| ▲ | davidw 5 hours ago | |
I don't think he's a hero, particularly, but he also does not strike me as a villain like some of the modern day billionaires either. I read a biography of him and he seems like an interesting guy. I don't think the 'humble lifestyle' thing was a schtick, like some suggest. I mean he mostly lived in Nebraska... give me a tiny fraction of his wealth and I would have taken right off out of Nebraska as the first thing I did, to go live somewhere warm and sunny. He also seemed a bit more aware of how much power money can translate into, and it seems he kind of stuck to "being rich" rather than shooting for "rich and also politically powerful" (although I'm sure there are probably a few exceptions). Compare his investment in the Washington Post with Bezos'. Buffett actually made money off it, and kept his hands off the direction of the paper. We all saw how much Bezos started leaning on it - which has had the effect of shedding subscribers as no one trusts it any more, and it's not attracting new readers of... the Fox News persuasion I guess we can call it. It also seems he mostly stuck to what he knows in terms of kind of boring investments rather than flashy rockets and other showy things. And of course he's been good with giving his money away and convincing others to do likewise. | ||
| ▲ | justin66 3 hours ago | parent [-] | |
> he also does not strike me as a villain like some of the modern day billionaires either With Musk, doge, and the handling of important programs like USAID, that bar has been set remarkably low. | ||