To all the philanthropists who have taken the giving pledge, give aid to the people of Egypt, Tunisia, etc.. (Thanks to Liz.)
https://givingpledge.org/#paul+g.+_allen
ABOUT | The Giving Pledge is an effort to invite the wealthiest individuals and families in America to commit to giving the majority of their wealth to the philanthropic causes and charitable organizations of their choice either during their lifetime or after their death.
Each person who chooses to pledge will make this statement publicly, along with a letter explaining their decision to pledge. At an annual event, those who take the pledge will come together to share ideas and learn from each other. The Pledge is a moral commitment to give, not a legal contract. It does not involve pooling money or supporting a particular set of causes or organizations. While the Giving Pledge is specifically focused on billionaires, the idea takes its inspiration from efforts in the past and at present that encourage and recognize givers of all financial means and backgrounds. We are inspired by the example set by millions of Americans who give generously (and often at great personal sacrifice) to make the world a better place. |
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DIRECTORY
Laura and John Arnold
Nicolas Berggruen
Michael R. Bloomberg
Eli and Edythe Broad
Warren Buffett
Jean and Steve Case
Michele Chan and Patrick Soon-Shiong
Lee and Toby Cooperman
Barry Diller and Diane von Furstenberg
Ann and John Doerr
Larry Ellison
Ted Forstmann
Bill and Melinda Gates
David and Barbara Green
Lyda Hill
Barron Hilton
Jon and Karen Huntsman
Carl Icahn
Joan and Irwin Jacobs
George B. Kaiser
Sidney Kimmel
Elaine and Ken Langone
Gerry and Marguerite Lenfest
Lorry I. Lokey
George Lucas
Duncan and Nancy MacMillan
Alfred E. Mann
Joe and Rika Mansueto
For 20 years the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation has focused its philanthropy in the Pacific Northwest, where I live and work. I’m proud to have helped fund great work done by non-profit groups throughout the region. But there’s always more to do. There are many challenges, both here in the northwest and around the world that I know will keep us broadening our reach and looking for ways to help. My philanthropic efforts will continue after my lifetime. I’ve planned for many years now that…
For 20 years the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation has focused its philanthropy in the Pacific Northwest, where I live and work. I’m proud to have helped fund great work done by non-profit groups throughout the region. But there’s always more to do. There are many challenges, both here in the northwest and around the world that I know will keep us broadening our reach and looking for ways to help.
My philanthropic efforts will continue after my lifetime. I’ve planned for many years now that the majority of my estate will be left to philanthropy to continue the work of the Foundation and to fund non-profit scientific research, like the ground breaking work being done at the Allen Institute for Brain Science.
Bill and Melinda have done so many great things around the world and I’m happy we were able to be partners in projects to increase teacher effectiveness, fund science and technology high schools and produce the documentary, Rx for Survival, a Global Health Challenge. Bill, Melinda and Warren have issued a worthy challenge to make our giving plans public, and I’m happy to add my name to the effort.
As our philanthropy continues in the years ahead, we will look for new opportunities to make a difference in the lives of future generations.
We look upon our financial position with a mix of disbelief and humility, never having dreamed that we would be in this situation. Our backgrounds are similar to that of many Americans. We each had a solid middle-class upbringing with an emphasis on values, work ethic and social responsibility. We each attended public secondary school and worked our way through private universities. And, of course, we dreamed of one day being “rich,” in the way that all young people fantasize…
We look upon our financial position with a mix of disbelief and humility, never having dreamed that we would be in this situation. Our backgrounds are similar to that of many Americans. We each had a solid middle-class upbringing with an emphasis on values, work ethic and social responsibility. We each attended public secondary school and worked our way through private universities. And, of course, we dreamed of one day being “rich,” in the way that all young people fantasize about having everything they want. To our great surprise, we now fit that very elementary label. We have more than ample resources to be good providers for our family and mentors to our children, and we have a lifestyle that is comfortable and then some.
We are deeply indebted to our community and our country for the many opportunities granted to us, and for a social and economic environment in which we could make the most of those opportunities. We consider it our responsibility to ensure the same opportunities for others. We view our wealth in this light – not as an end in itself, but as an instrument to effect positive and transformative change. To this end, we have contributed a significant portion of our wealth to the Laura and John Arnold Foundation and will continue to do so during our lifetime. Upon our death, the vast majority of our assets will be left to the Foundation.
At the Foundation, we focus on areas where (1) philanthropic investments can lead to solutions that are self-sustaining in the long-term, (2) we can leverage a relatively small investment to create a large impact on total societal benefit and (3) the market does not presently yield optimal results, due to inefficiencies, lack of adequate information or other reasons. These guiding principles have led us to invest in a number of areas including education reform, health care, social services and social justice.
We are blessed to embark on this critical endeavor at a relatively early stage in our lives and with a great sense of urgency. We will devote the majority of our wealth, time and resources to philanthropy in the coming years, and we fully intend to achieve transformative results during our lifetime. There is no more worthwhile work and no greater mission. And there is no reason for delay in making a difference.
Everyone is dealt a group of cards at birth. With them come possibilities and responsibilities. What one does with them is up to each one of us; and the sum of those choices, constitute our lives. I have been blessed with the chance to build the Nicolas Berggruen Charitable Trust. My dedication to making the Trust a success will be similarly applied to its related non-profit activities…
Everyone is dealt a group of cards at birth. With them come possibilities and responsibilities. What one does with them is up to each one of us; and the sum of those choices, constitute our lives.
I have been blessed with the chance to build the Nicolas Berggruen Charitable Trust.
My dedication to making the Trust a success will be similarly applied to its related non-profit activities. I believe that this approach best pairs my own abilities and the assets of the Nicolas Berggruen Charitable Trust.
It is in this spirit that I join the Giving Pledge.
One of the senior managers at my company, Bloomberg LP, recently told me that part of his new hires recruiting pitch is to ask, “What other company can you work for where the owner gives nearly all the profits to charity?” Nothing has ever made me prouder of my company than that one story. In the 1990s, a generous individual planned to leave Johns Hopkins University, my alma mater, $50 million upon his death. But I asked him: Why wait? Why deny financial aid to this generation…
One of the senior managers at my company, Bloomberg LP, recently told me that part of his new hires recruiting pitch is to ask, “What other company can you work for where the owner gives nearly all the profits to charity?” Nothing has ever made me prouder of my company than that one story.
In the 1990s, a generous individual planned to leave Johns Hopkins University, my alma mater, $50 million upon his death. But I asked him: Why wait? Why deny financial aid to this generation? Why deny a possible cure for a disease to this generation? That convinced him – and he gave the money right then and there.
As I wrote in my autobiography around that same time, the reality of great wealth is that you can’t spend it and you can’t take it with you. For decades, I’ve been committed to giving away the vast majority of my wealth to causes that I’m passionate about – and that my children are passionate about. And so I am enthusiastically taking the Giving Pledge, and nearly all of my net worth will be given away in the years ahead or left to my foundation.
Making a difference in people’s lives – and seeing it with your own eyes – is perhaps the most satisfying thing you’ll ever do. If you want to fully enjoy life – give. And if you want to do something for your children and show how much you love them, the single best thing – by far – is to support organizations that will create a better world for them and their children. Long term, they will benefit more from your philanthropy than from your will. I believe the philanthropic contributions I’m now making are as much gifts to my children as they are to the recipient organizations.
Giving also allows you to leave a legacy that many others will remember. Rockefeller, Carnegie, Frick, Vanderbilt, Stanford, Duke – we remember them more for the long-term effects of their philanthropy than for the companies they founded, or for their descendents. And by giving, we inspire others to give of themselves, whether their money or their time.
In my third career, as Mayor of New York, I’ve seen just how needed – and how powerful – private donations are. Public-private partnerships are at the heart of our efforts to improve public health and safety, fight poverty, fix a once-broken school system, expand economic opportunity, promote the arts, protect our environment, and so much more.
As a philanthropist, I’ve also had the opportunity to see the impact private donations can have in other countries – and just how far each dollar can go. For instance, with private funding, we can prevent tens of millions of premature deaths caused by tobacco-related diseases and traffic accidents -just two areas where my foundation has been active.
In my public and private lives, I have seen how small groups can make a very big difference – in cleaning up a park, starting a school, or helping others in need, whether in their own community or halfway around the world. I am thrilled that my friends Bill Gates and Warren Buffett are bringing together this group, which could have an unprecedented impact on what philanthropy can achieve. And the larger this group grows, the more people will share in the pleasure of giving, as well as the benefits that it will bring to the world.
We wholeheartedly endorse the Giving Pledge and hope that others will share in the inherent and immensely rewarding benefits of philanthropy. Those who have been blessed with extraordinary wealth have an opportunity, some would say a responsibility – we consider it a privilege – to give back to their communities, be they local, national or global. Though neither of us was raised in an affluent family, our parents taught both of us the importance of giving back and helping others less…
We wholeheartedly endorse the Giving Pledge and hope that others will share in the inherent and immensely rewarding benefits of philanthropy.
Those who have been blessed with extraordinary wealth have an opportunity, some would say a responsibility – we consider it a privilege – to give back to their communities, be they local, national or global. Though neither of us was raised in an affluent family, our parents taught both of us the importance of giving back and helping others less fortunate.
When the company we founded, SunAmerica, merged into AIG in 1999, our shareholders and employees made a lot of money, and so did we. After providing for our family and our two sons, we knew we wanted to use the rest to make a difference. The Giving Pledge allows us to formalize our longtime intention of giving away 75 percent of our wealth during or after our lifetimes.
About 10 years ago, we decided to focus full-time on philanthropy. We asked ourselves what was the greatest problem facing America. We both attended public schools and credit education as the foundation of our success. But we were dismayed by the state of America’s K-12 public education system, and we wanted to work to restore it to greatness. We are convinced the future of the middle class, our standard of living, our economy and our very democracy rests on the strength of our public schools. And we have a long way to go.
While we spend the most time on education reform, we invest the greatest resources in scientific and medical research, primarily in the areas of human genomics, stem cell research and inflammatory bowel disease. It is our hope that through our investments in these areas and our creation of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, the scientific and medical research we are funding will ultimately improve the human condition.
The third area of our philanthropy is the arts. We have both been enriched not only by the visual and performing arts but also by the artists we have met, whose view of the world has broadened our perspectives and enlightened our conversations. Our support of the arts is driven by the desire to make art accessible to the broadest public.
We view charity and philanthropy as two very different endeavors. For many years, we practiced charity, simply writing checks to worthy causes and organizations. Since leaving the world of commerce, we have engaged in what we term “venture philanthropy.” We approach our grant-making activity with much the same vigor, energy and expectation as we did in business. We view our grants as investments, and we expect a return – in the form of improved student achievement for our education reform work, treatments or cures for disease in our scientific and medical research, and increased access to the arts.
Before we invest in something, we ask ourselves three questions that guide our decision:
- Will this happen without us? If so, we don’t invest.
- Will it make a difference 20 or 30 years from now?
- Is the leadership in place to make it happen?
Philanthropy is hard work. Many people think it’s easy to give money away. But we are not giving money away. We want our wealth to make a measurable impact. And after running two Fortune 500 companies, we’re having more fun now – and working harder – than ever.
Philanthropy is intensely personal. No two people have identical views on what causes to champion and what approaches will fix social ills. There is no monopoly on philanthropy, and the needs will always far outpace resources – which is why the Giving Pledge unlocks the door to a world of new opportunities. There is no doubt that when the wealthy few open their pocketbooks, the impact will be extraordinary.
In 2006, I made a commitment to gradually give all of my Berkshire Hathaway stock to philanthropic foundations. I couldn’t be happier with that decision. Now, Bill and Melinda Gates and I are asking hundreds of rich Americans to pledge at least 50% of their wealth to charity. So I think it is fitting that I reiterate my intentions and explain the thinking that lies behind them. First, my pledge: More than 99% of my wealth will go to philanthropy during my lifetime or at death. Measured by…
In 2006, I made a commitment to gradually give all of my Berkshire Hathaway stock to philanthropic foundations. I couldn’t be happier with that decision.
Now, Bill and Melinda Gates and I are asking hundreds of rich Americans to pledge at least 50% of their wealth to charity. So I think it is fitting that I reiterate my intentions and explain the thinking that lies behind them.
First, my pledge: More than 99% of my wealth will go to philanthropy during my lifetime or at death. Measured by dollars, this commitment is large. In a comparative sense, though, many individuals give more to others every day.
Millions of people who regularly contribute to churches, schools, and other organizations thereby relinquish the use of funds that would otherwise benefit their own families. The dollars these people drop into a collection plate or give to United Way mean forgone movies, dinners out, or other personal pleasures. In contrast, my family and I will give up nothing we need or want by fulfilling this 99% pledge.
Moreover, this pledge does not leave me contributing the most precious asset, which is time. Many people, including — I’m proud to say — my three children, give extensively of their own time and talents to help others. Gifts of this kind often prove far more valuable than money. A struggling child, befriended and nurtured by a caring mentor, receives a gift whose value far exceeds what can be bestowed by a check. My sister, Doris, extends significant person-to-person help daily. I’ve done little of this.
What I can do, however, is to take a pile of Berkshire Hathaway stock certificates — “claim checks” that when converted to cash can command far-ranging resources — and commit them to benefit others who, through the luck of the draw, have received the short straws in life. To date about 20% of my shares have been distributed (including shares given by my late wife, Susan Buffett). I will continue to annually distribute about 4% of the shares I retain. At the latest, the proceeds from all of my Berkshire shares will be expended for philanthropic purposes by 10 years after my estate is settled. Nothing will go to endowments; I want the money spent on current needs.
This pledge will leave my lifestyle untouched and that of my children as well. They have already received significant sums for their personal use and will receive more in the future. They live comfortable and productive lives. And I will continue to live in a manner that gives me everything that I could possibly want in life.
Some material things make my life more enjoyable; many, however, would not. I like having an expensive private plane, but owning a half-dozen homes would be a burden. Too often, a vast collection of possessions ends up possessing its owner. The asset I most value, aside from health, is interesting, diverse, and long-standing friends.
My wealth has come from a combination of living in America, some lucky genes, and compound interest. Both my children and I won what I call the ovarian lottery. (For starters, the odds against my 1930 birth taking place in the U.S. were at least 30 to 1. My being male and white also removed huge obstacles that a majority of Americans then faced.) My luck was accentuated by my living in a market system that sometimes produces distorted results, though overall it serves our country well. I’ve worked in an economy that rewards someone who saves the lives of others on a battlefield with a medal, rewards a great teacher with thank-you notes from parents, but rewards those who can detect the mispricing of securities with sums reaching into the billions. In short, fate’s distribution of long straws is wildly capricious.
The reaction of my family and me to our extraordinary good fortune is not guilt, but rather gratitude. Were we to use more than 1% of my claim checks on ourselves, neither our happiness nor our well-being would be enhanced. In contrast, that remaining 99% can have a huge effect on the health and welfare of others. That reality sets an obvious course for me and my family: Keep all we can conceivably need and distribute the rest to society, for its needs. My pledge starts us down that course.
From the early 1980s, we were both privileged to play a part in ushering in the Internet revolution. AOL was, in essence, a social enterprise. While we were focused on building a business, what really drove us was the mission of building a new medium that could empower individuals and become as ubiquitous as the television or telephone, but be even more valuable. We are proud of the success AOL achieved – and in awe of the profound impact the Internet has had globally…
From the early 1980s, we were both privileged to play a part in ushering in the Internet revolution. AOL was, in essence, a social enterprise. While we were focused on building a business, what really drove us was the mission of building a new medium that could empower individuals and become as ubiquitous as the television or telephone, but be even more valuable. We are proud of the success AOL achieved – and in awe of the profound impact the Internet has had globally.
Since launching the Case Foundation in 1997 we have sought to tap the power of the Internet, new technologies and entrepreneurial approaches to help strengthen the social sector. The Case Foundation has invested in hundreds of organizations, initiatives and partnerships in the U.S. and around the globe. Built on the principles of leadership, collaboration and entrepreneurship, we seek to inspire individuals to realize their potential to create change, while helping social institutions achieve sustainable scale and impact.
While the Case Foundation is our primary philanthropic vehicle, it is not our only avenue as we seek to make a difference. We have also made personal gifts to schools, churches and other organizations that support our local communities. Further, while our commitment to charitable giving is fundamental to our efforts to address societal challenges, we think it is important to note that we also believe – and back our words with dollars – that societal objectives can often also be met through the prism of entrepreneurial businesses.
While there is often a defined division between “for profit” and “not for profit” sectors – with for profit focused on making money and not for profit focused on making a difference – our experiences suggest that can be an overly simplistic way of looking at the world. Instead, we first focus on a societal problem or opportunity that needs to be addressed, and then decide the right strategy to achieve the greatest gains. Sometimes that is backing or starting a non-profit organization. Other times, that is backing or starting a business that is focused on doing well while doing good.
We want to use all the tools available to us, to have the greatest impact, and achieve the greatest good. Our missions for the Case Foundation and our investment firm Revolution are therefore identical: we invest in people and ideas that can change the world. We deploy our capital – and our time – to have the greatest possible impact. We are privileged to have this opportunity to give back in so many ways.
We share the view that those to whom much is given, much is expected. We realize we have been given a unique platform and opportunity, and we are committed to doing the best we can with it. We do not believe our assets are “ours” but rather we try to be the responsible stewards of these resources – and we recognize we have an obligation to reinvest them in a positive, constructive and flexible manner.
We are pleased to join The Giving Pledge and publicly reaffirm our commitment to give away the majority of our wealth to fund worthy charitable causes. We also look forward to working with the dozens of others who have made the Giving Pledge commitment to share lessons, perspectives and best practices. We have learned a lot over the years both through our philanthropic successes and our failures, and believe that by working together and exchanging lessons learned, the impact of the backers of the Giving Pledge can be enhanced. Our individual commitments are significant, but the power of our collective commitments can be greater than the sum of the parts. That is why we are joining with Bill, Melinda, Warren, and so many others to make this public commitment.
While we are proud to be part of this distinguished Giving Pledge group, in closing we also want to reaffirm our ongoing commitment to encouraging a citizen-centered approach to philanthropy, which is rooted in the belief that small gifts from many are just as powerful as large gifts from a few. We hope the Giving Pledge will inspire many others, and we stand ready to do whatever we can to share what we learn and shine a spotlight on the extraordinary commitments millions of people make each and every day.
Our passion, our mission is to transform health and health care, in America and beyond. Our family foundation was established for that purpose. Growing up in South Africa during the time of apartheid, we had direct experience of inequality, including great disparities in health and access to good care. After thirty years living in the United States, we see similar disparities in health care on our doorstep in Los Angeles, and across the nation. What was unconscionable to us in South Africa …
Our passion, our mission is to transform health and health care, in America and beyond. Our family foundation was established for that purpose.
Growing up in South Africa during the time of apartheid, we had direct experience of inequality, including great disparities in health and access to good care. After thirty years living in the United States, we see similar disparities in health care on our doorstep in Los Angeles, and across the nation. What was unconscionable to us in South Africa in the twentieth century is just as unconscionable in the United States in the twenty-first.
America has been a land of opportunity for us, as it has for so many immigrants. We are proud to be Americans and we want to see our country strong and healthy. We are blessed to have resources and expertise to contribute.
Our pledge is that, through our family foundation, we will work to erode and eliminate disparities in health care, and to help bring about a system of health care which aims first to keep people healthy, and secondly to ensure that everyone has access to the best quality health care when they need it. We and our children are dedicating our time and our resources to that end.
Toby and I very much enjoyed our dinner with you, Bill, Melinda and Mayor Mike. The graciousness of the Mayor’s hospitality was matched only by the interesting guests and the quality of the dinner conversation! The concept of the Giving Pledge is intriguing and meritorious. The fact that Toby and I are even candidates to make the pledge is a testimony to the American Dream. Let me explain…
Dear Warren:
Toby and I very much enjoyed our dinner with you, Bill, Melinda and Mayor Mike. The graciousness of the Mayor’s hospitality was matched only by the interesting guests and the quality of the dinner conversation! The concept of the Giving Pledge is intriguing and meritorious. The fact that Toby and I are even candidates to make the pledge is a testimony to the American Dream. Let me explain.
I am the son of a plumber who practiced his trade in the South Bronx. I am the first generation American born in my family as well as the first to get a college degree. My education is largely public school based — public grade school, high school and college all in the Bronx. I had a short stint at the Columbia University Graduate School of Business where I earned an MBA and this opened the door for me to Goldman Sachs. I joined the Firm the day after graduation as I had a National Defense Education Act Student Loan to repay, had no money in the bank, and a six month old child to support. I had a near 25 year run of happiness and good fortune at Goldman Sachs. The last 19 years at Omega have also been years of happiness and good fortune with a few bumps along the way. While I worked hard, I must say I had more than my share of good luck.
Toby and I feel it is our moral imperative to give others the opportunity to pursue the American Dream by sharing our financial success. The case for philanthropy has been stated by others in a most articulate way and in words that have impressed me: In the early 1900’s Andrew Carnegie said “He who dies rich, dies disgraced.” In the 1930’s, Sir Winston Churchill observed that “We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we gives.” In 1961, President John F. Kennedy in his inaugural address stated “Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.” Well before all these gentlemen expressed their thoughts, it was written in the Talmud that “A man’s net worth is measured not by what he earns but rather what he gives away.”
It is in this spirit that we enthusiastically agree to take the Giving Pledge.
Sincerely,
Leon G. Cooperman
Many years ago, I put virtually all of my assets into a trust with the intent of giving away at least 95% of my wealth to charitable causes. I have already given hundreds of millions of dollars to medical research and education, and I will give billions more over time. Until now, I have done this giving quietly – because I have long believed that charitable giving is a personal and private matter. So why am I going public now…
To whom it may concern,
Many years ago, I put virtually all of my assets into a trust with the intent of giving away at least 95% of my wealth to charitable causes. I have already given hundreds of millions of dollars to medical research and education, and I will give billions more over time. Until now, I have done this giving quietly – because I have long believed that charitable giving is a personal and private matter. So why am I going public now? Warren Buffett personally asked me to write this letter because he said I would be “setting an example” and “influencing others” to give. I hope he’s right.
Larry Ellison
For many years I’ve been quietly doing my own version of “the giving pledge” trying to help disadvantaged children around the world. I’ve always believed that you don’t really talk about giving; you just do it. However, Mayor Bloomberg convinced me that by lending my name to “The Giving Pledge” it would help encourage others to participate and would result in helping many…
For many years I’ve been quietly doing my own version of “the giving pledge” trying to help disadvantaged children around the world. I’ve always believed that you don’t really talk about giving; you just do it.
However, Mayor Bloomberg convinced me that by lending my name to “The Giving Pledge” it would help encourage others to participate and would result in helping many needy causes.
I’ve tried to live by the motto “you save one life and you save the world.” I hope that by joining “The Giving Pledge” it will encourage others to do the same.
Parents all over the world do their best to give their children great opportunities. They work to give their children every chance to pursue their own dreams. However for too many parents, their dreams of giving their families better lives are dashed. In the United States, their children don’t get the education they need to succeed in life. In the developing world, their children succumb to diseases…
Parents all over the world do their best to give their children great opportunities. They work to give their children every chance to pursue their own dreams.
However for too many parents, their dreams of giving their families better lives are dashed. In the United States, their children don’t get the education they need to succeed in life. In the developing world, their children succumb to diseases that have long since been eradicated in rich countries.
Years ago, when we began to learn about global health, we were especially shocked to read that one highly preventable disease – rotavirus – was killing half a million children every year. Airplane crashes are always front-page news, yet here was a killer of half a million children every year, and most people couldn’t put a name to it, much less put a stop to it.
We have committed the vast majority of our assets to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to help stop preventable deaths such as these, and to tear down other barriers to health and education that prevent people from making the very most of their lives. Our animating principle is that all lives have equal value. Put another way, it means that we believe every child deserves the chance to grow up, to dream and do big things.
We have been blessed with good fortune beyond our wildest expectations, and we are profoundly grateful. But just as these gifts are great, so we feel a great responsibility to use them well. That is why we are so pleased to join in making an explicit commitment to the Giving Pledge.
The idea of the pledge came out of discussions we had with other givers about what they were doing, about what had worked in philanthropy and what had not worked. Everyone shared how giving had made their lives richer. Everyone who attended was inspired by listening to the others’ passion and encouraged to do even more.
For the two of us, because we see amazing progress every day, but also, how much more work remains, we’re honored to be a part of this pledge effort.
For example, to us, vaccines are miracles, tiny vessels of hope and promise. And the world has made progress in vaccinating millions of children. But there are still millions more who die of preventable diseases.
So we want to make sure lifesaving vaccines reach everyone who needs them, and that the world develops new vaccines.
We’ve seen similar progress in America’s education system. We have visited schools that are breaking down old barriers and preparing every child for college and life. These are great schools—but there are not nearly enough of them. Now the task is to make sure that every student gets the same opportunity to succeed in college and in life.
Both of us were fortunate to grow up with parents who taught us some tremendously important values. Work hard. Show respect. Have a sense of humor. And if life happens to bless you with talent or treasure, you have a responsibility to use those gifts as well and as wisely as you possibly can. Now we hope to pass this example on to our own children.
We feel very lucky to have the chance to work together in giving back the resources we are stewards of. By joining the Giving Pledge effort, we’re certain our giving will be more effective because of the time we will spend with this group. We look forward to sharing what a wonderful experience this has been for us and learning from the experience of others.
Best Wishes,
Bill and Melinda Gates
Coming from a family of preachers, the idea of giving back has been part of my life as long as I can remember. My parents and their parents before them were what some would consider poor, but they gave back whenever they could whether through small contributions of money, or through acts of kindness. God has blessed me with a wonderful family, a successful business and outstanding employees. I do not take these blessings lightly. I am honored to join this remarkable idea…
Coming from a family of preachers, the idea of giving back has been part of my life as long as I can remember. My parents and their parents before them were what some would consider poor, but they gave back whenever they could whether through small contributions of money, or through acts of kindness. God has blessed me with a wonderful family, a successful business and outstanding employees. I do not take these blessings lightly. I am honored to join this remarkable idea called The Giving Pledge.
When Hobby Lobby was created in the early 1970s, I was committed to use profits to help ministry work. I knew from an early age that ministry work, at least in the sense of preaching from a pulpit, was not my calling. But I also knew that God gifted me with a mind for understanding business, and that gift would allow me to carry out His work through contributions to great missions throughout the world. We honor the Lord in all we do by operating the company in a manner consistent with Biblical principles. From helping orphanages in faraway lands to helping ministries in America, Hobby Lobby has always been a tool for the Lord’s work.
For me and my family, charity equals ministry, which equals the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
2 Corinthians says, “Each of you should give what you have decided in your heart to give, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver. And God is able to bless you abundantly, so that in all things at all times, having all that you need, you will abound in every good work…You will be enriched in every way so that you can be generous on every occasion, and through us your generosity will result in thanksgiving to God.”
Like my parents and their parents before them, you don’t have to be wealthy to give. You can give your time, your talents and your passion. We congratulate those who have taken on this wonderful pledge.
After I made my first billion dollars a few years ago, I set up a foundation and worked with my estate planning attorney to provide for 80% of my estate to go to that foundation. I started with absolutely nothing and I’ve certainly lived the American dream. I’ve had the opportunity to meet and get to know a number of people who were what I would say “cursed” with very large inheritances. While some have done good things with their inheritances…
Dear Warren:
After I made my first billion dollars a few years ago, I set up a foundation and worked with my estate planning attorney to provide for 80% of my estate to go to that foundation. I started with absolutely nothing and I’ve certainly lived the American dream.
I’ve had the opportunity to meet and get to know a number of people who were what I would say “cursed” with very large inheritances. While some have done good things with their inheritances, many have lost all incentive to accomplish anything on their own, and as a result, have had much less fulfilling lives. I’ve often thought that while these folks had the disadvantage of the advantaged, I had the advantage of the disadvantaged, having to learn to take care of myself at a young age.
While you and I have been able to achieve financial success that just a generation ago would have been impossible, today too many Americans are in very difficult financial situations. We have a lot of work to do as a country to revitalize our economy, so that the opportunities I had are available to each and every American. Through our foundation, we hope to play a major role in helping to make a better America.
I got married three years ago for the first time at the age of 52 and Mei Sze and I have a one year old son. While I intend to provide him a level of security, I would never consider leaving him the vast amount of wealth that I have been fortunate to accumulate. The bulk of my estate will go to our foundation.
I didn’t come forward and discuss our commitment in August because I was in the middle of a campaign for US Senate here in Florida, and it would have looked like I was trying to exploit this for political gain. I am not running for anything now, and I am delighted to join you and the others that have publicly made this “giving pledge.” I am certain that your example has changed the way people the world over organize their estates and I am proud to be part of your group.
Very truly yours,
Jeff Greene
I wish to make the world a better place by advancing solutions to medical and environmental issues through investments in and donations to science. My focus is early stage life science companies with a special interest in oncology. At my death my entire estate and my foundation will be distributed to charities I have designated.
To Whomever It May Concern:
I wish to make the world a better place by advancing solutions to medical and environmental issues through investments in and donations to science. My focus is early stage life science companies with a special interest in oncology.
At my death my entire estate and my foundation will be distributed to charities I have designated.
Sincerely,
Lyda Hill
I am happy to reiterate the pledge I made in 2007 to donate the vast majority of my personal wealth to the humanitarian work of the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation. For me, the decision was easy — not just for how the money will be spent, but for how the money was earned. My father, Conrad Hilton, was one of America’s business giants. He was the first to link hotels together in a coast-to-coast chain, and to turn his name into a world-famous brand. During his career, “Hilton” literally became…
I am happy to reiterate the pledge I made in 2007 to donate the vast majority of my personal wealth to the humanitarian work of the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation. For me, the decision was easy — not just for how the money will be spent, but for how the money was earned.
My father, Conrad Hilton, was one of America’s business giants. He was the first to link hotels together in a coast-to-coast chain, and to turn his name into a world-famous brand. During his career, “Hilton” literally became synonymous with the word “hotel.” He personified his personal creed, “Think big, act big, dream big.”
While he reached amazing heights in business, he also suffered through the kind of economic downturns that are all too familiar to people coping with today’s recession. In fact, the milestones of my father’s career often followed a long, determined climb from the worst economic periods in modern history.
In 1919, during the post World War I recession, my father bought his first hotel, the Mobley in Cisco, Texas. He built up a collection of eight hotels in Texas, only to lose all but one during the Great Depression. By refusing to declare bankruptcy, he was among the first hoteliers to emerge from the Depression, only to endure the dramatic business slowdown during World War II. Eventually he was able to grow by acquiring several hotels for cents on the dollar, including the then-largest hotel in the world, the Stevens in Chicago. In 1946, Hilton Hotels Corporation became the first hotel company to be listed on the New York Stock Exchange. When the post-war recession slowed U.S. expansion, my father began to expand overseas, but not before he fulfilled his longtime goal of acquiring the lease for the Waldorf-Astoria in New York City.
After my service in the Navy in World War II, I spent 20 years as an entrepreneur, investing in Vita-Pakt citrus products and founding such diverse companies as Air Finance Corporation, Carte Blanche Credit Card and, 50 years ago, the Chargers of the American Football League. In 1966, the board of Hilton Hotels Corporation invited me to become President of Hilton Hotels, provided I drop my football responsibilities. That’s when I took the reins of the company.
Just after the recession that followed the Vietnam War, and just before the Arab oil embargo, I managed to enter the Las Vegas gaming market by acquiring the Flamingo and the International (renamed the Las Vegas Hilton) from financier Kirk Kerkorian. That added a valuable revenue stream for our company that, when combined with franchising, greatly increased the value of Hilton stock.
Not every deal worked out well in the short term, however, such as our sale of Hilton International to TWA in 1967. It took us another 30 years to reunite the companies. With more hotels of over 1,000 rooms than the rest of the industry combined, our strength in the convention market made us the envy of the lodging business.
In the midst of our domestic expansion, my father passed away in 1979 at age 91. Throughout his life, he embraced the power of prayer, and felt it was our God-given responsibility to alleviate the suffering of the most disadvantaged among us. He generously supported Catholic sisters and other worthy causes, writing personal notes to accompany his checks. But his $160 million estate created a new opportunity.
Under the leadership of Don Hubbs, and now my son, Steven, the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation has become a real agent for change. We focus on a need, find the right people or organization to fill that need, and then provide enough funding to create real systemic change. My brother, Eric, is among the family members and outside directors that are following my father’s philanthropic vision as board members. In his will, my father directed us to make our grants without regard for race, religion or geography. The reason was as simple as it was genius — the customers that built our wealth hailed from all parts of the world.
In 1996, I retired after 30 years as CEO of Hilton Hotels Corporation, and convinced Stephen Bollenbach to succeed me while I continued to chair the board. He ushered in a new era of consolidation for both Hilton and for the industry, while utilizing technology to improve efficiency and customer service. We continued to expand our gaming and hotel networks, adding brands like Bally’s, Caesars, Embassy Suites, Doubletree and Hampton Inn.
In 2006 and 2007, our gaming company and then our hotel company were both acquired by private equity firms at a considerable premium over the trading price of the stock. Despite my tremendous family pride, I knew Hilton Hotels Corporation had grown to the point where it could thrive, even without a Hilton family member at the helm. I had been a member of the Hilton Foundation board since 1954. It was only after the sale of our companies that I proudly became Chairman of the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation.
As one of Hilton’s principal shareholders, I decided to immediately pledge my proceeds of the sales — $1.2 billion — to the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation. In making the gift, I also pledged to follow my father’s example and donate 97 percent of my wealth to the Hilton Foundation. That gift, together with other personal assets, should bring the Foundation’s corpus to more than $4 billion.
Today we concentrate on a few strategic initiatives: Safe water development, homelessness, children, substance abuse and Catholic sisters. Other major programs include blindness prevention, hotel and restaurant management education, multiple sclerosis, disaster relief and recovery, and Catholic schools. We are constantly reviewing our practices while remaining faithful to the values and principles that guide us.
I recite our saga to consolidate information that was already a matter of public record over the past 90 years. I am gratified that our Foundation will live on forever, aiding the most vulnerable populations in the world. It will operate in perpetuity as a tribute to the customers, executives and hotel employees who created our wealth in the first place.
I salute Warren Buffett, Bill and Melinda Gates and other philanthropic leaders who have subscribed to the Philanthropic Pledge. It is my hope that others are inspired by my father’s story, and by our family’s steadfast adherence to his charitable philosophy.
It has been clear to me since my earliest childhood memories that my reason for being was to help others. The desire to give back was the impetus for pursuing an education in business, for applying that education to founding what became a successful container company, and for using that experience to grow our differentiated chemicals corporation into the global enterprise it has become. The journey which began in poverty somehow led to my name’s inclusion on the Richest Americans…
It has been clear to me since my earliest childhood memories that my reason for being was to help others. The desire to give back was the impetus for pursuing an education in business, for applying that education to founding what became a successful container company, and for using that experience to grow our differentiated chemicals corporation into the global enterprise it has become.
The journey which began in poverty somehow led to my name’s inclusion on the Richest Americans list for several years running. We progressed from being leveraged to the eyeballs to realizing a degree of wealth of which we had never dared to dream, always with the understanding that it was not ours to keep. Through hard work, luck at the right times, and a determination to succeed, we built a company which filled our coffers with money intended for others.
My pledge to give my entire fortune to curing cancer and assisting related other charities was formalized decades ago. As my sweet mother took her last breath in my arms and succumbed to the cancer she could no longer fight, I realized that our humanitarian focus must center on cancer. I saw with clarity the vision that the Huntsman fortune is a means to cure cancer and that my purpose on earth is to facilitate the research which will illuminate its mysteries.
Most of my shares of our company’s stock have already been donated to our family charitable foundation and are not at our family’s disposal. Moreover, most of our other assets are already pledged to charitable causes. The Chronicle of Philanthropy listed our family as donating $1.2 billion to past charitable causes or foundations.
Cancer terrifies us and often takes our lives, irrespective of age, gender, or walk of life. As I have publicly stated countless times, my duty is to make sure cancer is vanquished. Virtually all of my financial resources are already pledged to this lofty goal.
I began my career on Wall Street nearly 50 years ago. From a modest upbringing in Queens, New York, I have been fortunate enough to accumulate great wealth. And with that wealth comes responsibility – those who have benefitted the most from our economic system have a responsibility to give back to society in a meaningful way. That is why I made a commitment over 20 years ago that substantially all of my assets would be used to fund a charitable foundation…
I began my career on Wall Street nearly 50 years ago. From a modest upbringing in Queens, New York, I have been fortunate enough to accumulate great wealth. And with that wealth comes responsibility – those who have benefitted the most from our economic system have a responsibility to give back to society in a meaningful way. That is why I made a commitment over 20 years ago that substantially all of my assets would be used to fund a charitable foundation. Until Bill, Melinda and Warren started this project, I never considered going public with my intentions. However, I certainly see the value of a project that encourages wealthy individuals to step forward and commit to use their wealth for the common good. I hope that by adding my voice with those who are supporting this project, we will all encourage others to participate.
The principles that have guided my career in investing are the ones that I use in my approach to philanthropy. As a shareholder activist, I have focused on acquiring control of undervalued companies (which are often poorly managed). I believe I have unlocked substantial shareholder and bondholder value and have improved the competitiveness of American companies. In a similar vein, I want to maintain America’s position as the world economic leader by improving the competiveness of its educational system. America’s children, especially those from underprivileged backgrounds, are in a sense undervalued assets. I believe that this goal can best be accomplished by teaching our students the specific skills to succeed. Accordingly, my foundation supports the education and care of underprivileged children and the operation of vocational schools.
Out of this belief, I created the Icahn Scholars Program at Choate Rosemary Hall. Each year the Program provides scholarships for financially challenged students from across the country. And the Program works. Invariably, each year not only do the Icahn Scholars get accepted into the top colleges, but they also win a disproportionate number of the School’s top prizes. In fact, the first Bill and Melinda Gates Scholarship at Choate was awarded to an Icahn Scholar. I also endowed Choate’s state of the art Science Center as well as the Carl C. Icahn Laboratory for Princeton University’s Institute for Integrated Genomics and the Icahn Medical Institute at Mt. Sinai Hospital.
As a product of the New York City public school system, I have a particular interest in improving the education of the City’s children. I have sponsored and constructed public charter schools in the Bronx. These schools draw students from areas marked by poverty and high crime rates who would otherwise be at risk of academic failure. The mission of the Icahn charter schools is based on the belief that all students deserve a rigorous academic program which will increase their capacity to learn. The expectations have proven out as our charter students consistently score at or above the state average on standardized tests. The school programs provide the background knowledge necessary for continued academic success beyond the public school system and success as adults.
My work in education was recognized by the Center for Education lnnovation – Public Education Association in 2004. In 2006, I was honored with the 100 Women in Hedge Funds Effecting Change Award. Through recognition of my commitment to improving education, I hope to inspire others to make similar investments.
Improving child welfare is an important component of improving a child’s likelihood of success. I built Icahn House, a 65-unit complex for homeless families consisting of pregnant women and single women with children in the hope of leveling the socio-economic playing field. I am a trustee of the Randall’s Island Sports Foundation and made a significant contribution to the construction of Icahn Stadium, a track and field facility for inner city youth. For my work in this area, I was honored with the Starlight Foundation’s Founders Award and the 1990 Man of the Year Awards, and was named The Guardian Angel 2001 Man of the Year.
I believe, without significantly changing the method we use to educate our young students in this country, we will soon lose our hegemony. Through these commitments I hope to play a small part in making these changes. I am excited to join my friends Bill, Melinda and Warren in making a commitment to continue the charitable giving. I have been a longstanding proponent of improving America’s educational system and am delighted to join this important initiative to combine our efforts and financial resources.
I suppose I arrived at my charitable commitment largely through guilt. I recognized early on, that my good fortune was not due to superior personal character or initiative so much as it was to dumb luck. I was blessed to be born in an advanced society with caring parents. So, I had the advantage of both genetics (winning the “ovarian lottery”) and upbringing. As I looked around at those who did not have these advantages, it became clear to me that I had a moral obligation to direct my…
I suppose I arrived at my charitable commitment largely through guilt. I recognized early on, that my good fortune was not due to superior personal character or initiative so much as it was to dumb luck. I was blessed to be born in an advanced society with caring parents. So, I had the advantage of both genetics (winning the “ovarian lottery”) and upbringing. As I looked around at those who did not have these advantages, it became clear to me that I had a moral obligation to direct my resources to help right that balance.
America’s “social contract” is equal opportunity. It is the most fundamental principle in our founding documents and it is what originally distinguished us from the old Europe. Yet, we have failed in achieving that seminal goal; in fact, we have lost ground in recent years. Another distinctly American principle is a shared partnership between the public and private sectors to foster the public good. So, if the democratically-directed public sector is shirking, to some degree, its responsibility to level the playing field, more of that role must shift to the private sector.
As I addressed my charitable purposes, all of this seemed pretty clear: I was only peripherally responsible for my own good fortune; I was morally duty bound to help those left behind by the accident of birth; America’s root principle was equal opportunity but we were far from achieving it. Then I had to drill down to identify the charitable purposes most likely to right that wrong.
The discoveries of stem cell research and brain development in recent years provided some guidance for me. Though almost all of us grew up believing in the concept of equal opportunity, most of us simultaneously carried the unspoken and inconsistent “dirty little secret” that genetics drove much of accomplishment so that equality was not achievable. What the new research seemed to suggest, however, was that brain cells were functionally unformed at birth and that only through the communication among them – driven by trial and error interpretation of sensory stimulation shortly after birth – did our cognitive and social/emotional skills develop. As I sometimes joke, I remember vividly that place before birth as being warm, wet, dark…and boring. Then, suddenly, as I emerged, I was bombarded with sensory overload and had to interpret all of that strange stimulus. Most of that interpretation takes place by age three; after that, we can modify our destiny but it is a lot harder.
No child is responsible for the circumstances of her birth and should not be punished for it in this life. (I will leave the question of second chances to other pulpits.) I have therefore developed my charitable focus around the concept of providing the greatest opportunity for self fulfillment for each child, focusing on those who arrive in the least advantaged circumstances. (A purer focus would be in areas of much greater disadvantage in the world where fewer dollars accomplish more. I honor the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s commitment to the principle that “every life has equal value” but will leave my justification for a primarily American focus to another dissertation.) That governing concept has led us to those initiatives which attempt to reverse the generational cycle of poverty, especially for very young children and their families: prenatal healthcare; early learning and development for at-risk kids, birth to three; family healthcare; parenting training; job and income assistance for families with young children; operating a robust program to provide alternatives to incarceration for mothers who have committed non-violent crimes, et cetera.
These efforts focus most heavily on the causes of poverty but we also dedicate resources to the symptoms, especially in these difficult times and in our relatively poor part of the country – food, clothing, shelter, healthcare and civic projects that promote inclusiveness and vibrancy. We generate a mix of projects, some of which are leading edge and more that import best practices from the greater creativity and experience of others. We attempt to leverage other resources, public and private, by our example. We try not to let a budget drive our expenditures but rather pursue those efforts through which we can make a true difference at an appropriate cost, whether less than or more than our targeted allocation. We remain lean in our central organization and partner with the leading practitioners in our fields of endeavor. We tend to direct our purposes and carefully monitor targeted results on a contemporaneous basis rather than scattering gifts and trusting to retrospective general narratives of success from the beneficiaries. All in all, it is an intoxicating and yet frustrating journey, led by an extraordinarily committed and talented cadre of leaders.
Now that I have told you far more than you wanted to know about how I arrived at my charitable commitment and direction, it is time to make the pledge: I am entranced by Warren’s and Bill’s visionary appeal to those who have accumulated unconscionable resources, to dedicate at least half of them back to purposes more useful than dynastic perpetuation. My family is very well provided for and they join me in my intention to devote virtually all of my financial resources to the same general charitable purposes I have pursued in life, better informed in specifics by our experience and the experience of others. If enough acolytes follow Bill’s and Warren’s example, then maybe we will more closely approach the ideal of equal opportunity throughout the United States and the world.
I have responded affirmatively to the Giving Pledge. In fact, I have fulfilled that pledge already, having given more than half my wealth to charitable causes, primarily cancer research. I have also committed, and reaffirm here, that the balance of my estate–other than what is needed to support my wife during her lifetime–will also be given to charity…
Dear Warren:
I have responded affirmatively to the Giving Pledge. In fact, I have fulfilled that pledge already, having given more than half my wealth to charitable causes, primarily cancer research. I have also committed, and reaffirm here, that the balance of my estate–other than what is needed to support my wife during her lifetime–will also be given to charity.
My thinking is rather simple: I learned as a young boy that sharing with others is the right thing to do, a lesson I observed from my father’s willingness to share even our meager means with those less fortunate. Ever since, it has never been difficult for me to continue to do the right thing.
I trust your efforts in growing the ranks of those committed to the Giving Pledge will be matched by the effort to see those pledges fulfilled. Thank you for your leadership.
Warmest Regards,
Sidney Kimmel
Elaine and I were honored to receive your graceful letter. It conveys a spiritual purpose that has long been close to our hearts and, yes, we will gladly join you in making our own pledge. Much praise to you for making this a national calling. It is inspiring how such a simple idea puts faith into action for the community as a whole. Our family is thankful for the many blessings we have enjoyed. It is because we live in a special country, where freedom of opportunity is a cherished virtue…
Dear Warren,
Elaine and I were honored to receive your graceful letter. It conveys a spiritual purpose that has long been close to our hearts and, yes, we will gladly join you in making our own pledge. Much praise to you for making this a national calling. It is inspiring how such a simple idea puts faith into action for the community as a whole.
Our family is thankful for the many blessings we have enjoyed. It is because we live in a special country, where freedom of opportunity is a cherished virtue that we can reach so high in the first place. But nothing makes our society better than when we live up to its most caring ideals of service and selflessness. So it is also with a deep sense of gratitude that we are pleased to be included in this wonderful undertaking.
Sincerely,
Ken Langone
I have been asked why Marguerite and I made the Giving Pledge. The first and compelling is the joy we experience in giving to worthwhile causes. Marguerite and I have given the bulk of our fortune away. Over the last ten years, we have created a scholarship fund to send needy young scholars from rural areas to the better colleges, have sponsored research used by others to introduce legislation protecting our oceans, have started the center for sustainable energy at Columbia University, have…
Dear Melinda,
I have been asked why Marguerite and I made the Giving Pledge.
The first and compelling is the joy we experience in giving to worthwhile causes. Marguerite and I have given the bulk of our fortune away. Over the last ten years, we have created a scholarship fund to send needy young scholars from rural areas to the better colleges, have sponsored research used by others to introduce legislation protecting our oceans, have started the center for sustainable energy at Columbia University, have been the principal supporter of Teach For America in Philadelphia and have given to over a hundred other cases during that period.
The second reason is that we do not want to give excessive wealth to our progeny. Giving wealth to young and future unborn children, in our opinion, reduces or eliminates the character building challenges ahead of them in life that they would otherwise face.
Perhaps a third reason is that one is not measured by how many homes, yachts or airplanes you have. The ultimate achievement in life is how you feel about yourself. And giving your wealth away to have an impact for good does help with that feeling.
Sincerely,
H. F. (Gerry) Lenfest
Born in 1927 I remember vividly the worst of the depression years in terms of how they affected my family—1933 and 1937 especially. The depression taught me the value of money, and my mother gave me a lesson around 1937 I never forgot. She asked me to run down to the store and get a loaf of bread. I did and charged it as usual. When I got home and gave it to her, she started at me in disbelief. “Dummy!” she said. “You bought the small nine-cent size. Don’t you know you get half again…
Born in 1927 I remember vividly the worst of the depression years in terms of how they affected my family—1933 and 1937 especially. The depression taught me the value of money, and my mother gave me a lesson around 1937 I never forgot.
She asked me to run down to the store and get a loaf of bread. I did and charged it as usual. When I got home and gave it to her, she started at me in disbelief. “Dummy!” she said. “You bought the small nine-cent size. Don’t you know you get half again more for 11 cents?” From that I learned the lesson of percentages.
But a bigger lesson grew from that experience. I began to realize the importance of money consists of buying what is worth the price. As I grew into adult years, I passed over things most people might grab because I didn’t think the price justified the value. For decades I have applied that to hotels, plane fares, restaurants, clothes, hard goods. I drive a hybrid and fly coach, upgrading only with points, not money. I have only three luxuries: My Atherton, CA., home, a San Francisco luxury apartment 600 feet above sea level and a luxurious home on Pineapple Hill in Kapalua, Maui. All will end up in my foundation where three other homes are right now awaiting sale.
During even the Depression’s worst years my parents gave money—about 8% of their annual income of $2200. I remember saying to my mother that we can’t afford that. But she said we have to share with others. I learned from that to share.
Except for the first few years out of Stanford, I have given near the 10% mark for some 20 years. For the last 40 years the giving amounts to more than 90% of all monies earned. You might then ask, “What are your favorite recipients?”
Going back 40 years I began thinking where I should concentrate my grants. Back then all of it was going to Stanford University and a few other institutions like Leo Baeck high school in Haifa. Twenty years ago I locked into this conclusion:
What single factor most affected my being so successful in business? In a nanosecond the answer came up: Education.
Throughout the world without an exception, education is the determinant of a person’s intelligence level and possible success. And success is not making a million a month or a year. It’s earning enough to live comfortably and being able to finance children’s education.
As my thoughts wandered from Alameda grammar school and Grant high school in Portland to Stanford, I soon came to the conclusion that the most critical part of my education was Alameda with Stanford taking on the role of pointing a direction for my future—journalism later to be public relations and still later to be founding a very profitable business—Business Wire, now a subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway.
Each year I ask Alameda’s principal what they need. This year it’s a fully equipped rolling computer wagon to move among the classrooms as needed. In earlier years I equipped all classrooms with computers and built a new library there.
By the latter 1960s, I was concentrating on Stanford with endowed chairs and student scholarships. It climaxed in 2008 with a $75 million pledge for what might be the world’s largest stem cell laboratory as well as the new Stanford Daily building. The Daily is paid for, and the stem cell lab money is in the Stanford Donor Advised Fund.
Around 1990 I realized I needed to broaden the base of giving to educational institutions. I wanted to concentrate on education because by putting all the money into a single subject effort, it might make a difference. I never have slipped into giving $500 here and $1000 there to 100 or 200 entities.
This brought into focus the major recipients, such as Santa Clara University, University of Oregon, Mills College, Portland State University, Oregon Health and Science University, two Oregon libraries, three San Francisco area Jewish day and grammar schools, two Hispanic schools in San Jose, several Israeli colleges (Technion, Weizmann, Ben Guerion) along with Hadassah Medical Center.
At several of the colleges, the grants have been so large that recipients use the word “transformational” to describe their effect. This has been especially true for University of Oregon ($134 million), Mills College ($35 million), Santa Clara University ($37 million) and Technion Institute in Haifa ($33 million). What a good feeling this gives me. I would have it this way any day before wanting a jet plane or yacht.
As we went into the 21st century, I began quipping that I want to die broke. It won’t be quite that bad, but I will have set up machinery that my uncommitted assets today will be granted via such things as donor advised funds, charitable remained trusts and my foundation. The children, grandchildren and great grandchildren have been taken care of and will not be in the estate. Nor will my companion of 19 years, Joanne Harrington, who got her bequest many years ago and has been so helpful to me in the sharing process.
There’s an old saying about farmers putting back in to the ground via fertilizer what they take out. So it is with money. The larger the estate, the more important it is to revitalize the soil.
Storytellers are teachers and communicators who speak a universal language. That was Homer’s primary role, and both Plato and Aristotle used narratives and dialogues as a means of educating. Good storytelling is based on truths and insights, and a good storyteller is ultimately a teacher – using the arts as a means of making education emotionally meaningful. These are all tools at our educational system’s disposal, but too often we aren’t making use of them…
Storytellers are teachers and communicators who speak a universal language. That was Homer’s primary role, and both Plato and Aristotle used narratives and dialogues as a means of educating. Good storytelling is based on truths and insights, and a good storyteller is ultimately a teacher – using the arts as a means of making education emotionally meaningful. These are all tools at our educational system’s disposal, but too often we aren’t making use of them.
When I was in high school, I felt like I was in a vacuum, biding time. I was curious, but bored. It was not an atmosphere conducive to learning. I was fortunate that I found my path and my language.
It’s scary to think of our education system as little better than an assembly line with producing diplomas as its only goal. Once I had the means to effect change in this arena, it became my passion to do so – to promote active, life-long learning. I believe in the artisan school of learning, through apprenticeships and Aristotelian questions and discussion. This level of engagement dates back to the beginning of human life, but it’s still the best way of doing things. There have to be universal standards – particularly in education – and while it seems unwieldy, there is a willingness among educators to share their best practices.
Ultimately, that is why I created Edutopia and the George Lucas Educational Foundation.
The focus of GLEF has been to share educational innovations – cooperative and project learning, mentorship, parental involvement, and technological advances. This all comes straight from those on the front lines, from teachers who are putting these methods into practice. We are the facilitators. Our goal has been to showcase bold successes and inspire others to further increase the appetite for education. Our hope is that administrators, teachers, and parents will see the power of these collective efforts and join the fight for wider reforms.
But reform is just the beginning. We need to build new foundations, fostering independent thought and a desire to keep learning. Our students need to come away with more than just survival skills, and more than just what is required to complete the program. We need to promote critical thinking and emotional intelligence. We need to focus on building an education system that promotes different types of learning, different types of development, and different types of assessment. We have an opportunity and an obligation to prepare our children for the real world, for dealing with others in practical, project-based environments. It’s about working together and building character – being compassionate, empathetic, and civil as a means to a greater end.
As technology changes, so do students. So should classrooms, and so should our methods of teaching. In a few short years, connectivity has gone from a technological novelty to a daily necessity. It’s how our culture communicates, and our children are at the forefront of its use. Understanding those tools – and how to integrate them into learning – is an integral step in defining our future.
My pledge is to the process; as long as I have the resources at my disposal, I will seek to raise the bar for future generations of students of all ages.
I am dedicating the majority of my wealth to improving education. It is the key to the survival of the human race. We have to plan for our collective future – and the first step begins with the social, emotional, and intellectual tools we provide to our children. As humans, our greatest tool for survival is our ability to think and to adapt – as educators, storytellers, and communicators our responsibility is to continue to do so.
George Lucas
It is with a great sense of responsibility and recognition of our own good fortune that we commit to the “Giving Pledge.” We are aware, in our roles as family members, neighbors, colleagues, and friends, that we all rely on one another in both apparent and less obvious ways. Giving is one of the more clear and direct means to provide support, and it is satisfying to commit our resources to organizations that assist others and help to strengthen our society…
It is with a great sense of responsibility and recognition of our own good fortune that we commit to the “Giving Pledge.” We are aware, in our roles as family members, neighbors, colleagues, and friends, that we all rely on one another in both apparent and less obvious ways. Giving is one of the more clear and direct means to provide support, and it is satisfying to commit our resources to organizations that assist others and help to strengthen our society.
We very much believe that the accumulation of wealth gets us nowhere. Money has the most value when it’s used for others and the greater good, for sustaining and enriching our world. In our minds, foundational areas like education and health are the most critical. We support places like Rutgers University and Johns Hopkins, institutions at the nexus of education and medical research, as well as more local, grass-roots organizations that seek to maintain and enhance the health, education, and well-being of our community.
We also support the arts, an area that we see as central to a flourishing culture, allowing individuals to thrive personally and creatively, and itself an area that perpetually gives back to the community. In many ways we see the arts as an extension of education, a place where we are inspired to create, cultivate talents, and be encouraged to excel.
Both of us have been lucky in our own lives, supported by the generosity of others when pursuing our own college educations. We have also been lucky to have been in the company of inspiring, motivated, and encouraging colleagues and friends, who have helped to put us in a position in which we now have the means to give in ways that we see as worthwhile and promising.
We are honored to be included within the group making this “Giving Pledge” and grateful not only because of its call to responsibility as members of society but also for its inspiring an attitude of generosity and hope – hope in the idea that we collectively have the resources among us to transform, buildup, and renew our society. This is a responsibility and challenge, but one we are thrilled to take on.
I have been very fortunate in having been born to exceptional parents in this great country. I came from humble beginnings and grew to become a young scientist pioneering in a field of electro-optical physics. The US Army needed my help and actually set me up in business in 1956. Two years later the Air Force came to me for help with our country’s first spacecraft. The success of my first company (Spectrolab, now a subsidiary of the Boeing Co.) has enabled me to leapfrog from one success to…
I have been very fortunate in having been born to exceptional parents in this great country. I came from humble beginnings and grew to become a young scientist pioneering in a field of electro-optical physics. The US Army needed my help and actually set me up in business in 1956. Two years later the Air Force came to me for help with our country’s first spacecraft. The success of my first company (Spectrolab, now a subsidiary of the Boeing Co.) has enabled me to leapfrog from one success to another, enabling me to amass a substantial fortune. I want to use those resources to make this a better world — and to do as much as I can during my lifetime. I am therefore committing most of my estate to philanthropy, primarily focusing on development of medical products to improve and extend lives.
I began my extensive philanthropic program in 1985 with the founding of the Alfred Mann Foundation (AMF). AMF is an operating public medical research organization that has focused mostly on applications of neuromodulation. It employs about 100 people; all but a few are scientists and engineers. The contributions of AMF are numerous, including developments to enable the deaf to hear and soon for the lame to walk. AMF also developed a long-term implantable glucose sensor (lasting ~1½ years) for diabetes and a number of other devices.
The success of AMF has led me to try to use a similar approach to harness the intellectual property at elite research universities. Rarely does that work end up in successful products or successful ventures. To address this I am creating biomedical institutes at a number of elite research universities. Each university receives an endowment of at least $100 million. Ideas born within the academic faculty are developed into products within separate industrial institutes owned by the universities. When developed the products are then licensed out to existing or start-up businesses for commercialization. So far institutes have been founded at the University of Southern California, Purdue and the Technion in Israel.
I have also created several other medical research foundations and two holding entities to distribute assets to fund my philanthropic activities. Additionally I have given to a variety of other charities especially related to music and education.
Early I was able to provide modest support for my family so that I intend for at least 90% of my estate to be devoted to philanthropy — almost all directed to advancing medical technology.
This is my commitment.
Thank you for calling to discuss my participation with you and Bill Gates regarding your philanthropy philosophy. It brought back memories of our conversation 15 years ago when I tried to convince you to do the very same thing. As you might remember, it has always been my belief that leaving enormous wealth for our children does nothing to stimulate their ability to make it on their own. I too believe that all our efforts in creating the wealth that we have would give us a great deal more joy…
Dear Warren,
Thank you for calling to discuss my participation with you and Bill Gates regarding your philanthropy philosophy. It brought back memories of our conversation 15 years ago when I tried to convince you to do the very same thing. As you might remember, it has always been my belief that leaving enormous wealth for our children does nothing to stimulate their ability to make it on their own. I too believe that all our efforts in creating the wealth that we have would give us a great deal more joy if we were to disperse as much of it during our lifetimes.
We’ve been focused on this work at The Marcus Foundation since our conversation many years ago. For example,The Georgia Aquarium, which is the largest in the world, has given over 12 million visitors the joy of seeing fish and mammals that the overwhelming majority would have never had the opportunity to see in their lifetime. It also helped stimulate our downtown economy offering jobs and new opportunities. The work we do with hospitals, education, and children through the Marcus Autism Center (MAC), has enabled us to take care of well over 36,000 children since its inception and approximately 4,000 children annually. If it weren’t for the MAC in Georgia there would be nowhere for many of these families to go.
I share this with you because of happiness one can conceive by watching the joys of their work. I remember very vividly a child that I had seen about a year ago that was severely autistic in my walk through MAC. Someone pointed this child out to me and when he looked at me he went into total hysteria, e.g. screaming, butting his head against the wall, etc. These actions happen with children of these disabilities. Approximately one year later we were doing a documentary with NBC and I walked into a classroom where the producer asked me to appear with one of the children. There was this same young man and I was horrified he would have another episode as he had in the past. Instead he came over, sat in my lap and talked! By the way, he had not spoken for the six years of his life before going to MAC. I cried, the teachers cried, the cameraman cried, and the parents cried. What a blessing this was to have changed one life and to have had such an impact on a life. I encourage you to always try to see the faces of the recipients you help.
This has happened to me many times over the last 15 years and it’s made my life fuller. To make quarterly profits is one thing but changing just one life is so much better. However, I must say that just because we were involved with charity we didn’t lose our fundamental business acumen. Our staff insists on outcomes for every grant we make. If outcomes are not achieved, we don’t hesitate to withdraw funding. Our money has a value and it took lots of hard work to accumulate. I don’t just write checks – we try to make the organizations we fund better. The results have been rather outstanding.
So Warren, I want to thank you and Bill for doing what you’re doing. I hope you convince many others to enhance their own lives by sharing with others in a smart and business like way. It truly is the secret to longevity of their health and state of mind.
I hope that you and Bill will visit and enjoy The Georgia Aquarium soon.
Sending my best wishes,
Bernie Marcus
I was born in Galveston, Texas, to Greek immigrant parents and was a teenager during the Great Depression. Although I grew up in a very meager, yet loving, environment, I always considered myself fortunate to live in the United States where opportunities were unlimited, yet something we all seemed to take for granted. I quickly learned that a good education, hard work, dedication, willing mentors, and a few lucky breaks meant the difference between success and failure…
I was born in Galveston, Texas, to Greek immigrant parents and was a teenager during the Great Depression. Although I grew up in a very meager, yet loving, environment, I always considered myself fortunate to live in the United States where opportunities were unlimited, yet something we all seemed to take for granted. I quickly learned that a good education, hard work, dedication, willing mentors, and a few lucky breaks meant the difference between success and failure.
Throughout my life I’ve seen firsthand how even a little financial assistance could mean a chance for struggling students, dedicated scientists, and families to reach their goals. I’ve also witnessed how underwriting large-scale academic, performing arts, medical, and research programs can be quite appealing, as those ventures have far-reaching, long-term benefits for society as a whole, often extending for successive generations.
As I’ve been blessed with good fortune for decades and have lived the American dream, I’m pleased to take the Giving Pledge. Through The Cynthia and George Mitchell Foundation, I will continue to donate a substantial portion of my assets during my lifetime and through my will.
Bill and Melinda Gates and Warren Buffett have set an extraordinary example by their generosity and leadership, so I’m honored to join them in this remarkable philanthropic endeavor.
In 1998 when my sale of Domino’s Pizza was made public, the Detroit Free Press headline read, “I (Monaghan) Plan to Die Broke”. You could say that my giving pledge was made public at that time, but it was something I had contemplated for many years. So, when Bill (Gates) recently contacted me regarding the Giving Pledge project, I was more than happy to participate and share my story. I came into the world penniless and as a Catholic Christian, I know that I cannot take any of it with me…
In 1998 when my sale of Domino’s Pizza was made public, the Detroit Free Press headline read, “I (Monaghan) Plan to Die Broke”. You could say that my giving pledge was made public at that time, but it was something I had contemplated for many years. So, when Bill (Gates) recently contacted me regarding the Giving Pledge project, I was more than happy to participate and share my story.
I came into the world penniless and as a Catholic Christian, I know that I cannot take any of it with me, so it has long been my desire to use the material resources that I have been blessed with to help others in the most meaningful ways possible. My faith has always been a central part of my life; not that I have always lived it perfectly, but it has been the consistent guiding force as far back as I can remember. My early experience of the Catholic faith, taught to me by the Felician sisters when I was in the orphanage during my formative years, served as a foundation for what I would believe to be the most important things in life. As I built and expanded Domino’s Pizza for 38 years, my desire to spread the faith also grew.
As a young man, I remember doing some deep soul searching and asking myself some questions that had to change the way I lived. I asked myself, does God exist? If He did, then I had better get with it… If He did exist, which I am convinced He does, it meant that the eternal state of my soul was the most important thing in the world. So, my logic tells me that the best thing that I can do for my fellow man is to help share this truth with others. Also, as a Catholic, I would not be living out my faith if I did not use the abundant resources God has given me to help others.
In the 80’s, as the material things in my life were “thriving”, I had a deep desire to give back to God… He had been so good to me by blessing me with incredible material wealth and success. Domino’s Pizza was booming, I owned the Detroit Tigers, classic cars… – it was like a dream come true – yet, as mentioned above, I knew that the most important things in life were not material; I knew that all these things would pass away and that the only thing that really mattered was the state of my soul and for that matter the state of every person’s soul. While I had given money away previously, I now began to look for how I could really be effective, really make a difference in what truly mattered; in people’s eternal lives.
After selling Domino’s, I created a number of priorities that would guide my giving. However, I soon concluded that I needed to focus these priorities even more (as my resources were finite), and I eventually concluded that the most important thing I believed I could do with the resources that I had been blessed with was to help build quality, faithful Catholic education. A number of years before, I had started supporting Catholic education by getting involved with grade schools, and this was great, but building schools was expensive. I realized that to have a more global impact, I would need to focus on Catholic higher education – to train the teachers, the principals, the future Catholic university and seminary professors.
So, from my experience of sitting on numerous college and university boards and the expertise of some well respected Catholic academics, we set out on a journey to establish Ave Maria University and Ave Maria School of Law. Since that time, I have not only committed my personal assets to these institutions, but they have become my life’s work, as I am now going around the country raising money for them.
I am very grateful not only for the resources that I have been blessed with, but the opportunity to use these resources to help others in the best way I know how.
In 1955 we graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, got married and headed west so John could attend the Stanford Graduate School of Business and Tashia could start her teaching career. All of our possessions fit into our 1950 Ford and all of our wealth fit into a back pants pocket. It was the start of a glorious adventure! But we left the Midwest with much more; with the values, confidence and capabilities learned from our parents, our community, our early public schooling in…
In 1955 we graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, got married and headed west so John could attend the Stanford Graduate School of Business and Tashia could start her teaching career. All of our possessions fit into our 1950 Ford and all of our wealth fit into a back pants pocket. It was the start of a glorious adventure!
But we left the Midwest with much more; with the values, confidence and capabilities learned from our parents, our community, our early public schooling in Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, and from the University of Wisconsin. Early on we learned the art of giving small checks to causes important to us,. Through hard work, good fortune and the opportunities offered by our amazing country and the world, we have prospered beyond all expectation. As a result, we have been able to add many zeros to the amounts of the checks we are now able to write.
In 1992 we formed a family foundation with our children and the two of us as board members. It has been a learning process, but in spite of heartaches and setbacks, we have all learned to become involved, effective philanthropists. We have teamed with talented people and with many of the organizations that helped to form us. The more personally involved we have become with the causes we support the more effective we seem to be.
Through our foundation and also personally, we have now given away over half our net worth. It is our intent to remain involved and to continue to give. Our children intend to carry on their work after we are gone. The adventure continues.
In 2004, I had the extraordinary opportunity to help create Facebook, which has grown to connect half a billion people, dramatically increasing communication and transparency worldwide. As a result of Facebook’s success, I’ve earned financial capital beyond my wildest expectations. Today, I view that reward not as personal wealth, but as a tool with which I hope to bring even more benefit to the world. I’m grateful to my friends and family…
In 2004, I had the extraordinary opportunity to help create Facebook, which has grown to connect half a billion people, dramatically increasing communication and transparency worldwide. As a result of Facebook’s success, I’ve earned financial capital beyond my wildest expectations. Today, I view that reward not as personal wealth, but as a tool with which I hope to bring even more benefit to the world.
I’m grateful to my friends and family for shaping my understanding of effective philanthropy, educating me on areas of need, and demonstrating time and again the power of a good idea, well executed.
I’m especially thankful to have found a partner in Cari who shares my priorities and commitment to this humbling work. Over the next few years, we will begin to identify the causes to which we can make the most leveraged contributions. We will donate and invest with both urgency and mindfulness, aiming to foster a safer, healthier and more economically empowered global community.
When eBay went public in 1998, Pam and I suddenly found ourselves in a position of great wealth. In a matter of days we went from making a modest living to landing a spot on Forbes’ list of richest Americans. It was a surreal experience. But the responsibility we felt for being good stewards of that wealth was genuine – and has grown ever since. In 2001, I publicly stated that we intend to give away the vast majority of our wealth during our lifetime. Our view is fairly simple…
When eBay went public in 1998, Pam and I suddenly found ourselves in a position of great wealth. In a matter of days we went from making a modest living to landing a spot on Forbes’ list of richest Americans. It was a surreal experience. But the responsibility we felt for being good stewards of that wealth was genuine – and has grown ever since.
In 2001, I publicly stated that we intend to give away the vast majority of our wealth during our lifetime. Our view is fairly simple. We have more money than our family will ever need. There’s no need to hold onto it when it can be put to use today, to help solve some of the world’s most intractable problems.
In thinking about how we could be most effective, we began our work by reminding ourselves of our core values, including respect for others and a sense of service. We’ve made a conscious effort to remain true to these guiding principles as our efforts grow and evolve. The eBay community also taught us a valuable lesson: people respond to opportunity in inspiring ways. The organizations we’ve created and the time and energy we spend on various causes is rooted in our belief that people are inherently capable but frequently lack opportunity.
Today we believe our philanthropic impact is amplified because our approach uses a wide variety of tools and resources. We don’t just write checks; we engage deeply with the organizations we support to help them reach and improve the lives of millions, not just thousands. We invest in for profit businesses that serve overlooked populations with much-needed products and services. We reach out to like-minded investors and advocates to form coalitions that support issues that will benefit from a unified voice.
So while the focus of the Giving Pledge is on the philanthropists and amounts pledged, we are inspired by the organizations we support that are doing amazing things and the people we are here to serve.
We are pleased to stand alongside Bill and Melinda, Warren, and so many others who are working every day to create positive social impact in the world. Truthfully, it’s not up to the small minority of those with money to spare; lasting change requires all of us working together across industries, sectors, and cultures. Our common challenge is not necessarily about dollars raised; it’s about discovering the most efficient and effective use of our resources and leaving a legacy of hope for those to come.
The Bernard Osher Foundation started in 1977 with contributions to higher education and the arts. Within the field of higher education, the Foundation has focused on postsecondary scholarships, especially for older returning students; lifelong learning institutes for seasoned adults; and integrative medicine programs. The Barbro Osher Pro Suecia Foundation, founded in 1995, supports Swedish-American educational and cultural exchange. We have been committed for more than thirty years…
The Bernard Osher Foundation started in 1977 with contributions to higher education and the arts. Within the field of higher education, the Foundation has focused on postsecondary scholarships, especially for older returning students; lifelong learning institutes for seasoned adults; and integrative medicine programs. The Barbro Osher Pro Suecia Foundation, founded in 1995, supports Swedish-American educational and cultural exchange. We have been committed for more than thirty years – and remain committed — to directing the majority of our means to philanthropy.
One of the most memorable moments in my life was at a charity dinner I was attending for a breast cancer cause. A woman approached me and said, “I just wanted to say thank you—because of you my sister is alive.” I happened to be standing next to the man who was really responsible for that wonderful news—Dr. Dennis Slamon. I first learned of Dr. Slamon’s research about 20 years ago when we were introduced by a mutual friend, Lily Tartikoff…
One of the most memorable moments in my life was at a charity dinner I was attending for a breast cancer cause. A woman approached me and said, “I just wanted to say thank you—because of you my sister is alive.” I happened to be standing next to the man who was really responsible for that wonderful news—Dr. Dennis Slamon.
I first learned of Dr. Slamon’s research about 20 years ago when we were introduced by a mutual friend, Lily Tartikoff. He told me he had found abnormally large quantities of a gene called HER2 in about 30% of breast-cancer tumors. But he hadn’t yet proven that the gene played a pivotal role in the disease. He wanted to begin testing antibodies that might slow some of the more aggressive forms of cancer. The trouble was the research wasn’t developed enough for drug-company backing, and funding it with government grants would add years to the study. The idea of funding this immediately appealed to me. I have always been interested in giving to projects that may not get done otherwise. If the research wasn’t productive, I would have spent money to no avail, but, if the idea worked, the potential was enormous—it was a risk I was willing to take. I asked Dr. Slamon what he needed and then told him to get to work.
The result of that research was Herceptin, the only drug known to cure certain types of breast cancer. And it started helping women, like that woman’s sister whom I will probably never meet, a full 10 years earlier than if Dr. Slamon had not received my gift.
I can think of no greater example as to why giving now and seeing the benefits first hand can be the single most rewarding thing any of us can do. I support this pledge to designate half my assets for the benefit of charitable purposes during my lifetime and through my foundation.
I am very pleased to pledge that I plan to contribute the substantial majority of my assets to philanthropy. As you know, I am well on my way. I do so with great pleasure. And for several reasons. My parents were Greek immigrants who came to America at age 17, with 3rd grade educations, not a word of English and hardly a penny in their pockets. Their dream was the American dream, not just for themselves but for their children as well. My father took a job no one else would take…
Dear Warren:
I am very pleased to pledge that I plan to contribute the substantial majority of my assets to philanthropy. As you know, I am well on my way.
I do so with great pleasure. And for several reasons.
My parents were Greek immigrants who came to America at age 17, with 3rd grade educations, not a word of English and hardly a penny in their pockets. Their dream was the American dream, not just for themselves but for their children as well.
My father took a job no one else would take – – washing dishes in a steamy caboose on the Union Pacific railroad. He ate and slept there and saved virtually every penny he made. He took those savings and started the inevitable Greek restaurant, open 24 hours a day for 365 days a year for 25 years. Throughout this period, he always sent money to his desperately poor family in Greece and fed countless numbers of hungry poor who came knocking on the back door of his restaurant. Above all else, he wanted to save so as to invest in his children’s education.
As I watched and learned from my father’s example, I noticed how much pleasure his giving to others gave him. Indeed, today, I get much more pleasure giving money to what I consider worthwhile causes than making the money in the first place. As I checked with other philanthropists, I found this was a very common experience.
For example, I have been particularly pleased to support causes and institutions for which I have a passion and for which I contribute myself, that is my personal capital, as well as my financial capital. For example, the Peterson Institute for International Economics, the Council on Foreign Relations and The Concord Coalition that I co-founded with Senators Warren Rudman and Paul Tsongas.
I was also informed by the great novelist, Kurt Vonnegut, who once told a story that seemed to capture my situation perfectly. He and Joseph Heller were at a party given by a wealthy hedge fund manager at his majestic beach house in the Hamptons, the summer playground on Long Island where the rich and famous congregate. Kurt and Joe both had made their marks by satirizing life’s absurdities – Kurt with best-selling novels like Slaughterhouse 5 and Breakfast of Champions, Joe with the incomparable Catch-22. During the course of the party, Kurt looked around at the surroundings and asked Heller: “Joe, doesn’t it bother you that this guy makes more in a day than you ever made from the worldwide sales of Cach-22?” Joe thought for a moment and then said, “No, not really. I have something that he doesn’t have.” “What could you possibly have that he doesn’t have?” Kurt asked. “I know the meaning of enough.” My father often said the same thing.
When I enjoyed a most surprising billion dollar plus windfall from the public offering of The Blackstone Group, a firm co-founded, I pondered, what should I do with all of this money?
In 2007, I decided I already had far more than enough and was delighted to commit a billion dollars to the Peter G. Peterson Foundation and to some causes that I care deeply about.
My foundation made its first major contribution to a transcendent global threat, the proliferation of nuclear weapons. I have known former Senator Sam Nunn, for whom I have enormous respect, who is devoting much of his life to this cause.
I am also much concerned about domestic threats that I also consider transcendent. I refer to several such threats as undeniable, unsustainable and yet, politically speaking, untouchable. For example, our unfunded entitlement promises that so many depend upon, our ballooning debts to foreign lenders, which combined with our very low savings, leaves us very vulnerable and even threaten our national sovereignty. Then, of course, there are our mushrooming healthcare costs that threaten to bankrupt our economy.
We, at the Foundation, are deeply involved in educating, motivating and, hopefully, activating the public to do something about these problems.
I am a very lucky American dreamer but I want to see that dream alive for my five children’s and nine grandchildren’s generations. On our current path, I fear we are imperiling their future by passing on massive, hidden debts and unthinkable taxes. At bottom, I consider this fiscal child abuse or mortgaging their future, or whatever one chooses to call it, it is not only an economic issue but a national security issue and, above all, a moral issue.
Given the serious political challenges and our country’s apparent reluctance to accept the required shared sacrifice, no doubt many are saying my Foundation is not only a presumptuous mission, but a foolhardy one. So, I quote my old University of Chicago professor George Stigler, “If you have no alternative, you have no problem.” I asked myself this melancholy question: How will I feel 10 to 20 years from now if I look back and ask why, oh why did we all leave such a legacy? How could we have done this, not simply to America, but to our own children and grandchildren? Could there be a worse feeling? Can not trying really be an acceptable alternative?
Finally, Warren, you and Bill Gates know better than anyone how distinctly American private philanthropy is.
I thank you warmly and congratulate you and Bill Gates both mightily for your leadership role in this most worthwhile cause.
Best,
Peter G. Peterson
I’ve long stated that I enjoy making money, and I enjoy giving it away. I like making money more, but giving it away is a close second. To date, I’ve given away nearly $800 million to a wide-range of charitable organizations, and I look forward to the day I hit the $1 billion mark. I’m not a big fan of inherited wealth. It generally does more harm than good. I want to thank my friends Bill and Warren for their leadership – I am pleased to join them.
I’ve long stated that I enjoy making money, and I enjoy giving it away. I like making money more, but giving it away is a close second. To date, I’ve given away nearly $800 million to a wide-range of charitable organizations, and I look forward to the day I hit the $1 billion mark. I’m not a big fan of inherited wealth. It generally does more harm than good. I want to thank my friends Bill and Warren for their leadership – I am pleased to join them.
My parents and their friends in the little town in North Carolina where I grew up were always very philanthropic. They wanted our schools to be the best they could be, and they worked hard to get them that way. They worked on our parks. They worked with the local hospital to make it the best. We had two local colleges, Livingstone and Catawba – one black, one white – and the townspeople were supportive of both. When I moved to New York, I worked with the Boys’ Club of New York, namely at…
My parents and their friends in the little town in North Carolina where I grew up were always very philanthropic. They wanted our schools to be the best they could be, and they worked hard to get them that way. They worked on our parks. They worked with the local hospital to make it the best. We had two local colleges, Livingstone and Catawba – one black, one white – and the townspeople were supportive of both.
When I moved to New York, I worked with the Boys’ Club of New York, namely at 110th Street in Harlem and at Pitt Street which is on the lower East Side. My doctor got me interested in something called the Cancer Research Institute where I eventually became board chairman. This led to a lifelong interest in medical research. Early on, I also met a man named Bill Milliken, who in my opinion is the greatest venture capitalist in the good-works field. He was a refugee of the gang warfare which existed in Pittsburgh and New York and became an incredible leader with his Communities in Schools, which is now in 26 states and in 3,400 schools serving 1.4 million children annually. My late wife, Josie, and I worked jointly for Central Park and Lincoln Center. Her work with the Boys’ Clubs eventually far exceeded my own. Philanthropy was a part of our lives that we both enjoyed greatly.
In 1990 I set up the Tiger Foundation, with a young man named John Griffin, to help alleviate poverty in New York. In my business, I was then working with some great young people who had marvelous leadership credentials, and I wanted to encourage them to be philanthropists. This has turned out well, as the foundation has become extremely respected in its quest to alleviate poverty and has spawned a number of young people who have become great philanthropists in their own right. Frankly, I count the Tiger Foundation as the most successful venture I have had a hand in starting.
In 1993, Josie and I started our own foundation. It was designed to address issues in medicine, education, spirituality and, finally, the environment, which I had come to rather late in life.
I met a man named Fred Krupp who nurtured a latent effort on my part to get into issues of environmental concern. Fred is responsible for the most successful speculation I ever made. Fred called one day and told me that the California legislature was in limbo over a bill pushing the toughest auto emissions standards ever proposed. The speaker was willing to do whatever was necessary, even keeping the legislature in session into all hours of the night until a positive vote could be obtained. Fred and I went to work, and with just a little lobbying money, and a lot of help from a friend in California, got the three votes needed to pass the bill. This was a huge thrill for me personally. The California bill became the model that thirteen states adopted and eventually became the national standard for autos.
In the year 2000, Josie and I started the Robertson Scholars program designed to promote interaction between student leaders at Duke and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Sixteen scholarships are awarded annually at each school, and the scholarship has become internationally known and respected. Our summer programs send outstanding students to outposts all over the world on creative leadership projects.
One very fortunate thing is that I did not get nearly as enthusiastic about philanthropy early on as I am now; if I had there would be very little to give away. I have found so many great new projects to work with just in the last several years: the national parks, the families of our military, stem cells, and now obesity. The Milken Institute calculates that if we could get Americans back to their weight level of 1991, we could save a trillion dollars a year. A trillion dollars, think of that! Besides making Americans healthier, we could now solve the fiscal crisis in the US.
Philanthropists, at their best, try to address serious societal problems and occasionally come up with innovations that lead to enduring change In the end, success requires much more than financial resources, although money is, of course, essential. Good ideas are just as important; otherwise one risks wasting both the funds and the opportunity. Effective philanthropy also requires patience – patience to deal with unexpected obstacles; patience to wait for the first, slight stirrings of…
Philanthropists, at their best, try to address serious societal problems and occasionally come up with innovations that lead to enduring change In the end, success requires much more than financial resources, although money is, of course, essential. Good ideas are just as important; otherwise one risks wasting both the funds and the opportunity. Effective philanthropy also requires patience – patience to deal with unexpected obstacles; patience to wait for the first, slight stirrings of change; and patience to listen to the insights and ideas of others.
For five generations, my family has experienced the real satisfaction and pleasure of philanthropy. Our engagement has helped to create a strong group of institutions, including the University of Chicago, The Rockefeller University, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Rockefeller Brothers Fund. The practice of philanthropy also has enabled many of us to become personally involved in efforts to address critical global challenges such as poverty, health, sustainable development, and environmental degradation. Our family continues to be united in the belief that those who have benefitted the most from our nation’s economic system have a special responsibility to give back to our society in meaningful ways.
Warren Buffett and Bill and Melinda Gates share this belief and have challenged others to pledge half their assets to philanthropy during their lifetime or at their death. I am pleased to say this has long been my intent and my practice, and I am delighted to have been asked to participate in this important initiative. I hope that others will accept this challenge – and opportunity – and will join us in this worthwhile endeavor.
I also hope that our efforts to expand the scope of philanthropy as individuals, in collaboration with others, and in ways that include not only financial resources but innovative ideas and patience, will be part of the gift we all bequeath to the future.
Like many of those who responded positively–and enthusiastically– to Bill Gates’ and Warren Buffett’s call, I never expected, in my wildest dreams as a youth or as a young professional, to be in a position where anyone (other than my immediate family) would care what I would do with my money. That is because I did not expect to have much of it. I also did not see wealth accumulation as a likely professional outcome, or even a particularly desirable one…
Like many of those who responded positively–and enthusiastically– to Bill Gates’ and Warren Buffett’s call, I never expected, in my wildest dreams as a youth or as a young professional, to be in a position where anyone (other than my immediate family) would care what I would do with my money. That is because I did not expect to have much of it. I also did not see wealth accumulation as a likely professional outcome, or even a particularly desirable one.
I was born and raised in modest, blue collar circumstances in Baltimore. The making of large sums of money–and the disposition of them–was just not on my radar screen.
My goal was simply to do well enough in school to secure scholarships to college and law school to practice law; and to fulfill a long-time desire–perhaps inspired by President Kennedy’s inaugural address–to move back and forth from the practice of law into various public service positions. And I was on that course–I graduated from the University of Chicago Law School–with the assistance of considerable scholarship money–practiced law in New York at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison–and (through luck far more than skill) managed three years after law school to find myself as a deputy domestic policy assistant to President Carter.
I expected that I would stay at the White House for eight years–the voters obviously felt four years of my service was enough–and would then live a life of shuttling back and forth into government service from a Washington law firm perch, with the goal of hopefully doing some public good during each time in government service. The income level of a Washington lawyer does not allow for the accumulation of large wealth, but I felt it was more than enough to satisfy my somewhat spartan needs and the likely needs of any family I would produce and raise.
And then, as is the case with so many individuals who accumulate wealth, my life did not go in the direction I had expected or intended, or desired. After a few years of practicing law following my White House days, I realized that I was not all that great a lawyer; I had growing reservations about constantly uprooting my career to go back and forth into government, (especially as a family emerged); and I felt that I should try to do something I might enjoy more than law or government service.
And so I started a small investment firm in Washington–a rarity for the city in the late 1980’s. My original partners and I struggled to raise the first $5 million to capitalize the firm, and we spent many years trying to get investors and others to take us seriously–an experience not uncommon to most entrepreneurs in their early years.
But, nearly a quarter century later, this tiny firm grew to be one of the world’s largest private equity firms, producing for the founders and many others in the firm more wealth than we had ever expected or dreamed about.
In my own case, I had been relatively tunnel-visioned in trying to build the firm, and spent little time on philanthropic matters until I turned 54. I then read that a white male, on average, would live to 81, meaning that I had already lived, if I were to match the average, two thirds of my life. I then thought that I did not want to live the other third, get to my deathbed, and then ask someone to give away my accumulated resources as they saw fit (even if I left some guidance in a will). I also thought that my resources had become–and would likely be at death—far more than my family reasonably needed.
So I decided to put my toe into the world of philanthropy, and did get reasonably involved from that point forward. My approach in the ensuing seven years has not been as systematic as may be desired. I have begun to contribute to a wide variety of performing arts, educational, medical, literary, public service, and cultural causes and institutions–causes that have meaning to me, and institutions that were very helpful to me earlier in my life or I think are now being very helpful to others. I now serve on a few dozen non-profit boards–far too many to focus one’s philanthropic interests. But I enjoy these boards and the causes and the purposes for which they serve.
However, I recognize that to have any significant impact on an organization or a cause, one must concentrate resources, and make transformative gifts–and to be involved in making certain those gifts actually transform in a positive way. And I am heading in that direction, and hope–if I do get to 81 – to have made many such transformative gifts by that time. And, with luck, some of them may actually have transformative benefits – hopefully during my lifetime – for the organization or the cause.
In signing the Pledge, I did not honestly do anything more than I had already intended to do, as I said to Bill Gates when he talked to me about the Pledge. I actually had already made arrangements to ensure that a good deal more than half of my resources would have gone to philanthropic purposes
So in participating in the Pledge, I cannot honestly say that I am now committing to do more than what I had been planning to do for some time, and was in the process of doing. But I felt that the Pledge was a quite positive undertaking, and was pleased – and honored – to be asked to be part of it, for these reasons:
1) To the extent that individuals with considerable resources are publicly committing to give away at least half of their wealth, other individuals with considerable wealth in this country may be inspired to do so as well–and that would be a positive development, especially if the individuals had not previously thought about or felt obligated to give away that much.
2) To the extent that the publicity surrounding the Pledge affects other Americans, it is my hope that it will inspire individuals with resources of modest or average or even above average means to make similar pledges–to themselves, their families, or to the public. The giving away of money should not be seen as only an obligation – or as a pleasure – restricted to the wealthiest (and most fortunate) among us. Everyone can and should give, and everyone can and should feel that their gifts may make the world a little bit better place. And if every person with the ability to make some philanthropic gifts does so, the country will be much better for these gifts, and the donor will surely feel much better about himself or herself.
3) Philanthropic activity is, unfortunately, more of an American phenomenon than a global phenomenon. My hope is that the Pledge will inspire similar efforts to get under way abroad. And while it is likely such efforts will focus on the wealthiest of individuals in other countries, my hope, again, is that individuals of all levels of resources will also increase their giving, and feel they are helping their countries and humanity by doing so.
In my own case, I would add as a final point, one a bit beyond what the Pledge seeks. I hope to do my own giving–and to honor my Pledge – while I am alive. I recognize no one really knows how long he or she will be on the earth, and it is therefore difficult if not impossible to time one’s giving perfectly to match one’s longevity. But I enjoy seeing the benefits–when they arise–of my giving, and would like to have as much of this enjoyment while I am alive as possible.
I recognize that others signing the Pledge – now or in the future – may have a different perspective, and their considerable resources (or age) may make the goal of honoring the Pledge during their lifetime a bit less realistic. But I do hope that others involved in this effort – and those who are ultimately inspired to increase their giving – will accelerate their giving, so as to bring whatever benefits come from giving to the world a bit sooner. That can only make the world a bit better a bit sooner. Too, watching the product of one’s giving is one of life’s greatest pleasures, and those with the ability to do so should do what they can to experience that pleasure when they are around to see the benefits. They will never regret doing so.
We are among the converted having committed to give all our net worth to philanthropy starting with a grant of $1.3 billion in 2006 to our spend-down Foundation. When you think about it, no other approach seems to make sense. Passing down fortunes from generation to generation can do irreparable harm. In addition, there is no way to spend a fortune. How many residences, automobiles, airplanes and other luxury items can one acquire and use…
We are among the converted having committed to give all our net worth to philanthropy starting with a grant of $1.3 billion in 2006 to our spend-down Foundation.
When you think about it, no other approach seems to make sense. Passing down fortunes from generation to generation can do irreparable harm. In addition, there is no way to spend a fortune. How many residences, automobiles, airplanes and other luxury items can one acquire and use?
The Buffett/Gates initiative is likely to be a major “game changer.” Their partnership and dedication and their challenge to billionaires to share their wealth with the less fortunate will undoubtedly unlock a substantial amount of funds. Congratulations!
As former CEOs of a highly successful financial institution, we were rewarded monetarily beyond our wildest imagination, at the same time experiencing the emotional high associated with building a great company from scratch and winning in the competitive race. At the same time, we found equal gratification in working with employees and customers.
For example, an important part of our staff was composed of single working mothers. We provided training and counseling to these women, so that they could rise through the ranks and become managers with greatly enhanced earning power. On the lending side of our business, we found that there was no greater gratification than enabling a family to own their own home, especially when they thought it was an impossible dream. These are a few examples of the sense of fulfillment we experienced in “giving back” and which, among other things, led to our decision to devote our energy and money to making a difference in people’s lives. Believe it or not, the psychic income – the highs if you will – associated with giving money away thoughtfully and effectively has been even more gratifying than running a successful business.
Our two children are totally involved with us in the Foundation’s activities. Not only do they support our Pledge, but they also plan to follow our example with respect to their own net worth.
SANDLER FOUNDATION
We would like to share with you the attached two documents we produced before getting started:
• Mission Statement and Values
• Guiding Principles for Grants
We would like to elaborate on some of the information contained in the attachments and also spend a little time discussing how we operate.
We Want To Make As Big An Impact As Possible.
We are a spend-down foundation and therefore act with urgency to make significant contributions that have both an immediate and lasting impact.
We Are Focused On Achieving Results.
One of our core competencies stems from our experience as CEOs of the second largest savings bank in the country. We understand the critical importance of due diligence, an important part of which is evaluating the management of potential grantees. We offer technical assistance, i.e., how to improve strategic and business plans; goals and objectives; budgets; etc.
We Are Willing To Take Risks.
In essence, in many ways, we are venture capitalists. We are willing to take risks and make bold strategic investments in areas not adequately addressed by government, industry, universities or the non-profit sectors. We prefer to assist well-run organizations with additional funding, but where we have not been able to find an institution that can fill an important need, we have not hesitated to start one. During the last several years, we have created nine non-profits, all of which are performing beyond our original forecasts. We would like to give you two examples:
• American Asthma Foundation (AAF). Asthma is a chronic lung disease affecting approximately 23 million Americans. It is the most disabling childhood disease in the country, and as you might expect, it is an especially serious problem for poor, inner city children. Sad to say, there has been no material improvement in treatments for over 50 years. Equally surprising, until we created the American Asthma Foundation, there was no institution devoted to funding research that would improve treatments, prevent and find a cure for the disease. Since its establishment ten years ago, through a highly innovative approach, AAF research has led to the discovery of 17 breakthroughs for new treatment, three of which are in clinical trials.
• ProPublica – Journalism in the Public Interest. The economic crisis of American journalism potentially undermines the ability of a free press to call the powerful to account. Herein lies our motivation to create ProPublica, a new kind of institution: a non-profit newsroom staffed with top talent and having as its sole mission producing journalism in the public interest with what we call “moral force.” Led by Paul Steiger, formerly Managing Editor of the Wall Street Journal, ProPublica already has won 30 honors, including a Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting, since it began publishing in mid-2008.
We welcome the opportunity to add our names to the Pledge list and would like to express our thanks to Bill Gates and Warren Buffett for their leadership.
Sincerely,
Herbert M. Sandler Marion O. Sandler
President President
We pledge we will gift to non-profit causes more than 90 percent of our assets during our lifetime or as planned gifts. We deeply appreciate the good fortune that allows us to make this commitment. Our support of various not for profit organizations has given us enormous satisfaction particularly where we have been personally involved with the boards or committees of those institutions. We would not be in this position if not for the extraordinary people that made AES a success…
We pledge we will gift to non-profit causes more than 90 percent of our assets during our lifetime or as planned gifts.
We deeply appreciate the good fortune that allows us to make this commitment. Our support of various not for profit organizations has given us enormous satisfaction particularly where we have been personally involved with the boards or committees of those institutions.
We would not be in this position if not for the extraordinary people that made AES a success. We deeply appreciate their commitment to expanding access to electricity around the world and the personal values they demonstrate. Giving to causes that will make the world a better place socially and environmentally is one of the ways we can express our thanks to them.
We have created a family foundation, with our four children and their spouses amongst our trustees, so that as a family we can address the issues that we feel are the most compelling. Our appreciation to each of our family members is unbounded as they have contributed their insights and ideas that have made our Foundation grants more effective. Our children and grandchildren have brought us joy beyond our imagining.
We encourage others to go down a philanthropic path of their choosing with the understanding that this road is full of opportunities and challenges. It is as hard to make good grants as it is to make good investments and it needs to be done with dedication. For this we thank our extraordinary staff, and our non-family trustees, who work diligently to help us realize our mission to assist in creating a world where nature can flourish and people can thrive. When done right, there is nothing more satisfying than grant-making – seeing positive results and learning from mistakes.
Finally, we thank Warren Buffett and Bill and Melinda Gates for their leadership in expanding the amount of philanthropy in the world.
While I’m pleased to respond to the appeal you are making with Bill & Melinda Gates to promote “Giving Pledges” among our peers, I made that commitment long ago. As you know, I’ve already contributed quite a bit, beginning in earnest 35 years ago with my first significant contribution to the Zoo. As long as health permits, Sue and I plan to be active and engaged philanthropists. Like our good friend Chuck Durham, who made some wonderful gifts in his final years, we enjoy seeing…
Dear Warren:
While I’m pleased to respond to the appeal you are making with Bill & Melinda Gates to promote “Giving Pledges” among our peers, I made that commitment long ago. As you know, I’ve already contributed quite a bit, beginning in earnest 35 years ago with my first significant contribution to the Zoo.
As long as health permits, Sue and I plan to be active and engaged philanthropists. Like our good friend Chuck Durham, who made some wonderful gifts in his final years, we enjoy seeing the fruits of our philanthropic efforts. Upon my death, virtually all of my remaining estate will go into the Walter Scott, Jr. Foundation.
My interests, that I hope my foundation’s successor trustees continue, are twofold. Number one is causes that serve young people. I have nothing against old people. I am one! But I believe society will get the most bang-for-the-buck if I invest in things that help us produce educated and productive citizens, whether through youth social services or assisting them pursue a college education through scholarships.
My second major interest is causes that help improve our community. That can take many forms, beginning with our Zoo. But it can also include causes like helping Dr. Maurer build a world-class research institution, or helping improve engineering and information science education at the Peter Kiewit Institute. I like to invest in causes that move our community forward because if we don’t, we will find that it has begun to deteriorate.
Our community is fortunate to have had a series of exceptionally generous philanthropists. I don’t know if Mary Lucretia Creighton was first, but Creighton University is quite a legacy. The people of Omaha enjoy a higher quality of life because of the significant charitable investments made by wealthy individuals for more than a century.
In my remaining years, through my foundation, I’ll continue to invest in our community, including additional gifts to our Zoo. There’s still room for a Buffett exhibit. Call me when you’re looking for an idea!
Sincerely,
Walter
We and our children have determined that the great majority of our wealth will be devoted to philanthropic purposes. We are very fortunate to be in this position, and we find the execution of our philanthropic work to be both challenging and deeply satisfying.
I grew up in a middle class family in Canada. My dream was to be a writer who tells stories that make a difference in the world. Along the way, when I got out of business school, I became the first full-time employee and the first President of a fledgling company with an online auction service called AuctionWeb. That company later became better known by its corporate name, eBay. When the company went public in 1998, all of a sudden I went from being in debt and living in a house…
I grew up in a middle class family in Canada. My dream was to be a writer who tells stories that make a difference in the world. Along the way, when I got out of business school, I became the first full-time employee and the first President of a fledgling company with an online auction service called AuctionWeb. That company later became better known by its corporate name, eBay. When the company went public in 1998, all of a sudden I went from being in debt and living in a house with five roommates, to having hundreds of millions of dollars in the value of my eBay shares.
Until then, I had not thought much about philanthropy. But with my newfound paper wealth, I resolved to do good things for the world with that money, in smart ways.
The first thing I did, in 1999, was to start the Skoll Foundation. Today, the Skoll Foundation has become the leading organization in the world supporting social entrepreneurs to drive large-scale impact. Each year, we find innovative social entrepreneurs from around the world – people like Paul Farmer of Partners in Health or Ann Cotton of Camfed – and we support them over a multi-year period. We also convene the annual Skoll World Forum on Social Entrepreneurship, at Oxford University. I am proud of the work we are doing together with our partners and grantees. In the words of one of my heroes, John Gardner, we are “betting on good people doing good things.”
In 2004, I resurrected my original vision of telling stories that make a difference in the world by creating Participant Media. Since then, Participant has released over 25 movies, including Good Night and Good Luck, The Kite Runner, Charlie Wilson’s War, An Inconvenient Truth, The Cove and Syriana. Our films have won four Academy Awards and received 18 nominations. But I am most proud of the impact that these films have had on social issues – human rights, Afghanistan, climate change and so on. We even have a social action network called TakePart that is rapidly becoming the online community for social activists and concerned citizens alike. For me, Participant is another form of philanthropy, as I believe that good stories well told can inspire and compel social change.
In 2009, I started a new foundation, called the Skoll Global Threats Fund, to deal with urgent threats that imperil humanity. The first five issues are climate change, Middle East peace, nuclear weapons, pandemics and water scarcity. These are all issues that could bring humanity to its knees if we don’t tackle them together now.
I have already donated about half of my net wealth to these organizations in the last eleven years. I expect to contribute almost all of my wealth to the betterment of humanity either during or after my lifetime.
In the meantime, I will continue to tell stories that awaken enlightened self-interest, activate citizen engagement, and galvanize political will. I will continue to double down on innovative solutions that have enduring social impact. And I will continue to support catalytic mechanisms, like the Skoll World Forum and TakePart, that unite the forces of change from all corners and cultures of humanity.
In doing so, I hope also to inspire others to do the same. The world is a vast and complicated place and it needs each of us doing all we can to ensure a brighter tomorrow for future generations. Conrad Hilton said it is the duty of successful people to give back to the society from which their success was derived. I feel privileged to have grown up in Canada and to now live in the US, two countries that value and reward education, hard work and good choices. I feel lucky to have been able to pursue my dreams and I hope that my contributions will in some small way lead to a sustainable world of peace and prosperity.
I am a 53-year-old married investor. My wife and I live in San Francisco, which we love. We have four kids, the oldest of whom is 22 and the youngest of whom is 16, whom we also love. Almost by accident – we’ve focused on good investing not making money – we currently have more assets than we could reasonably spend in our lifetime. Our original impetus for saving money revolved around wanting our kids to enjoy the same educational opportunities that we had…
I am a 53-year-old married investor. My wife and I live in San Francisco, which we love. We have four kids, the oldest of whom is 22 and the youngest of whom is 16, whom we also love. Almost by accident – we’ve focused on good investing not making money – we currently have more assets than we could reasonably spend in our lifetime. Our original impetus for saving money revolved around wanting our kids to enjoy the same educational opportunities that we had, so that they could succeed on their own terms, assuming that they worked hard. That’s what our much appreciated parents did for us. We never aimed to endow our children with wealth. After honest conversations with each of them, singly and together, we know that they don’t want that either. We also worried about affording excellent healthcare for our family. But otherwise, we enjoy our life here in California and don’t require more material possessions.
We want to leave our kids a different kind of inheritance, an example of at least trying to lead a worthy life. In that regard, John Gardner long ago counseled us to “do” things as opposed to trying to “be” someone; in his opinion, seeking “to be” inevitably leads to egocentric outcomes. Traditionally, societies focused on ancestor-worship, but as Americans, we have mostly descended from penniless, indentured, or fugitive antecedents, so it really makes no sense to us to try to derive importance from our birth, and thank goodness for that.
As luck would have it, we live in a city named for a man famous for actively denying his birthright – a birthright not of ambiguity or even scandal but of confirmed privilege. He stripped himself of his worldly goods (including clothes), identified with animals, and kissed the sores of lepers. Because what he did came to define him, St. Francis is our epitome of a “to do” kind of guy. While we might struggle to emulate his example in many ways (while keeping our clothes on), we can see that an active life like his – he spent it famously consoling, understanding, loving, giving, and pardoning — promises the greatest satisfaction.
Admittedly, in our case, “to do” is inextricably wound together with “to have.” Having assets has enabled us to organize projects which we otherwise could not have and which we hope will leave our community and neighbors – both near and far – better off, at least in some small part. If we succeed, we will have left a wonderful legacy for our kids, and we can’t dismiss “having” resources as an irrelevant aspect of that. But our pleasure and pride in life come from working with valued partners, not owning things or totaling up our net worth. Therefore, along with Mr. Buffett and after due consideration, we pledge the bulk of our assets to philanthropic activities carried out over the course of our lifetimes.
We will not, however, do so heedlessly. We do not knock other approaches, but we have strong opinions based on lessons learned about how to “invest” our resources on behalf of the common cause. For one, we harness wherever possible the power of markets to direct investment effectively, even as we recognize their inherent limitations. People of all income categories know what they value and will demonstrate that most convincingly by where they are willing to dedicate their scarce resources. At the same time, we know that markets do not price externalities and shouldn’t be expected to support adequately public goods like education or clean water. There is, after all, an abidingly important place for government, social compact and social conscience. Muhammad Yunus and the Grameen Bank family of social businesses have made a major impression on us, as they’ve successfully engineered good incentives, rewarded industry and measured success – and failure –to good outcomes for all people.
We will also strive to make our pursuits fun and constructive — as an older and wiser friend advised us to do. We do plan to give the vast bulk of our money to charitable pursuits, not to our descendents, but we expect every minute of the ride will be exciting and engaging. That doesn’t compare in our minds with the sacrifices that other Americans have made in terms of effort, danger, and life itself on behalf of their country and fellow citizens. But we relish the opportunity to do our part and leave our collective campsite cleaner and better tended than we found it. It’s our pleasure at least as much as our obligation. We hope St. Francis approves.
More than 99% of our wealth will go to philanthropy during our lifetime or at death. We have already started our giving. Our children have already been provided for. Virginia and I wanted to give back something more valuable than money to the millions of people who made our success possible with American Century Investments. We wanted to give people “Hope for Life”- Hope for a better life. Our vision is to make a significant contribution to humanity through medical research by…
More than 99% of our wealth will go to philanthropy during our lifetime or at death. We have already started our giving. Our children have already been provided for.
Virginia and I wanted to give back something more valuable than money to the millions of people who made our success possible with American Century Investments. We wanted to give people “Hope for Life”- Hope for a better life. Our vision is to make a significant contribution to humanity through medical research by expanding our understanding of the secrets of life and by improving life’s quality through innovative approaches to the causes, treatment and prevention of diseases.
In 1994 we began by creating the Stowers Institute for Medical Research to pursue a very distinctive approach to basic science. It took six years to plan and develop the world-class campus and its laboratories in Kansas City, Missouri. The doors finally opened in November 2000.
Today, the Institute is already recognized as one of the best basic biological research organizations in the world.
The Institute focuses on outstanding science.
Many of the scientists have been acknowledged both nationally and globally for their individual excellence.
The scientists are not given tenure – rather they are given term appointments that are renewable based on research excellence and productivity.
The Institute’s Scientific Advisory Board composed of seven internationally recognized scientists. It is extremely important to note that this independent board must unanimously determine which investigators the Institute can accept and which it can retain.
The research scientists enjoy the benefits of a world-class campus and state-of-the-art Technology Centers, both of which enable them to make discoveries at an unprecedented rate. Our scientists have given all their intellectual property to the Institute so that they can receive 50% of the profits once it is commercialized.
Other features which are extremely important
Our scientific effort is made possible by the proceeds the Institute receives from the Hope for Life Endowment; which is truly the lifeblood of the Institute.
When you make a gift to the Stowers Institute, the experience is radically different from giving to other worthwhile causes. Why is it different?
• Your money is not immediately spent. All proceeds are added directly to the “Hope for Life Endowment” of the Institute.
• You will become personally involved in the long-term effort, because you are issued “Hope Shares.”
Each year at least 3 ½% of that dynamic long-term endowment will be spent for scientific research. The endowment is invested for long-term appreciation and, over time, should earn more than the 3 ½% that is paid out for scientific research each year. This is endowment-based research.
The Institute issues you Hope Shares to indicate your degree of investment in the endowment for uninterrupted scientific research.
The minimum initial Hope Share investment is $1,000.
The Hope Shares are registered in your name, while the value remains with the endowment of the Institute. The value of your shares fluctuates along with the value of the endowment.
As an owner of Hope Shares, you will:
• Become personally involved in the long-term effort to provide “Hope for Life” – Hope for a better life for everyone.
• Be remembered forever for your gift to research, because your gift keeps on giving each year.
• Receive regular Stowers Reports so that you can follow our progress in medical research.
• Receive your “Hope Share Statement,” informing you:
* The amount you invested during the year.
* Your total investment.
* The present value of your “Hope Shares”
* The amount you are contributing to scientific research this year.
We believe whenever the very best scientists work together as a team, supported by dedicated leaders, advanced technology and uninterrupted funding, great discoveries will happen.
Giving back was instilled in me by my father at a young age. In addition to being active with Rotary and other civic organizations, my dad was also philanthropic with his own small resources. Not only did he make contributions to causes that he cared about, he also supported the tuition of two African-American students at his alma mater, Milsaps College in the late 1950s. It made a big impression on me to see someone as hard-charging as my father take the time to quietly help out two young…
Giving back was instilled in me by my father at a young age. In addition to being active with Rotary and other civic organizations, my dad was also philanthropic with his own small resources. Not only did he make contributions to causes that he cared about, he also supported the tuition of two African-American students at his alma mater, Milsaps College in the late 1950s. It made a big impression on me to see someone as hard-charging as my father take the time to quietly help out two young people like this. Sometime during the 1970s, before I made a significant amount of money, I attended a seminar on philanthropy. At dinner I was seated next to a man who was quite a bit older than I and we began discussing charitable foundations. He told me about his family’s foundation and the good things they were doing around the world. I filed this away in my mind and told myself that if I were ever wealthy enough to have a foundation, I’d be sure to make it a family foundation so that my children would be involved and understand the importance of giving back.
Fast forward twenty years to September 1997. I was being honored as the 1997 Man of the Year by the United Nations Association and I was contemplating what I’d say that evening. Good thoughts about my family’s foundation, the Turner Foundation, starting flooding my mind, and I smiled at the fact that we had already invested several hundred million dollars in grants and had made a significant impact on so many people and organizations around the world. I wish I could remember who that man was who first gave me the idea for a family foundation, because I owe him a debt of gratitude. The Turner Foundation helped me understand the impact we all can have through philanthropic contributions. My experiences with organizations like the Better World Society opened my eyes to the power of assembling a team of international leaders to address global issues. Had I not experienced working with these two organizations, I don’t think I would have had the confidence to move forward with what I was about to propose to the United Nations that evening. That was the night my $1 billion pledge was heard around the world and the United Nations Foundation was born. I also made it clear that while the amount I was giving away was certainly a lot of money, I was also putting other rich people on notice that I would be calling on them to be more generous. Now that I was pledging such a large amount, I could lead by example, and it was time for me to get out in front of the parade.
Over the years, the United Nations Foundation has done innovative work to make the world a better place and has helped strengthen the U.N. in the process. This gives me a lot of satisfaction, as have my efforts to influence other wealthy people to become more active in philanthropy. After the billion dollar pledge, I challenged my fellow billionaires to do more. I realized that many of them used their net worth as a way to keep score and they enjoyed seeing where they ranked on lists put out by magazines like Fortune and Forbes. Understanding how competitive most of these people were, I called on the media to start publishing lists of people who gave away the most. I figured that this would not only motivate people to try to get to the top of the philanthropy list, it could also shame some whose names didn’t show up. Slate.com was the first to take up the list idea and other media outlets joined in later.
To date, I’ve visited more than 60 countries in every part of the world. In addition to making a lot of friends, I’ve also seen firsthand the desperate challenges facing so many people. It’s been eye-opening for me and I’ve discovered that the more people you meet, the more you learn, and the more you learn, the more you want to help, and the more you help, the better you feel. These days, I’m putting my resources and energies toward tackling the worlds more important issues. The three problems that concern me the most are the threat of nuclear annihilation, climate change and the continuing growth of the world’s population. Sometimes these problems can seem overwhelming, and when they do, I remind myself of a conversation I had many years ago with Jacques Cousteau. I asked him if he ever got discouraged or worried that the problems he was working on were insurmountable. He looked at me and said, “Ted, it could be that these problems can’t be solved, but what can men of good conscience do but keep trying until the very end?” At that moment, his very words inspired me to want to do even more.
I don’t measure success in numbers, but I consider my contributions of more than 1.3 billion dollars to various causes over the years to be one of my proudest accomplishments and the best investment I’ve ever made. Those dollars have improved lives, saved species, fought disease, educated children, inspired change, challenged ideas and opened minds; and at the time of my death, virtually all of my wealth will have gone to charity.
Looking back, if I had to live my life over, there are things I would do differently, but the one thing I would not change is my charitable giving. I’m particularly thankful for my father’s advice to set goals so high that they can’t possibly be achieved during a lifetime and to give help where help is needed most. That inspiration keeps me energized and eager to keep working hard every day on giving back and making the world a better place for generations to come.
We are delighted to lend our support to Bill and Melinda Gates and Warren Buffett’s novel idea of a “Giving Pledge.” We applaud their leadership and encourage others to join this effort at a very important time in our history given the severe economic impact virtually everyone and every institution has experienced over the last couple of years. Our Pledge is this: We will continue to give away all of the wealth we have been so fortunate to make except for a small percentage…
We are delighted to lend our support to Bill and Melinda Gates and Warren Buffett’s novel idea of a “Giving Pledge.” We applaud their leadership and encourage others to join this effort at a very important time in our history given the severe economic impact virtually everyone and every institution has experienced over the last couple of years.
Our Pledge is this: We will continue to give away all of the wealth we have been so fortunate to make except for a small percentage allocated to our children and grandchildren between now and the time we pass because we are firm believers that shrouds don’t have pockets. Furthermore, we pledge to continue to work tirelessly each and every day, donating our time, energy, experience, passion and intellect to the causes and organizations we have been involved with for many years because, for us, philanthropy is much more than just writing a check.
Philanthropy has been a large part of our lives over the last three decades and is something we are deeply passionate about and enjoy doing together. In the early days, we used to say that Joan took care of the streets and Sandy took care of culture. In any case, we look at a non-profit the same way we look at a company – investing in a nonprofit is like buying stock in that organization.
Education and partnership are at the heart of everything we do philanthropically and we make long term commitments to the organizations we lead: Sandy is currently the Chairman of the National Academy Foundation (since 1980); Carnegie Hall (since 1991); and Weill Cornell Medical College (since 1996), while Joan is Chair of Alvin Ailey Dance Foundation (since 2000); Paul Smith’s College of the Adirondacks (since 2005); and Co-Chair of the New York Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center Women’s Health Symposium (since 2000).
Each day we are touched by the incredible work people from the organizations we are associated with, as well as countless others are doing. They are changing the world and helping bridge cultural divides thru education, healthcare and the arts. Among some of our proudest moments in philanthropy to date include: opening up the first American medical school overseas in Qatar in 2001 following the tragic events of 9/11 and at a time when many questioned doing something in the Middle East, as well as aiding in the development of a medical school in Tanzania and an HIV/AIDS clinic in Haiti; seeing Alvin Ailey be recognized as one of the most acclaimed international ambassadors of American culture and having a home which is the nation’s largest facility dedicated to dance; raising $60 million in one evening at Carnegie Hall to establish broad reaching music education programs; and working with nearly 50,000 students in over 500 academies of finance, hospitality and tourism, information technology and engineering each year and seeing 90% of them graduate, often the first in their family to do so.
Our journey together through life over the last 55 years has been nothing short of amazing. We have learned a lot and been blessed beyond our wildest imaginations. From our experiences in philanthropy, we have found the following lessons very useful: Keep it focused, you can’t do everything; the busiest people can always do more; you can run a better private business if you help run philanthropic enterprises; don’t be afraid to hire people smarter than you; don’t be afraid to make mistakes; and whatever you do, be passionate about it.
In the years we have left, we want to continue to try and do whatever small part we can to leave the world a little better than we found it. That return on investment would be unquantifiable and something we would cherish the most.
Sincerely,
Sanford and Joan Weill