Here’s A Better Way For Billionaires To Give Their Money

By Wallace Manheimer

Many of your fellow billionaires contribute large sums to “cure” a nonexistent climate crisis, falsely naming it an “existential threat.” They wrongly claim that wind and solar can support modern civilization. For instance, Michael Bloomberg has proudly committed $500 million to eliminate coal. Jeffery Bezos has committed $10 billion to a variety of climate causes and “clean energy” efforts. These billions dwarf resources available to small groups fighting, for instance, degradation of their land by gigantic wind companies.

Furthermore, these philanthropists direct many dollars into foolishness like Critical Race Theory and a fabricated division of the world into oppressors and the oppressed. In addition to unnecessary climate panic, college campuses harbor harmful notions of “gender fluidity” and dangerous divisiveness among students that manifest as rampant antisemitism and hostility toward the deplorables du jour.

You know this is wrong but, despite your wealth, may feel powerless to stem the societal degradation. You make your own large contributions to hospitals, museums, medical schools, etc. Of course, that is very commendable. Still, you may be looking for other avenues for your generosity – perhaps actions that could

not only help people but also challenge the promotion of negative forces. Well, we have a few suggestions.

Let’s first consider possibilities within the U.S. As a private citizen or group of citizens, you can certainly place ads into major media to expose the fraudulence of scientifically invalid claims of a climate crisis. You could cite the mountain of scientific evidence that contradicts the popular apocalyptic narrative as well as the tens of thousands of prominent scientists attesting that there is no climate crisis. Sources include the CO2 CoalitionGlobal Warming Petition Project and CLINTEL’s World Climate Declaration. Furthermore, you could partially balance the scales by financially supporting local groups fighting installation of hundreds of gigantic wind turbines, each the size of the Washington Monument; or square miles and miles of solar panels, which will permanently scar their land.

If you’re more inclined to support universities, then we suggest financing a faculty position about Washington, Jefferson, Hamilton, Madison, and Lincoln. Their accomplishments and documents are sources of inspiration worldwide. Alternatively, you might consider supporting nuclear science and engineering departments, or initiating an interdepartmental organization, for domestic and international students, in the disciplines of petroleum geology, engineering, and industry.

Internationally, there are many countries that suffer from a lack of energy. The less developed world is not giving up on fossil fuels regardless of pompous calls from the climate industrial complex for them to do so.

“I firmly believe that no African country can be asked to halt the exploration of its natural resources, including fossil fuels,” says Kenyan President William Ruto.

Even the head of the United Nations’ most recent climate summit, Sultan Al-Jaber of the United Arab Emirates, said that use of fossil fuels cannot be discontinued “unless you want to take the world back into caves.”

Perhaps nobody exhibited resentment of meddling in Third World energy policy more than did Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi: “The colonial mindset hasn’t gone. We are seeing from developed nations that the path that made them developed is being closed to developing nations.”

Lesser developed countries will continue to advance in ways they see fit, employing fossil fuels (and hopefully also nuclear power). China and India are building coal-fired power plants at a furious pace, and Africa and other regions will soon as well. There is no stopping it! Rather than utter hypocritical and futile pieties, let’s help them and, while doing so, also help promote sensible, clean energy technologies developed in the U.S.

Coal promises to be the salvation of more than half of sub-Saharan Africans — the number who labor daily with inadequate supplies of electricity. Cooking, heating and lighting are done with a combination of wood, charcoal and dried animal dung. The World Health Organization estimates that about half a million die each year from the resulting indoor air pollution.

Ultra-super critical coal-fired generating facilities, recently developed in the United States, are cleaner and more efficient than traditional plants. American billionaires investing in these sources of clean, affordable, reliable electricity could save the lives of untold numbers of sub-Saharan Africans.

Nigeria, once an important oil producer, never instituted effective pollution controls and, with the advent of hydrofracturing technology in the U.S., is hardly competitive on the world market. In fact, Exxon Mobil is considering pulling out of the country. The right investments could restore both Nigeria’s environment and oil industry.

There are many new things for rational, public-spirited billionaires to support. Why leave the field to those pursuing the climate fetish and promoting destructive ideologies and fads?

This commentary was first published at Daily Caller on March 24, 2024.

Dr. Wallace Manheimer is a life fellow of the American Physical Society, the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers and is a member of the CO2.Coalition. He is the author of more than 150 refereed papers.

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Jimmy Walter
March 28, 2024 12:29 am

The billionaires only give to causes that profit them or their companies, if not directly (like they own companies that sell the green crap) or to virtue signal that they are not ruthless illegitates. Wake up and smell the coffee.

strativarius
March 28, 2024 1:35 am

What makes them appear virtuous gets cash.

The Football Association is standing by a controversial design of the St George’s Cross on the New England shirt despite growing criticism. 
The shirt’s manufacturer Nike has altered the appearance of the St George’s Cross using purple and blue horizontal stripes in what it called a “playful update” to the shirt ahead of Euro 2024. 

Woke and going broke

MyUsername
Reply to  strativarius
March 28, 2024 1:40 am

Look up why they choose these colors. This has nothing to do with “woke”. And stop being afraid of colors.

strativarius
Reply to  MyUsername
March 28, 2024 1:50 am

A very lame excuse – one you swallow with ease

About moving amplification, got an answer yet?

Reply to  MyUsername
March 29, 2024 6:51 am

Look up why they choose these colors.

And?

The English flag is a red cross on a white background.

Always has been, and always will be.

No one should mess with our flag.

Reply to  strativarius
March 28, 2024 2:43 am

 in what it called a “playful update””

Wow.. how “gay” of them. !

strativarius
Reply to  bnice2000
March 28, 2024 2:55 am

Exactly

Reply to  strativarius
March 28, 2024 5:40 am

Nike hasn’t gone broke yet, but I’m looking forward to the day.

strativarius
Reply to  More Soylent Green!
March 28, 2024 6:09 am

They want…..

The new authentic England shirt costs £124.99 in adult sizes and £119.99 for kids 
https://www.radiotimes.com/tv/sport/football/how-to-buy-new-england-kit/

In a cost of living crisis….

Reply to  strativarius
March 28, 2024 2:04 pm

Incredible. I usually shop at WalMart.

MyUsername
March 28, 2024 1:38 am

Furthermore, these philanthropists direct many dollars into foolishness like Critical Race Theory and a fabricated division of the world into oppressors and the oppressed. In addition to unnecessary climate panic, college campuses harbor harmful notions of “gender fluidity” and dangerous divisiveness among students that manifest as rampant antisemitism and hostility toward the deplorables du jour.

So much bitter and hateful drivel in one paragraph, i’m amazed.

Coal promises to be the salvation of more than half of sub-Saharan Africans

Worked really well in the past decades…or we just didn’t care, right?
But now that renewables have a huge impact on developed markets, and it seems the same for african countries, we all start to care about humanity and whales on this blessed day.

What does 2024 have in store for renewables in Africa?
https://african.business/2024/02/energy-resources/what-does-2024-have-in-store-for-renewables-in-africa

India can easily surpass 500 GW RE target before 2030
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/renewables/india-can-easily-surpass-500-gw-re-target-before-2030-official/articleshow/108828854.cms

Clean energy contributed a record 11.4tn yuan ($1.6tn) to China’s economy in 2023, accounting for all of the growth in investment and a larger share of economic growth than any other sector

https://www.carbonbrief.org/analysis-clean-energy-was-top-driver-of-chinas-economic-growth-in-2023/

Reply to  MyUsername
March 28, 2024 2:51 am

Renewables are the very last thing Africa needs. They need solid reliable electricity supply…

… and the RE scam is DENYING them that… forcing them to remain in abject poverty.

The left DO NOT care for humanity… they actively DESPISE it.

COAL is still well and truly king in India.. and will be for a long time to come.

China’ total energy usage shown below… .. use a magnifying glass to see wind and solar…

You are being CONNED by blatant propaganda again, useless Luser. !

China-Energy-consumption
MyUsername
Reply to  bnice2000
March 28, 2024 7:09 am

Look at whats happening in South africa. How solar is doing what the failing fossil fuel grid isn’t capable of.

Reply to  MyUsername
March 28, 2024 1:27 pm

If they had been allowed to build a proper FF grid.

Please tell us how wind and solar power refrigerators on a dark windless night.

Yes.. wind and solar are FAILING TO SUPPLY.. .

… and the African people want proper RELIABLE electicity., not useless intermittent crap.

Reply to  MyUsername
March 28, 2024 3:00 am

Worked really well in the past decades… blah, blah…”

The last couple of decades, the funds to develop coal resources have been DENIED to countries in Africa by the leftist virtue-seeking CO2-haters like the World Bank.

Only the utter waste of erratic, unusable renewables have been allowed.

You cannot store food, medical supplies etc etc with intermittent power..
What use is solar, when you still have to cook at night over a dung fire. !

…. but that is what the AGW scanners have been foisting onto the African people.

It is totally despicable, racist and anti-human behaviour, and far-leftist cretins like you undoubtedly back that behaviour completely.

MyUsername
Reply to  bnice2000
March 28, 2024 7:07 am

If you had as many sources as catchwords I’d be amazed.

Reply to  MyUsername
March 28, 2024 1:27 pm

And you have an empty gullible mind.

Can’t counter a single thing I said.. can you LUSER. !!

Reply to  MyUsername
March 28, 2024 5:41 am

I get it. Thoughtful criticism of progressive talking points is hate. That’s all you need to say.

MyUsername
Reply to  More Soylent Green!
March 28, 2024 7:05 am

So calling something you don’t like foolishness and fabricated is thoughtful criticism nowadays.

strativarius
Reply to  MyUsername
March 28, 2024 7:07 am

You are funny. What”s the pay rate for Son of Griff?

Reply to  MyUsername
March 28, 2024 1:29 pm

When it is foolish and fabricated.. yes…

… .. you just are incapable of seeing the truth.

Reply to  MyUsername
March 28, 2024 2:08 pm

You said it was hateful. Now you’re saying it just isn’t thoughtful. Quite a bit of difference between not thoughtful and hateful, isn’t there?

Reply to  MyUsername
March 28, 2024 6:09 am

India’s 500 GW target includes coal and renewables. It’s current installed capacity is 428 GW but coal accounts for 75% of generation and 54 GW of coal are planned to be installed by 2032. The coal and renewable targets will keep the generation ratio roughly the same.

Coal, rather than batteries, is viewed as an inexpensive back up to intermittent renewables.

india
MyUsername
Reply to  Ollie
March 28, 2024 7:02 am

As of 31st October 2022, the installed electricity generating capacity in the country was 409 GW including 166 GW of RE generating capacity (including large hydro), which is about 40% of the total installed electricity generating capacity in the country. India has envisaged to increase the non-fossil fuel based installed electricity generation capacity to 500 GW by 2030.

https://cea.nic.in/wp-content/uploads/notification/2022/12/CEA_Tx_Plan_for_500GW_Non_fossil_capacity_by_2030.pdf

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  MyUsername
March 28, 2024 10:50 am

You DO know the difference between capacity and generation, right?

Reply to  Jeff Alberts
March 28, 2024 1:31 pm

Nope.. the Luser is absolutely clueless.. about basically everything

Reply to  MyUsername
March 28, 2024 1:30 pm

Installed hydro.. can supply when needed.

Installed wind and solar… is basically just JUNK electricity.

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  MyUsername
March 28, 2024 10:57 am

So are you telling us that you believe men can be women (and vice versa), and that racial segregation is a good thing?

observa
March 28, 2024 1:45 am

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi: “The colonial mindset hasn’t gone….

Well something sure has but certainly ignore the crazies completely if you know what’s good for you-
Lefties losing it: Rita Panahi blasts John Mellencamp’s ‘pathetic’ on-stage tantrum (msn.com)

Ed Zuiderwijk
March 28, 2024 1:54 am

Dr Mannheimer is of course spot on, but his message will never reach the intended targets. Between him and the target is a filter made up of woke-infected advisors and assistants who will decide that such rational ideas are to be ignored.

UK-Weather Lass
March 28, 2024 2:13 am

Most billionaires have followers who helped create the legend. I once attended a gathering where Microsoft employees were telling tales competitively about how close they had gotten to their hero. One such even offered the tale that he had once parked in Gates’s Microsoft parking place for fifteen minutes.

Windows was never a super OS when Gates was around and the Vista version disaster was his not so fond farewell. He started business selling power to the people and ended up taking money under false pretenses with an OS that was a disaster.

I don’t want any businesses to have monopoly opportunities that end up screwing people which is what we have in increasing abundance. Look at where the money went with COVID-19 and where is goes with climate change mitigation and what we have are people directing money into ‘chosen pockets’ which have nothing to do with value for money.

Capitalism thrives when it has real competition for customers something the woke all seem to have forgotten or perhaps never knew to start with. Perhaps we should name the undeserving billionaires and start telling the truth about their businesses, after all don’t we have reservations about Saudi Arabian cash or are ‘we’ so weak we are going to give in to that one too?

strativarius
Reply to  UK-Weather Lass
March 28, 2024 2:58 am

I recall with Windows 8.1 it was advised that it shouldn’t be used for critical systems, ie nuclear…

rhs
Reply to  UK-Weather Lass
March 28, 2024 5:36 am

I remember Windows 98 SE2 was so good, you could get the blue screen of death on a monochrome monitor.

Gregg Eshelman
March 28, 2024 3:20 am

If the super wealthy want to do something good for humanity with their money, put it into a huge program to develop a cure for chronic Hepatitis B.

Richard Greene
March 28, 2024 3:47 am

Grear article
I missed it at The Daily Caller

Assuming these billionaires are way above average IQ, it’s puzzling how few recognize there is no climate problem and no need for Nut Zero

If they want to believe there is a climate problem, the first step would be to convince about 175 nations, with almost 7 billion combined population, to join the Nut Zero fools — about 20 nations and 1+ billion people. But they don’t do that.

The next step would be to promote nuclear power and that is not common

The third step is to use your money to publicize real air pollution over Asian cities and lobby for government programs that punish China for that pollution (some reaches the US left coast)

How about providing small solar panels / small hot water tanks for some of the 775,000,000 people with no electricity? Better yet, coal.

Promoting wind and solar power for a non-existent climate crisis seems dumb for a billionaire, or anyone else.

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  Richard Greene
March 28, 2024 10:56 am

The third step is to use your money to publicize real air pollution over Asian cities”

Not just that, the vast majority of ocean pollution comes from garbage dumped into rivers by “developing” countries.

Ron Clutz
March 28, 2024 5:01 am

Manheimer has also criticized Net Zero directly. His paper is:

While the Climate Always Has and Always Will Change, There Is no Climate Crisis
https://ccsenet.org/journal/index.php/jsd/article/view/0/47745

My synopsis:

https://rclutz.com/2024/03/25/time-for-billionaires-to-fund-climate-and-social-realism/

March 28, 2024 5:39 am

The best thing a billionaire can do with money is help other people out of poverty through the free market. Incubate businesses. Loan money to entrepreneurs. Support property rights.

strativarius
Reply to  More Soylent Green!
March 28, 2024 6:11 am

All the things the establishment hates….

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  strativarius
March 28, 2024 9:38 am

Because doing so reduces their power and control and often their bank accounts.

Coach Springer
March 28, 2024 6:11 am

I am feeling cautious about making this a contest of money to make a difference. Then again, that ship is already sailing and our navy is comparable to that of a small inland nation.

gezza1298
March 28, 2024 8:19 am

The biggest problem the oil industry has in Nigeria is theft by the local population.

MyUsername
Reply to  gezza1298
March 28, 2024 8:29 am

Looks like the problem the population has is the oil industry

The colonial exploitation of Africa’s fossil fuels must stop

https://www.context.news/net-zero/opinion/the-colonial-exploitation-of-africas-fossil-fuels-must-stop

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  MyUsername
March 28, 2024 10:50 am

Opinion = fact. Got it.

Reply to  MyUsername
March 28, 2024 1:33 pm

The anti-human disallowance of Africa using their own fossil fuels MUST STOP.

traxiii
March 28, 2024 9:02 am

Bezos would do way more in his cause to limit carbon if he spent his $10 billion building Nuclear power plants, and changing the perception of them to his fellow green travelers.

Drake
Reply to  traxiii
March 28, 2024 3:15 pm

Hey, don’t forget the 3+ billion he got hie Democrat cronies in the US congress (when controlled by the Dems) to pay his Blue Origin rocket company to produce a moon lander. Hell, he has yet to even launch hie New Glen rocket.

NASA dismissed Blue Origin and gave SpaceX the only contract to build a lunar lander. Then Bezos went to work to get his pile of money.

BTW, the guy who was behind Musk and SpaceX, the only qualified company making substantial progress toward the lunar lander goal, getting the singular award was fired by the Brandon gang.

Sparta Nova 4
March 28, 2024 9:50 am

A couple of things missing in the decision process to make the made rush to green insanity.
Analysis of alternatives.
Systems engineering.

The conversion of US coal generation to natural gas is proven and a lot less expensive than what is being pursued.

The plan is simple. One at a time, convert coal plants to natural gas. CO2 footprint (not that that matters in reality) goes down. This is a process that has been ongoing for many years. Just fund it in a way that makes it economical. There is a technology available since 2011 that recycles CO2 back into the fuel stream making them more efficient and further reducing CO2 emissions. Put that in place with each conversion.

This is low hanging fruit, but does economically impact coal miners.
So, what about the miners?

Spend the foreign aid money building coal fired generators in Africa and South America and/or places where they can do some real good. Have our minors continue to pull coal out of the mines and ship it to those generators. There will be a long term economic benefit, even if we sell the coal below market or for free.

There will be infrastructure development that goes on with the new power plants. Those and the power plants will need advisors for a while so the local populations can come up to speed and be self-sufficient.

By planning this and pacing it properly, there will be no energy or economic impacts here and it will boost the standards of living for all the countries that are bootstrapped.

Oh, also, political reasons: Russia and China are already doing this. Need I say more?

Sparta Nova 4
Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
March 28, 2024 10:49 am

Another typo… the CO2 recycling technology was implemented and demonstrated in 2017, not 2011.

Reply to  Sparta Nova 4
March 28, 2024 2:11 pm

You’re missing the point. The point isn’t to reduce carbon emissions. That’s just what they tell people.

JC
March 28, 2024 11:23 am

The question isn’t so much about private donation. The question is what is the program and the motivation behind the program? Becoming a billionaire and remaining one, unless it’s by dumb luck, requires multi-tier longitudinal solving for pattern via a potent habit of integrated thought, which rarely exists in the population at large. This can be enhanced by AI deep learning but it is resident in most of the Billionaires of our time. And Billionaires do nothing in a vacuum. They know how to synergize and multiply everything they do.

They should be investing in the fundamental strength of our society

  • Freedom of Speech
  • Truth in public discourse
  • Objectivity and rigor in arts, sciences and social sciences.
  • Personal Privacy
  • Protecting representative power
  • Protecting and empowering local, private and family business and land ownership
  • Open and free markets at all scales (local, national, global, nano, micro and macro)
  • Protect the rule of law
  • Truly innovative at all scales energy generation, storage and distribution, which will enable a new era of cheap energy that will propel both consumeristic and non-consumeristic economic development, (local, national and global).

Comparing and contrasting omission and commission of giving

You learn much by looking at omission as you do commission. The question is why are these billionaire omitting their dollars to what would strengthen us the most? I am sure they would argue that they are giving to what will make us stronger. They are great at turning arguments on their heads and obfuscation because they have teams of operatives that will do it for them.

What we should assume
–They are always looking for the biggest bang for their bucks regardless of the status of their dollar: investment, purchase and donation.
–they never give away anything without return value.
–Their motive is never at it’s core altruistic.
–Their ultimate goal is power.

We should not assume
–they are true believers of the any particular cause, even if it they mouth the words.
–they are politically aligned in a traditional sense

March 29, 2024 6:47 am

Bezos

If you really want to make a difference why not invest your $10b in providing access to clean water to the 2 billion people without access?

Potentially this would save almost a million lives every year.