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  #1  
Old 10-22-2005, 12:57 AM
andyfox andyfox is offline
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Default What Money Can Buy: Bill Gates and Africa:

A long article in the October 24th edition of the New Yorker is about health problems, especially malaria, in Africa (and elsewhere) and what the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is trying to do about it.

The morality rate for infants in the developing world is sixteen times greater than it is for infants in the West. At least one woman dies every minute from avoidable complications of pregnancy. Half of these deaths occur in Africa, where hundreds of millions of children, and almost as many adults, suffer needlessly from illnesses that most people in the West have never heard of.

Malaria, the world's most prevalent parasitic disease, kills as many as three million people every year--almost all of whom are under five, desperately poor, and African. In most years, more than 500,000 case of illness can be attributed to the disease, although exact numbers are difficult to assess because many people don’t (or can't) seek care. It is not unusual for a family earning less than two hundred dollars a year to spend a quarter of its income on malaria treatment, and what they often get no longer works.

The Gates Foundation has an endowment of $29,000,000,000. This is more than the gross domestic product of Tanzania. Its goal is simple: to rid the world of disease, particularly the many illnesses that are essentially ignored because they affect the world's poorest people.

In January, the foundation contributed $750,000,000 to the U.N. Global Alliance for Vaccine and Immunization, to fight easily preventable diseases, like diphtheria, whooping cough, and measles. Gates also provided funds to vaccinate 42,000,000 children against hepatitis B.

The annual budget of the World Health Organization is $1.65 billion. Since 2000, the Gates foundation has spent $6 billion to address health issues in the Third World--more than nearly every contributing nation to the W.H.O., and far more than any other charity. In May, Gates gave $250,000,000 to help pay for the Grand Challenges, a series of fourteen fundamental obstacles to scientific progress which, if solved, would lead to dramatic improvements in the health of the world. The challenges, which include goals like developing vaccines that require no needles or refrigeration, were first issued in 2003 (along with a $200,000,000 grant) and a thousand scientists from 75 countries responded with proposals.

It would be hard to overstate the impact that the Gates foundation has had: the research programs of entire countries have been restored, and fields that have languished for years have once against burst to life.

"It just blows my mind how little money has been spent on malaria research," Gates said. "What has prevented the rich world from attempting this? I just keep asking myself, Do we really not care because it doesn't affect us? Is that what it is?

"Human suffering as a result of malaria is incomparable. I refuse to accept it. I refuse to sit there and say, OK, next problem, this one doesn't bother me. It does bother me. Very much. And the only way for that to change is to stop malaria. So that is what we are going to have to do."
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  #2  
Old 10-22-2005, 01:00 AM
BCPVP BCPVP is offline
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Default Re: What Money Can Buy: Bill Gate and Africa:

Would it really be a good idea to rid the world of disease?
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  #3  
Old 10-22-2005, 01:05 AM
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Default Re: What Money Can Buy: Bill Gate and Africa:

[ QUOTE ]
Would it really be a good idea to rid the world of disease?

[/ QUOTE ]

my money says it's impossible.
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  #4  
Old 10-22-2005, 01:06 AM
andyfox andyfox is offline
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Default Re: What Money Can Buy: Bill Gate and Africa:

From the article:

"Bill Gates has always had an interest in science. Yet it was Melinda who first suggested that they concentrate on global health. Gates didn't get it: he was interested in population control and thought that improving the world's health might even run counter to that goal. 'It was only when I dug into it a bit that I came to understand that better health leads to lower populations with more resources,' he said."
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  #5  
Old 10-22-2005, 01:07 AM
andyfox andyfox is offline
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Default Re: What Money Can Buy: Bill Gate and Africa:

Gates: "I am not so foolish as to say that will happen. But that's our goal."

I don't know you, but I suspect his money will have more impact than yours.
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  #6  
Old 10-22-2005, 01:09 AM
bholdr bholdr is offline
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Default Re: What Money Can Buy: Bill Gate and Africa:

IMO, gate's charitable work is commendable- he set out with the intent to correct what he saw as the largest inequity between the developing world and the leading industrialized nations. By the time he's done, he may save a hundred million children or more.

good for him. go bill gates.

I also like his father's progressive tax proposals for washington state.
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  #7  
Old 10-22-2005, 01:10 AM
bholdr bholdr is offline
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Default Re: What Money Can Buy: Bill Gate and Africa:

"Bill Gates has always had an interest in science. Yet it was Melinda who first suggested that they concentrate on global health. Gates didn't get it: he was interested in populatoin control and thought that improving the world's health might even run counter to that goal. 'It was only when I dug into it a bit that I came to understand that better health leads to lower populations with more resources,' he said."

ty andy- good point that i hadn't considered.
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  #8  
Old 10-22-2005, 02:03 AM
Peter666 Peter666 is offline
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Default Re: What Money Can Buy: Bill Gates and Africa:

Rich people are constantly worried about the over population of the world, which is very strange. Warren Buffet who is the second richest after Gates is the same way. Why do they hate people so much?
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  #9  
Old 10-22-2005, 09:27 AM
superleeds superleeds is offline
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Default Re: What Money Can Buy: Bill Gate and Africa:

I'd be really interested in your thought processes here, unless off course, you have none.
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  #10  
Old 10-22-2005, 12:22 PM
Zeno Zeno is offline
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Default Re: What Money Can Buy: Bill Gates and Africa:

[ QUOTE ]
Why do they hate people so much?

[/ QUOTE ]


This comment just solidifies my opinion that you are an extremely confused individual.


-Zeno
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