
Bill Gates: AI, Pandemics, and Philanthropy at Trump's Tech Dinner
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Bill Gates was back in the national spotlight this week as one of the highest-profile guests at President Trump’s exclusive tech dinner at the White House on September 4th, an event covered by CBS News and reported in depth by Fortune. Gates was seated next to First Lady Melania Trump during a gathering that brought together 33 power players from Silicon Valley—including Mark Zuckerberg, Tim Cook, Sam Altman, Sundar Pichai, and others—in a show of unity between the tech industry and the current administration. Notably, Elon Musk was absent, despite Musk claiming he was invited but couldn’t attend. Sources like the Right Side Broadcasting Network and GeekWire confirm that Gates used his speaking time to highlight the defining links between technology innovation and his current philanthropic work, emphasizing advancements in health, vaccines, and gene editing. He praised the possibility of eradicating diseases like polio and called for AI-driven solutions to expand healthcare worldwide, particularly envisioning “a doctor for everyone in Africa” through AI. According to CBS News, Gates also publicly lauded Trump’s leadership during Operation Warp Speed and supported the president’s push for more domestic tech investment; he revealed that Microsoft, the company he co-founded, is currently spending around $75 to $80 billion per year in the United States. Remarks from the dinner trended on X as part of a broader conversation about Big Tech’s “strategic realignment” with Trump, reported by Fortune, as attendees discussed regulatory shifts and the scale of their investment pledges—Zuckerberg announced $600 billion for U.S. business initiatives through 2028.
Beyond the White House, Gates generated media attention with a new interview highlighted by AOL, warning younger generations about the major risks they face: climate change, AI mismanagement, nuclear war, and the threat of bioterrorism or pandemics. He was optimistic about future breakthroughs in health, but stressed that fear should motivate the next generation to take risks seriously and channel anxiety into innovation. In global philanthropy news, his foundation made headlines at the 2025 Gender and Inclusion Summit in Abuja, Nigeria, where it advocated urgent adoption of gender and social inclusion policies, citing a substantial funding drop for women’s health and maternal care programs in Africa. No major new social media controversies or rumors have surfaced in the past few days, and any online criticism regarding his vaccine and AI statements at the White House has been mostly limited to predictable corners of the internet and not substantiated by mainstream news. This week has seen Gates straddle the worlds of elite diplomacy, public health advocacy, and future-shaping technology—most of it under the literal and figurative spotlight of the White House and global press.
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