Inspired by this thread. And it doesn’t have to be something bought. It can be a business startup, etc.
For me, I’d found a private school where the emphasis is on quality academics and learning Taekwondo. I’d start with grades 9-12, then expand down until we have all grades covered K-12. Our goal is to be so good that we have colleges lined up waving bags of scholarship money at our graduates and begging them to come be students on their campus.
I’d create an trust fund to financially support my public library. My town’s city government has been screwing them for years. They’re down to three operating days a week. I’d put enough money into the fund so that the interest alone would support the library in perpetuity without too much fear of the city’s control of the budget.
Pay off the house. Trust funds to pay for my kids’ college. New carpeting and counter tops. Invest practically all the rest.
Clausewitz says the first principle of warfare is to make your base secure. I would do that first - then we can start taking about sports cars and what not.
For me: land, house, vehicles. House passive-solar, passive geothermal. Land to include permaculture gardens, greenhouses, etc. Hydro-electric installation, solar-electric panels, wind turbines for power. Maybe a small biofuels plant. And electric/biofuels vehicles.
For the community: fund reliable rural transit at least on the main routes so that people have an option not to use cars. Fund urban planning to encourage walkable design in towns. Start transitioning towards local self-reliance: composting to return nutrients to the soil, local food production, local electricity and fuel production, etc, etc.
For youth: fund a social-skills training program in public school and especially high school. This would be for those who, like me, had trouble socially and never learned how to be socialble until it was too late. This would cover things like social awareness, body language, conversation skills, vocal training. Everything a kid needs to be more successful in the dating world, for one. And in the work world. There would also be a section on self-defense. The best way to deal with a bully is to not be the target… but if you are the taeget, you need to be able to defend yourself as well.
Edit: do such social-skills training programs actually exist now?
Over $100 million? My two main priorities would be paying off our house and helping my parents retire more comfortably, but that would still leave most of it. Tough question. I’d probably buy the SDMB so I could get rid of all the ads, and put the rest toward animal rescue, likely via the Humane Society.
Scholarships. Lots of scholarships. A trust fund for my debate team, so they have funding after I retire and go off to live a life of decadence and debauchery.
Then houses. If we won more than $50 million after taxes, it would break down to a large compound in Skagit county, WA, a condo in San Diego and a condo in Vegas.
5 acres of land in northern San Diego county to establish a cat ranch.
Get a general contractor to supervise redoing our house, instead of contracting out each piece ourselves.
Pay off my son-in-law’s law school debt.
I like the donating money to the library idea. Ours aren’t that bad yet, but it is a struggle. Also, I’d donate a bunch of money to Guide Dogs for the Blind, since we’ve had such fun raising puppies.
But the big thing would be to see if I could endow a foundation to help teach critical thinking in schools, as well as financial education. The goal would be to have every high school graduate be able to critically analyze news stories and ads, and to have them be able to make wise decisions on credit cards, mortgages, and the like.
Ditto. To have no financial worries would be heavenly. To know the kids can go to college. To know the house is in good shape. To know I’ll be comfortable in my retirement.
I’d buy and completely rehabilitate an entire run-down old traditional village, restoring the architecture that’s worth saving and building new structures and spaces to fit in with the good old stuff.
Building a house for myself is fine, but I want a whole living streetscape and neighborhood to my standards.
After each building or property is in good shape, I’ll sell it off (excepting a couple), but with my architectural standards as deed restrictions, so nobody can screw it up again. I’ll provide incubator programs to subsidize the establishment of the businesses I want in my neighborhood.
Pay off student loans, both mine & my husband’s. That wouldn’t be much, but it’s the only debt we have at the moment.
Buy a house. Then pay off anything my parents may owe on their house (I don’t know if they owe anything at all, but if they do). Ditto for my sister & her husband.