1336 points by pseudolus 1993 days ago | 836 comments on HN
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Contested
Editorial · v3.7· 2026-02-28 11:19:33 0
Summary Philanthropic Commitment to Welfare & Education Advocates
This Forbes biographical article celebrates philanthropist Chuck Feeney's completion of an $8 billion giving initiative focused on education, healthcare, human rights, and social change. The article strongly advocates for the 'Giving While Living' model as a human rights strategy, with Feeney's work explicitly aligned to education (Article 26), welfare (Article 22), health access (Article 25), capital punishment abolition (Article 3), and international cooperation (Article 28). The content demonstrates advocacy for philanthropic fulfillment of human rights values but frames these through charitable giving rather than systemic rights protections.
most people say the would do something like this if they ever became extremely rich, but only a few would actually be able to do it. I'm in awe of the strength of character this guy must have.
This is a role model I can actually appreciate. I can't figure out why this is the first time I've heard of him. I've seen lots of news about people buying expensive shit, but the fact that this has never come to my attention is a horrible indicator of what the media chooses to report on.
Interesting! I wonder if he tracked outcomes so we can see what the result is of all this. He seems pretty happy with how his charitable "investments" have done.
That data could reveal which things are the most effective things to operate charitably in terms of increasing human happiness.
That's something I really like about Jack Dorsey's approach. I get to follow along and see what works.
> While many wealthy philanthropists enlist an army of publicists to trumpet their donations, Feeney went to great lengths to keep his gifts secret.
Crazy respect for this. Many times billionaire charitable foundations are just tax preferred ways of building your image or amassing influence. Bill Gates has done a lot of good, but his charitable work also served to redeem his image from that of the ruthless businessman crushing competitors that he had in the 1990’s. In addition, it has also given him a lot of soft power. I bet there are dozens of heads of state, especially in Africa and Asia, that he could personally get on the phone within 30 minutes if he really wanted to.
I find those people who determine to earn big and then give away big very interesting minds. Their reasons to earn are most of the times very different from a typical person.
I humbly encourage everyone to make giving a larger part of your life.
Consider giving at least 10% of your income to cost-effective charities -- because cost-effective charities can do thousands of times more good than merely regular charities. So your $1,000 donation can do as much good as $1 million, if given well.
He was outed a few years ago due to a IPO of DFS, otherwise he'd still be below the radar. His partner at DFS, Miller, took the opposite route: still a major shareholder, extravagant lifestyle with his kids being classic "rich kids".
Huge fan of Chuck. “Who wants to be the richest person in the graveyard?” Is a question I often ask myself. Chuck has lived that philosophy. I moved to the bay last year and I hoe to one day meet him!
Mark Benioff donated $100M to the UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital and got his name on the INSTITUTION (not just a building). What many don't know is that donation was to complete a match of $125M offered by Chuck Feeney (who does not have his name on a building anywhere on the campus, AFAIK).[0]. That $125M was only part of the $394M Chuck ended up giving to UCSF.[1]
Is a person who invests that money for-profit but makes giant advancements in maths/science while doing it an equally big giver?
Take for example, Elon musk. Even though he hasn't given monet away to charities like Chuck, his for-profit enterprises like electric cars, solar farms, spacex and possibly neuralink might just have been things that end up equally great for humanity.
Chuck Feeney embodies what Gandhi said about the rich having wealth in trust and using it for the good of society:
"“supposing I have come by a fair amount of wealth — either by way of legacy, or by means of trade and industry — I must know that all that wealth does not belong to me; what belongs to me is the right to an honourable livelihood, no better than that enjoyed by millions of others. The rest of my wealth belongs to the community and must be used for the welfare of the community.” [1]
Each time I bike past Cornell Tech, Feeney's generosity awes me. What a mensch. Makes me proud to be human.
This guy is my hero. I do hope he was able to enjoy spending some of his money on himself and his family though. I have no problem with billionaires who contribute a lot to society living well as long as they aren't hording resources (huge acreage estates, mega yachts, rental properties). "Contribute to society" is the sticking point for many of them though.
I hope I can live like Mr. Feeney, although I personally wouldn't be quite as ascetic as he given the circumstances (I would own a small but nice house in San Diego or Hawaii and a nice 0 emission solar/sail powered boat).
I’ve long argued for massive estate tax rates on large estates in order to incentivize behavior like this. I have no problem at all with Bezos being worth $200 billion (or whatever it is now), but it’s this dynastic wealth that I find borderline sickening. Why in the hell should the Rockefeller’s of today be billionaires??? Also, these giant charitable foundations/family offices are similarly off-putting, as they are setup as semi-perpetual institutions that often only make the minimum 5% distribution annually. (Another fix would be to jack that up to 25% upon death) Big estate taxes seem to solve for a lot of problems with appropriate compromises.
I vaguely recall that there are classic levels in Jewish philosophy regarding philanthropy, and among the highest is to give with no expectation of any return whatsoever: that means not only giving where it matters, but to do so anonymously, to organizations that don't benefit you (no opera companies), and to people with no ties to you. In this respect Chuck Feeney has been incredible.
This is not to dismiss the likes of Bill Gates: he has been very public with his donations, but in some cases (notably celebrity) notoriety in your donations may create a multiplier effect as it encourages others to do likewise. Even so, I think this is still on a lower-rung, philanthropy-wise, than Feeney's approach.
Nonetheless, we're sitting here praising someone who reduced himself from billions to $2M, but we must remind ourselves that this is unimpressive compared to the poor person who donates $25 to others while starving herself. The value of money is nonlinear. I'm sure that Feeney would say this as well: he no doubt sees himself as saddled with the burden of billions of dollars rather than someone doing something amazing.
I wonder if I ever will have the strength to do what he has done.
The amount of negativity in this thread regarding billionaires and charity is stupefying. There are well established reasons why the distribution of wealth is lumpy - the uneven distribution of initial endowments, skills, parenting, luck, education, etc. The work of Pareto and the Ergodicity Economics gives a sound theoretical basis to this realization. There is no middle ground folks - in any incentive driven system you will have a power tailed distribution.
Can we just celebrate Chuck Feeney and his awesomeness?
It’s true of him regardless, but as someone from Northern Ireland, Chuck Feeney is a freaking hero.
I don’t have much to add that hasn’t been said already, but his donations - right up to the last - have made genuine and lasting differences in the hearts and minds of kids growing up here and I doubt even he knows all the good that’s come of what he did in this place.
I don’t want to ramble on because it’ll end up sounding like a eulogy but he’s done an incredible thing for our people and we’re incredibly grateful for it.
Chuck's actual works get just a little mention in this piece.
He is known for helping to bring peace to Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. That is, to end the Troubles, a conflict that lasted about 30 years, from the late 60s to the late 90s. People who were not yet adults in that time may have difficult imagining the violence of the Troubles. The terrorism, riots, violence and armed actions that characterized a guerrilla war and its suppression, all on the edge of Western Europe. The southern counties that now make up the Republic of Ireland had only achieved independence a few decades before that (the dates are complicated, but let's say it was in 1921) after 800 years of British occupation, and a recent war of independence.
That was the backdrop against which Chuck Feeney tried to bring peace. He did so by working with both sides of the conflict, the Catholics and the Protestants, with diplomacy and massive investments, to make sure that they could see a path to peace despite all the anger, animosity and desire for vengeance that decades of violence and killing can instill. He helped resolve that. Not alone, but he was crucial. And we don't even think about it any more because it's all been relatively normal for a while. And that's amazing.
You don't need to "become extremely rich" for charitable giving to be quite worthwhile. Even donating trivial amounts of money to high-impact charity can easily come with a factor of 1000× in value created, compared to just spending the same amount of money on your own private consumption. (Of course this assumes that you're choosing the right causes, generally involving very poor countries and the like; not just "donating" to your local art gallery, or for that matter your local college with a billion-dollar endowment.)
I wonder if a person was more involved in charitable giving if they would have heard about this guy before? Mainstream news coverage isn't going to cover him much but stories have been written, he worked closely with Gates and Buffet.
My takeaway from this story is to spend my time on things that matter to me. It's a reminder that our news sources are really just another form of entertainment, which is not something that can give your life meaning or a sense of accomplishment.
Sure, but what benefit does that power get him except to accomplish the goals of his philanthropy? He doesn't appear to be trying to amass more wealth.
He needs to amass connections and power if he wants to accomplish his philanthropic goals.
As for fixing his image, sure, maybe that was part of it. But I doubt it. He could have just made a few really big donations and then went off to himself to enjoy his wealth.
Absolutely. Especially being an American. We have such a materialistic, maximalist culture. There’s definitely a psychological element here to be able to tune out all those negative messages (“Why don’t I have a nicer car/house/yacht than Alice/Bob?”). I’d be interested on where he falls on the satisficer/maximizer scale.
Speculating here as I am not spectacularly wealthy... I suspect there is more to relate to than first meets the eye.
Chuck is human like all of us. Most people have to spend some amount of time solving for generating enough capital to meet their (and their family’s) needs - whatever they may be. The fabulously wealthy / successful did too once upon a time but at some point crossed a threshold the vast vast majority of people - which I will refer to as “typical” - will never, and that is having enough to do and buy literally anything they could possibly desire indefinitely.
Thus the motivation to keep on going professionally (ie to earn more and more, something that drives typical people who are solving to meet needs), I suspect, changes to things money can’t buy which are nevertheless “typical”: The desire for impact.
Some want it in their life times, others want it for generations (legacy). Some want it in their church or on their job. Others seek and have the means to achieve it on a global scale.
If you were raised a certain way, in a certain era, it wouldn't be rational to spend it on 'frivolity'.
There are a lot of people like this. Tons of very rich folks living in normal homes, driving normal cars that they 'never buy news'.
I think in some ways more common than not, especially in more rural and suburban areas wherein projecting wealth isn't actually necessary to their professional identity.
One of my arguments against the accumulation of vast wealth is that Bill Gates can get an in-person visit with my local representative faster than I, a constituent, can get a return phone call.
I think we need 5x the number of representatives at the House level. Separate their duties, strip power from some of them, and keep them in district most of the year so they can actually be held accountable. Would also help to further democratize the House.
That point about cost effectiveness is what always leaves a bitter taste in my mouth when donating. I didn't realize people put lists of recommendations together, that's nice to see.
But how would you go about verifying any stated claims?
The article says he put away $2m for his and his wife's retirement. While I agree it's not quite 'broke' in the classic American sense, it is .025% of his former net worth of $8b.
This one line
"While notoriously frugal in his own life, Feeney was ready to spend big and go for broke when the value and potential impact outweigh the risk."
Amazing life, made a ton of money and lived to see it all given away.
I think thinking in terms of percentage of income doesn't work, because the lower your income, the lower a percentage you can afford to give away. I have found it better to think of it as a percentage of your non-essential expenses. e.g, if you spend $500 per month on non-essential things (eating out, movies, netflix, amazon impulse buys etc.), then you can afford giving away 10% of it ($50 per month) to charity.
2 million is only 0.025% of 8 billion. It's a bit of editorializing to call it "broke" but donating such a huge percentage of his net worth is commendable and he will be living a relatively much more modest lifestyle.
> I've seen lots of news about people buying expensive shit, but the fact that this has never come to my attention is a horrible indicator of what the media chooses to report on.
While weighing journalist's actions you might want to consider that Chuck Feeney wanted to remain completely anonymous and the media - the members of the media acting in accordance with your desires specifically - made that impossible.
(that some of us have known his name for many years might also indicate that this has never come to my attention is not a meaningful measure of the media's performance - perhaps it's a measure of your use of media)
Farmers working under communist rule in China who started private farming caused agricultural productivity to skyrocket and the number of starving people to drop [1]. Say what you will about human greed, but aligning a behavior you want with a natural economic incentive is a powerful tool.
On the flipside, some industries like healthcare don't belong in such a ruthless system, because "voting with your wallet" is sometimes equivalent to "voting with your life". Other industries like scientific research have too long a lag time for the the companies to stay afloat, or for the decision makers to benefit from the decision. These industries are the ones that frequently need help from government, nonprofit, donors, etc.
I'll echo this sentiment and add that during my career I've experienced a number of ups and downs. During the downs, when it felt like I've wasted years of my life for something that went nowhere, what always felt worthwhile to me was the time I spent doing charity work and volunteering. You don't need to be a Feeney to make a huge difference. Many of the people on HN are insanely well educated and knowledgable and have skills and traits that can be put to good use helping others or inspiring a new generation, especially among the less privileged. Just spending an hour or two a week over a period of years can yield tremendous results in the lives of others.
I think a big part of the Feeney story is that he didn't just donate money. He got involved. He took an interest and made sure he was making a difference, or at least was doing his best to make a difference. He gave his time and his personal effort.
I remember watching a documentary on him some time ago. There was some issue he was interested in. I think it involved a community in Ireland. He put his money into the issue, but it didn't have the desired outcome. He looked closely at what they were doing and decided the strategy wasn't a failure, so he committed some astounding amount more with specific strings attached. His strings forced others to put skin in the game with him. Then they worked together towards their desired outcome.
How do you make sure that your donation to the blind center will get that roof repaired? Grab a hammer.
Spend your money on riotous living – no tax; leave your money to your children – the tax collector gets paid first. That is the message sent by the estate tax. It is a bad message and the estate tax is a bad tax.
The basic argument against the estate tax is moral. It taxes virtue – living frugally and accumulating wealth. It discourages saving and asset accumulation and encourages wasteful spending. It wastes the talent of able people, both those engaged in enforcing the tax and the probably even greater number engaged in devising arrangements to escape the tax.
The income used to accumulate the assets left at death was taxed when it was received; the earnings on the assets were taxed year after year; so, the estate tax is a second or third layer of taxation on the same assets.
The tax raises little direct revenue- partly because the estate planners have been so successful in devising ways to escape the tax. Costs of collection and compliance are high, perhaps of the same order as direct tax receipts. The encouragement of spending reduces national wealth and thereby the flow of aggregate taxable income. These indirect effects mean that eliminating the tax is likely to increase rather than decrease the net revenue yield to the federal government.
The estate tax is justified as a means of reducing the concentration of wealth. However, the truly wealthy and their estate planners avoid the tax. The low yield of the tax is a testament to the ineffectiveness of the tax as a force for reshaping the distribution of wealth.
The primary defense made for the estate tax is that it encourages charity. If so, there are better and less costly ways to encourage charity. Eliminating the estate tax will lead to higher economic growth, which is the most important variable in determining the level of charitable giving.
Death should not be a taxable event. The estate tax should be repealed.
There are two reasons to support a hefty inheritance tax on wealth over $X million. First, it raises revenue to help fill the deficit. More importantly, it is friction against generational wealth. Bill Gates (and his father) have for decades supported inheritance tax and gave this as the explicit reason.
That's a good point. And 'broke' isn't 100% broke just yet, he's not going to have to sleep under a bridge. But he's broke enough that the wrong accident can put him on the far side of the line easily enough. Obviously this goes for many people but they tend to end up in that situation by accident, not by design and as an example to other billionaires he's pretty impressive.
I understand your sentiment. But the highest marginal estate tax rate is currently 40%, for amounts above $1M (after deducting applicable exemptions). That seems high enough. The problem is that the estate tax system is so complex, so full of loopholes and tricks, that no truly rich person with 2 brain cells and a competent estate lawyer will pay a fraction of that 40% tax.
I don't know what the solution is, but it seems to me that the estate tax system is overly complex, too open to abuse, and needs to be simplified. It is unfortunately intertwined with Trust laws, Probate laws, Income tax laws, international tax treaties, etc. As far as I can tell, the estate tax exists only because of the "stepped up cost basis" feature in the US tax code, where all capital gains is zeroed out upon death by increasing the cost basis of the asset to the current market value. (Does any other country have this?)
I think it would be simpler to eliminate Stepped Up Cost Basis, and replace the estate tax with something like a "deemed disposition" tax, where the capital gains tax is paid upon death (above a certain exemption amount, say $5M/couple), or paid upon transfer to another non-pass-through legal entity (e.g. an irrevocable trust). Oh, we should also eliminate the long-term capital gains tax rate, and all capital gains should be taxed at the same rate as earned income. I think this would eliminate the "carried interest" loophole. Oh, and we should eliminate Dynasty Trusts, which can last as long as 365 years. It's hard to see how allowing a Trust to last 365 years is good public policy. Oh, and so many other loopholes need to be closed.
Unfortunately, I don't think there is much political will to tackle these issues. Estate tax law is a very obscure part of the tax code. Very few people care, except for the small number of ultra wealthy people and their lawyers who are taking full advantage of the current system.
Article extensively celebrates education as Feeney's primary philanthropic focus. Clear statement: '$3.7 billion to education, including nearly $1 billion to his alma mater, Cornell.' Roosevelt Island $350M technology campus described as exemplifying his education philosophy. Education is repeatedly positioned as core to the model.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
Article states: 'Feeney gave $3.7 billion to education, including nearly $1 billion to his alma mater, Cornell, which he attended on the G.I. Bill.'
Article describes: '$350 million for Cornell to build a technology campus on New York City's Roosevelt Island.'
Article frames education funding as classic example of Feeney's philosophy: 'While notoriously frugal in his own life, Feeney was ready to spend big and go for broke when the value and potential impact outweighed the risk.'
Inferences
Education is positioned as Feeney's dominant philanthropic priority and the article explicitly endorses this allocation as exemplary.
The article strongly advocates for education investment as human rights fulfillment, with education representing the largest single allocation of the $8B giving.
Article extensively celebrates social security and welfare-focused giving: $3.7B education, $870M+ human rights/social change, $700M+ health. The philanthropic model is explicitly framed as achieving welfare outcomes. Direct quote: 'We see little reason to delay giving when so much good can be achieved.'
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
Article states: 'Feeney gave $3.7 billion to education' and '$870 million went to human rights and social change.'
Article mentions: 'more than $700 million in gifts to health' and $270 million specifically for 'public healthcare in Vietnam.'
Direct quote from Feeney: 'I see little reason to delay giving when so much good can be achieved through supporting worthwhile causes.'
Inferences
The article frames welfare-focused philanthropy as the model worthy of emulation by Gates, Buffett, and other world leaders.
The celebration of social welfare provision through Feeney's example suggests strong alignment with Article 22's emphasis on social security and welfare rights.
Article frames entire narrative around Feeney fulfilling duties to community. Direct quote: 'I see little reason to delay giving when so much good can be achieved through supporting worthwhile causes.' Four-decade commitment to 'giving while living' is explicitly about community obligation and duty fulfillment.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
Article directly quotes Feeney: 'I see little reason to delay giving when so much good can be achieved through supporting worthwhile causes. Besides, it's a lot more fun to give while you live than give while you're dead.'
Article describes Feeney's model as 'Giving While Living—spending most of your fortune on big, hands-on charity bets instead of funding a foundation upon death.'
Article frames the four-decade effort as duty fulfillment: 'My thanks to all who joined us on this journey.'
Inferences
The entire article is structured around celebrating active community duty fulfillment through purposeful giving.
Feeney's approach is positioned as the exemplar of Article 29's emphasis on community obligations and personal responsibility.
Article explicitly states Feeney gave '$62 million in grants to abolish the death penalty in the U.S.' This directly supports the right to life principle.
FW Ratio: 33%
Observable Facts
Article explicitly states: '$62 million in grants to abolish the death penalty in the U.S.'
Inferences
Direct financial support for death penalty abolition aligns directly with Article 3's right to life protection.
The inclusion of this work in Feeney's philanthropic achievements suggests the article views capital punishment abolition as a human rights priority.
Article extensively discusses grants aimed at adequate standard of living: healthcare modernization, public health improvements, education access. Feeney's philosophy frames improving material conditions of life as primary philanthropic mission.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
Article states: '$270 million grant to improve public healthcare in Vietnam' and '$176 million gift to the Global Brain Health Institute.'
Article describes grants 'ranging from a $270 million grant to improve public healthcare in Vietnam to a $176 million gift to the Global Brain Health Institute.'
Roosevelt Island technology campus designed as infrastructure for standard-of-living improvement through employment/education.
Inferences
The explicit focus on healthcare, education, and infrastructure grants demonstrates alignment with adequate standard of living principles.
Feeney's model positions improving material conditions and access to services as core to human rights fulfillment.
Article celebrates scientific and cultural development through major institution building: Roosevelt Island technology hub and Global Brain Health Institute partnerships. These represent commitments to advancing culture and science.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Article describes: 'Roosevelt Island into a technology hub' and '$176 million gift to the Global Brain Health Institute, a partnership program between Trinity College Dublin and the University of California, San Francisco.'
Article positions these as examples of Feeney's approach to 'big-bet grants' on institutions.
Inferences
Support for university partnerships and technology infrastructure demonstrates commitment to scientific advancement and cultural development.
The article frames institution-building as a high-impact human rights strategy.
Article celebrates dignity-focused philanthropy (education, healthcare, human rights grants). Frames charitable giving as fulfilling universal human dignity principles. Positive alignment with Preamble's emphasis on dignity and freedom.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
Article reports Feeney gave $3.7B to education, $870M to human rights, $700M to health, and $62M to death penalty abolition.
Multiple influential figures (Gates, Buffett, Powell Jobs) are quoted praising Feeney's model for inspiring modern giving philosophy.
Article frames 'Giving While Living' as a philosophy that respects human dignity through active engagement and impact.
Inferences
The celebration of dignity-focused charitable action aligns with Preamble's emphasis on human dignity and freedom.
The article's framing suggests universal human rights principles are better served through active, purposeful giving.
Article mentions Feeney's work 'bringing peace to Northern Ireland,' healthcare modernization in Vietnam, and global operations across seven time zones. These demonstrate commitment to international cooperation and peace. Framed positively as high-impact global work.
FW Ratio: 50%
Observable Facts
Article lists global work: 'bringing peace to Northern Ireland, modernizing Vietnam's health care system.'
Article notes: 'At its height, the Atlantic Philanthropies had 300-plus employees and ten global offices across seven time zones.'
Inferences
The emphasis on international cooperation and peace-building suggests alignment with Article 28's emphasis on international social and economic order.
Global operations and multi-national problem-solving demonstrate commitment to international human rights framework.
Article celebrates using resources for social good but does not directly address legal equality. Indirect alignment through focus on dignity and equal access to goods (education, healthcare).
FW Ratio: 67%
Observable Facts
Article describes Feeney's frugal personal lifestyle contrasted with his massive charitable spending, suggesting deliberate equality in resource distribution.
Grants mention improving public systems (Vietnam healthcare, education access), which relate to equal opportunity.
Inferences
The philanthropic approach reflects an implicit belief in human equality by targeting systemic improvements rather than personal enrichment.
Article mentions $76 million for Obamacare grassroots campaigns and $270 million for Vietnam public healthcare improvement. These relate to non-discriminatory access to services but framed as charity rather than rights.
FW Ratio: 67%
Observable Facts
Article states: '$76 million for grassroots campaigns supporting the passage of Obamacare.'
Article mentions: '$270 million grant to improve public healthcare in Vietnam.'
Inferences
Support for healthcare access expansion suggests alignment with non-discrimination principles, though the charitable framing subordinates rights language to philanthropic positioning.
Article is journalism reporting on philanthropic work with byline and source attribution. Demonstrates free expression in reporting on social issues. Content itself does not advocate for expression rights but exemplifies them.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
Article is published with clear byline: 'By Steven Bertoni, Forbes Staff. Steven Bertoni is a New York-based editor who covers entrepreneurs.'
Multiple named sources provide direct quotes (Gates, Buffett, Powell Jobs, Feeney, Pelosi letter).
Article references Forbes calling Feeney the 'James Bond of Philanthropy' — independent editorial characterization.
Inferences
The publication of this bylined journalism demonstrates Forbes's protection of editorial freedom and expressive rights.
The ability to critically profile and celebrate a wealthy subject's values reflects platform support for free expression.
Forbes publishes this independent journalism. Platform enables free expression through editorial independence (bylined article with author credentials). Subject-matter reporting demonstrates structural support for expression.