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Jeff Bezos gives away $200 million to recognize 'courage and civility' on Earth, as critics attack the billions he's spent on the space race

Jeff Bezos stands with Jose Andres and Van Jones
Jeff Bezos (C) stands with Chef Jose Andres (L) and Van Jones, founder of Dream Corps, after announcing a $100 million award for their projects that help humanity on July 20, 2021 in Van Horn, Texas. Joe Raedle/Getty Images
  • Jeff Bezos is giving away $200 million in a pair of awards recognizing "courage and civility."

  • Activist Van Jones and chef Jose Andres will each receive $100 million to donate as they see fit.

  • "It's easy to be courageous and mean - try being courageous and civil," Bezos said.

  • See more stories on Insider's business page.

Jeff Bezos announced a pair of $100 million awards to recognize "courage and civility" following his successful flight to space on Tuesday.

The gift comes as billionaires including Bezos and Virgin Galactic founder Richard Branson face criticism for spending billions of dollars - with significant sums of public funds - on building out their respective space tourism businesses.

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In a pre-flight interview with CNN on Monday, Bezos said those critics were "mostly right," but still defended his decades-long space project.

"We have lots of problems here on Earth and we have to work on those," he added.

On Tuesday, at the end of the post-flight press conference, Bezos said he had "one more thing," a new philanthropic initiative to fund leaders who "aim high, pursue solutions with courage, and always do so with civility."

"We need unifiers and not vilifiers," Bezos said as he announced the award. "It's easy to be courageous and mean - try being courageous and civil."

Read more: These are the 5 space companies you might not know yet, but probably should

The recipients, activist Van Jones and chef Jose Andres, will each receive $100 million to direct to the non-profits of their choosing.

"No bureaucracy, no committees - they can give it all to their own charity or they can share the wealth," Bezos said.

"Sometimes dreams come true," said Jones, whose Dream Corps works on issues including criminal justice reform, clean energy, and equity in tech.

"Lauren and Jeff don't do nothing small - they dream big, they love big, and they bet big, and you bet on me, and I appreciate it," Jones said.

Sharing the stage with Jones was chef Jose Andres, who launched World Central Kitchen to provide emergency food relief and resilience programming for communities around the world.

"This award itself cannot feed the world on its own, but this is a start of a new chapter for us," Andres said.

Read the original article on Business Insider