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I met with Donald Trump for an intriguing three-hour dinner, along with his chief of staff and my manager. We discussed various topics, particularly global health, where I shared updates on our foundation's work towards an HIV cure and the potential for accelerated vaccine innovation similar to what was done during COVID. We also talked about polio eradication efforts, emphasizing the challenges in regions like Pakistan, Afghanistan, Gaza, and Africa. Trump showed a keen interest in how he could help achieve significant milestones in these areas over the next four years. I was impressed by his enthusiasm and willingness to engage with the issues I presented.

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Running corporations and making billions can lead to boredom. Bill Gates aims to depopulate the planet by 2030 using vaccines and healthcare. He believes lowering the population by 10-15% is achievable. Gates' efforts focus on human depopulation, genetically modified foods, and vaccines. The Gates Institute for Population and Reproductive Health works to control population growth in developing countries. Gates predicts future pandemics and stresses the importance of global coordination and vaccination for returning to normalcy.

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Bill and Melinda Gates announced a $10 billion commitment to research and develop vaccines for the world's poorest countries. This pledge was part of a larger agenda that aimed to increase profits for pharmaceutical companies, give the Gates Foundation more control over global health, and allow Bill Gates to shape the future for billions of people. Gates has been adamant that the world cannot return to normal until a vaccine for COVID-19 is developed, and this message has been echoed by many heads of state and health officials. However, there are concerns about the safety and rushed development of an experimental vaccine. The Gates Foundation has a history of influencing public health policies and funding vaccine development.

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Bill Gates is known for blunt responses like "that's the stupidest thing I've ever heard." He emphasizes the importance of vaccines, pledging $1 billion towards them. Gates also mentions his father's interest in statistics.

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Population and reproductive health are urgent issues. Growing up with parents involved in volunteer work, including Planned Parenthood, shaped my perspective. Looking ahead 10-15 years, I aim for significant change in mortality rates in developing countries, which can help reduce population growth and improve education and nutrition. We have ambitious goals and use numeric dashboards to track progress. Currently, the world population is about 6.8 billion, projected to reach 9 billion. With effective vaccines and health services, we could potentially lower this growth by 10-15%. Over the next decade, we plan to invest $10 billion to advance vaccine development and distribution, aiming to reduce child mortality from 9 million to 4.5 million annually. This progress will enable societies to better care for themselves.

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In the next 10 to 15 years, I hope to leave a legacy of significant impact in global health. While some diseases like AIDS may not see a dramatic improvement, I believe we can make a difference in over half of the 20 diseases our program targets. We have promising projects in the pipeline that can greatly reduce mortality rates in developing countries, leading to easier access to education and nutrition. We use internal dashboards to track progress and share our results transparently. By learning from our experiences and collaborating with other foundations, I believe we can make a lasting impact in health, development, and education.

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In 10-15 years, I hope to see a significant impact on global health, particularly in reducing mortality rates in developing countries. We aim for improvements in diseases like malaria, with the ultimate goal of easing challenges in education and nutrition. Our foundation uses data-driven dashboards to track progress and share learnings with others. With a budget of $3 billion annually, we have high expectations for the impact we can make. Thank you for the opportunity to discuss our work at the World Economic Forum.

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The speaker states that organizations like the Gates Foundation are recommitting to global health initiatives. Despite challenges, there is optimism regarding the potential eradication of diseases like polio and malaria within the next twenty years, citing available tools and strategies. The Gates Foundation is pledging $1.6 billion to Gavi for the next five years and will invest billions more in developing new, low-cost vaccines to enhance Gavi's effectiveness. The speaker quotes Nelson Mandela on the importance of how a society treats its children, noting that Gavi has helped over one billion children live healthier lives in the last 25 years. Continued support is crucial to maintain this progress in the coming decades.

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In this video, the speaker discusses their ambitious goals for the next 10 to 15 years in tackling various diseases. They believe that over half of the 20 diseases targeted by their global program can see a significant impact within this timeframe. While some diseases like AIDS may not see a dramatic improvement, others like malaria have potential solutions in the pipeline. The speaker emphasizes the importance of reducing mortality rates in developing countries, as it positively affects population growth, education, and nutrition. They use dashboards internally to track progress and share results transparently. The speaker also mentions the value of learning from any shortcomings and lessons that can be applied to other foundations.

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Creating mRNA is easy, cheap, and scalable. In the next 5 years, we aim to improve stability and cost, allowing for global vaccine production. mRNA will be explored for diseases like HIV, malaria, and TB with various approaches. The Gates Foundation and other global health organizations will support mRNA vaccine development.

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The transcript presents a critical examination of Bill Gates, portraying him as transforming from a software magnate into a global health power broker whose wealth and influence have reshaped public health, vaccine development, and population policy. It argues that Gates’ philanthropic activities are not purely charitable but are deployed to extend control over health systems, global research agendas, and even the reproductive choices of people worldwide. Key claims and points are detailed across several strands: - Public image and power shift: Bill Gates is described as no longer a “public health expert” yet becoming a central figure in billions of lives, guiding medical actions and vaccine strategies. The program asserts that Gates’ reinvention through the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has been aided by a sophisticated public relations apparatus and by directing media coverage of global health issues. - Foundation scale and reach: The Gates Foundation is depicted as the world’s largest private foundation, with assets reported as tens of billions of dollars and a broad remit in global health, development, growth, and policy advocacy. Its influence extends to funding media outlets, think tanks, and reporting units across multiple outlets (BBC, NPR, Our World in Data, ABC, among others), creating what the program calls “tentacles” across global health. - Partnerships and funding of global health initiatives: Gates is credited with initiating and funding major global health vehicles, including: - Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, with seed funding and ongoing commitments that have shaped vaccination markets. - The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria, and other public-private partnerships that coordinate vaccine development and immunization programs. - Support for CEPI (Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations), the World Health Organization’s vaccine initiatives, and other pandemic preparedness efforts. - The World Health Organization’s funding profile, described as heavily dependent on Gates Foundation support, with Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus noted as a non-medical doctor connected to Gates-backed initiatives. - The “Decade of Vaccines” and vaccine policy: Gates is credited with launching a decade-long vaccine initiative, including a pledge of billions of dollars to vaccine development and distribution. This is linked to the creation of a global vaccine action plan and to Gavi’s role in establishing vaccine markets. The narrative asserts that vaccines have been used to steer global health policy and to secure roles for private firms in public health decision-making. - Vaccine development concerns: The program raises concerns about the safety and speed of vaccine development, criticizing the eighteen-month timeline Gates advocates for a universal vaccine, and questioning the use of new technologies (DNA and mRNA platforms) and rapid deployment with limited testing. It highlights potential safety risks, including historical vaccine-associated disease enhancement and concerns about broad immunization in a short period. - Vaccine safety and regulation: It is claimed that vaccine safety at scale is hard to guarantee and that liability protections for vaccine makers and public health officials have been enacted (e.g., a U.S. declaration granting liability immunity for COVID-19 countermeasures), a point framed as enabling risk-bearing without accountability. - Population control framing: A central thread is the assertion that Gates seeks to reduce population growth through health improvements, vaccines, and reproductive health services. The transcript traces Gates’ interest in contraception and population issues to his family background and to Rockefeller-era eugenics historical contexts, arguing that discussions about fertility, contraceptive technologies, and demographic trends have long-term population implications. It cites specific Gates Foundation activities in reproductive health, including funding for innovative birth-control delivery methods, depot injections, implanted devices, and efforts to develop digital identity tied to health services as tools within a broader population-control framework. - Digital identity and biometric ID: The narrative emphasizes Gates’ involvement with biometric identification through Gavi and ID2020, noting partnerships with Microsoft and the Rockefeller Foundation, the Aadhaar system in India, and the World Bank’s ID4D initiative. It argues that vaccination programs, biometric identity, and cashless payments are being integrated into a comprehensive “population control grid,” enabling state and private actors to track, truncate, or deny access to services based on identity and health status. - Data, surveillance, and privacy concerns: The piece contends that the push for digital IDs, digital health records, and biometrics will erode privacy and enable broad government and corporate surveillance, linking health data to financial services, voting, housing, and welfare. It highlights projects involving digital certificates, immunity passports, and real-time health data collection via microneedle patches and barcode-like skin markers, suggesting these innovations could be used to control access to services. - Epstein connections and broader conspiracy context: The program references alleged connections between Gates and Jeffrey Epstein, including flight logs and involvement in philanthropic funding discussions, framing these ties as part of a broader pattern of influence. It also points to prior associations with notable figures (Buffett, Rockefeller, Soros) and critiques of Gates as aligning with a “population control” ideology. - The underlying motive and conclusion: Throughout, the narrative asserts that Gates’ wealth is being used not for charity alone but to build an overarching system of control—over health institutions, research funding, public policy, identification, and financial systems. It contrasts his public image as a generous philanthropist with alleged hidden agendas, suggesting that the real aim is to shape global governance and human behavior through vaccination, identification, and digital infrastructure. - Final framing and call to action: The closing sections urge viewers to recognize Gates’ influence as part of an ideology rather than a single person’s plan. It frames the situation as a broader movement that could continue beyond Gates personally, urging awareness and action to resist what the program deems a population-control regime embedded in global health and digital identity initiatives. In sum, the transcript portrays Bill Gates as a central figure driving a multifaceted, globally interconnected program—through the Gates Foundation, Gavi, CEPI, and related partnerships—that allegedly reconfigures vaccine policy, global health governance, reproductive health, biometric identification, and digital payments into a cohesive system of population control and surveillance, using philanthropy as a veneer for power and control.

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Population and reproductive health are urgent issues. Growing up with parents involved in volunteer work, particularly Planned Parenthood, shaped my perspective. Looking ahead 10 to 15 years, I aim for significant improvements in mortality rates in developing countries, which can help reduce population growth and enhance education and nutrition. We are committed to rigorous tracking of our progress, with an expectation of high impact from our investments. Currently, the world population is about 6.8 billion, projected to reach 9 billion. By improving vaccines and healthcare, we could potentially reduce this growth by 10-15%. Our goal is to cut child mortality from 9 million annually by half through new vaccines, allowing societies to better care for themselves.

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In 10 to 15 years, I hope to leave a legacy of significant impact in my new role. My ambitious goal is to make a dramatic difference in at least half of the 20 diseases our global health program focuses on. By doing so, we can greatly reduce mortality rates in developing countries, leading to a decline in population growth. This, in turn, will make education and nutrition more accessible. I have high expectations for the positive changes we can achieve.

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In the next 5 years, we can easily and inexpensively produce mRNA, which is the key to its success. We just need to work on improving the stability, cost, and scalability of lipid nanoparticles. Once we achieve that, we can establish factories worldwide to manufacture affordable vaccines within a short time frame. We plan to use mRNA technology for diseases like HIV, malaria, and tuberculosis, with different approaches for each. The Gates Foundation and other organizations focused on global health will support our efforts to develop these missing vaccines using mRNA.

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The video discusses various aspects of Bill Gates' influence and actions related to vaccines and global health. It mentions his involvement in the Microsoft antitrust case, the establishment of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and his investments in vaccinations. The video also raises concerns about the Gates Foundation's investments in companies accused of social and health problems. It highlights controversies surrounding vaccine programs in India and Africa, including allegations of harm caused by experimental vaccines. The video questions Gates' motives and presents different perspectives on his philanthropy. It concludes by discussing the potential timeline for returning to normalcy amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

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In 10 to 15 years, the speaker hopes to leave a legacy of significant achievements in their new work. They have set ambitious goals, particularly in addressing 20 diseases through their global health program. Their optimism stems from the possibility of making a dramatic impact on over half of these diseases within the given timeframe. By reducing mortality rates in developing countries, they anticipate a positive ripple effect, including a decrease in population growth. This, in turn, would make education and nutrition more accessible. With high expectations, the speaker aims to bring about substantial changes in global health.

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In the video, Speaker 1 discusses their ambitious goals for the new work they are involved in. They aim to make a significant impact on at least half of the 20 diseases targeted by their global health program within 15 years. By doing so, they hope to greatly reduce mortality rates in developing countries, which would in turn lead to a decrease in population growth. This positive outcome would make other areas such as education and nutrition much easier to address. Speaker 1 expresses their high expectations for the future.

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In 10 to 15 years, I hope to have made a significant impact on at least half of the 20 diseases targeted by our Global Hope program. While some diseases like AIDS may not see a dramatic improvement, we have promising developments for others like malaria. Our goal is to reduce mortality rates in developing countries, which will have a positive ripple effect on education and nutrition. We use internal dashboards to track progress and share them to encourage transparency and learning from other foundations. Additionally, we have specific divisions focused on health, development, and U.S. education.

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Bill and Melinda Gates announced a $10 billion commitment to research and develop vaccines for the world's poorest countries. This pledge was part of a larger agenda to increase profits for pharmaceutical companies, give the Gates Foundation more control over global health, and allow Bill Gates to shape the future for billions of people. Gates insists that the world cannot return to normal until a vaccine for COVID-19 is developed, even though medical researchers have doubts about the effectiveness and safety of such a vaccine. The Gates Foundation has a history of controversial vaccine initiatives, including a study in India that violated human rights. Gates' ultimate goal is control over the health industry and the global population.

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The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has played a significant role in various global health initiatives. They sponsored the creation of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, which aims to establish healthy markets for vaccines. The foundation provided substantial funding to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria, as well as supported efforts to eliminate neglected tropical diseases. They were also a founding partner of the Global Financing Facility for women, children, and adolescents, contributing $275 million. Additionally, the Gates Foundation injected $100 million into the Coalition For Epidemic Preparedness Innovations to develop vaccines for emerging infectious diseases. Their influence can be seen in numerous major global health initiatives over the past two decades.

Conversations (Stripe)

A conversation with Bill Gates
Guests: Bill Gates
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Bill Gates and Patrick Collison discuss Gates’s early life, the origins of Microsoft, and the future of technology. Gates describes starting at 13 with a time-sharing computer and notes that his first money came from payroll work and Traf-O-Data; 'I'm 16 before I get real profit.' He explains the PC memory arc, saying '64k bytes... we went from 64k to 1 megabyte, 16 bits to 20 bits,' and recounts resisting the 286 architecture and urging Motorola’s approach. The conversation covers Xerox PARC’s influence, the Altair, and the homebrew era: 'The People’s Computer Company' and a group of founders who saw 'what personal Computing would become.' They discuss how passion, risk, and a willingness to pursue unconventional paths enabled early innovation, and Gates reflects on his upbringing in rural Ireland and the freedom to explore, including hikes and late-night programming. The dialogue moves to the psychology of founders and the 1970s tech boom: Gates debunks the '640k RAM' myth with, 'No, I never did.' He describes the shift to Seattle, the competitive landscape with Lotus, 1-2-3, and the approach of writing 'lots of software and selling it globally.' He recalls LSD anecdotes jokingly and emphasizes focus, discipline, and intense work habits. Towards the end they discuss AI, Gates Foundation aims, and global risks: AI will be transformative; Gates envisions AI aiding malaria and polio eradication and helping a smallholder farmer in Africa. They address trust in universities and the need for long-term thinking, and Gates argues for a tax system that subsidizes labor as automation rises. The dialogue ends with reflections on the modern era’s opportunities and threats and Gates’s optimism about human progress.

Armchair Expert

Bill Gates Returns | Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard
Guests: Bill Gates
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Dax Shepard and Lily Padman welcome listeners to the Armchair Expert podcast, featuring an interview with Bill Gates conducted in India after a long day. They express gratitude to Gates' team, particularly Hari, who provided insights into the Gates Foundation's work in India. Gates introduces himself as William Henry Gates III, sharing anecdotes about his family nickname, "Trey." Gates discusses the importance of storytelling in the Gates Foundation's mission, particularly in securing funding for global health initiatives like vaccines in Africa. He reflects on his public speaking skills, acknowledging that while he is not a natural, he has developed the ability to communicate effectively over the years. Gates emphasizes the significance of engaging with different cultures and audiences to convey complex ideas simply. The conversation shifts to the challenges of global health advocacy, noting that while there was a strong focus on health issues in the early 2000s, the agenda has since expanded, making it harder to maintain attention on critical issues like saving lives in developing countries. Gates highlights the importance of women's groups in community projects and the need for honest feedback during visits to ensure the effectiveness of initiatives. Gates explains the foundation's approach to problem-solving, emphasizing the need for simplicity and efficiency in projects, particularly in developing countries. He shares insights into the foundation's work in India, including successful HIV prevention efforts and vaccine distribution, which have significantly reduced childhood mortality rates. The discussion also touches on the role of AI in healthcare and agriculture, with Gates expressing optimism about its potential while acknowledging the need for caution in its application, especially in education and mental health. He reflects on the challenges of adapting to new technologies and the importance of understanding their implications for society. Gates concludes by discussing the foundation's focus on global health and education, noting the impact of their work in India and the importance of innovative approaches to address complex issues. The episode wraps up with a light-hearted exchange between Dax and Lily about their experiences in India and the connections made during the trip.

Possible Podcast

Reid riffs on Bill Gates and promising tech developments
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A single conversation spans cows to fusion, revealing how Bill Gates links technology, economics, and human progress to save lives. He moves across topics without notes, detailing methane, malaria, child mortality, and AI, always with an economic lens aimed at helping lower-income countries become self-sufficient rather than dependent on aid. The discussion highlights three paths: software and AI transforming many fields; energy as an enabler, with fusion as a goal; and a shift in sensing through AR and devices, reshaping how we understand the world. Gates notes desalination as an energy issue tied to water access.

Possible Podcast

Bill Gates on possibility, AI, and humanity
Guests: Bill Gates
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Bill Gates sees a future where progress accelerates through science, policy, and everyday choices. The conversation hinges on a trifecta: big impact, new learning, and enjoyment. He notes the foundation touches climate, global health, malnutrition, AI, and education, and that breakthroughs can save millions for less than a thousand dollars per life. He emphasizes the scale of climate urgency: over 50 billion tons of emissions and a goal to reach zero cost to achieve zero emissions. On Netflix, Gates contrasts The Future with Bill Gates and his earlier film Inside Bill's Brain. He recalls meeting Lady Gaga and how the health footage anchors a broader mission, joking that audiences may come for spectacle but stay for global health. He highlights rapid innovation across climate, health, and nutrition, and explains that the pace of product development now often surpasses expectations, aided by networks of experts and online tools. Turning to climate specifics, he outlines several paths beyond emissions cuts. Cows contribute a minority of emissions but offer several levers: vaccinating gut bacteria to reduce methane, altering feed, or a drug that changes the microbiome, plus a skin implant that burns methane. He notes cross-breeding for higher productivity while keeping adaptability. Chicken production is already cheaper in places like Ethiopia, empowering women and benefiting children. The aim is affordable, scalable solutions that remove carbon-heavy inputs while expanding solar, wind, storage, and nuclear where needed. He argues for fusion energy's promise, predicting progress within a six-year horizon if priorities align. AI is framed as a force multiplier, accelerating discovery in materials, biology, and medicine, and boosting education through personalized tutoring and data-driven teaching. He cautions that grid reliability will challenge the transition, and suggests renewables and geothermal, plus space-based concepts, as options. The aim remains a zero-green-premium future, with policy and investment guiding the scale-up of clean electricity alongside nuclear research. In health, the talk covers eradication versus burden reduction, with polio campaigns in Afghanistan, Gaza, and Somalia, and the fight against malaria and Guinea worm through affordable vaccines. Gates envisions AI-assisted ultrasound at point of care and cheaper vaccines reaching mothers who never see a doctor. In education, he praises Khan Academy and Kigo, cites New York school, and argues for longer school days and parental involvement as AI becomes a classroom partner.

Armchair Expert

Bill Gates | Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard
Guests: Bill Gates
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In this episode of "Experts on Expert," hosts Dax Shepard and Monica Padman interview Bill Gates, co-founder of Microsoft and philanthropist. Gates discusses his early life, acknowledging the privilege he had, including a supportive family and access to education, which shaped his success. He reflects on the impact of the Rockefeller Foundation in philanthropy, noting its significant contributions to global health and education, and compares it to his own foundation's work. Gates shares insights into his childhood friendship with Kent, who inspired him intellectually, and how their discussions about future careers influenced his entrepreneurial spirit. He emphasizes the importance of mentorship and learning from others, particularly in complex fields like economics and medicine. Gates also discusses the challenges of fame, noting that he was not prepared for the public attention that came with his success. The conversation shifts to philanthropy, where Gates highlights the necessity of addressing global health issues, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. He stresses the importance of vaccines and the need for equitable distribution, especially in poorer countries. Gates expresses frustration with the anti-vaccine movement in affluent communities, linking it to a lack of understanding of the benefits of vaccines. Gates also discusses the future of energy, advocating for nuclear power as a viable solution to climate change, while acknowledging the challenges of battery storage and the need for innovation in clean energy. He reflects on his personal growth, noting that becoming a father helped him balance his work and personal life, leading to a healthier perspective on success and failure. The episode concludes with Gates discussing his relationship with Warren Buffett, emphasizing the value of their friendship and mutual learning. He expresses optimism about the future, both in technology and philanthropy, while recognizing the complexities of societal issues.
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