يحاول ذهب - حر
Why activism is allergic to the middle ground of causes
November 24, 2025
|Mint Hyderabad
Some days ago, Bill Gates did the sort of thing that infuriates powerful activists.
He said a doomsday was not coming.
He did this in a single detailed article on his blog Gatesnotes.com. He wrote that climate change is a very serious issue, even transformative, and that millions will be affected, especially the poor. If he had just said all this, it would have looked like the text of any compassionate and alarmist climate warrior, but then he framed it in his new conviction that climate change is not the end of the world. It will not be as bad as we have been led to believe. Also, carbon emissions are coming down, and they may come down faster: "...with the right policies and investments, innovation will allow us to drive emissions down much further." What would particularly disturb some well-financed climate activists was his articulation of the fact that funding for various issues is a zero-sum game—something is at the expense of something else—and all the billions going into climate action is money denied for human welfare in some of the poorest regions on earth. An implication of what Gates said is that intellectuals and millionaires pushing for ever greater climate spending may actually be perpetrators of human inequality without either knowing or acknowledging it.
هذه القصة من طبعة November 24, 2025 من Mint Hyderabad.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Mint Hyderabad
Mint Hyderabad
SIM misuse risk falls on users
Mobile subscribers may be held liable if a SIM card procured in their name is found to have been misused for cyber fraud or other illegal activities, an official statement said on Monday.
1 min
November 25, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
India needs catastrophe bonds to cover disaster relief expenses
We could reduce the fiscal burden of disaster relief by using the money invested in high-risk ‘cat bonds’ offering high returns
4 mins
November 25, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
Inverted duty fix is next on GST agenda
GST Council to expand work on fixing anomaly at next meet
1 min
November 25, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
India’s buffalo-milk mozzarella melting its way into global markets
India is emerging as an unexpected player in the global mozzarella market, upending a space long dominated by Western suppliers.
1 mins
November 25, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
Tesla vs Tesla: HC grants protection to Musk’s company
The Delhi High Court on Monday granted interim protection to Elon Musk-led Tesla Inc. in its trademark infringement case with Gurugram-based Tesla Power India Pvt. Ltd.
1 mins
November 25, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
HAL calls Tejas crash isolated
India’s Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd (HAL) said on Monday the crash of a Tejas fighter jet in Dubai last week was an isolated occurrence caused by exceptional circumstances, without providing further details.
1 min
November 25, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
Wipro VC eyes exits, packaged food bets
Wipro Consumer Care Ventures, the venture capital arm of consumer goods major Wipro Consumer Care & Lighting, is looking to cash out of some of its investments from its first fund of ₹200 crore.
2 mins
November 25, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
HOW TO SPOT A WINNING STARTUP IPO
As a flood of new listings burns small investors, we investigate the overlooked metrics
8 mins
November 25, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
REAL ESTATE PLAY: THE END OF INDIA’S BIGGEST TAX HACK
For years, the easiest dinner-table flex in India was a line that began with “You know what I bought that flat for?” and ended with a smug smile. Real estate wasn’t just an investment, it was a moral victory. Hold long enough and inflation would ensure you paid no to minimal tax. All thanks to indexation, a process that adjusts the cost of acquisition for inflation until the year of sale, effectively reducing your capital gains and the tax on them.
3 mins
November 25, 2025
Mint Hyderabad
Micro biz has a harder time securing loan to start up
Bank lending to first-time micro-entrepreneurs has plummeted, signalling tighter credit conditions for small businesses already struggling with cash flow pressures and trade turmoil. In the first six months of the fiscal year, a key central scheme to support such lending managed to sanction just about 12% of what was sanctioned in the entire previous fiscal year, official data showed.
1 min
November 25, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

