Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Tepper blurb in WashPost


Paa Langfart

Recommended Posts

Quote

David Tepper

NET WORTH: $12 billion

SOURCE OF WEALTH: Hedge funds

CORONAVIRUS RESPONSE: The founder and president of global hedge fund Appaloosa Management, and owner of the NFL’s Carolina Panthers, declined to answer questions about his covid-19 relief giving. A spokesperson for Tepper forwarded a Forbes article in which Tepper said he’d given about $22 million to efforts including Feeding America and Blue Meridian, which is providing direct cash assistance to those in need. Tepper’s foundation has also paid for mobile hotspots with prepaid Internet service for schools in Charlotte, where the Panthers are located.

Tepper told Forbes he expected to give more money as the crisis continued, and implored his fellow billionaires to ramp up their giving.

“We hope that everybody steps up,” Tepper said. “I think in general, in times of need, people have to step up if they have the ability to step up. Period.”

For the median American, Tepper’s giving so far is the equivalent of spending $178.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/what-the-50-richest-americans-have-given-for-covid-19-relief/2020/06/02/bb70b94c-9a10-11ea-ac72-3841fcc9b35f_story.html

Link to comment
Share on other sites

For the median American... basically, if he were you and I this is how much of his money he would have given away proportionately. It's a disingenuous stat in it tries to make him look like some kind of skinflint cheapskate and completely washes over the astronomical impact that giving $22 million dollars does have.

And in the end, if every American gave $178 towards helping out, that would be somewhere in the neighborhood of $63 billion. That'd fix a lot. He's doing his part and to decry his efforts as tightwaddery is just kind of sad.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

37 minutes ago, Khyber53 said:

For the median American... basically, if he were you and I this is how much of his money he would have given away proportionately. It's a disingenuous stat in it tries to make him look like some kind of skinflint cheapskate and completely washes over the astronomical impact that giving $22 million dollars does have.

And in the end, if every American gave $178 towards helping out, that would be somewhere in the neighborhood of $63 billion. That'd fix a lot. He's doing his part and to decry his efforts as tightwaddery is just kind of sad.

 

^
Nailed it!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Khyber53 said:

For the median American... basically, if he were you and I this is how much of his money he would have given away proportionately. It's a disingenuous stat in it tries to make him look like some kind of skinflint cheapskate and completely washes over the astronomical impact that giving $22 million dollars does have.

And in the end, if every American gave $178 towards helping out, that would be somewhere in the neighborhood of $63 billion. That'd fix a lot. He's doing his part and to decry his efforts as tightwaddery is just kind of sad.

 

There are at least 40 million of us who are currently unemployed and wondering how we will feed our family

next month, keep the lights on, and keep what health insurance we have.  I don't think it's asking too much to expect one of the richest people in the world, to do more to help those at the bottom.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 minutes ago, Paa Langfart said:

There are at least 40 million of us who are currently unemployed and wondering how we will feed our family

next month, keep the lights on, and keep what health insurance we have.  I don't think it's asking too much to expect one of the richest people in the world, to do more to help those at the bottom.

My local food bank says a donation of $1 can provide 4 meals. So Tepper donated the equivalent of 88 million meals. I wouldn't call that something to sneeze at.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

19 hours ago, Khyber53 said:

For the median American... basically, if he were you and I this is how much of his money he would have given away proportionately. It's a disingenuous stat in it tries to make him look like some kind of skinflint cheapskate and completely washes over the astronomical impact that giving $22 million dollars does have.

And in the end, if every American gave $178 towards helping out, that would be somewhere in the neighborhood of $63 billion. That'd fix a lot. He's doing his part and to decry his efforts as tightwaddery is just kind of sad.

 

I would pie twice if I could.  Toppers a good guy but just because he made a lot of money makes him an vil person in many eyes. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 minutes ago, mc52beast said:

People who complain about the rich not giving enough usually aren’t giving anything.

Not true. I complain about the rich not giving enough and I give a good portion of what I make to others less fortunate and donate hundreds of hours of volunteer work helping others. And I have done that for the past 30 years. Part of the problem in society is painting everyone with the same brush. 

My experience has been that those with the least often give what they can because they realize they could be there themselves or were at sometime in the past. Rich people sometimes think they earned and deserve everything they get without acknowledging the advantages they have had or the people who helped them along the way. Tepper comes from blue collar and seems to better understand the plight of those who have little or nothing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 6/4/2020 at 2:23 PM, Paa Langfart said:

There are at least 40 million of us who are currently unemployed and wondering how we will feed our family

next month, keep the lights on, and keep what health insurance we have.  I don't think it's asking too much to expect one of the richest people in the world, to do more to help those at the bottom.

True, but we can't realistically say that at $22 million (and probably growing) he hasn't done something. I mean, that would be a hard yardstick for anyone to measure up to.

Unemployment sucks and right now is probably the most desperate time to be unemployed in the last 80 years without a doubt. But there are other doors to throw eggs at on Richman's Row who deserve it more than Tepper right now.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • yeah. winter backpacking trips were the most miserable and amazing experiences. same with the coldest and snowiest hunting  experiences. i love being in it. makes for incredible memories. the worse it was, the more i ended up loving it. made the greatest memories.  i just want to get out of it afterwards.
    • I forgot about Jackson...definitely elite.  The sad part of your list is that 2 of them were 'there for the taking for the Panthers'.  Rumor has it that Hurney loved Herbert and was vetoed on trying to trade up.  And rumor has it that Frank & McCown wanted Stroud.  I believe both rumors.  
    • I went on a solo elk hunt in the Flat Tops. It was awesomely miserable. LOL It was a late season hunt, I think third season and it was forecasted to snap off cold with highs in the upper thirties and lows in the single digits. fug it, I'm going anyway. They were wrong. The highs were in the low 20s and the lows were in the negative teens. I shivered so hard the first night I thought my teeth were going to break. It was the only time I've ever been legit concerned that I might be in trouble. Crawled out of my sleeping bag and got a fire started and suffered through the night bundled up next to the fire. I slept the next two nights literally wearing every stitch of clothing I'd brought with Nalgenes full of near boiling water in the bottom of my sleeping bag. That was the only way to have non-frozen water in the morning anyway. There was about a foot of snow on the ground and the melt/freeze crust was almost enough to support your weight but you'd go crashing through just as you went or make your step. It was exhausting travel and every step sounded like a rifle shot. Hunting was basically impossible. I never saw an elk in those four days, only saw 5-6 deer. LOL It was brutal but I loved it. Absolutely beautiful country that is never been to before and haven't been back since. I needed that four day complete break from society fighting for my life against the elements. I'm weird like that.
×
×
  • Create New...