And the richer the billionaire, the less of their fortunes they shell out. Tesla CEO Elon Musk sits first on the Forbes 400 list, Oracle cofounder Larry Ellison third, and Nvidia co-founder Jensen Huang seventeenth. All three each have given away less than 1 percent of their fabulous fortunes.
Amazon’s Jeff Bezos sits second on the Forbes list, on top of a tidy nest egg worth $160 billion. He’s given away less than 5 percent of his billions.
The dollars the rich do give away to nonprofits regularly flow to causes and concerns more near and dear to their pocketbooks than their hearts.
Billionaire Charles Koch, for instance, sits 16th on the latest Forbes 400 list. The 27 donor organizations that Koch and his fellow Koch Industries execs control, the Center for Media and Democracy detailed this past spring, spent a combined $657 million on contributions to nonprofits in 2021, on top of $525 million in 2019 and $639 million in 2020.
Only 6 percent of those expenditures went to nonprofits that the Center assesses as “selfless and altruistic rather than overtly supportive of Charles Koch’s own political or financial goals.” Over 93 percent of the Koch empire’s donations went to nonprofits “primarily focused on influencing American policy and politics” in directions that do align with those goals.
Overall, our nation’s richest are doing precious little to address the starkest challenges our planet faces, points out Alan Davis, a deep-pocketed activist with Patriotic Millionaires and the chair of the Excessive Wealth Disorder Institute. On climate change, Davis has just noted in Fortune, our “excessively rich” don’t seem to be “feeling the heat.” They’ve devoted a mere 0.04 percent of their considerable assets to addressing our climate crisis.
At the same time, add researchers at Oxfam, our world’s top 125 billionaires have an average 14 percent of their investments sitting in fossil fuels and assorted other pollutants. Adding into the picture the enormous personal energy consumption of our super-rich simply compounds the environmental damage they’re doing.
Take all those superyachts, for instance. A little Mediterranean jog by a 50-meter yacht between Monaco and St. Tropez — around 85 miles as the crow flies — can easily “burn through $35,000 of diesel,” the Washington Post points out.
If we combine the impact of how much our super-rich invest in fossil fuels with how much energy they personally consume, Oxfam has calculated, we end up with an extraordinary set of figures. Our billionaires are individually responsible for a million times more carbon emissions than one of our planet’s average people.
So what do we do? The simple response from the Excessive Wealth Disorder Institute’s Alan Davis: We all need to understand that we’ll only be able to “limit the power of the excessively wealthy” if we “stop the hoarding of excessive wealth.”
This content originally appeared on CounterPunch.org and was authored by Sam Pizzigati.
Sam Pizzigati | Radio Free (2023-10-11T05:58:39+00:00) Private Yachts as Long as Football Fields. Retrieved from https://www.radiofree.org/2023/10/11/private-yachts-as-long-as-football-fields/
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