very inspiring, pmarca!
with your blog -- you have given a lot
to the startup geeks!
and with this, you have given something
amazing to your local community.
Thank you.
and looking forward to your "fondest hope"!!!
whats up with the rest of the ultra rich valleyits?
while I agree that stanford hospital is not the needest place - its his money and I like the idea of funding local. Plus emergency services are the frontline service to the community and have been getting cut left and right.
anyway you skin it this is amazingly generous and deserves an applause.
utterly retarded, and he will have a poor social ROI. He should have used it ( $28m ) to fund 3 or 4 hospitals in some of the less fortunate parts of the world. Instead, people ( like me ) will ask questions like "Why didn't he give it to a part of the world that really needed it?". I'm pretty sure Stanford hospital can take care of itself. Just my 2c
(a) Stanford is a research hospital, and the work they do in research hospitals improves healthcare everywhere.
(b) This doesn't preclude him from making other donations.
(c) Even if it were an unwise choice (which I don't believe), it was still a generous thing to do. No one deserves to be called names for giving away $28 million.
This seems to me the meanest (in both senses) comment I've seen on News.YC to date. Ending it with an ass-covering "Just my 2c" just makes it seem that much more contemptible.
Maybe he donated to a US hospital because he couldn't find anyone outside of the USA who wanted US$. :-)
More seriously, the quality of health care available to Americans without health insurance is comparable to that in many third world countries; so funding US hospitals (which provide a disproportionate amount of their services to the uninsured, who often don't seek treatment for medical issues until said issues become life-threatening) can be seen as providing assistance to the disadvantages.
Finally -- as other people have said, it was his money. Up to him to decide what to do with it.
When you have $28 million dollars to blow, you will be free to spend it as you see fit. In the interim, perhaps you shouldn't be so critical of a billionaire donating money to a hospital; much larger fortunes have simply been squandered. Not to mention the fact that throughout history the rich have donated untold sums to cultural and arts centers, recreation, etc. All money that could have been spent building hospitals in less fortunate parts of the world, and probably most of which brought nothing but praise to the philanthropist.
Bill Gates, Warren Buffett, and others are spending the bulk of their fortunes working in Africa and other developing nations. You would be naive to think that there aren't poor people in the SV area that could use better health care. Like it or not, ER's are the frontlines of care for the majority of the uninsured in this country.
I think it is very noble to try and equalize care in your hometown - especially one with such wealth disparity as SV. I think he hopes to inspire other rich technology tycoons to do the same.
Andreesen is among those who have created markets, companies, and industries more or less out of thin air (by implementing an idea on a digital device that doesn't produce tangible physical goods like a steel factory or something) in a few years. He's giving back in a very generous way. Let's all just recognize how amazing the entire situation is, shall we?
What would he know about developing countries? There's no harm in dealing with what you're familiar with.
Wow. I was taken way out of context on this one. Cover my ass? I stand by what I said. Yes, Stanford can take care of itself (I googled and its endowment is somewhere in the billions). So its a research hospital, that doesn't mean that the research they do is going to save lives. I'm not saying its not a noble thing to do, just that if you are going to give $28 million and brag about it, it better be for a damn good cause. Stanford Hospital, in my opinion, is not. Peace.
<sarcasm> yeah what a selfish jerk. Nobody should invest a cent into anything domestic until the whole of the third world is brought out of poverty. </sarcasm>
Thinking like this is what keeps people like me from enjoying charitable work.
One of the reasons I find myself with enough time to do a startup is because I cut down so much on my volunteer and charitable work. I just got sick and tired of putting in my own time and money and listening to people like you complain.
I suppose I should thank people like you for helping me refocus my energy on my own efforts. But I won't. Instead, I'll just say, "Shut up and say 'thank you'".
You do have a point... there could be a much greater need in developing countries. But I think generosity is in short supply in this world. Any charity should be applauded loudly because it helps someone.
[+] [-] sri|18 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Mistone|18 years ago|reply
whats up with the rest of the ultra rich valleyits?
while I agree that stanford hospital is not the needest place - its his money and I like the idea of funding local. Plus emergency services are the frontline service to the community and have been getting cut left and right.
anyway you skin it this is amazingly generous and deserves an applause.
[+] [-] kirse|18 years ago|reply
We need to stop giving to other countries so much and fix our own [mounting] problems first.
[+] [-] cellis|18 years ago|reply
[+] [-] pg|18 years ago|reply
(b) This doesn't preclude him from making other donations.
(c) Even if it were an unwise choice (which I don't believe), it was still a generous thing to do. No one deserves to be called names for giving away $28 million.
This seems to me the meanest (in both senses) comment I've seen on News.YC to date. Ending it with an ass-covering "Just my 2c" just makes it seem that much more contemptible.
[+] [-] cperciva|18 years ago|reply
More seriously, the quality of health care available to Americans without health insurance is comparable to that in many third world countries; so funding US hospitals (which provide a disproportionate amount of their services to the uninsured, who often don't seek treatment for medical issues until said issues become life-threatening) can be seen as providing assistance to the disadvantages.
Finally -- as other people have said, it was his money. Up to him to decide what to do with it.
[+] [-] boucher|18 years ago|reply
When you have $28 million dollars to blow, you will be free to spend it as you see fit. In the interim, perhaps you shouldn't be so critical of a billionaire donating money to a hospital; much larger fortunes have simply been squandered. Not to mention the fact that throughout history the rich have donated untold sums to cultural and arts centers, recreation, etc. All money that could have been spent building hospitals in less fortunate parts of the world, and probably most of which brought nothing but praise to the philanthropist.
[+] [-] far33d|18 years ago|reply
I think it is very noble to try and equalize care in your hometown - especially one with such wealth disparity as SV. I think he hopes to inspire other rich technology tycoons to do the same.
[+] [-] henning|18 years ago|reply
Andreesen is among those who have created markets, companies, and industries more or less out of thin air (by implementing an idea on a digital device that doesn't produce tangible physical goods like a steel factory or something) in a few years. He's giving back in a very generous way. Let's all just recognize how amazing the entire situation is, shall we?
What would he know about developing countries? There's no harm in dealing with what you're familiar with.
[+] [-] jamiequint|18 years ago|reply
[+] [-] cellis|18 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jamiequint|18 years ago|reply
[+] [-] brent|18 years ago|reply
When you donate $28 million to a better cause I'm sure we'll all like to hear about it. Until then, I hope I don't run in to "people like [you]".
[+] [-] edw519|18 years ago|reply
One of the reasons I find myself with enough time to do a startup is because I cut down so much on my volunteer and charitable work. I just got sick and tired of putting in my own time and money and listening to people like you complain.
I suppose I should thank people like you for helping me refocus my energy on my own efforts. But I won't. Instead, I'll just say, "Shut up and say 'thank you'".
[+] [-] mynameishere|18 years ago|reply
[+] [-] trekker7|18 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|18 years ago|reply
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