Warren Buffett may be congratulating himself for all the good press he is getting for the gesture (note: his request to other filthy rich capitalists to put their money into "philanthropy")--but this has to be seen in the context of what's been called the "single worst day of Buffett's life," from a p.r. standpoint, which happened just back in June when he had to testify in front of Congress about his association with the ratings agency Moody's.
Buffett's gigantic investment company, Berkshire Hathaway, is the single-largest shareholder in Moody's, which, along with the other ratings agencies, played a key role in enabling the Great Recession. They are the ones who gave assurances that the toxic investments devised by the investment banks were safe. Lehman Brothers, Goldman Sachs and the rest of the gang couldn't have sowed the wholesale destruction that they did without the assistance of the ratings agencies.
Grilled about Moody's by the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, Buffett argued that the ratings agencies weren't to blame, because everybody was fooled by the housing bubble--"Look at me. I was wrong on it too"--as if the whole job of the ratings agencies wasn't supposed to be that they did their homework and weren't fooled when everyone else was. But Buffett went further, rejecting the idea that Moody's should even have new management. Having directly profited by investments in a company that played a major part in touching off the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, Buffett defended the status quo.
Anybody who's lost a job or taken a pay cut or seen their community blighted in the current crisis can, in part, thank Warren Buffett and his investment strategy.No matter how much he "gives back," it will never be as much as he has taken away. He's not a role-model. He's a con man relentlessly looking for new hustles, no matter what the cost to society. His "Giving Pledge" is just another con.
http://socialistworker.org/2010/08/19/another-reason-to-hate-buffett