• @Changetheview
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    101 year ago

    Yeah, the wealthy “giving it all away” is always a bullshit scheme in some way. If they really felt that way, they would have shared the profits with those who helped create them. This sort of wealth only happens in literally one situation: greed overcomes compassion for others.

    These schemes usually fall into one of three categories:

    1. I fucking hate my kids and don’t have anyone I think actually deserves this money, so I’m giving it to some random charities of my choosing when I die because I know damn well I can’t spend it all and I have to do something with it

    2. I’m just putting it all into a charitable trust that I still have full control over and likely won’t spend much out of it, unless it benefits me personally

    3. Straight up bullshit PR campaign about a future promise that is not binding

    Quite often, it’s a combination of 1 and 2, locking up the money for a loooong time and only to be used for a specific purpose.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      01 year ago

      Charitable trusts have to be donated to charity. You can’t pull the money back out. It’s like giving it away that year.

      Yeah, a ton of things can be a “charity”. You can donate the money to your friends at a church or a clubhouse for your friends and still have it be a “charity”.

      • @Changetheview
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        edit-2
        1 year ago

        I think we’re saying the same thing, but it’s definitely not like giving it to charity that year. They are irrevocable trusts so you can’t take the money back from it, but the majority money doesn’t immediately have to go anywhere.

        And even when money does flow out (beyond admin/establishment costs), there are TONS of creative ways to use it for personal benefit.

        See Rolex and Hershey for two of the biggest examples. Or giant charity galas.

        Many ways to use the funds for “non-profit” entertainment. Plenty of ways to get kickbacks from “charitable” donations. Non-profit status is not that high of a hurdle.