hehe why doesn't his god ..ever TELL him 2 give his software away 4 free :0 ..someone ought 2 tell billy boy ..his pants R on fire LMAO
Bill Gates says he has no use for money… He is doing
‘God’s work’
truther February 28, 2013
Having already given away $28bn, Bill Gates intends to
eradicate polio, with the same drive he brought to Microsoft .
William
Henry “Bill” Gates is a rich man. His estimated wealth, some 65 billion
measured in US dollars, equals the annual GDP of Ecuador, and maybe a bit more
than that of Croatia. By this rather crude criterion, the founder of Microsoft
is worth two Kenyas, three Trinidads and a dozen or so Montenegros. Not bad for
a university dropout.
Gates
is also mortal, although some of his admirers may find that hard to believe,
and as they say, there are no pockets in shrouds. So he is now engaged in the
process of ridding himself of all that money in the hope of extending the lives
of others less fortunate than himself.
“I’m
certainly well taken care of in terms of food and clothes,” he says,
redundantly. “Money has no utility to me beyond a certain point. Its utility is
entirely in building an organisation and getting the resources out to the
poorest in the world.”
That
“certain point” is set a little higher than for the rest of us – Gates owns a
lakeside estate in Washington State worth about $150 million (£94 million) and
boasting a swimming pool equipped with an underwater music system – but one
gets the point. Being rich, even on the cosmic scale attained by Bill Gates, is
no guarantee of an enduring place in history. The projection of the personal
computer into daily life should do the trick for him, but even at the age of 57
he is a restless man and wants something more. The “more” is the eradication of
a disease that has blighted untold numbers of lives: polio.
Later
this month, Gates will deliver the BBC’s Dimbleby Lecture, taking as his theme
the value of the young human being. Every child, he will say, has the right to
a healthy and productive life, and he will explain how technology and
innovation can help towards the attainment of that still-distant goal. Gates
has put his money where his mouth is. He and his wife Melinda have so far given
away $28 billion via their charitable foundation, more than $8 billion of it
to improve global health.
“My
wife and I had a long dialogue about how we were going to take the wealth that
we’re lucky enough to have and give it back in a way that’s most impactful to
the world,” he says. “Both of us worked at Microsoft and saw that if you take
innovation and smart people, the ability to measure what’s working, that you
can pull together some pretty dramatic things.
“We’re
focused on the help of the poorest in the world, which really drives you into
vaccination. You can actually take a disease and get rid of it altogether, like
we are doing with polio.”
This
has been done only once before in humans, with the eradication of smallpox in
the 1970s.
“Polio’s
pretty special because once you get an eradication you no longer have to spend
money on it; it’s just there as a gift for the rest of time.”
One
can see why that appeals to Gates. He has always sought neat, definitive
solutions to things, but as he knows from Microsoft, bugs are resilient things.
The disease is still endemic in Nigeria, Pakistan and Afghanistan, and killing
it off altogether has been likened to squeezing jelly to death. There is
another, sinister obstacle: the propagation by Islamist groups of the belief
that polio vaccination is a front for covert sterilisation and other western
evils. Health workers in Pakistan have paid with their lives for involvement in
the programme.
“It’s
not going to stop us succeeding,” says Gates. “It does force us to sit down
with the Pakistan government to renew their commitments, see what they’re going
to do in security and make changes to protect the women who are doing God’s
work and getting out to these children and delivering the vaccine.”
Gates
does not usually speak in religious terms, and has traditionally danced around
the issue of God. His wife, a Roman Catholic, is less defensive on that topic
but ploughs her own furrow, encouraging contraception when necessary, in
contradiction to teaching from Rome.
“Melinda
and I had been talking about this even before we were married,” he says. “When
I was in my 40s Microsoft was my primary activity. The big switch for me was
when I decided to make the foundation my primary purpose. It was a big change,
although there are more in common with the two things than you might think –
meeting with scientists, taking on tough challenges, people being sceptical
that you can get things done.”
Gates
is still chairman of Microsoft but without his day-to-day attention it has
taken on the appearance of a weary giant, trailing Apple and Google in
innovation. Some have called for Gates’s return to the company full-time to
inject some verve but he isn’t coming back.
“My
full-time work for the rest of my life will be at the foundation,” he says. “I
still work part-time for Microsoft. I’ve had two careers and I’m lucky that
both of them have been quite amazing.
“I
loved my Microsoft: it prepared me for what I’m doing now. In the same way that
I got to see the PC and internet revolutions, now I see child death rates
coming down. I work very long hours and try to learn as much as I can about
these things, but that’s because I enjoy it.”
He
emphasises that the foundation’s effort is part of a global campaign in which
governments must play the lead role.
“The scale of the (foundation’s)
wealth compared to government budgets is actually not that large, and compared
to the scale of some of these problems. But I do feel lucky that substantial
resources are going back to make the world a more habitable place.”
In
1990 some 12 million children under the age of five died. The figure today is
about seven million, or 19,000 per day. According to the United Nations, the
leading causes of death are pneumonia (18 per cent), pre-birth complications
(14 per cent), diarrhoea (11 per cent), complications during birth (nine per
cent) and malaria (seven per cent). For Gates, though, polio is a totem. The
abolition of the disease will be a headline-grabber, spurring countries on to
greater efforts. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation will spend $1.8 billion
in the next six years to accomplish that goal, almost a third of the global
effort.
“All
you need is over 90 per cent of children to have the vaccine drop three times
and the disease stops spreading. The number of cases eventually goes to zero.
When we started, we had over 400,000 children a year being paralysed and we are
now down to under 1,000 cases a year. The great thing about finishing polio is
that we’ll have resources to get going on malaria and measles.”
Gates
is no saint. He could be an intimidating boss at Microsoft and his company
became notorious for using its clout to reinforce its dominance in the market
place, at the expense of smaller rivals. Still, he and his wife are showing
generosity on a staggering scale, a counterblast to the endemic greed of the
Nineties and early Noughties, and they have convinced others that mega-philanthropy
is the way of the future. That wily investor, Warren Buffett, has so far given
away $17.5 billion via the Gates Foundation.
The
children of Bill and Melinda Gates will never know poverty. They may not become
multibillionaires but even the loss to charity of the vast bulk of their
parents’ fortune should leave them with a billion or so each.
Gates
explains: “The vast majority of the wealth, over 95 per cent, goes to the
foundation, which will spend all that money within 20 years after neither of us
are around any more.”
So,
is it about some new-found faith, all this giving?
“It
doesn’t relate to any particular religion; it’s about human dignity and
equality,” he says. “The golden rule that all lives have equal value and we
should treat people as we would like to be treated.”
Source:
telegraph.co.uk
telegraph.co.uk
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