Eric Zuesse
Bill Gates was interviewed in the Thursday June 25th Financial Times,
about global warming investments, and he said some remarkably stupid
things, but explaining what he said requires a lot of intelligence; so,
maybe what he said isn’t actually that stupid. Might he be an idiot
savant? Perhaps there’s a deeper truth here.
After all, idiot savants should be
respected in the areas where they have their gift, but not outside it.
Occasionally, distinguishing between an idiot savant and a genius can be
hard to do.
For example, at the beginning of the 20th
Century, Henry Ford was considered to be a genius of industry and of
technology, and he was sometimes America’s wealthiest person, but he was
also a bigot, and
no one can be stupider than that; so, he was just an idiot savant,
after all. He was additionally famous as a
philanthropist, having
founded the Ford Foundation, but his donations to Hitler’s Nazi Party
and his propagandizing in the United States against Jews and for the “Protocols of the Elders of Zion” hoax, might have done the world more harm than his Foundation ever did good. It certainly helped to produce World War II, Hitler’s war to exterminate all Jews.
Global warming will do even more harm in the world
than anti-Semitism has done; and the only way that it might be
prevented from actually destroying the world is if very little of the
already-discovered fossil-fuel reserves that are in the ground will ever
be sold and burnt — in other words: used. This is the subject that Bill
Gates was talking about; so, the key scientific finding about
“unburnable reserves” must be stated, as it was clearly expressed in the
25 January 2013 study “Oil and Carbon Revisited: Value at Risk from ‘Unburnable’ Reserves,” from the giant global bank HSBC,
The IEA’s World Energy Outlook (2012
edition) estimated that in order to have a 50% chance of limiting the
rise in global temperatures to 2ºC, only a third of current fossil fuel
reserves can be burned before 2050. The balance could be regarded as
‘unburnable’.
That’s for only a 50% chance of a livable world in 2050: “only a third of current fossil fuel reserves”
can be burnt by that time; the remaining two-thirds must be wasted
(left permanently in the ground), if we’re to have just a 50% chance.
Obviously, that’s not good enough. We
need a 100% chance of a livable world in 2050; and, if that’s no longer
possible, then we’ve got to do everything that we can to approximate as
closely to a 100% chance as we can. Two-thirds of current reserves being
simply wasted — left forever in the ground — won’t be good enough. It’s
got to be as close to 100% as we can make it.
But, for Bill Gates, what’s not good enough seems to be instead too good, too
much. He doesn’t want merely for those two-thirds to be burnt; he wants
even more oil and gas and coal to be discovered; he wants to add yet
more to these unburnable reserves.
And, so, Agence France Presse headlined on 26 June 2015, “Fossil fuel divestment alone will not halt climate change: Gates,” and
they reported that he is investing some of the money of his ‘charity,’
the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, “in carbon-spewing companies
like BP” — the oil giant that caused the 2010 Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill.
This money that his Foundation is
investing props up these companies’ stock prices, so that even more oil
and gas can be discovered and added to their existing stockpile of
unburnable reserves. Exploration, after all, is what a company like BP does:
it explores for and develops — sends to market — yet new sources of
unburnable oil and gas. If it doesn’t explore for yet more oil and gas
and coal, then it simply dies. There are all of those sunk costs, which
will kill it, even when they stop exploration altogether. If the assets
that they’ve discovered in the past can’t be sold, then certainly new
such assets can’t be sold — but Bill Gates wants his ‘charity’ to pay
(indirectly) to discover more such ‘assets.’ He apparently wants to burn
the planet. But, he says he doesn’t; so, Gates himself also personally
“will invest $2 billion in green energy.” Doesn’t seem very smart, does
it?
The Financial Times interviewed him and reported that
he was “rejecting calls from environmental campaign groups for
shareholders to dump holdings in oil and gas companies, on the grounds
this will have little impact.” That “little impact” is actually the only
chance to salvage our planet. If investors don’t drive down the
market-value of fossil-fuels companies, then there will be even more
unburnable reserves added to those that these companies have previously
wasted money to discover; and those companies will thus become even more
desperate to advertise and lobby against governmental actions to stop
global warming; so, not only will governmental actions to stop global
warming be further delayed, but the companies themselves are doomed
anyway. It’s just stupid, but that’s the way the real economy (not the fake one in the textbooks)
actually works. It works like the debt-buildups and crashes in 2008,
and in today’s Greece, and elsewhere, have worked: crashes which can be
predicted with certainty, and which become the worse the longer they’re
held off, but whose precise timing is always in doubt among the public
(but known among the aristocracy, such as Gates) until the crash
suddenly comes. (The world, and economic theory, are corrupt as hell,
in order to leave the public-at-large holding the bag at the end,
almost every time.) Not only those companies will be doomed; but, by
virtue of this needless delay, the planet itself will also be doomed.
This is just obvious to any intelligent person; but (if we are to
believe him) it’s simply not obvious to Bill Gates. Does he actually
believe in the tooth-fairy?
Henry Ford didn’t care enough about past
history for him to get past history right. Bill Gates, apparently,
doesn’t care enough about future history to get future history right.
It’s even more important to care about
the future, than it is to care about the past. But Bill Gates is either
an idiot, or else he doesn’t really care about the future, because any investment in a fossil-fuels company is going largely into discovering yet more unburnable reserves. That’s so simple. Why doesn’t he get it? Is he — like Henry Ford was — really just an idiot savant?
The odd thing is that, whereas Gates
wants his ‘charity’ to lose money on fossil-fuel stocks that are doomed
to become a total waste (they’ve already got more reserves than they’ll
ever sell), his personal funds are simultaneously buying alternative-fuels stocks that will be benefiting from replacing
those fossil-fuel companies. It’s interesting that, while his ‘charity’
will be losing money, he personally will be gaining money.
The inverse relationship between the
values of fossil-fuels companies versus renewable-fuels companies is
already evident from stock indexes that follow these things. Here you can see the 5-year performance of renewable-fuels companies; and here you can see the 5-year performance of fossil-fuels companies. Whereas the former are steadily going slightly upward (and a purer fossil-free index
has performed even more steeply upward than that), the latter (the
fossils) are highly volatile and already seem to be heading slightly
downward. Clearly, fossils are at least a little worse than alt-fuels
stocks on the overall trend, but they are lots worse even than that when
their additional extreme volatility is taken into account. On 25 August
2014, Bloomberg issued a report, “Fossil Fuel Divestment: A $5 Trillion Challenge,”
and at the end on page 17, this puff-piece for staying in fossils
characterized renewable-fuels investments as having the disadvantage of
being “volatile” as compared to fossil-fuels companies — something that
they had offered no data to support, and which those three links I just
provided show to be the exact opposite of the reality: the
renewable-fuels companies are far less volatile, and also have better
trendlines. Perhaps billionaires need the public to buy fossil-fuels
stocks because that’s what they must themselves get rid of. They know
that the sector is inevitably heading for a crash. They know that only a
50% chance of a livable world in 2050 won’t cut it much longer. They
thus must sell their trash ASAP, and they need people to buy it.
So: maybe Bill Gates is no idiot after
all; maybe he is instead using his ‘charity’ in order to help suppress
the current market value of the alt-fuels stocks that he is buying (at
those artificially suppressed market-values) for his personal portfolio.
Maybe the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is basically a racket for
him, not just regarding ‘charity’ tax-deductions, but, even more, in
order to suppress the current market value of the stocks that he’s
buying right now, so that he’ll experience even bigger capital gains on
them as more and more people subsequently dump oil-and-gas-and-coal
companies (such as his ‘charity’ is buying) in order to invest in
alt-fuels stocks (which he will then be selling — presumably at hefty
profits). He just doesn’t care about the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation losing some of its money, so long as this will boost his own
net worth.
Maybe Gates is intelligent, after all — an intelligent psychopath, that is.
Well: he seems to be a lot like Henry Ford, after all, doesn’t he?
Or, is he, instead, an idiot savant, who
is intelligent only about investing, and who has no real conscience —
none but the one that he fakes (via his ‘philanthropy’)?
However, that would be just a specific type of intelligent psychopath, wouldn’t it?
Whatever it is, it’s the real world; it’s the way a real economy works — or, at least, ours does.
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