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Billionaires Gather In Arizona To Discuss How To Give Their Money Away



May 7, 2011 11 Comments ›› Pat Dollard

Phoenix (AP) – What do dozens of American billionaires talk about when they get together? Their topic this week was of course money; not how to make it, but how to give it away.

Billionaire investor Warren Buffett said Friday that a private gathering was a great chance for the billionaires who have pledged to give away at least half their wealth to meet each other, compare notes, eat and laugh.

The media was banned from Thursday’s first meeting of the group that has accepted the giving challenge by Buffett and his friend Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates. Since last June, 69 individuals or couples have made the giving pledge.

Buffett knew only about 12 of the 61 people at the dinner at the Miraval Resort in Tucson before the famously gregarious Berkshire Hathaway CEO worked the room and made 40 new friends.

“They all more than fulfilled my expectations,” Buffett told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.

Melinda Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, said she was delighted by the openness of the virtual strangers. At one point, conversation at her table drifted toward the biggest mistakes people had ever made as philanthropists.

“One of the things about being a philanthropist, in many ways it’s rather a lonely job,” said Tashia Morgridge, a retired special education teacher.

She works with her husband, Cisco Systems chairman John Morgridge, to give money to improve U.S. education through the Denver-based Morgridge Family Foundation.

George Kaiser, a Tulsa, Okla., philanthropist who aids early childhood education and social services programs, said the giving pledge helps philanthropists who don’t want to just throw money at causes and instead want to explore the best ways to invest money to tackle the world’s biggest problems.

“Being able to share with other people who are agonizing about the same decisions is extraordinarily useful,” said Kaiser, the chairman of BOK Financial Corp who has been an oil and gas industry executive for four decades. He led a session on applying analytical business practices to philanthropy.

The goals of the organization do not include working together to pool philanthropic dollars. Still, the meeting in Tucson that ended Friday included sessions where different philanthropists shared their passion to improve education, the environment and other causes.

Philosophies of giving and ideas for collaboration among the billionaires were also shared throughout the event, said Jean Case, CEO of the family foundation started by her and her husband, America Online founder Steve Case.

“There’s a strong desire in this group to learn from each other,” said Jean Case, who offered to host the event at their Tucson resort after Melinda Gates talked to her about the possibility of the meeting.

The mother of five children also led a session on children and families in philanthropy. Steve Case gave a talk on using social media to encourage giving. All the sessions at the meeting were led by members of the group.

Some common themes emerged from the event. The participants are looking to do more impactful, more effective philanthropy and to inspire average people to give money away, Jean Case said.

Sharing ideas about giving also took place informally. Melinda Gates said she talked to two people who were devoting money for work on state pension issues and criminal justice—problems Gates had previously not thought about.

Chuck Feeney, a New Jersey philanthropist Buffett called the spiritual leader of the group, spoke about his plans to give all his money to charity.

“He wants his last check to bounce,” Buffett said.


  • Pull

    buffett and gates ideas could only be bad for conservatives. Take your business of fucking with the working peoples money and shove it.

  • Desert Rat

    Damn! They are in AZ and want to give away their money?

    Give it to Pat! He’s close by and would most certainly use it for a good conservative cause!

  • mike3481

    Give it away?

    Okay, how about this, build and endow 100 new Hillsdale Colleges around the entire country.

    http://www.hillsdale.edu

    • http://patdollard.com USMC 3112

      Excellent idea Mike. :beer: What do you think the chances of that happening?? Close to slim..and none??

  • Patriotofpast

    With ALL thier Millions… Think they could Spare 500K? Thats probably a days Interest for Buffet.

  • remmy

    They have to have a meeting to agree to give away money to charity. Why not just pick a charity and write a check? Why not buy a building, hire teachers and get kids. It’s called a school. Or buy a building, hire doctors and buy equipment and get patients. It’s called a hospital.

    Build it and they will come. And come. And continue coming until everything is gone. Then raise taxes.

  • Swede

    This is insulting and exactly what Obama will use to his advantage. There is no way in heck that these yoyos are dumping their wealth. They are gathering and having a private party about how wonderful it is for them to give so they can writedown huge sums of their income and reduce their tax and feel good about themselves. Pomp and posturing!

  • Gary in Midwest

    Why does the accumalation of money and loss of logical thinking see to coincide?

  • midTN

    ROFLMAO at the headline.

    FU

  • Axel

    I could use some cash.

    I mean really, what a bunch of dip shits.

  • http://www.arcanys.com outsourcingcompany

    @Swede well said! :cool:

    Giving doesn’t only mean corporate responsibility but also a cut in their tax. Shrewd men.