In a 2018 public letter, Bill and Melinda Gates openly addressed the fairness of their immense wealth and its influence. They acknowledged that their wealth provides them with exceptional opportunities and access that most people lack. Melinda admitted it is unfair when billions have so little, while Bill explained their preference for philanthropy over government redistribution, citing foundations' ability to act swiftly and globally. Despite their divorce, both remain committed to using their wealth to promote equity and giving back. The script prompts the audience to consider whether billionaires should be responsible for fixing the very systems they benefit from.
Category
🗞
NewsTranscript
00:00Bill and Melinda Gates flat out said it's not fair we have this much wealth. Back in 2018,
00:05before their divorce, the Gates answered a brutally honest question in a public letter.
00:09Is it fair that your money gives you this much influence? They didn't dodge or sugarcoat it.
00:14Melinda wrote, no, it's not fair when billions of people have so little. They admitted their
00:18wealth opens doors most people can't even knock on. World leaders take our calls. Schools shift
00:23priorities just because we might fund them. Bill addressed the elephant in the room too.
00:27Why not just hand it all over to the government? His answer was how foundations can do what
00:32governments can't move faster, take risks and test ideas globally. Their wealth is power and they know
00:38it, but they're trying to use that power to tilt things toward equity, not away from it. Even after
00:43the divorce, they stayed aligned on one truth. When you have this much, you give it back. So what do
00:48you think? Should billionaires be in charge of fixing systems they benefited from? Follow Benzinga for
00:53more stories where wealth meets accountability.