Disaster Lots of Americans are in the global 1%. A tenth of their income could transform the world. - Author explicitly states not to donate goods, only cash because "the people on the ground" know better than you what others need

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If you earn $60,000 a year after tax and you don’t have kids, you’re in the richest 1 percent of the world’s population.

If you have a household income of $130,000 after tax and you’ve got a partner and one kid, you’re also in the richest 1 percent.

Or say you have a household income of $160,000 after tax and you’ve got a partner and two kids. Guess what? You’re also in the 1 percent.

You can find out exactly how rich you are compared to the rest of the world by using this fun calculator. If you find yourself in the global top 1 percent, consider that if you and everyone like you gave away 10 percent of your income, even for just a single year, we could end extreme poverty and prevent the next pandemic.

That’s the top-line finding in a new report from Longview Philanthropy, a nonprofit that advises donors who want to address the biggest challenges facing humanity. The report is meant to inspire excitement about what we can achieve if we give more, at a time when philanthropy has undergone a massive backlash.

“Of course we have many reasons to be cautious of, and even cynical about, philanthropy,” the new report acknowledges. “At its worst, it continues to be used for corporate gain; buying influence over and reliance from recipients, reputation laundering, ‘greenwashing,’ and more. In other words, when the very wealthy do give, it is often in exchange for something else.”

But at its best, the authors argue, philanthropy can step in to tackle huge problems that slow-moving governments or risk-averse markets won’t solve. Bold, strategic generosity can alter the course of history. In fact, it already has.

Take the agronomist Norman Borlaug who, with funding from the Rockefeller Foundation in the 1940s, researched how to improve crop yields and kickstarted the Green Revolution that brought countries back from the brink of famine. Or take the March of Dimes foundation, which funded the development of the polio vaccine in the 1950s thanks to donations from 80 million Americans. Or take the suffragist and biologist Katharine McCormick, whose philanthropy funded the development of the first birth control pill.

We can be similarly ambitious about tackling today’s problems — and you don’t need to be ultra-wealthy to make big contributions.

Here’s what we could achieve if the 1 percent gave 10 percent​

According to the report, if the global 1 percent gave away 10 percent for a year — or, if their wealth outstrips their income, they instead gave 2.5 percent of their net worth — they would generate $3.5 trillion over and above what already goes to charity each year.

And with $3.5 trillion, we could do some pretty amazing things. Specifically, we could:

  • Wipe out extreme poverty for a year and lift millions out of poverty once and for all ($258 billion)
  • Prevent the next pandemic through wastewater screening for new pathogens, lab upgrades, and more ($297 billion)
  • End hunger and malnutrition ($341 billion)
  • Give everyone access to clean water and sanitation ($1.22 trillion)
  • Fund contraception, maternal care, and newborn care for all women for at least five years ($175 billion)
  • Massively suppress or eradicate tuberculosis, malaria, and HIV ($219 billion)
  • Massively suppress or eradicate most neglected tropical diseases ($53 billion)
  • Double global spending on clean energy R&D until 2050 ($662 billion)
  • Quadruple philanthropic funding for nuclear weapons risk reduction ($6 billion)
  • Increase tenfold the funding for AI safety ($1.5 billion)
  • Halve the number of animals suffering on factory farms by 2050, especially by creating alternative proteins ($222 billion)
Of course, the scope of these problems is huge and estimates are necessarily non-precise. But still: Not too shabby!

“Within the first year alone, we could rewrite the future of our planet,” said Natalie Cargill, Longview’s founder and president and one of the report’s authors, in a statement. “Far from being doomed, we are closer than we might realize to a radically fairer and better world.”

Philanthropy alone definitely can’t solve everything​

While it’s great to give generously, it would be foolish to think that spending can magically solve humanity’s most pressing problems on its own.

For one thing, philanthropy is always in a dance with politics. Remember Borlaug, the guy who got cash from the Rockefeller Foundation and figured out how to feed the world? Well, he wouldn’t have been able to kickstart the Green Revolution if he hadn’t worked in partnership with the Mexican government. Political will is an important ingredient.

Likewise, philanthropy has a tendency to fail miserably when the wealthy presume to know what poorer people need. The history of charitable giving is littered with TOMS shoes and water-pumping “PlayPumps” that no one wants. It works much better when donors trust that people on the ground know what they need.

One great way to get around the issue of paternalism is to donate directly to low-income people through an organization like GiveDirectly, which gives out cash transfers. Longview Philanthropy recommends this option.

If you like the sound of what giving 10 percent can do for the world, you can sign the Giving What We Can pledge, which commits members to donating 10 percent of their annual incomes to highly effective charities. Or take a Trial Pledge, which commits members to donating a percentage of their choice to such charities. If 10 percent is too much for you, you can try 5 percent or 1 percent. The most important thing is just to get into the groove of donating. (Pro tip: Set up monthly payments so it’s extremely automatic and hard to avoid doing!)

No, it won’t transform the world all on its own. But giving a little, regularly, can do a lot.
 
These people who type/say shit like this can’t even empathize with white trash living in rural lands. How do they expect rich people to give them free shit?
No, they're saying if you make $60,000 / year you're the 1%. They're calling you rich and asking for money:
If you earn $60,000 a year after tax and you don’t have kids, you’re in the richest 1 percent of the world’s population.
Ain't that rich?
 
And with $3.5 trillion, we could do some pretty amazing things. Specifically, we could:
Oh yay, let us go through the lies and dispell them one by one.

Wipe out extreme poverty for a year and lift millions out of poverty once and for all ($258 billion)
Poverty is a mindset/lifestyle; people enjoy living on the streets and begging as they literally have infinite freedom and can subsist off the kindness of others. You can throw all the money you want at them, they'll still beg and be a nuisance, and people will unfortunately still give to them.

Prevent the next pandemic through wastewater screening for new pathogens, lab upgrades, and more ($297 billion)
Not gonna happen, a lot of the water problems we've heard about in places like Flint Michigan are self-inflicted due to negligence and/or incompetence by the city leaders. I'm not going to say it's like that everywhere, but consider the level of mismanagement and other fuckery in anyone's local, state, and federal level, and you'll realize that government doesn't win by fixing problems, they win by being re-elected, and they do that by promising to fix problems.

End hunger and malnutrition ($341 billion)
This isn't a money issue, it's a people issue. America has a large surplus of what you may call food, and also donate a lot to needy nations. The problem in America is people don't eat right and fail to take care of their children. The problem in other nations is much the same, but a lot of those people are also literally too fucking stupid to learn how to farm properly. The third problem is just insanity and corruption/mismanagement like in Rhodesia and South Africa. Blank checks don't solve problems; violence and force do.

Give everyone access to clean water and sanitation ($1.22 trillion)
See above about corruption. Someone's gonna have to take charge of the system and they'll either be a tyrant and horde it for themselves / charge insane prices, or be illprepared to maintain said system.

Fund contraception, maternal care, and newborn care for all women for at least five years ($175 billion)
I'm not entirely against this; but I'm more for stable families and helping them raise a successful family. Not whatever the fuck this propagandist is interested in.

Massively suppress or eradicate tuberculosis, malaria, and HIV ($219 billion)
Massively suppress or eradicate most neglected tropical diseases ($53 billion)
Retards in Africa still dig up dead family members and dance with them, exposing themselves to shit like Ebola; also, gays love the HIV. Money won't fix stupid.

Double global spending on clean energy R&D until 2050 ($662 billion)
We have nuclear, just donate for redundancy and other security issues; green energy isn't sustainable.

Quadruple philanthropic funding for nuclear weapons risk reduction ($6 billion)
Just tell me you want to partake in money laundering, it's more believable.

Increase tenfold the funding for AI safety ($1.5 billion)
Google and others are already lobotomizing their AI, they don't need to get paid more to do so.

Halve the number of animals suffering on factory farms by 2050, especially by creating alternative proteins ($222 billion)
I'm more of a organic farm person myself and showing a little more care with what you kill to eat. But Bill Gates isn't gonna give up all the farm land he bought for that number.

And as an aside, we can do all this for only 3.5 Trillion? Someone get Zelensky on the phone, we need a fraction of what we gave him back.
 
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They're manufacturing consent to squeeze whatever they can out of what's left of the dying middle class in this country. At that income, you are living in an expensive place where jobs may be somewhat plentiful, or you're living in the middle of nowhere or some gutted Rust Belt town. In the former case, people who make twice as much as you can still struggle to feed a family, and in the latter, you may be quite comfortable, but aware that if you lose your job, it will be months before you get another one. 60k is not rich.
And even if we could do more for the rest of the world, should we? We have dumped the equivalent of 5 Marshall Plans on Africa and all they do is quadruple their population every 20 years. The only thing I'd be willing to spend money in Africa on is the contraceptives, it will save us problems in the future.
 
The only thing I'd be willing to spend money in Africa on is the contraceptives, it will save us problems in the future.
Napalm is a better solution; that or just quarantining the entire fucking continent and letting nature take its course. If there weren't rare earth metals or exotic animals there, Africa would be of little use to anyone outside of being a stop/rest point between two other places.
 
Ah yes time for it to become about how YOU should be fixing the world, IGNORE the corporations being complete shitheals absorbing more and more cash while fucking everyone over it's your problem now! Straight out the Oil industry's playbook it's YOU who must stop driving common person! what's that? I can't hear you over the noise of my private jet!
 
I don't see anything in here about what happens to the people who give up the 10% of their income. When black people make X% less than white people in rich countries, don't we see studies coming out daily about how this is murder and their life expectancy is going down because of it? Well, now everyone is making 10% less. Let's run the "systemic racism" numbers on that.
 
Forced charity really isn't charity, is it?
Kind of like when fake Christians (aka episcopalians/anglicans) use the Bible as an excuse to enact socialism. "Jesus said that you should voluntarily give to the needy - so we should have men with guns take your money away to do whatever they want with it, throw you in prison if you don't, and kill you if you resist". The spirit of giving seems to evaporate once you add the threat of government-backed force, but somehow they don't see it that way.
 
These people can go fuck themselves.
They made their societies repellant to the creation of wealth by allowing oppression, corruption, crime, or all 3 to fester.
The past decade they've been infecting OUR nation with it and actively eroding our standard of living.

The ideal "donation" to the worst invader populaces would be neutron bombs, detonated at approximately 20km
 
Sigal Samuel is a senior reporter for Vox’s Future Perfect and co-host of the Future Perfect podcast. She writes primarily about the future of consciousness, tracking advances in artificial intelligence and neuroscience and their staggering ethical implications. Before joining Vox, Sigal was the religion editor at the Atlantic.
What exactly is "the future of consciousness?"

The only comfort I take from this article is that it while it extremely likely Ms. Samuel has procreated, it is extremely unlikely she ever has or ever will breed.

Remember Borlaug, the guy who got cash from the Rockefeller Foundation and figured out how to feed the world? Well, he wouldn’t have been able to kickstart the Green Revolution if he hadn’t worked in partnership with the Mexican government.
Norman Borlaug was a white male protestant from Iowa. Literally Hitler, amirite?
 
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