President Mark Zuckerberg???

“Progress now requires humanity coming together not just as cities or nations, but also as a global community.” – Mark Zuckerberg

Alright, folks, we have tried it on for size and it did not fit.  We tried putting a billionaire businessman in the big White House, and the experiment failed miserably within the first week, so why would we want to try it again?  It is not that I have anything in particular against billionaires or businessmen, but the reality, as we have seen, is that being a billionaire businessman does not qualify a person for the role of president.  In fact, I suspect it should automatically dis-qualify them.

Since January, when Zuckerberg announced his plan to visit all 50 states by the end of the year, there have been rumblings and rumours that he intends to run for the office of president.  He said that his journey around the country would involve road trips with his wife Priscilla Chan, visits to Facebook offices, meetings with teachers and scientists, and stops in small towns and universities.

“I’m looking forward to this challenge and I hope to see you out there!”

Sounds rather like a politician, doesn’t he?

During his travels this week, he ‘dropped in’ on a family in northern Ohio and dined with them, making worldwide headlines – another very political sort of thing to do.

zuckerberg-dinner.png

Zuckerberg is a better man than the current experiment sitting the Oval Office.  He has donated to many worthy causes over the years, he is intelligent, and he is a humanitarian.  However, he still lacks the skills and experience to lead the nation.  The basis for the rumours, in addition to his political-sounding announcement, lies in the unsealed court filings from a class-action lawsuit filed in April, revealing that Zuckerberg and two board members had discussed how Zuckerberg might pursue a political career while retaining control of Facebook. Venture capitalist Marc Andreessen, one of the company’s most prominent investors, texted Zuckerberg in March to say that the “biggest issue” of the corporate proposal was “how to define the gov’t service thing without freaking out shareholders that you are losing commitment”. Uh-oh … I smell conflict-of-interest and ethical issues already.

I will not spend much time dwelling on Zuckerberg as a candidate … it is just too early in the game to do more than briefly speculate and then move on.  But let us take just a quick look at Mark Zuckerberg, the man.

Zuckerberg and his wife are philanthropists … real ones, not the fake kind who donate pictures of themselves to charity.  Along with Bill Gates and Warren Buffett, Zuckerberg signed “The Giving Pledge”, in which he pledged to donate at least half of his wealth to charity over the course of time.  Zuckerberg founded the Start-up: Education foundation and donated $100 million to Newark (New Jersey) Public Schools, one of the lowest socio-economic school districts in the state.  In 2014, he and his wife donated $25 million to combat the Ebola virus disease, specifically the West African Ebola virus epidemic.  He has made numerous other charitable donations, some of which have been controversial, and I leave those out for the moment.

Zuckerberg’s political views are largely unknown, however I have read a few things I liked, and some I did not.  He is supportive of the Black Lives Matter movement and actually seems to understand it, which many do not, saying, “Black Lives Matter doesn’t mean other lives don’t — it’s simply asking that the black community also achieves the justice they deserve.” He is also supportive of immigrants and against bans and deportation, which raises him a notch higher in my book.  He is also a supporter of the LGBT community.

On the flip side, he led the launch of a 501(c)(4) lobbying group called FWD.us.  The goals of this group are basically worthy, including immigration reform, improving the state of education in the United States, and enabling more technological breakthroughs that benefit the public.  However, they have also advocated a variety of oil and gas development initiatives, including drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and the Keystone XL pipeline.

Personally, I do not care about a candidate’s religion or lack of … I am more concerned with his experience and qualifications, and I consider religion or lack of to be a personal decision.  However, I am in the minority on this, and many people seem to judge candidates based on their religious preference.  I remember that this was a problem for John F. Kennedy, being a Catholic.  In today’s environment of religious zealots, to be an atheist would doom any candidacy.  Until December 2016, Zuckerberg, though raised in a Jewish household, identified as an atheist.  But last December, some believe in preparation for a political run, he renounced his former atheism, saying, “I was raised Jewish and then I went through a period where I questioned things, but now I believe religion is very important.”

Again, I believe Zuckerberg is a good man with his heart in the right place, which is certainly in contrast to the current president, but I know of nothing that actually qualifies him for the job.  He has no experience in public service, no Constitutional Law background, no foreign relations experience, and I believe we have seen what those lacks can lead to.  However, I reserve the right to change my opinion over the course of the next three years, if I see that Zuckerberg is, indeed, a worthy candidate for the office.

Bill Gates for President!!!

I don’t know why it didn’t come to me sooner.  Probably because I have always thought that the best person to be president of the United States would be one with upper-level experience in government, with legal expertise, with knowledge of foreign nations and policies.  But this year, of course, some portion of the public has determined that these are not requisite for the job of president and that they prefer, instead, a businessman with a loud mouth and a bad hairpiece.  Now, okay, I still like the idea of a legal scholar in the White House, but if we are going to have a businessman instead, wouldn’t it be preferable to have one who is also an intellectual?  And one who is successful at what he does?  Enter … none other than … drumroll, please … Bill Gates!  There are two main measurable areas in which Bill Gates is so superior to Donald Trump that they really bear a closer look: philanthropy and business acumen.

Philanthropy

Bill Gates’ net worth as of 2015 was $79.2 billion, as compared to Trump’s measly $4 billion.  Not that I think that wealth should be a requisite for the job, but it does show that Gates is far more successful than Trump.  More importantly, Bill Gates, through the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, supports numerous humanitarian causes (see below) to the tune of more than a billion dollars a year.  Trump, on the other hand, while claiming to be an “ardent philanthropist”, is said by every source I checked to be the stingiest.  He last donated to his own foundation in 2008 in the amount of $35,000.  According to NPQ (Non Profit Quarterly), his donations are small and overstated, generally involve a celebrity, and in some cases he, himself, is the beneficiary.  Several other sources have named him the Least Charitable Billionaire.

Here is a short list of just a few of Bill Gates’ contributions:

  • $35M grant to assist people in developing countries living on less than $2 per day
  • $5M – field research into assisting poor people in developing nations
  • $3.1M – financial & healthcare services for poor in Latin America
  • $19.9M to increase world’s rice production
  • $100M productivity & small farm production in Africa
  • $3.4M for sanitation systems and clean drinking water
  • $200 sanitation projects
  • $86M distribute polio vaccine in developing nations
  • $750M global vaccinations for HIV, TB and tropical diseases
  • $12.2M to help rebuild libraries in Louisiana and Mississippi after hurricane Katrina
  • $373M on education in 2009 alone

This is a only a sampling of his many contrubitons, as I couldn’t possibly list them all, but I think it makes the point that Bill Gates is a humanitarian philanthropist who has a deep desire to help others less fortunate than himself.  Donald Trump, on the other hand, is a narcissist who, when he does contribute to charity, does so mainly to gain favour from somebody who is in a position to help him.  It would seem that Trump is more concerned with reducing his taxes while Gates genuinely wants to help people and make the world a better place.

Failed business ventures:

  • Trump: Trump Airlines, Trump Vodka, Trump Mortgage, Trump University, Trump Casinos (4 bankruptcies), Trump Magazine, Trump Steaks …..
  • Gates: None

Successful business ventures:

  • Trump: Grand Hyatt Hotel, Trump Tower, Wolman Rink, 40 Wall Street, Trump Place, The Apprentice, Trump International Tower-Chicago
  • Gates: Microsoft Corporation

There are other situations that would make Gates a better candidate than Trump.  He has never filed bankruptcy (Trump has, a minimum of 4 times), he is a deep thinker (Trump, obviously, is not), he is much more reserved and professional in his public persona (I cannot imagine him saying any of the cruel, stupid things Trump has said in the past 6 months), Gates has been married to his wife, Belinda, for 22 years (Trump has been married 3 times and brags about numerous affairs with married women), and the list goes on.  Interestingly, both men have very similar IQ scores – Gates 160, Trump 156, which goes to show that intellect is about more than IQ scores. If I were going to elect a businessman as president, which I still don’t think is a particularly good idea, I would far prefer the likes of Bill Gates than Donald Trump.

Alas, I am not the first to think of Gates for president, as if you Google “Bill Gates for president”, you will come up with 19,600,000 matches.  And, sadly, the idea was already proposed to him and he rejected it, saying : “I decided the philanthropic role is where my contribution would be more unique, and so that is what I will work on the rest of my life,” Gates said. “I actually think, maybe I’m wrong, that I can have as much impact in that role as I could in any political role. In any case, I would never run for political office.”