Exploitation & Charity
William Henry Gates III, Medina, Wash.
Net Worth: $51.0 billion

Gates’ and Buffett’s billions rest more
fundamentally on the labor of workers
For them to polish their PR images now
with promises of charity to help
the poor reeks of hypocrisy
At best, they are giving back
what they plundered from society
Bill Gates and Warren Buffett have grabbed headlines lately not for the usual reason of the record fortunes they’ve amassed, but because of the record sums they plan to give away to charity.In June, Gates--cofounder of Microsoft and the world’s wealthiest man for 12 years running, according to Forbes magazine--announced that he would retire from business to concentrate on managing the philanthropic foundation he runs with his wife.
A few weeks later, Buffett--the world’s second-richest man--declared that he would donate more than 80 percent of his fortune, mostly to the Gates foundation, which promises to devote its efforts to combating AIDS, especially in Africa.
The mainstream media--never faint in its praise of these two latter-day robber barons--now seems ready to canonize them as saints.
“Billanthropy,” the Economist magazine declared on its cover. “We’re in awe of a Buffett or a Gates,” gushed the Chicago Tribune’s Julia Keller, “not just because these people made a lot of money, but because they made a lot of money and then turned around and gave a great deal of it away to causes they deemed worthy.”
Gates’ and Buffett’s good deeds (or, more accurately, announced plans for future good deeds) were just the thing to hype in the ongoing effort to clean up Corporate America’s image in an era of oil company profiteering and business mega-scandals like the Enron collapse--something highlighted by the timely death of disgraced Enron CEO Ken Lay.
Less remarked on was the grotesque fact that Gates and Buffett are bucking a trend among the super-rich--since Congress and the Bush administration three years ago lowered the top rate of the estate tax imposed on wealthy inheritances, bequests to charities from the rich have fallen steadily and sharply, year by year.
And practically no one mentioned the most obvious point--that Gates and Buffett could give away 99.9 percent of their net worth and still remain rich beyond any ordinary person’s wildest dreams. The truth is that their billions in gifts to charity will have less effect on their lives than a working person giving a buck to someone who asks for it on the street.
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JUST WHAT did Gates and Buffett do to become so immensely wealthy?
Neither man is among one-third of people on the Forbes 400 list of richest Americans who landed there from birth, thanks to the family fortune. On the other hand, neither came from modest backgrounds and worked their way up the ladder either. Both started out on the upper rungs.
Gates’ parents were wealthy enough to send him to the most expensive prep school in Seattle and pay his full tuition at Harvard.
Buffett’s father was a stockbroker and four-term Republican congressman whose son’s early years were sufficiently comfortable that, at age 14, Warren had saved enough money to invest in 40 acres of farmland--not exactly a common experience for U.S. teenagers.
But the “rags to riches” myths about Gates and Buffett are misleading in a more fundamental way. The bigger lie is that the two ever did anything useful or productive to justify the vast wealth that they accumulated beyond what they were born with.
Gates is rich because the company he founded became a giant in the computer industry. But Gates has never had anything to do with actually producing or distributing the packages of software Microsoft sells.
He doesn’t even design the products. Microsoft thrived by buying software developed by other people and successfully marketing it as the boom in personal computers took off in the 1980s.
Gates is rich because he owns. He and his fellow Microsoft shareholders own the means of producing computer software--the factories and offices, the machines, the patents on different technologies.
Likewise, Buffett began his business life in the owning game--as a stockbroker, buying and selling shares of ownership in different companies through stock trading.
The flagship of his empire, Berkshire Hathaway, is in reality a mammoth holding company, with investments and controlling interests in a wide range of subsidiaries. In other words, its chief business is owning other companies.
Buffett’s operation is built around the most parasitic of capitalist ventures--insurance. Berkshire Hathaway’s insurance subsidiaries generate enormous amounts of cash--by charging premiums from customers on the gamble that future claims won’t cost as much as the premiums bring in.
This huge fund of ready capital has been the basis for Berkshire Hathaway to make further investments and buy up new companies.
Buffett is known in the business world for rejecting the kind of financial shenanigans that led, for example, to the collapse of Enron and Ken Lay’s notorious end.
But this preference for orthodox accounting methods shouldn’t obscure Buffett’s record of ruthlessness at the companies he acquires--and the string of laid-off workers, closed factories and devastated communities left in his wake.
The hallmark of a Buffett-run company is a tough management devoted to cutting costs and squeezing workers. Berkshire Hathaway itself was founded as a textile company, but Buffett closed the company’s mills one by one, shuttering the last more than two decades ago.
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BUFFETT AND his top executives say that their main job at Berkshire is “capital allocation.” But this “job” is dependent on being owners--with the absolute authority to dispose of assets and resources any way they choose, regardless of the consequences for others.
This is true about the capitalist system generally. The power of the minority at the top rests on its ownership and control of what Karl Marx called the “means of production.”
Because they own, the capitalists make the most important decisions about how the resources of society are used--and they put the priority on guaranteeing and expanding their own wealth and power.
That wealth is dependent most of all on hiring much larger numbers of people to do the actual work of making or providing different goods and services.
The wealth of the few wouldn’t exist without the labor of the many. The profits that come from auto or computer sales, for example, wouldn’t exist without a workforce making these products.
For their labor, workers get paid a wage, but even the best-paid worker doesn’t receive as much as they produce. The capitalists keep the profit after covering wages and other costs of production, such as raw materials and machinery.
This is supposed to be a fair exchange--workers get “a fair day’s pay for a fair day’s work,” and capitalists get a return on their investment. But there’s nothing fair about it. The employers have all kinds of ways to keep wages down, but there’s no limit on their profits.
The Marxist case is that capitalism is based on organized theft--the theft of the value of what workers produce by the small class of people who employ them.
The term for this process is exploitation. Normally, this word is associated with especially low wages and brutal conditions.
In reality, exploitation takes place every minute of every day--carried out by a small minority of people that does nothing useful or productive, but gets richer because it owns and controls the wealth created by the people who do work.
For all the seeming importance of shrewd stock deals and corporate alliances, Gates’ and Buffett’s billions rest more fundamentally on the labor of workers.
For them to polish their PR images now with promises of charity to help the poor reeks of hypocrisy. At best, they are giving back what they plundered from society.
I disagree about the authors ideas that capitolism is exploitation. I would
suggest that the capitolist takes all of the risk and all of the loss where
the worker can just move jobs without concern for the companies losses. 90%
of businesses fail, so why would someone venture to create jobs if there
was no chance for reward? The odds are already stacked against investors
regarding success. Only the best investors actually make money and, in the
process, create or maintain jobs for people. I would prefer more Warren
Buffets and Bill Gates to exist and I thik it will be better for the
average worker. Most people don't want to dedicate their lives to work over
everything else and they don't want to take the risks required to be a big
entrepneur. They want to put in their 40-50 hours per week and go home and
play with their kids or spend time with their wife or take care of a sick
family member or friend. And they want a salary that allows them to live.
You don't see either Warren Buffet nor Bill Gates being criticized for
paying such a low wage that employees cannot pay for a normal life such as
you hear about Walmart. Buffet and Gates took the risks and they worked the
hours and took on the responsibility of their companies success and
failures and now they reap the rewards. If the author would have read more
about Buffet he would have found that Buffet hated to close the factories
that he did close. He did everythig to keep them open. He only gave up when
he saw that not closing the factories would start to affect the long term
viability of his company and therefore many other peoples jobs. So, I give
Buffet credit for making the hard decision and protecting his company. Yes,
he depends on his workers for the big profits and that is why he protects
the company; because it is what keeps the people employed. And after he has
done a very good job of allocating capitol and building the company he has
allowed thousands of workers to keep their jobs, secure that they will
exist tomorrow. And now after he has amassed great wealth, I think it is
very nice and intelligent of him to donate these rewards back to the world.
This is the strength of American capitolism. That people can be rich and
then they are free to do with these riches as they please, including donate
it to fix problems in the world that governments either don't have the
resources or political willpower to fix. We need more of this style of
wealthy people in the world and I commend both Gates and Buffet for their
execution of their ideologies.
'''paid survey Earn $5 to $75 per
survey.
Warren Buffet made all his money by raping the american worker. He bought
my company then stripped all retiree medical if you were not 40. 40 is a
“protected” age. I had worked for the company for 14 years but was not 40
by Jan. 1 2004 so I lost essentially $500 to $1000 dollars per month. He
gives 37 billion to Africa but fucks his American workers in the ass!!!
The author of this post is simply jealous.
Industrialism and big business, crude or not
are here and will remain. Just remember who
brought forth the computer you typed your
snide comments on. And can you honestly
say you have never used the services of companies
or products which are thanks to Mr. Buffet.
Even if Mr. Gates did not package or physically produce
the Microsoft products which sell he had the initiative, know how,
and was willing to take the necessary risks to be as successful as
he now is. And about Warren buffet purchasing a farm; that was
something like the early 1940's with inflation as it is, the price then
was nothing as it would be today, as well due to economic plunges
due to conflict and such this could have been an extremely inexpensive
piece of property, and I am not sure that your allegations are correct
on where he recieved the money. I know he worked hard as a paper boy
through his early years and I am not aware of him getting free money from
relatives, this should be researched before being stated as fact.
Are you really one to cast the first stone at the success of these two?
The pedestal shall remain empty....
You people are morons. This is the most compelling and honest article I
have ever read. Capitalism is bad, why do you think the druge trade is
still a problem. You and your scathing child remarks, i'm sure you all
have vast amounts of money. I hope you all suck an egg and enjoy your up
the butt capitalism.