The Billionaire Moral Map

Does wealth buy moral respect?

Current voters are ranking billionaires by perceived positive impact. The map shows where wealth and public moral rating line up - and where they do not.

Farther right means more wealth. Higher means voters choose them more often. Rankings reflect current community votes, not an editorial judgment.

Early public signal · 333 votes and counting
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Primary thesis

Voters do not simply reward wealth.

The richest people are not automatically ranked as the most moral. Some billionaires outperform their wealth, while others fall below what their fortune might suggest.

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Money vs morals

The Billionaire Moral Map

Each row is one billionaire. The blue dot is where voters rank them; the gold dot is their wealth rank. Green means the crowd respects them more than their fortune — red means less. Tap a row for the full read.

Moral rank Wealth rank#1 left · last right

Story cards

Shareable snapshots update as the public vote changes.

Wealth ≠ moral rank
The richest person is not automatically the most respected.
Current voters are not simply ranking by net worth. The wealth leader and the moral-rating leader are different people.
Richest: Elon Musk · Moral leader: Warren Buffett
Richest: Elon MuskHighest moral rating: Warren Buffett
Moral overperformer
Who gets the most moral credit relative to their wealth?
Some billionaires rank far higher in public moral rating than their wealth rank would predict.
Marc Andreessen: wealth rank #25, moral rank #2
Wealth #25Moral #2
Marc Andreessen
Wealth without respect
Who has huge wealth but a weaker public moral rating?
Some of the wealthiest people land much lower in the current public moral ranking.
Mark Zuckerberg: wealth rank #3, moral rank #18
Wealth #3Moral #18
Mark Zuckerberg
Crowd favorite
Who do voters currently rank highest?
The top moral rating belongs to the person voters most often choose in head-to-head matchups.
#1 · 1,708 Elo · 92.3% win rate
#1
Warren Buffett
1,708 Elo · 92.3% win rate
Lowest current rating
Who are voters least willing to pick?
The bottom of the ranking shows where current voters are least convinced of positive impact.
#25 · 1,317 Elo · 13.6% win rate
Bottom
Carlos Slim
1,317 Elo · 13.6% win rate
Biggest rank gap
The biggest split between money and moral respect.
This is where current voters most sharply separate wealth rank from public moral rank.
Marc Andreessen: wealth #25, moral #2
Wealth #25Moral #2
Marc Andreessen
Industry scoreboard
Which billionaire worlds get the most moral credit?
Grouped by background, voters may judge philanthropists, tech founders, finance leaders, and media figures differently.
Current leader: Finance
#1Finance1579 avg Elo
#2Philanthropy1534 avg Elo
#3Conglomerate1528 avg Elo
Coming after your votes
Your morality fingerprint
After enough matchups, you should be able to see whether your votes are harsher on tech founders, more favorable toward philanthropy, or more aligned with the public average.
Vote 10 matchups to unlock a personal read.
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Find someone on the map

Tap a name to highlight them on the map, dim the rest, and open the person card.

Warren Buffett · #1Elon Musk · #4Marc Andreessen · #2Mark Zuckerberg · #18Howard Schultz · #8Carlos Slim · #25
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Full scatterplot

The full scatterplot is still here for deeper comparison

On mobile, the story cards above are the fastest way to understand what voters are saying. The full chart remains available for deeper comparison.

Moral overperformersCrowd favoritesLow-signal / lesser-knownWealth without respectNotableWarren Buffett$130B · Elo 1,708NotableMarc Andreessen$1.7B · Elo 1,622NotableLarry Ellison$150B · Elo 1,604SelectedElon Musk$300B · Elo 1,601NotableRichard Branson$3.1B · Elo 1,588NotableHoward Schultz$4.0B · Elo 1,556NotableMark Zuckerberg$180B · Elo 1,455NotableCarlos Slim$93B · Elo 1,317Farther right means more wealthHigher means current voters rank them more positively
Wealth scale is compressed so very large fortunes fit on one map.
Show full snapshot

Full current snapshot

Rankings update as more matchups are voted.

#NameWealthEloWin rateVotes
#1Warren Buffett
Finance
$130B1,70892.3%26
#2Marc Andreessen
Venture Capital
$1.7B1,62278.3%23
#3Larry Ellison
Technology
$150B1,60462.1%29
#4Elon Musk
Technology
$300B1,60164.5%31
#5Richard Branson
Conglomerate
$3.1B1,58862.5%24
#6Larry Page
Technology
$135B1,58663.3%30
#7Melinda French Gates
Philanthropy
$13B1,56955.2%29
#8Howard Schultz
Food & Beverage
$4.0B1,55656.3%32
#9Jeff Bezos
Technology
$185B1,53855.6%27
#10Jack Ma
Technology
$28B1,53353.6%28
#11Sergey Brin
Technology
$125B1,53053.8%26
#12Azim Premji
Technology
$10B1,52250.0%32
#13Sam Altman
Technology / AI
$2.0B1,51651.9%27
#14Jack Dorsey
Technology
$5.0B1,50753.6%28
#15MacKenzie Scott
Philanthropy
$38B1,49851.6%31
#16Peter Thiel
Technology
$9.0B1,47146.2%26
#17Mukesh Ambani
Conglomerate
$88B1,46748.0%25
#18Mark Zuckerberg
Technology
$180B1,45542.3%26
#19George Soros
Finance
$6.7B1,44936.0%25
#20Michael Bloomberg
Finance / Media
$105B1,43742.9%28
#21Bill Gates
Technology
$107B1,38033.3%27
#22Rupert Murdoch
Media
$22B1,36022.7%22
#23Charles Koch
Industrials
$60B1,35219.0%21
#24Reid Hoffman
Technology
$2.5B1,33414.3%21
#25Carlos Slim
Telecom / Conglomerate
$93B1,31713.6%22
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