• @audaxdreik@pawb.social
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    541 day ago

    The problem is that the theft begins by simply becoming a billionaire in the first place. You don’t get to be one by playing nice and not exploiting a lot of people and rules along the way. Sure the government could be blamed some for not having enough regulations in place to prevent/stop that, but capitalism ensures that businesses exploit any available loophole possible to maximize profit, otherwise you’re a bad business.

    While I can respect a lot of those philanthropic efforts, those should not be his decisions alone to make. That money should’ve been paid into taxes and distributed in agreed upon ways. $7 Billion dollars to Africa is just great, but it could do a lot of help here, too. I have no issues with sending $7B to Africa, but that sure seems like something the people should agree upon first, through some sort of national aid, and not as an effort to spare the conscience of an aging billionaire.

    Fuck all billionaires. Every. Last. One. Forever.

    • @Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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      301 day ago

      The problem is that the theft begins by simply becoming a billionaire in the first place.

      That’s why that was my first sentence!

      • @audaxdreik@pawb.social
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        111 day ago

        The problem is that billionaires should not exist but come on.

        Was your first point. I expanded on it by calling out that it is specifically theft and then going further to illustrate that he was using that theft to make personal choices about how that money should be spent, compounding the reasons I find this distasteful.

        Forgiving it simply because it’s philanthropy plays exactly into their narrative. Don’t buy it! Don’t defend billionaires to any extent.

        • @desktop_user@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          -222 hours ago

          theft implies violating laws, which few billionaires explicitly do, because other billionaires made the laws and intentionally provide legal methods to extract wealth from the poor.

          • @ferrule@sh.itjust.works
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            21 hour ago

            while i don’t think it should be a moral issue, i think we need to stop trying to make this a fair argument out of some desire to be on some high ground here. what you described is fucked up and we should give them no latitude. it is theft even if they made the laws. the staggering level of difference in energy put forth versus compensation is ridiculous. When someone makes more in an hour than their least paid employee will gross over their entire lifetime…there should be no justification for the billionaire’s existence.

    • @Chastity2323@midwest.social
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      1 day ago

      While I can respect a lot of those philanthropic efforts, those should not be his decisions alone to make. That money should’ve been paid into taxes and distributed in agreed upon ways.

      As a capitalist, all of his solutions are capitalist. His efforts to slow climate change are primarily technological, with a focus on unproven horseshit like carbon capture rather than proven improvements like better, less car centric urban planning and reducing meat intake. He would never even consider an strategy of economic degrowth to fight climate change even though available evidence shows that that is exactly what we need.

      • @arrow74@lemm.ee
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        1 day ago

        I think we’re well past the chance of urban designing our way out of the climate collapse.

        We need to make major changes in our consumption to even make a dent, but I say our best shot is cold fusion and carbon capture. Those are obvious longshots.

        We’ve created a runaway greenhouse gas effect. Even if we cut emissions to 0 temperatures will continue to climb.

        Obviously cutting emissions to 0 would give us more time to fix this mess though

        • @Chastity2323@midwest.social
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          31 day ago

          We need to make major changes in our consumption to even make a dent, but I say our best shot is cold fusion and carbon capture. Those are obvious longshots.

          I would argue for extensive rewilding as an alternative

    • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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      51 day ago

      Still the wrong conversation. Yes he was appropriately villainized for anticompetitive behavior running Microsoft, accumulating excessive wealth at the expense of many others, but come on ……

      I have no issues with sending $7B to Africa, but that sure seems like something the people should agree upon first,

      Just no. His philanthropy, his wealth. His choice.

      But I’m with you on inadequate taxation for the wealthy, and that we have a responsibility as a country to help the less privileged of humanity, and should not just assume someone’s personal largesse.

        • @Soulg@ani.social
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          723 hours ago

          It is his wealth. We don’t have to like it, but that’s how the current system works.

          • Michael
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            2 hours ago

            The current system needs to be retired. Wealth and power should not be concentrated to the degree that it is.

            The human race is committing suicide needlessly, all because of concepts like “cost” and a system and world order that is out of control.

    • @SkunkWorkz@lemmy.world
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      222 hours ago

      Well now no US tax money is going to Africa, since people voted for Trump. Most Americans would rather see Africans exploited, starve and die than pay a bit more in taxes.