Article in Fortune by Jake Angelo:
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/peter-thiel-actively-convincing-billionaires-174212328.html
Article in Fortune by Jake Angelo:
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/peter-thiel-actively-convincing-billionaires-174212328.html
The article described Thiel attempting to persuade people to leave the pledge, but not that he has actually succeeded.
This seems like the original article that is being quoted from. The quoted comments seem pretty bleak:
otoh, this is funny:
Am I missing something or does this argument make no sense? As far as I can tell, Musk can easily fulfill his giving pledge by giving to his preferred not-left-wing nonprofits without deferring to Bill Gates.
I mean... if I were a conservative billionaire, I would be extremely wary about misuse and subversion of the principles that started some foundations (Mellon is the most egregious, but also Rockefeller, Ford, MacArthur...) and a few months ago we had in this very forum a discussion, if memory serves, of the terrible philanthropic choices of MacKenzie Scott. While I obviously think it is desirable for billionaires to spend money on effective charity giving, I also feel there's a reasonable case to be made for that money that would conventionally be routed into philanthropy to do more good if directed toward innovation: sometimes through philanthropy to individuals and early projects, sometimes through investment in companies capable of creating major breakthroughs.
Seems like a great reason for donors to give during their own lifetimes instead of setting up a long-term foundation.
I couldn't find this discussion, would you mind pointing me to it?
Just made a search and, rather embarrassingly, I couldn't find an actual long discussion in the forum (memory didn't serve as well as I had thought). I think I conflated the 2 comments of Ian Turner and Jason on this topic (in the forum post The ugly sides of two approaches to charity by Julia Wise from January 13th 2025) with EA-focused criticisms of MacKenzie Scott's donations from this reddit thread, starting from PEEFsmash's post:
I interpreted this as the challenge of setting up a foundation with one purpose in mind, and then the people you hire executing something different because of the values they bring to the table. In general, I'd guess that people who work in philanthropic spaces skew left-wing, and so whatever mandate you set will end up skewing more left-wing than you intend (if you yourself are not left-wing).
He was talking about counterfactuals here. I think he's attempting to convince a lot of right wing billionaires that if they donate to GHD charities for instance than this will cause Bill Gates to redirect some of his GHD money towards left wing nonprofits.
This interpretation is not true. Thiel was talking specifically about money going to Gates in the event of Musk dying:
I think this would only make sense if Musk had specifically willed his pledge money to the gates foundation?
Huh, thanks for letting me know.
My takeaways from reading the NYT article:
Another, less plausible explanation for the slow-down in Giving Pledge sign-ups might be the growth of Founders Pledge in recent years. Some people who would have signed the Giving Pledge in the past might now sign the Founders Pledge instead.[1] Anecdotal evidence from my own country supports this hypothesis: no person has signed Giving, but four billionaires / UHNWIs have signed Founders.
Giving and Founders are not perfect substitutes; Founders also targets early-stage founders who are not yet (ultra) wealthy.)