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The Bill Gates Problem

Reckoning with the Myth of the Good Billionaire

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The Bill Gates Problem

Written by: Tim Schwab
Narrated by: Tim Schwab
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This program is read by the author.

New York Times Editors' Choice

A powerful investigation of Bill Gates and the Gates Foundation, showing how he uses philanthropy to exercise enormous political power without accountability

Through his vaunted philanthropy, Bill Gates transformed himself from a tech villain into one of the most admired people on the planet. Even as divorce proceedings and allegations of misconduct have recently tarnished his public image, the beneficence of the Gates Foundation, celebrated for spending billions to save lives around the globe, is taken as a given. But as Tim Schwab shows in this fearless investigation, Gates is still exactly who he was at Microsoft: a bully and monopolist, convinced of his own righteousness and intent on imposing his ideas, his solutions, and his leadership on everyone else. At the core, he is not a selfless philanthropist but a power broker, a clever engineer who has innovated a way to turn extreme wealth into immense political influence—and who has made us believe we should applaud his acquisition of power, not challenge it.

Piercing the blinding halo that has for too long shielded the world’s most powerful (and most secretive) charitable organization from public scrutiny, The Bill Gates Problem shows how Gates’s billions have purchased a stunning level of control over public policy, private markets, scientific research, and the news media. Whether he is pushing new educational standards in America, health reforms in India, global vaccine policy during the pandemic, or Western industrialized agriculture throughout Africa, Gates’s heady social experimentation has shown itself to be not only undemocratic, but also ineffective. In many places, Bill Gates is hurting the very people he intends to help.

No less than dark-money campaign contributions or big-business political lobbying, Bill Gates’s philanthropic empire needs to be seen as a problem of money in politics. It is a dangerous model of unconstrained power that threatens democracy and demands our attention.

A Macmillan Audio production from Metropolitan Books.

©2023 Tim Schwab (P)2023 Macmillan Audio
Marketing & Sales Philanthropy & Charity Public Policy Small Business & Entrepreneurship Business Divorce
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What the critics say

“In Stage One of the neoliberal revolution, we cut taxes, encouraged tech monopolies, deregulated everything, and built up a set of billionaires like the world had never seen before. Stage Two will come when we learn to love all these changes—because those billionaires are fine people doing good in our sadly privatized world. Thanks to Tim Schwab’s devastating account of the Gates Foundation, however, that day of rationalization may never arrive. Read it and learn the brutal truth: there is nothing altruistic about the world’s favorite billionaire.”Thomas Frank, author of What's the Matter with Kansas

“Tim Schwab has written the definitive critique of Bill Gates as bully-philanthropist. Schwab uses the case of Gates to tell a compelling and carefully researched story that raises disturbing questions about the lack of accountability of power-philanthropy.”Robert Kuttner, co-founder and co-editor, The American Prospect

“This is not the story of one bad man, so much as a demonstration of the inability for anyone—no matter how smart or rich—to solve the world’s problems from the top down with money and technology. As this well-argued and immensely engaging account of Bill Gates’s forays into world-saving by fiat make clear, the problem with Big Philanthropy is the Big Hubris that comes along with it.”Douglas Rushkoff, author of Survival of the Richest

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long form opinion piece

I was very excited to listen to this book, hoping that it would be as evidence based as RFK's real Anthony Fauci. I was expecting a brutal take down with receipts. However, the author never really managed to do that without inserting his own political bent on morality or best practices. Schwab clearly has strong leanings towards Socialist Marxist doctrines and cites agreement with woke advocates as validation for his opinions. while it is clear that Bill Gates manipulates power structures to his own ends, the book never gets beyond finger wagging. There is no smoking gun. Almost every accusation is one that I already understood from news columns. Even Schwabs attempts to villianize Gates through comparison are flat. like when he compares Gates land ownership to 3 of the smallest countries in the world. Or when Schwab suggests that "social distancing" was an affirmed factor for minimizing pandemic effects without evidence. Schwab seemingly was a proponent of pandemic measures, but never scrutinized Gates as hard as he could have. Suggesting that he either mostly agreed with Gates involvement with the WHO or that he only wishes to scrutinize activities that he disagrees with. the chapters on race are insufferably woke, and never come anywhere close to finding real fault with Gates. just woke suggestion from a very low bar. The book does a good job of characterizing the absolute arrogance of Bill Gates. Unfortunately, it is overshadowed by the authors.

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