Steve Jobs refused to talk philanthropy with biographer

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  • Reply 81 of 102
    wizard69wizard69 Posts: 13,377member
    If you donant to an organization silently it is expected that you will actually remain silent. Revealing these sorts of donations can have a negative effect on many charities. Mainly the problem is public perception, if people think an organization has a big time patron they will have a tendency to donate to alternative charities. This can be very bad especially if that big time donor was financing a special project.







    Quote:
    Originally Posted by igxqrrl View Post


    In principle I agree with the folks saying that it's nobody's business who Steve Jobs donates his money to.



    Except that... He *sought out* a biographer to write the story of his life. The story includes intimate details about his relationship with his family, his drug use, his business successes and failures, his moral foibles.. honestly his views on philanthropy seem pretty tame compared to what he revealed to Isaacson.



    So yes, his charitable donations are his own business. Just as his relationship with his first daughter is his own business. But it is incongruous for him to make 98% of his own business public record, but then to keep that little tidbit private.



  • Reply 82 of 102
    elrothelroth Posts: 1,201member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by k2director View Post


    Personally I think Jobs didn't like the idea of charity....ie simply giving away something valuable without it being earned. It simply went against his world view. I think he was absolutely fine with helping people, but was uncomfortable with the conventional idea of simply giving away money. I think he much rather would have created new companies and products that would help people help themselves, rather than just handing over money, which probably seemed crass to him and non-renewable. I think he had far more faith in capitalism to do good than conventional charity.



    So do I. Giving money away like Gates and Buffet do is not the best use of that money. It creates short-term benefits but not long-term, sustainable ones. And while it does benefit some needy people, it also benefits the slick do-nothing types that often run and work for philanthropic organizations, which is an ugly side effect.



    You're being an idiot here. You know nothing about jobs' view of charity, or capitalism, or anything else. You think this and you think that, but you know nothing. You're just inserting your politics, and trying to tell us that Jobs believed the same thing.



    You also haven't researched what Gates' foundation has done - their projects are for long-term, sustainable help in curing diseases, stopping hunger, increasing education, etc. You really live in a fantasy world.
  • Reply 83 of 102
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by boeyc15 View Post


    Please read this and tell us how the money could have better spent to solve these problems.



    http://www.gatesfoundation.org/Pages/home.aspx



    BTW have you volunteered your services to Bill etc so you can tell him how to do it better?



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by stelligent View Post


    You have so much to learn if you believe eradicating deadly and debilitating diseases, supporting research in science, education and socioeconomics, and building schools and infrastructure in underdeveloped regions have short term benefits. Without knowing you, I'm quite certain this is the most mistaken statement of your entire life.





    You both speak to the same issue, so I'll answer together. I've noticed that a lot of people who support Big Philanthropy, like they support Big Government, value the intent of the philanthropic act as much as they value the end results of that act. When I talk to people about hugely wasteful and destructive government programs (like welfare, or school bussing, etc. etc. etc.) I've heard people say "at least they're trying", as if hugely failing in the endeavor is acceptable because the government was at least "trying" to help.



    And that's why I think people like you ultimately value what Bill Gates and his ilk do. Unfortunately, people don't actually bother to measure their true impact on creating a better world, because they're simply satisfied that the intent was there and that money was spent. It's like the old pagan ritual of sacrificing a lamb on the alter while asking for a good crop. You really have no idea if the crop will be good or not, but by making the sacrifice, you've done all that you can do.



    Regarding Gates efforts, here's what I think on a case-by-case basis:



    MEDICINE

    Ending malaria and polio seem incredibly misguided to me, and Gates' billions will go down the drain like previous billions of dollars in foreign aid spent on Africa and other third world ditches. Really, why is he investing his effort in the shit-hole third world, where even if he cured malaria and polio, we'd still have incredibly backward societies that can't take care of their people? Those societies aren't backwards because they suffer from malaria and polio, they're backwards and dysfunctional largely for cultural reasons....ie, attitudes towards human rights, towards strongmen/leaders, towards religion, towards the value of the individual and most importantly, respect for a true free market (most shithole third world countries are practitioners of command-and-control socialism). The Western world had polio and malaria and a lot of other diseases, and they solved them how? Not by one of the world's richest men giving them cures, like mana from heaven. It was the energy and industry and ingenuity of Western society that solved those problems, and was able to solve countless others that even the richest men in the world couldn't afford to solve by throwing their money around. Honestly, you solve polio and malaria in the third world, and you'll simply have more people waiting to be killed off by famine or civil war or some other tragedy. I'd be more impressed if Gates were trying to invent a time machine to reach back through time and haul the British Empire back to the present day. People in Africa were better off under the British than they have been since the British left.





    EDUCATION

    Please. What is the Bill Gates Foundation going to do about the pathetic state of public education? Public education isn't working precisely because it's free for everybody, and is required to be given to everybody, whether they take it seriously or not. Can you imagine how crappy a phone, a car, a house, a TV, etc. would be if it had to be free for everyone, and where people that abused/neglected the free product they were given could always get another free replacement, no questions asked? Would any of you want a product like that? Probably not, but that's what public education has become. A free product that's designed for the lowest common denominator, and people wonder why it doesn't have good results, despite throwing more and more money at the problem. Free public education worked earlier in our society because people could remember what it was like when they didn't have access to education that directly led to them acquiring useful skills that led to economic growth, and so they valued what was suddenly given freely to them and used the opportunity wisely. It took a few generations for that "memory" to wear off, to become muted, and now, free education is taken for granted. That's why you see more and more education watered down by elective courses that don't produce economically useful learning for most kids. It's also why more and more colleges are coming up with economically useless majors like "Peace and Conflict Studies" and "African American Studies" and "Communications", but graduating fewer and fewer kids that can think critically, write/speak clearly, and that are actually prepared to start working in a job that requires real skills, and creates real economic growth.



    P.S. If Gates really wanted to haul kids out of poverty through education, he would create a business of boarding schools that get kids out of their deadbeat neighborhoods and households from an early age, that teach technical subjects that have economic value in the real world (along with English and History), and that take a 10-20 % cut of all the kids' earnings for the first 20-30 years of their working lives (to repay the earlier investment made in the kids). That creates true motivation on everyone's part--the business is motivated to mint competent people that can earn good livings, and the kids are motivated to earn good livings that leave plenty of money left over for them. The kids also emerge with an appreciation of how acquiring hard-to-come-by skills really affects their lot in life, which they then pass on to their own families.





    SCIENCE

    Again, Bill Gates' freebie giveaways to science research are not going to come close to having the impact on society that scientific developments by the private sector have. I look at all the science/technology in my house, at my office, and at my doctor's office, and I don't see much that came through philanthropic munificence. If there's something to be invented, it's far more likely to be invented by people pursuing good old fashion profit, and operating under the limits of a for-profit enterprise.





    So that's what I think of the stuff that Bill Gates and Warren Buffet are going to do with their money. In other words: waste it, for the most part. Their money will get spent. It will have short term impact that looks good in press releases, but do very very little that's lasting. If Bill and Warren and their ilk were wise (they're clearly smart, but I don't think they're wise), they would fund a ton of new for-profit businesses that, when successful, would actually increase their wealth, not water it down. But of course, increasing their wealth would not look good for the newspapers and liberal masses whining about 1-percenters.
  • Reply 84 of 102
    wizard69wizard69 Posts: 13,377member
    It is totally asinine to imply that Jobs was given his wealth. If anything he is a prime example of a person starting out from zero and becoming an American success story.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by drobforever View Post


    I'm surprised by how many people buy into this idea. "It's my money, I earned it." It's pretty sad when people are so ungrateful of what they've been given by the society (and God if you believe that) in order to be able to "earn it".



    You sir need to engage in a little self analyse. There is nothing I've seen that indicates that Steve was ungrateful. As for society we gave him nothing that was even remotely related to his success.

    Quote:

    Health, rule of law, free mkt (not free to maintain), everyone around you baring some form of costs when you compete with them, luck, relationships, etc. Nothing is "fully earned" by yourself without the above.



    You are very sick! Using your logic everyone should enjoy the same success that Steve enjoyed. Rather one has to look at what drove him internally as factors in his success.
  • Reply 85 of 102
    wizard69wizard69 Posts: 13,377member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Fake_William_Shatner View Post


    My guess is Steve wanted to do good -- not set up another PUBLICITY stunt philanthropy.



    He also had a wife that could handle that effectively. Beyond that little good comes from making donations public, unless such donations are there to engage the public.

    Quote:

    Personally I think that Charities have gotten out of hand -- and they don't solve a damn thing.



    Well this I agree with. As ive gotten older I'm much more careful with respect to personal donations. Many charities these days actually have a negative impact on society, drain money to finance worthless causes.

    Quote:

    I'd much rather have the wealth spread out, than to have kids making bake sales so that they can beg for book money.



    This on the other hand is simply ignorant. You can't spread wealth out because there are to many people out there that can't effectively do anything constructive with it.



    As to bake sales there is more than simple charity going on there. It is called education, there are multiple lessons for children to learn in activities like bake sales. It certainly isn't begging for book money as you seem to think.

    Quote:

    If the Philanthropist/ King doesn't like you -- he won't shower you with his lordly beneficence.



    Actually that is an extremely important part of philanthropy. Like it or not you have to have somebody making decisions with respect to a charities benefit to society. As you note above many do more harm than good. Sadly a lot of people have lost control over where their donations go, this has resulted in a lot of donation going down the drain so to speak. The United Way is a prime example of charity done wrong.

    Quote:

    I really want a nation that can decide it's priorities and drive solutions -- not a nation that solves flood damage by holding a church pot-luck.



    Well this is demonstrating a complete misunderstanding of reality. First do you really expect public money to go to rebuilding a church? Second the whole point of a church is fellowship and mutual support. Third you never want to be in a situation where you depend upon one source for good.

    Quote:

    The fact that so many people are so misty eyed about yet another "charity" is what is so messed up with our psychology. There aren't any problems we cannot fix as a nation if we have the will to do it.



    This is a bit twisted because you are right about the misty eyed. In general people should be very distrustful of charities. Especially those that spring up suddenly.



    However your promotion of big government is idiotic. Big government can not fix everything and it can seldom do so cost effectively. Even wasteful charities do more good epithet ever dollar they collect than the government ever has a chance of doing. Unfortunately many government organizations are built around managers that see or measure their success by growing their organization not by doing good through that organization.
  • Reply 86 of 102
    conradjoeconradjoe Posts: 1,887member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by NoodlesNoodlemann View Post


    If he had gone around making a big deal about his charitable giving, the same people would be whining that he was doing it for the publicity.



    That's not FAIR!
  • Reply 87 of 102
    Walter has several mistakes in the book but I'll chalk that up to his rush to getting it out and not cross-referencing more.



    There are also major gaps in how the Apple/NeXT merger came together. That in itself could cover an entire book.
  • Reply 88 of 102
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by elroth View Post


    You're being an idiot here. You know nothing about jobs' view of charity, or capitalism, or anything else. You think this and you think that, but you know nothing. You're just inserting your politics, and trying to tell us that Jobs believed the same thing.



    You also haven't researched what Gates' foundation has done - their projects are for long-term, sustainable help in curing diseases, stopping hunger, increasing education, etc. You really live in a fantasy world.



    Thanks for hurling personal insults in what was otherwise a normal forum conversation!



    In light of that, you RETARD, I'd like to point out that this entire thread is conjecture....ie, people expressing their opinions and guesses about Jobs' view on philanthropy. Nobody here claims to have known him. Nobody claims to know what he thought lately on the matter....



    I certainly didn't claim that. I said "Personally I think..." which is a pretty good signal that I'm not putting words in the guy's mouth, or saying with certainty that he thinks X or Y. I threw my opinion in like everyone else. I think the real problem is that you didn't like my opinion (a faith in capitalism over philanthropy), and so you attacked me, saying that I didn't know Jobs (although you couldn't know that) and offering no evidence that my opinion was wrong, or that you knew Jobs any better.



    You've got a puny little intolerant mind. Perhaps you're one of those do-nothing types that cling to big, bloated philanthropies, which almost always have lower standards for productivity and efficiency than for-profit companies. A little insecure in your cushy "job" this holiday season?
  • Reply 89 of 102
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by t2af View Post


    you can join the dots after remembering his public image, and the mounting public opinion.:




    Connect the dots ... or speculate .... We are all allowed speculate.



    One thing is 100% certain - neither you nor I know his initial motive for starting his donations. But if we are connecting dots, we can conclude it does not take nearly the amount of dollars or time he has given to his foundation to build his image. He did not have to quit Microsoft to dedicate most of his time to confronting TB, malaria, polio, education ... He did not have to hire some of the most accomplished scientists in the world to manage dispersion of funds to various labs around the world. His initial motives don't matter. His ongoing actions do. And boy, do they matter.
  • Reply 90 of 102
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by wizard69 View Post


    Sarcasm? You ought to leave a hint if that is your goal. Rather you painted yourself as a jerk and simpleton.



    The rolling eyes (and previously sarcasm punctuation) is the hint.
  • Reply 91 of 102
    clemynxclemynx Posts: 1,552member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by fecklesstechguy View Post


    Neither one of these comments are based in reality or fact. Since Jobs preferred to donate anonymously there is no way either of you could know what he in fact did or did not donate, or what charities, if any, he supported. Period. The old "everyone knows that" cop-out is just plain stupid, or as you so blythely put it: "big bullshit". You don't know, you can't know and yet you are willing to pass judgement in blind ignorance.



    The second quote is truly "pretty straight forward, really." Wrong in such fundamental ways as to be completely out in left field playing soccer on a baseball field. And based on these wrong-headed comments - Steve Jobs is dickish because he didn't care if macinthe408 knew all about every penny he gave to every charity. Nice.



    When people donate for charity they don't spend all their time being anonymous, because that's not the point of charity. If someone gets publicity for doing charity and if it encourages them to do more then it's good, because what's important is that they donated. I prefer someone donating and getting a lot of attention than someone not donating and being treated like an anonymous. When someone donates, people get to know. Because if you want to do something, when you have all that money, you find ways to spend your money in a good way.
  • Reply 92 of 102
    clemynxclemynx Posts: 1,552member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by k2director View Post


    Thanks for hurling personal insults in what was otherwise a normal forum conversation!



    In light of that, you RETARD, I'd like to point out that this entire thread is conjecture....ie, people expressing their opinions and guesses about Jobs' view on philanthropy. Nobody here claims to have known him. Nobody claims to know what he thought lately on the matter....



    I certainly didn't claim that. I said "Personally I think..." which is a pretty good signal that I'm not putting words in the guy's mouth, or saying with certainty that he thinks X or Y. I threw my opinion in like everyone else. I think the real problem is that you didn't like my opinion (a faith in capitalism over philanthropy), and so you attacked me, saying that I didn't know Jobs (although you couldn't know that) and offering no evidence that my opinion was wrong, or that you knew Jobs any better.



    You've got a puny little intolerant mind. Perhaps you're one of those do-nothing types that cling to big, bloated philanthropies, which almost always have lower standards for productivity and efficiency than for-profit companies. A little insecure in your cushy "job" this holiday season?



    If you have faith in capitalism we can see how well that worked in the us, where everyone is rich...
  • Reply 93 of 102
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by nkhm View Post


    No, the exact opposite.



    A philanthropist doesn't help others for his own fame. True charity is given without personal fanfare.



    There are Buddhist teachings that say pretty much the same thing. Teachings that Jobs likely learned when he was studying said religion/philosophy
  • Reply 94 of 102
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by macinthe408 View Post




    Remember watching the video of Jobs as the Cuprtino City Council meeting in which he introduced the new Apple HQ? Remember one of the councilmembers asking for free Wi-FI? Jobs' response was something to the effect of, "I'm a simple man. We pay taxes. The city should be providing that service if that's what it wants to do."



    it's actually a valid response. Jobs wouldn't want there to be any implication that Apple got the permit ( even if perhaps they shouldn't have) because they agreed to do the free wifi.
  • Reply 95 of 102
    [QUOTE=igxqrrl;2008709

    Except that... He *sought out* a biographer to write the story of his life. [/QUOTE]





    Because he knew he was dying. ANd he had zero reason to believe that folks would stop gathering page hits and issues sales after his death given the evidence of how they acted during his life. This bio was his way of having a word out there. His side of things.



    and it doesn't mean that he has to talk about everything. His right to privacy isn't abolished because of his death, this bio or anything else.
  • Reply 96 of 102
    I know Steve was not a Christian believer but he seemed to follow the words of Jesus Christ about giving. I think these words would be well followed by all who give regardless of religious persuasion.



    ?So when you give to the needy, do not announce it with trumpets, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and on the streets, to be honored by others. Truly I tell you, they have received their reward in full. But when you give to the needy, do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing, so that your giving may be in secret. Then your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you."
  • Reply 97 of 102
    galbigalbi Posts: 968member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Prof. Peabody View Post


    Right, because:



    1) You know him so well personally (I would bet you've never met him)

    2) Absent proof of him giving to charity, you just assume he didn't.



    The truth is that until very recently (last 20 years or so) , and absent a few outliers like Carnegie, it was standard operating procedure for corporations and rich people to donate anonymously. It's only recently that we have them insisting on getting advertising for their efforts or naming the stadium after them etc. If you have to crow about it, it isn't charity at all. It's you making a big deal about what a charitable person you are.



    The same logic applies to you pal.



    I have PROOF.



    Steve Jobs never cared about charities in the first place.



    It was Tim Cook who started the recent charity program.



    I know, truth is hard to swallow as a fanboy like yourself.



    Dont get too emotion pal. Its only the internet.





    Quote:

    Tim Cook is also taking interest in charity has which, as you all may or not know, Steve Jobs never did in his time.



    http://www.redmondpie.com/the-struct...obs-departure/



    It doesnt matter whether I've met the guy in person or not. Quite frankly, I could care less. Besides, he is dead anyway.
  • Reply 98 of 102
    bwikbwik Posts: 565member
    A lot of nonprofits are extremely inefficient. Some serve mainly to provide cushy jobs for their own workers.



    It is not certain that donating your money to charity is "good" compared to other things an extremely talented person like Jobs might do with his time and money. Giving money to charity doesn't automatically help ANYBODY.



    Jobs helped A LOT OF PEOPLE. Probably more than United Way ever has, or ever will. Just as an example. United Way is great. But, we are not all inferior to the charity sector in terms of helping people.



    A lot of f**ing people, including poor people, were helped by Apple, GUI, and will be helped by Apple. And they will enthusiastically mention that. That is why I kind of feel this Jobs / charity santimony has always been a bit of a crock.
  • Reply 99 of 102
    Steve was always very frank about his ideals. Had he hated philanthropy he'd probably have said so to Isaacson. Instead he chose to remain silent about the subject.
  • Reply 100 of 102
    After reading the bio I get the impression philanthropy is something Steve wanted to do perfect, so he put it off, just like how he had very little furniture in his house. I suppose his wife and family will sort it out. (Not saying he didn't donate lots anyway).
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