Fuel @ only $424.00/gal
    $12,000,000 for DOD Bio Fuel "Going Green" project @ $27.00/gal ...and more
    $Billions and Billions on Department of Education with only 65-70% actually going to classrooms.
    $45,000,000 for cameras in Chicago which were destroyed right away by weather.

    The rest of this list is way to long for here, but you get the point.
    • $8,500,000 for Bio Fuel @ only $424.00/gal
      $12,000,000 for DOD Bio Fuel "Going Green" project @ $27.00/gal ...and more

      150% more money for a 94% reduction in price? That's a bargain! How often is DoD that effective?

  • Bill Gates singled out the Supreme Court's overturning of Roe v. Wade as "a huge setback for gender equality, for women's health, and for overall human progress." "The potential for even further regression is scary," he added. "It will put lives at risk for women, people of color, and anyone living on the margins."

    The fact he'd single out that one ruling (which, BTW, is irrelevant to the entire world EXCEPT for the USA) shows he's funding a personal agenda made of his opinions.

    All of the people acting like

    • I think you are completely ignoring the fact the the supreme's just reversed a 50 year old precedent. If a 50 year old ruling that has withstood multiple appeals over the decades is easily tossed aside, what is next. The only group that should feel safe are the inter-racial marriages. Well because Thomas has one. Although who knows, maybe he wants an annulment.
      • Yeah, because uncritically upholding prior decisions is the most important thing the Court can do. That's why Dredd Scott still stands, Brown vs the Board of Education was decided in favor of the Board, and Loving vs. Virginia (which you mentioned) was decided for Virginia, which is why Thomas is still single.
        • Normally if the court reverses it is because times changed and the courts change with them, although usually decades later. Here the court changed on something that the public is generally for (>50%) and reversed a decision that had born multiple attempts at not even full reversals. History is going to look very unfavorably on this court and Roberts knows it. Trumpers should be delighted though, they achieved thru the courts what they wanted. Congrats to moving the US back to the 50's. But careful what y
          • So the duty of the court is to gauge the mood of society and rule based on public opinion?
            • The duty of the court is to interpret the law. Precedent means that should not change on a whim. What the court just demonstrated is that they will change the interpretation on a whim. I'll ask you specifically, what changed to reverse a 50 year old interpretation? With specificity, and the answer should not be new justices. Because that would mean the new justices were making law not interpreting it. And as we all know, conservatives abhor courts that make law. Right?
    • by cusco ( 717999 )

      What the Supremes essentially said is that there is no right to privacy, since that was the concept that Roe v Wade was settled on. If you don't think that's a big deal then I don't know what would be.

      • What the Supremes essentially said is that there is no right to privacy, since that was the concept that Roe v Wade was settled on. If you don't think that's a big deal then I don't know what would be.

        Well, there is a prescribed way to instantiate privacy nationally....add it as a constitutional amendment.

      • There *is* no Constitutionally enumerated right to privacy. Privacy isn't mentioned anyway as a natural/God given right for the government to uphold.

        Privacy has always been only legally upheld as a conditional right "by extension" of having other rights. (EG. Anyone is allowed to photograph you if you're out in public, period. If you're in your home and someone sticks a camera up to your windows (trespassing on your property to do so) and takes photos of you inside your place? Now you have some legal prote

      • No, they said that giving the federal government the ability to legally rule on abortion in states via "privacy" was a weak interpretation. Go read the ruling. It's not terribly confusing, goes into detail on the process of the decision. It's readily available online, the copy I read even had NY Times intrusions fronting what they thought. The only parts I didn't really understand clearly were references to earlier cases, and I would imagine if I had spent more time, I'd have been able to read them as well.
  • by biggaijin ( 126513 ) on Wednesday July 13, 2022 @06:53PM (#62700850)

    We all deserve to be compensated for the anguish and frustration caused by blue screens in the past and for the wasted time and frustration caused by unanticipated Windows updates.

  • by Locutus ( 9039 ) on Wednesday July 13, 2022 @06:55PM (#62700856)
    when ever there are financial hardships open source software starts getting looked at. And when open source software like Linux starts getting looked at, Microsoft and Bill Gates start chipping in. But it's all about the kids, the girls and how politics get in the way right?

    I hardly ever hear much about politics are robotics build sessions or meetings. Nor at maker space builds of other types of things.
    Always here about money needed for licenses for this that and the other things though.

    Go figure, here comes Bill Gates like a shining armored knight ready to save us with Microsoft software. oh boy, thankyou sir may I have another?

    LoB
  • Polarization (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Shaitan ( 22585 ) on Thursday July 14, 2022 @02:07AM (#62701544)

    ""Polarization is forcing us to look backwards and fight again for basic human rights, social justice, and democratic norms." While achieving gender equality has long been one of the foundation's primary investment areas, in his essay, Bill Gates singled out the Supreme Court's overturning of Roe v. Wade as "a huge setback for gender equality, for women's health, and for overall human progress." "The potential for even further regression is scary," he added. "It will put lives at risk for women, people of color, and anyone living on the margins.""

    So 'polarization' shifting things back to the middle is what is preventing his polar position from dominating?

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It's not bringing things back towards the middle, unless you consider that loss of bodily autonomy, privacy and access to healthcare somehow balances out the imaginary scales where social justice and trans people are tilting them the other way.

      You can't have half a right, you can't half control your own body. The US certainly tried it for decades, but in reality there is no middle ground, and there are no scales to be tipped. You either accept other people have rights and may exercise them in ways you don't

      • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

        "You can't have half a right, you can't half control your own body."

        I've never followed this talking point. Abortion isn't about the woman's body it is about whether or not you have the right to kill a child if you are its guardian. The woman isn't the one who dies and the procedure is to kill the child not treat the woman. The child doesn't have the mother's DNA and is not a body part. Some religion may claim otherwise but modern science is straightforward, there is no magic blessing or even a growth devel

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          The issue is that what you think is a human being is not to many people.

          • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

            There is no objective basis for that position. As a rather polarized and outspoken political agent yourself we both know you'd have raised it if there were. A very solid indication that you are on the wrong side of history is when your argument depends on dehumanizing someone, especially someone who isn't in a position to defend themselves, to make terminating their life acceptable. That is why the arguments of anti-life proponents are either attacks on their opposition or rare edge cases (most of them arti

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              My view is based on science.

              If you go back 200,000 generations, your direct paternal ancestor was a fish. Somewhere between him and you, human beings evolved. There was no first human, it was a gradual process.

              People eat fish without a second thought. Murdering a person is a serious crime that most people would recoil at. There wasn't a specific ancestor of yours who was the first to be due human rights, who wasn't food. It was a gradual process.

              It's the same with pregnancy. There is no definite point where

              • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

                There is no evolutionary process occurring between fertilized egg and adult human just as there is none occurring between a fertilized fish egg and the adult fish. If you eat a fertilized chicken egg, you are eating a chicken. If you eat a fertilized fish egg, you are eating a fish. To say fertilized X egg is simply to be more specific about what sort of X you are referring to. Barring some sort of environmental failure disrupting the process an omnipotent cell containing viable DNA is a complete lifeform a

        • "You can't have half a right, you can't half control your own body."

          I've never followed this talking point. Abortion isn't about the woman's body

          See, to you that's true. But to other people, the woman's body is relevant and important, and the woman has rights.

  • A few candidates winning in key races could do more for easing the suffering of the entire world than $20 billion dollars could ever do.

  • Want to stem human suffering? Pour 20 billion into real, useful AI. Get us that, and we have solutions to all the solvable problems instead of attacking them piecemeal with slow, fumbling human reason.

    He could have started that process 30 yesrs ago. And who knows where we'd be now if he hadndone so?

  • "The political divide limits our political capacity for dialogue, compromise, and cooperation and thwarts the bold leadership required both domestically and internationally to tackle these threats,"

    No, you're just losing for the first time and wishing that people would do what you want instead of having to convince them your ideas are any good. You know, through dialog, compromise and cooperation. Maybe the problem isn't the political divide, maybe it's that you're just bad at politics. Maybe it's that

  • Gates controls the foundation and directs its investments to profit him directly.

    The headline should read "Bill Gates transfers $20 Billion from one hand to the other To Stem 'Significant Taxation'".

  • This is, at best, only going to get you to the 8th circle.
    Which while better than a vast majority of CEOs but not something to be proud of.
  • I've experienced "significant suffering" due to COVID e.g. having to listen to blowhards bleat incessantly about it and having supply chains disrupted unnecessarily. I'll need two million dollars compensation. Better make that four million to adjust for inflation. Oh, and I'll need another million for a stupid regulatory taxation recovery fee.

  • I really don't care how you made it. It's what you're doing with it now that's the important thing.

I had the rare misfortune of being one of the first people to try and implement a PL/1 compiler. -- T. Cheatham

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