My fondest memories of Jimmy Carter
Gatesnotes.com ^ | Bill Gates
Posted on 01/06/2025 9:02:38 AM PST by algore
Iam deeply saddened to learn of the passing of former president Jimmy Carter, and my heart is heavy for the whole Carter family. For more than two decades, I’ve had a chance to work with Jimmy, Rosalynn, and the Carter Center on several global health efforts, including our mutual work to eliminate deadly and debilitating diseases.
The Carters were among my first and most inspiring role models in global health. Over time, we became good friends. They played a pretty profound role in the early days of the Gates Foundation. I’m especially grateful that they introduced us to Dr. Bill Foege, who once helped eradicate smallpox and was a key advisor for our global health work.
Jimmy and Rosalynn were also good friends to my dad. One of my favorite photographs of all time shows Jimmy Carter, Nelson Mandela, and my dad in South Africa holding babies at a medical clinic. I remember my dad coming back from that trip with a whole new appreciation for Jimmy’s passion for helping people with HIV. At the time, then-President Thabo Mbeki was refusing to let people with HIV get treatment, and my dad watched Jimmy almost get into a fist fight with Mbeki over the issue. As Jimmy said in a 2012 conversation at the Gates Foundation hosted by my dad, “He was claiming there was no relationship between HIV and AIDS and that the medicines that we were sending in, the antiretroviral medicines, were a white person’s plot to help kill black babies.” At a time when a quarter of all people in South Africa were HIV positive, Jimmy just couldn’t accept Mbeki’s obstructionism.
As with HIV, Jimmy was on the right side of history on many issues. During his childhood in rural Georgia, racial hatred was rampant, but he developed a lifelong commitment to equality and fairness. Whenever I spent time with him, I saw that commitment in action. He had a remarkable internal compass that steered him to pursue justice and equality here in America and around the world.
After Jimmy “involuntarily retired” (his term) from the White House, he reset the bar for how Presidents could use their time and influence after leaving office. When he started the Carter Center, he gave a huge shot in the arm to efforts to treat and cure diseases that rich governments were ignoring, like river blindness and Guinea worm.
The latter once devastated an estimated 3.5 million people in Africa and South Asia every year. That total dropped to just 14 cases in 2023, thanks to the incredible efforts of the Carter Center.
When the world eradicates Guinea worm, it will be a testament to Jimmy’s dedication—and yet another remarkable achievement to add to his list of accomplishments. He won the United Nations Human Rights Prize and the Nobel Peace Prize. He wrote 30 books. He helped monitor more than 100 elections in countries with fragile democracies—and did not pull and punches about the ways America’s own democracy was being undermined from within.
He worked to erase the stigma of mental illness and improved access to care for millions of Americans. He taught at Emory University. He built hundreds of homes with Habitat for Humanity. And, as I saw when I visited with Jimmy and Rosalynn in Plains a few years ago, he also painted, built wooden furniture, and took the time to offer his intellect and wisdom to people from all walks of life. As he once told my dad, tongue in cheek, “I have Secret Service protection, so I can pretty well do what I want to!”
Whenever I have struggled with a global health challenge, I knew I could call him and ask for his candid advice. It’s just starting to sink in that I can no longer do that.
But President Carter’s example of moral leadership will inspire me for as long as I’m able to pursue philanthropy—just as it will the hundreds of millions of people whose lives he touched through peacemaking, preaching, teaching, science, and medicine. James Earl Carter Jr. was an incredible statesman and human being. I will miss him dearly.
TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: chat; gates; genocide; notnews; vaxx
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1 posted on 01/06/2025 9:02:38 AM PST by algore
To: algore
GOD WANNA BE GATES is PURE EVIL! He thinks there are BILLIONS of people in the world that SHOULDN’T BE ALIVE!!
2 posted on 01/06/2025 9:04:48 AM PST by Ann Archy (Abortion....... The HUMAN Sacrifice to the god of Convenience.)
To: algore
There was a time when I was rooting for Carter - when he was challenged by Ted Kennedy. But after he won the primary, I was all for Reagan.
3 posted on 01/06/2025 9:06:55 AM PST by Opinionated Blowhard (When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic.)
To: algore
My favorite memory of Uncle Jimmah would be: “The Rabbit”!!
4 posted on 01/06/2025 9:07:57 AM PST by lgjhn23 ("On the 8th day, Satan created the progressive liberal to destroy all the good that God created..." )
To: algore
My fondest memory was him leaving office.
5 posted on 01/06/2025 9:09:33 AM PST by pfflier
To: algore
My fondest memories of jimmy carter, standing in gas lines for hours to get ten gallons of gas.
6 posted on 01/06/2025 9:09:51 AM PST by Ronald77
To: algore
My fondest memory of Carter is making a small fortune off his stupidity.
7 posted on 01/06/2025 9:10:22 AM PST by SaxxonWoods (Black guy upon receiving a MAGA hat: "MURICA!")
To: algore
If the Carter Center did some good work with respect to eradicating river blindness and Guinea worm, well, I’m willing to give credit where credit is due. But if Bill Gates, one of the world’s worst people, thinks Carter was great, that’s an unfortunate black mark for Jimmuh in my book.
8 posted on 01/06/2025 9:10:46 AM PST by irishjuggler
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