Refleksi : Hebat dan baik sekali kalau orang-orang kaya di USA memberikan 50% 
dari kekayaan mereka sebagai sedekah. Bagaimana dengan orang-orang kaya di NKRI 
 yang melekat dengan langit biru, apakah bersedia memberikan 50% dari harta 
kekayaan mereka sebagai  sedekah kepada orang miskin yang jumlahnya makin 
bertambah?

http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2010/8/5/worldupdates/2010-08-05T013252Z_01_NOOTR_RTRMDNC_0_-506292-2&sec=Worldupdates

Thursday August 5, 2010
U.S. billionaires pledge fortunes to charity
By Michelle Nichols
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Dozens of U.S. billionaires pledged on Wednesday to give 
at least 50 percent of their fortunes to charity as part of a philanthropic 
campaign by two of the world's richest men -- Warren Buffett and Bill Gates.

     
      Billionaire investor Warren Buffett (R) and Microsoft Corporation founder 
Bill Gates (L) at Columbia University in New York, November 12, 2009. More than 
30 US billionaires pledged on Wednesday to give away at least 50 percent of 
their wealth to charity as part of a campaign by investor Buffett and Gates. 
(REUTERS/Mike Segar/Files) 
Based on Forbes magazine's estimates of the billionaires' wealth, at least $150 
billion could be given away.

Among the rich joining The Giving Pledge campaign are New York Mayor Michael 
Bloomberg, media moguls Barry Diller and Ted Turner, Oracle co-founder Larry 
Ellison, "Star Wars" movie maker George Lucas and energy tycoon T. Boone 
Pickens.

A total of 40 of the richest people in the United States, including Microsoft 
founder Gates and investor Buffett, now have taken the pledge.

Since launching the campaign in June, Buffett, Gates and his wife Melinda have 
spoken to about 20 percent of the wealthiest people in the United States -- 70 
to 80 billionaires -- in a bid to persuade them to give away their fortunes.

"In most cases we had reason to believe that the people already had an interest 
in philanthropy," Buffett said. "It was a very soft sell but 40 have signed up."

"We're looking forward to enlisting many of these 40 to go out and make some 
calls also so we can report an even greater milestone but we're off to a 
terrific start," he said.

The campaign asks U.S. billionaires to give away at least half their wealth 
during their lifetime or after their death, and to publicly state their 
intention with a letter explaining their decision.

Gates has an estimated $53 billion fortune, which places him second on the 
Forbes magazine list of the world's richest people, and Buffett, who made his 
fortune with insurance and investment company Berkshire Hathaway Inc , ranks 
third on the list with $47 billion.

The Giving Pledge does not accept money but asks billionaires to make a moral 
commitment to give their fortunes to charity.

TAX BREAK NOT A MOTIVATION

"I've long stated that I enjoy making money, and I enjoy giving it away," 
energy tycoon Pickens, who is worth about $1 billion, said in his Giving Pledge 
letter. "I'm not a big fan of inherited wealth. It generally does more harm 
than good."

Buffett and Gates will hold several dinners later this year to recruit more 
billionaires, and members of The Giving Pledge also will meet annually to 
discuss their philanthropy.

Buffett and Gates also are due to meet with some of the wealthiest people in 
China in September and India in March.

"We ... hope that this catches fire in some other countries," Buffett said. "If 
they want to take what we think is a good idea and run with it, we will be 
cheering."

Forbes said the United States is home to 403 billionaires, the most of any 
country. Individual Americans gave more than $227 billion in 2009, according to 
a the Giving USA report by the Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University, 
down just 0.4 percent from the previous year despite the U.S. recession.

"I have always thought that the best thing to do is to make the world better 
for your kids and your grandkids rather than just give them some money," 
Bloomberg, who is worth $18 billion, told reporters. "Your kids get more 
benefit out of your philanthropy than your will."

Buffett said none of the members of The Giving Pledge were driven by tax 
breaks. "Not one has talked to me about taxes," he said. "Anybody who is 
entitled to take a tax deduction takes it but I think the motivation goes far, 
far beyond taxes."

Real estate and construction billionaire Eli Broad, venture capitalist John 
Doerr, media entrepreneur Gerry Lenfest and former Cisco Systems Chairman John 
Morgridge joined Gates and Buffett when The Giving Pledge was launched in June. 
Another 34 members were announced on Wednesday.

Buffett pledged in 2006 to give away 99 percent of his wealth to the Bill & 
Melinda Gates Foundation and family charities. Bill and Melinda Gates have so 
far donated more than $28 billion of their fortune to their foundation.

The full list of billionaires and their letters can be seen at 
www.thegivingpledge.org .

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