In these comments you're going to have a lot of "Rory got em" etc. I just want us to all be adults and recognise this is a 1-hour discussion shared with folks who share different politics; perspectives and views. And I'm very appreciative that this was able to be had. I appreciate Bill for partaking in such a discussion when quite frankly he doesn't need to have much opposition to his perspective in this day and age. And I appreciate Rory for not sending softballs and allowing for both of them to get into the trenches of both their interests and seeing where they diverge. Both smart men. I think it's a tad unfair to comment on such when one has come prepared with data and the other hasn't been given the same opportunity.
@Iamjimpage9 ай бұрын
I think that’s an admirable but naive way of looking at it. Gates is projected as an expert on the subjects that Rory pushed back on, and I don’t think it’s unreasonable to expect Gates to have the answers
@cdorman113 ай бұрын
@@Iamjimpage To what end? If Rory sums up Gates by complimenting his endless curiosity, well, I'm curious what Rory's smirk meant. I'd rather have heard Gates ask what compelled that smirk rather than rehashing what time-sharing access he had at age 13. Where did Rory think he was going with that? That the Green Revolution of Asia can't happen in Africa? That Gates is powerless to prevent war so he should give up? That Africa should be ceded to Chinese soft diplomacy?
@prasadrao28959 ай бұрын
What I like about this channel is that they have follow-up questions based on the answers they are given.
@edwardsudall94019 ай бұрын
Great conversation. Questions were more frank than I ever expected, which was refreshing, especially in discussing elephants in the room head-on. Great to hear from Bill and good for him to be open to the questions and conversation.
@varcoliciulalex9 ай бұрын
I really like the fact that when unhappy with an answer they don't insist too much of it but on the other side they are asking some relevant and sometimes even sensitive questions.
@mattinterweb9 ай бұрын
The level of this discourse is so far above what you hear on an American political show. Keep up the good work guys, we need more of this in the world of politics.
@billyo549 ай бұрын
Rory's final assessment on Bill Gates is astute. I found Gates to be quite cautious in his answers while at the same time courageous in his endless curiosity.
@drdecorator95329 ай бұрын
He’s probably been coached by Blair’s sidekick
@drdecorator95329 ай бұрын
@@inherreign I meant Gates being coached by Ali
@Iamjimpage9 ай бұрын
I love that pause at 4:01 when he realises “oh, I can’t just use my set PR statements, this guy knows what he’s talking about”
@joejohnson63279 ай бұрын
That didn't stop him from spewing the usual crap he deals in...
@guythat11859 ай бұрын
My Boy's Wicked Smart
@dhumpherson9 ай бұрын
Slam dunk
@chrisjameswarren889 ай бұрын
Exactly what I thought too! Also, over the subsequent couple of minutes his realisation he might not be the most knowledgeable person in the room on this issue!
@freedomforall2369 ай бұрын
@@guythat1185Eugenics whiz kid
@jennycalvin59279 ай бұрын
This is the best Bill Gates interview that I’ve watched. That’s a true credit to the interviewers. Thank you both for your insight.
@touchofsound9 ай бұрын
The "afterglow" was the best part of the conversation - thank you Rory and Alastair!
@NessieAndrew9 ай бұрын
They're really good character judges.
@debatablelands_ratcher63549 ай бұрын
Rory scurried away from my towns battle with the housing association, the housing lot put the wrong heat pumps in the OAP s houses and there bill went up 100s of percent, and Rory bottled it and never came back, the wimp
@Ken-pi7qk9 ай бұрын
Definitely
@serenth83108 ай бұрын
@@debatablelands_ratcher6354 This sounds fairly bizarre. Heat pumps aren't commonly put in houses and this should be a legal rather than a political one.
@debatablelands_ratcher63548 ай бұрын
@@serenth8310 iv got an air source heat pump in my house , costs a fortune to get bearly any heat, i think rory was there for the community but done nothing to help, the counciler was married to the housing association chairman , the community had no chance
@FireflyOnTheMoon9 ай бұрын
Having watched many of these interviews I do think that the key to what makes them so effective is the lightness, gentleness and humour - as well as the intelligences at work. The humour lights the shows up and never fails to be quite shocking to me when talking about such dark subjects. It's a fine balance to strike and is hearteningly well done here. There's a sense of real time honesty and sincerity in the presenters, without which the show would fail.
@user-ge5qb3xq5m8 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@justjackman7 ай бұрын
The post interview analysis was the best part of the podcast!
@jezlawrence7209 ай бұрын
Well done for presenting additional numbers to challenge bills positivity with. I think hes right strategically - with a helicopter view africa as a continent is better off than it was. But where bad spots erupt or persist its still very bad. Important to highlight that the big picture may be good but we cant let it gloss over millions of people in dire straits just because millions more are doing better, otherwise we'll miss the early signs of the trend changing.
@jimb90639 ай бұрын
Yes unfortunately a helicopter view is all that's available to one individual when it affects millions or billions of other individuals. Was recently talking to my eldest daughter about a similar thing. She works in a nutrition and dietetics department in a hospital. She has to use what she's learned is best for the "average" person, and apply it to individuals. This has meant some decisions made run counter to the general advice learned for the all over well being of each individual.
@crabapple19749 ай бұрын
Both things can be true. Absolute numbers are probably not down as much or even up but relative numbers are down. The key is the increase in population in these areas. It is hard to make a point about what the impact of him not doing the work he has done would have been. I just think it is weird that we are at the mercy of single individuals like this. For good and bad. You don’t have to like the guy to realize the immense of good work he (and his foundation) has done.
@Heegooat9 ай бұрын
Bill Gates is a neocolonist billionaire like Cecil Rhodes. Him and his fellow billionaires are trying to grab Africas resources using "aid". They want our wildlife and forests assets. Let see how it will pan out.
@MrTurjacanin9 ай бұрын
Rory is the one asking/stating the hard stuff/pushing back
@BanterRanterr9 ай бұрын
Would be amazing PM 😢 but instead we got Clown...
@tabbymrp9 ай бұрын
I've only discovered this channel two days ago! And boom!!! Got a massive one today.
@travismurdock28759 ай бұрын
Love when guests realise how smart Rory is 😂
@oldschool36709 ай бұрын
Hmmmm
@jameshodgkins5599 ай бұрын
Wrong’ns all 3
@andypandy19869 ай бұрын
@@jameshodgkins559 agreed
@beepresent86369 ай бұрын
He was the only Conservative I would have EVER voted for.
@beepresent86369 ай бұрын
@@jameshodgkins559 why? This is a debate after all. Don't do a trump and say something with out any reason or evidence. Come On?
@BigChompinc9 ай бұрын
I liked his honesty around climate change it was refreshing to hear someone in his position be frank about not meeting 2 degrees target, Seemed to take Alastair back a bit aswell.
@An-Orange-Fox9 ай бұрын
Fucking awesome work guys , what a great guest !
@freedomforall2369 ай бұрын
What a 😈 sounds like 👍
@twelvecatsinatrenchcoat9 ай бұрын
It seems pretty disingenuous to look at percentages of poverty dropping enormously across a continent, and then say "Yeah but what about in this one country that's the worst one? And what about if you ignore percentages and just look at the raw number of people in poverty" even though you know the population scale has more than doubled.
@marcusaurelius91238 ай бұрын
Agree. Rory fixated on Malawi a long term basket case
@sharenpaine99899 ай бұрын
I'm surprised that Bill gates doesn't take more of a systems view of the issues he's interested in. He's focused on individual issues but not on their interconnectedness. His comments about global warming reflect this well - if the people living near the equator can't harvest their own food then where do they go (mass migration) and what impact does that have? No issue exists in isolation and I think Rory sees this in his final comments on poverty. Thank you :)
@anwiycti15859 ай бұрын
It’s time for some education to the one atop the pedestal 😂
@petewilliamson65129 ай бұрын
Well said
@richardthompson97909 ай бұрын
I feel like Rory and Bill should be friends, but they've started off on the wrong foot and are now locked into a kind of weird "Nerd off". Alistair teased Rory in that direction, and that's probably spot on. It seems like a throwaway comment but they know each other so well by now (Alistair and Rory) that it can't be. The other unspoken thing is Bill is probably fed up of having people like Rory, who are passionate about international development and think they have the answer (rightly or not), and just need $10 billion. I imagine he is stalked endlessly by well connected intellectuals who want to save the world.
@narendra626 ай бұрын
Good quality interview. So glad to hear Alastair be clam. He was totally deranged over Brexit.
@fionaetienne16939 ай бұрын
😂 Alistairs face when Rory suggested Bill had 10 active years left 😂
@colincampbell42619 ай бұрын
15 if you listen!
@ncp3218 ай бұрын
@@colincampbell4261 "10-15 years", he said..
@dinoflame96968 ай бұрын
and calling China bad guys... jfc
@pj200509 ай бұрын
28:16 Alistair's reaction lmao
@ralphzimmermann9 ай бұрын
what was he mouthing? i couldnt figure it out.
@Eoaiyer21987rhei9 ай бұрын
Think he says, "oh, Rory"
@dpact42019 ай бұрын
@@ralphzimmermann It's "I hope it's more than that!" Also, the Alistair eyeroll at 23:19 is a classic. I admire Rory's poise in continuing to ask questions after putting an upper limit on the span Bill Gates's active life! I would melt into the floor from mortification.
@nabilfreeman9 ай бұрын
Babe wake up, new The Rest Is Politics with Bill Gates just dropped
@hmq90529 ай бұрын
You sound ridiculous
@twelvecatsinatrenchcoat9 ай бұрын
This is seriously a small part of why I don't have a girlfriend. I might actually do these things.
@tomonetruth9 ай бұрын
@@hmq9052 He's right, though. Pass it on.
@ralphzimmermann9 ай бұрын
Released! God damn it! But I share your sentiment.
@DanielHill-h1o6 ай бұрын
Thank You all Im humble i am Greatful
@DanielHill-h1o6 ай бұрын
Thank You women Thank You Men
@daykz699 ай бұрын
It was an interesting listen but he has obviously developed a diplomatic persona over the years, therefore not willing to over reach in any question that you asked of him. It’s understandable to a point, yet left me disappointed for lack of specific commitment in his answers.
@susancerezo4019 ай бұрын
I agree, it was a very interesting podcast. They always are !!!!!;; But, married to someone who is on the Asperger syndrome....not diagnosed, but I am convinced of it, I feel pretty sure that Bill Gates is there too. I feel it explains a lot of his inability somehow to answer the more personal, emotional questions. It is very hard to describe that to someone who isn't familiar with such people. But it felt very, very familiar to me !
@kuecheaufbauen9 ай бұрын
Totally agree. He is giving the audience some headline but is not willing to show the full depth.
@zedz63909 ай бұрын
What a coup for the show, great guest and conversation.
@macktravels689 ай бұрын
Outstanding Interview!!! Deep thought. Really good.
@A33-y4v4t8 ай бұрын
Fantastic guys, great work!
@killercarpcatcher9 ай бұрын
I think being optimistic and not being dragged in to the politics gets him into more rooms than being negative and offensive. Very clever
@twelvecatsinatrenchcoat9 ай бұрын
I find it interesting that they found that interesting. I think that's how MOST smart billionaires act, they ride the line to be sure no matter whose in office they can get what they want. People like Elon are a radical outlier.
@crappymeal9 ай бұрын
Indeed, he wants to get things done instead of getting bogged down in gossip and politics
@danutahull93198 күн бұрын
A good style interview from the UK guys covering many topics , including personal questions with the legendary Bill Gates and Bill responded to everything with good grace ☑️ 🙏♥️
@TigerP19 ай бұрын
Very happy to see this on YT already. It is a very important broadcast. I sent it to the Development committee of the European Parliament.
@kuribojim39164 ай бұрын
This man is a treasure for the world.
@5118489 ай бұрын
love the podcast and the Yeti mugs on the table. Thank you guys.
@DusanPavlicek789 ай бұрын
Very smart questions, I liked that.
@YakubKang9 ай бұрын
EPSTEINS BEST MATE
@wills25529 ай бұрын
That was very good, Gates is a master at saying quite a bit but at the same time nothing at all, but whatever your views he is a serious person with a passion for making an impact where he feels it will work. He's not a billionaire playboy dandy like some of the others.
@crappymeal9 ай бұрын
I feel he's only interested in talking about important things instead of gossip
@Mike_Viola9 ай бұрын
Very insightful interview, thanks so much for this gentlemen.
@5kribbles9 ай бұрын
Really? I found his answers incredibly vapid.
@nigelwylie019 ай бұрын
@@5kribbles Therein lies the insight for me.
@tomonetruth9 ай бұрын
@@5kribbles I agree. I like Bill Gates but don't feel I learned much from this. Surprisingly boring.
@BusterMove789 ай бұрын
What a catch, can't wait to watch.
@fillrobs77269 ай бұрын
Great stuff - Kim Jong Un next 😂
@phemykadri94879 ай бұрын
I’ll qualify the statement about “Africa being better than it was years ago”. Nigeria, for example has regressed significantly.
@firstnamelastname96319 ай бұрын
Nigeria is the loud cousin of Afrika, a lot more going on.
@Grandfinal439 ай бұрын
That’s a blanket statement - Nigeria’s soft power through food culture and music has grown significant. Ask most African diaspora where the place to be is in December and they’ll all say Nigeria. Mismanagement of governance is certainly a problem but a regression is too simplistic
@briancollins11498 ай бұрын
you guys ask way better questions than american interviewers
@Heather-zk5eu9 ай бұрын
Bill Gates the Philanthropist 🤣🤣🤣
@odeode43389 ай бұрын
The only men in history who got richer by giving away his money.😂
@TheBoomtown48 ай бұрын
How much do you give away because he’s given billions
@odeode43388 ай бұрын
@@TheBoomtown4 wrong, he made billions by giving away his fortune. Ever wondered why?
@TheBoomtown48 ай бұрын
@@odeode4338 he makes billions by investing the rest of his money, not by giving away malaria vaccines
@GabrielNicho8 ай бұрын
@@odeode4338He hasn't made billions, the stock that he gave the foundation is hugely inflated in value...so he seems richer...but the entire stock market is overheated...
@curt34949 ай бұрын
This podcast is like watching Skeletor interview Sauron.
@alexkuznetsov43349 ай бұрын
Impressive guest! Great interview!
@josephdebri89419 ай бұрын
New vaccines, seeds, livestock for Africa. God help them.
@willdon.12798 ай бұрын
"God" is their major problem, not a help. Science will help, but nothing is infallible; Educating girls, and not having more children than you can care for, would also be a major step forward.
@dawncole5518 ай бұрын
@@willdon.1279 I suggest you watch a documentary called “The War On Our Children”, to understand that this so called education of girls in Africa, is happening but in ways that are actually causing more harm by ‘sexualising’ these children. African countries are trying to fight back, but according to African health representatives are being told that the foreign aid funding will be stopped if they don’t comply. I travelled extensively in Africa for a year and malaria was not a big issue, but their diets is based around Cassaver (spinach like veg), Nsima (corn/maize- which they eat every meal😂) and always meat and lots of fruits. I saw strong people. This man is not a philanthropist. Whilst visiting the northern area of Zanzibar I was informed by a local boat guy that Mr Gates owned an island off of this area where people pay thousands per night to stay there. His and other boats were not allowed anywhere near it. Whilst the number of tourist hotels etc were nice around the coastal mainland the infrastructure was poor, no roads and poor lighting - he does not care about even his back yard. My friend is an Indian NGO, she informed me also that he has not helped the people in ways that would benefit the people but that he could profit from. I suggest also you check out Vandana Shiva for more in-depth context
@mrstephenpariah9 ай бұрын
Elephants everywhere
@nickbarton31919 ай бұрын
Rory silenced him with stark facts. Not very rosy for very many people.
@ToastieBRRRN9 ай бұрын
I think his remark at the end about better health standards in developing countries doesn't necessary equate to improve life standards was on point. Saying Bill was too focused on one aspect of why people are suffering.
@NoddyTron9 ай бұрын
I actually think Rory was being a bit hypocritical there - specifically with his Iran example. If someone came up to him with anecdotal evidence about something he disagreed with, he would fall back on stats and studies to prove the guy wrong. But anecdotal evidence that he's got from Iranians, he takes that over the stats. I'm not saying one is right or wrong, but it does show a bias for taking whatever evidence backs your own position. Human nature I suppose.
@firstnamelastname96319 ай бұрын
Stewart thinks micro whilst Gates thinks macro. Rough analogy but true.
@nickbarton31919 ай бұрын
@@firstnamelastname9631 I don't think that Stewart's facts were micro. Africa is a continent, admittedly not as populated as Asia but there's been no or negative progress regarding poverty, according to Stewart. Let's hope that Gates is right, and there'll be good progress over the next decade.
@nickbarton31919 ай бұрын
@@NoddyTronI was referring to what Stewart said about poverty in Africa. Gates was silent for a good while before he could come up with something positive.
@brixan...9 ай бұрын
These interview questions are so good wtf
@mind-ful-music9 ай бұрын
10, 15, 20 years of active life left... Alastair's reaction is brilliant, and Bill seems very offended by that!
@odeode43389 ай бұрын
People like Bill hate nothing more but be reminded that they are dinosaurs
@DirtiestDeeds9 ай бұрын
I found his sanguine view of us passing 2 degrees of global warming utterly terrifying.
@billyshakespeare179 ай бұрын
If that bothered you then please, for your own mental health, refrain from looking at past meteorlogical history.
@tawektawek38389 ай бұрын
I thought his approach was mostly sensible. Global warming is already terrible in its effects, and it will get much much worse. However, if we talk as though 2 degrees is the end of the world, then we run two risks. Some will feel that, if 2 degrees is inevitable, then there is nothing to be done. Others, once we reach 2 degrees, that our direst predictions didn't come true, so continued warnings about the future will be worthless. As I understand it, while science knows a lot about global warming, there is a lot we don't yet know. There may be a trigger point where passing a particular threshold will lead to run-away and irreversible disaster; or it may be the damage will be incremental based on how high the temperature goes, and it may be the damage will only be seen progressively over time. I fear he's right that 2 degrees is inevitable. If so, the battle ahead is to keep the rise as low as possible, and then to press for changes to bring the temperature down a bit. However, I agree that he understated the damage to temperate regions. Catastrophic climate change in the tropics will lead to an enormous increase in migration which will create horrendous problems, not just in the deadly consequences for the people in the countries affected, but in the enormous migration flows that will result. Populist dissension over migration from poor countries to rich is already a serious challenge to our democracies. In future, it will become far more serious.
@DirtiestDeeds9 ай бұрын
When he casually said "europeans will have to get air conditioners like America" blah blah blah, accompanied by the zero pushback from the hosts just astonishing. @@tawektawek3838
@Aran_chini8 ай бұрын
@@billyshakespeare17what period(s) in particular?
8 ай бұрын
@@Aran_chini Ignore the slow lying right wing fool.
@willdon.12798 ай бұрын
An excellent and informative discussion between 3 smart, capable, and incidentally very decent human beings - who some people I know, think are devils incarnate!
@peacefulpleb9 ай бұрын
Great interview chaps.
@TheSackblabbath9 ай бұрын
Wow! You got Bill Gates. Well done.
@andrewsmith-jf6ou9 ай бұрын
A master at dodging answering the questions.
@freedomforall2369 ай бұрын
He's a 😈👺💀
@willdon.12798 ай бұрын
@@freedomforall236/@andrew... I was wondering where you all were. 🙂
@freedomforall2368 ай бұрын
@willdon.1279 Who??? The critical thinkers, who see through all the 🐂💩
@ralphzimmermann9 ай бұрын
There is/was a documentary on Bill Gates on Netflix, well worth a watch. The guy is an exceptional intellect. This podcast was a fantastic listen, felt like 15 minutes not one hour!
@SK-hq6ux9 ай бұрын
As an African and not even anti-vac by current standards- I always feel uncomfortable in how Bill Gates thinks and paints a certain narrative that Africa's growth is connected to increased vaccinations.
@ayrmendina83149 ай бұрын
I mean.. he's not wrong. Civilisation's longevity is tied to its population size and ability to work. More people able to survive, leads to increase in work, which leads to a country's growth, which leads to an increased standard of living. Vaccines are just akin to any other success in 1st World Countries: "You either die a hero or live long enough to see yourself become the villain". Please don't take something that has been taken for granted in some countries that have solved Maslow's hierarchy for so long, and bastardise and villanize it for those without when we can clearly see a direct line related to human civilisation's increased age longevity. Look at the vaccine rates in Nigeria, Ghana, South Africa, Ethiopia etc where we have over the past two decades seen both GDP growth, but also increased life longevity.
@firstnamelastname96319 ай бұрын
Don't limit yourself to a detail like vaccines, think about the mothership: medicine. If modern medicine was universal and free, Africa would be/could be the powerhouse of the world.
@crabapple19749 ай бұрын
He is not wrong and his foundations work has done tremendous work. But it is not the only factor. As a white European I am not and African and can only offer my outside perspective. But it seems a complex mix of issues both internal and external.
@crabapple19749 ай бұрын
As someone who has studied a bit of public health, hospitals are an end of pipe solution. Clean water, infrastructure, food, vaccines etc are way way more important than medicine per se. Modern medicine has a huge impact in the individual case but very little impact on global health. This was actually covered in one of my introductory lectures in med-school. Public health is where it is at on a global/national level. Modern medicine is for when you have a coronary infarction or an accident.
@firstnamelastname96319 ай бұрын
You are so polite. English I gather?@@crabapple1974
@jezlawrence7209 ай бұрын
Nice try on the cash idea rory :)
@ROALD.9 ай бұрын
Sharp questions lads, weak answers though! But great job with the guest
@theGraphicAutist9 ай бұрын
Bill: K you guys are gonna throw me a bunch of softballs and I'm gonna still somehow deflect and not answer the question you asked...
@tonygold16619 ай бұрын
Brilliant. Varied thoughts. Thank you.
@VoltRei9 ай бұрын
I love to see Bill talking.Because is really interesting! I super love to seeing your smile.hahaha ❤😂
@VoltRei9 ай бұрын
Your wife are so beautiful.
@InstallaFriend9 ай бұрын
The way Bill Gates comes across with these answers makes me think he couldn't even pass a job interview today.
@InstallaFriend9 ай бұрын
@@inherreign Ok, now imagine if he wouldn’t be and instead he was on the other side of the table as an applicant. Would you hire him if he behaved the same way as he did in this interview?
@tracybenson63648 ай бұрын
Great conversation.
@BlackVinylMusic9 ай бұрын
4 minutes in and Rory throws a curve ball, that was amazing
@galloping32658 ай бұрын
I have a great admiration for Dr Gates.
@neilbuchangrant23078 ай бұрын
Highly enjoyable interview with one of my favourite people. Not only is his philanthropy, innovation and concern for the world's poor up there with anyone from history, his early software (Windows 3.1 and MS ACCESS) enabled me to start a business which gave me so much free time I could enjoy a second career doing something I love, essentially, without going all "Robert the Bruce" on your ass, his products gave me and millions of others, FREEDOM!!!
@veranichole19817 ай бұрын
Asking Bill Gates about Climate Change is an awful lot like asking Gary Pilnick (the Kellogg’s CEO) about world hunger. Of course he’s optimistic! He’s going to invent the thing that will save us all and continue to allow us to plunder the earth of every drop of its resources. Why do we ask rich people about social justice issues when they are the ones who cause and create the turmoil we suffer under?
@Visherex9 ай бұрын
I think considering he of course is one of the largest beneficiaries of our current corporate system, this can explain his intent on putting positivity forward
@1234567marks9 ай бұрын
It always feels to me that people give Gates a hard time in interview, I think it boils down to this, he’s put an awful lot of his own time and money into helping tens of thousands of people, and he didn’t have to help a single one of them.
@t5kcannon19 ай бұрын
@@inherreign 10 / 10 for that deeply ignorant comment about the British Empire. Is your ignorance natural, or do you deliberately try? Just asking.
@Grandfinal439 ай бұрын
@@t5kcannon1oh we got an imperialist yawn
@adamblackman66609 ай бұрын
Remember when he denied usage of his patented vaccine during the worst part of the pandemic… India had all the tools to go into production to produce the vaccine… but how would that benefit Bill? Ah sooo a bunch of people die for lack of his secret recipe, on a sauce he didn’t invent… well it’s 2024 now and all cause mortality is up everywhere…. Especially in places that were very compliant during the pandemic… So who is Bill … a medical pioneer without a medical degree? Or a profiteer, without morality. He has more than doubled his wealth “helping the world”
@QwentyJ9 ай бұрын
@@inherreignWow, we know. You've literally gone through the entire comments section just to make this one point
@dawncole5518 ай бұрын
he didn’t help a single one - he profited from them. There have been two books written about Mr Gates this yr. Please read them and then form an opinion.
@housey42979 ай бұрын
The difference with detailed knowledge and high level knowledge.
@firstnamelastname96319 ай бұрын
Exactly my point in Stewart vs Gates.
@deborahcox17737 ай бұрын
May I aks a question? I would enjoy hearing Mr. Gates engage in a debate about fiscal responsibility. I would think that would be cool. And the question is, Can you please arrange for an interview with Mr. Gates regarding fiscal responsibility. Have an amazing Easter.
@StPete.3089 ай бұрын
Excellent interview with Bill Gates! When you wonder (or remark) about how he isn't helping Joe Biden, I would suggest that he probably is, and that if he is he's certainly not going to say so.
@wayneb1459 ай бұрын
Lock bill Dr evil gates up for the rest of his life!!!!!
@johnoldfield23906 ай бұрын
The rural areas not so cool, especially for the over populated areas.
@markbradley23677 ай бұрын
As always, fascinating discussions. I especially enjoy 'your washup' at the end . I always feel so much more uplifted after watching your podcasts . Amazing to think when Alistair was 'In power' I used to think he'd sell his own grandmother to get what he wanted. Sorry, I was wrong.
@deborahhoffman73948 ай бұрын
Gates has very specific goals and is committed to seeing them realized. He has perseverance.
@eirikasbjrnberg87539 ай бұрын
I liked the Interview . Good question too !
@joeDi19609 ай бұрын
Bill Gates comes over as sincere and decent - Rory doesn’t like him because he didn’t give direct cash to the poor in Africa but he has his own methods for helping Africa and I respect that
@tawektawek38389 ай бұрын
I don't understand Rory's argument. The Gates Foundation has $69 billion in assets. If it even managed to give $6 billion a year in cash payments in unconditional cash payments, that would be less than $9 a year per person in extreme poverty. Surely, Bill Gates is right. He simply doesn't have the resources to give the $1000 per person that Rory is suggesting.
@FireflyOnTheMoon9 ай бұрын
Rory was just asking Bill about his view on direct giving. Gates gave a clear and reasonable answer.
@sugarcan11108 ай бұрын
By sure he will never be forgotten this geezer over neons and neons
@Zifferony9 ай бұрын
As someone has already commented on. It was entertaining to see Bill Gates’ rosy views on Africa challenged with specific examples which forced him to stutter a bit before getting back to the business of trying to sell his positivist mantra of “everything is better today”. After Rory’s examples however, Gates’ arguments felt very generalising about this place called Africa. As if it’s all a homogeneous place. Likewise Gates’ did not at all manage to sell the whole ‘2° C temp increase is not such a bad thing’- argument. He was very focused on agriculture only. What about biodiversity, new diseases and natural disasters like storms? No mentioning of that. As long as we can manipulate crops so that we will still be able to feed the human populations I suppose everything will be fine. 🤔 Question for Alister and Rory: I commend you on challenging this subject as much as you did. I recognise that this must have been a very juicy catch. Do you feel there was room to challenge the things he said more than you did without going overboard? If so, what parts of the interview? 🙂
@ColinSmith20019 ай бұрын
Agree on 2C. I think in engineering terms it is just about "manageable" in the west, I just see the costs (cash and change) involved in flood defense and relocation works, over decades, as being so far beyond what the general public anticipate and would support. With the hard decisions being needed 30+ years before the effects become clear enough to tick the "common sense" boxes :(
@jimb90639 ай бұрын
Yes I noticed that too. Also started talking about how Asia was more successful, before conceding Africa wasn't as successful. I understand your frustration when points aren't pressed further, it drives me up the wall in political discussion. Let off the hook, yet again. In a conversation like this covering many topics however, it's easy to get bogged down on a tiny detail which can easily take up far too much time. I don't think Rory needed a victory dance, his points weren't answered very convincingly IMO. Duly noted.
@jimb90639 ай бұрын
@@ColinSmith2001 Possibly the worst aspect of contemporary democracies. What will get you elected next time is far more important than the long term. It's like the well known problem of those who seek power and are good at getting it can often turn out to be the last people you want in charge. What do we do, force the likes of Rory and Ian Hislop to form a government at gunpoint?!
@ColinSmith20019 ай бұрын
@@jimb9063 It would be an improvement but their own lack of engagement in the "who in government does long term planning" Q&A question from a few weeks back was not ideal either....
@jimb90639 ай бұрын
@@ColinSmith2001 Maybe having no plan is the best plan, in the Bismarck style. Or is all the time taken up with planning to avoid disasters rather than planning for something positive?
@markendicott68749 ай бұрын
Quite a coup chaps - good episode.
@johnoldfield23906 ай бұрын
The rural areas not so cool, especially for the over populated areas for visits etc.
@brownboytravels9 ай бұрын
It is amazing the bubble these people live in! He has no idea of the real world he is just regurgitating figures from NGO reports presented and feeling good about himself
@rpb5838 ай бұрын
Why is Rory dressed as Blofeld from a bond film?
@deborahhoffman73948 ай бұрын
Poverty and health. One cannot accomplish anything without health. Gates priorities are solid.
@marafi29 ай бұрын
0:05 My wife asked me why I was speaking so softly at home. I told her I was afraid Mark Zuckerberg was listening! She laughed. I laughed. Alexa laughed. Siri laughed.
@ChrisGamble7 ай бұрын
Awesome
@vijay-18 ай бұрын
Full of insight
@deanobucket1234 ай бұрын
Bill Gates sitting there telling us about climate change, bro has a carbon footprint the size of Jupiter. 😂
@Contraster6719 ай бұрын
Bill Gates is an obsessive - period. I don’t think he has room for debate because he knows best and his empathy is limited. Rory tried to engage him, but you don’t have that with Gates. So I totally agree with Rory’s summation there is a balance between health and personal wealth. Gates doesn’t understand this and hence why ‘tablet’ technology was a game changer. It removed our dependency on Microsoft being able to solve everything, when it couldn’t.
@largesatsuma9 ай бұрын
Quite a coup to get Bill Gates on your programme. Hugely enjoyable, as always.
@ed17267 ай бұрын
1. Drop in democracy. 2. Huge wealth inequality. 3. Africa extreme poverty. Well let me answer 1 and 3 immediately.
@valentinesouthest28069 ай бұрын
Yes Me Gates , hand in hand with the WHO and it’s infamous head , Mr Tredros .
@yvesarns1379 ай бұрын
Philanthrop - LMAO
@jacquelinemahoney6219 ай бұрын
Really interesting discussion although he was nervous with some questions. He is a mathematician and agree with Rory very cautious. Think as a wealthy man it is untrue that he doesn't have power or influence and uses that when necessary for the good I would hope 😊
@Mike-zz5kz9 ай бұрын
5:15 I find that little chuckle when talking about children dieing before the age of five a little disturbing.
@FireflyOnTheMoon9 ай бұрын
Just nerves
@martinogden629 ай бұрын
Nice one, fellas!
@twelvebears19719 ай бұрын
I’d have been very excited to do this interview. Nice to hear from a billionaire who doesn’t seem to be actively trying to ruin the planet.