E105: Musk’s Move Into Politics: Yanis Varoufakis and Cory Doctorow on Fighting Billionaire Control
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Not Synced[Mehran] Hello.
hello, hello and welcome. -
Not SyncedI'm Mehran Khalili.
-
Not SyncedWe are DiEM25, a radical political
movement for Europe. -
Not SyncedAnd this is another live discussion
featuring subversive ideas -
Not Syncedyou won't hear anywhere else.
And tonight, we're talking Elon Musk,
the world's richest human. -
Not SyncedYes, Musk is now reshaping
politics in troubling ways, -
Not Syncedusing his vast wealth and control over
technology to influence elections -
Not Syncedand public discourse.
-
Not SyncedTwo years ago, he bought
X, formerly Twitter, -
Not Syncedplacing himself at the centre
of the news via his own account, -
Not Syncedthe largest on the platform,
-
Not Syncedbut it wasn't until last year that
Musk got deeply involved in politics, -
Not Syncedjumping around on stage
with Donald Trump
and injecting more than
a quarter of a billion dollars -
Not Syncedinto the man's campaign
to help to get him elected. -
Not SyncedMusk has now, in recent weeks,
-
Not Syncedbeen throwing grenades into
Europe's political mainstream, -
Not Syncedsupporting an anti-migrant,
hardline nationalist party -
Not Syncedin Germany ahead of
elections there, -
Not Syncedand calling for the resignation
of the British Prime Minister. -
Not SyncedSo all of this highlights the alarming
intersection of tech and political power. -
Not SyncedSo how did we get here?
-
Not SyncedI mean, wealthy elites have always
-
Not Syncedshaped public discourse and policy,
-
Not Syncedbut why does it feel now,
-
Not Syncedlike we've broken through
to a fresh level of hell? -
Not SyncedAnd of course, the question
we always ask here on DMTV, -
Not Syncedhow can we push back against it?
-
Not SyncedTo answer these questions, we've got
two people that have coined the terms -
Not Syncedthat we often use to describe
the mess that we're in, -
Not Syncedtechnofeudalism, cloud capital,
and then shitification. -
Not SyncedAnd that's, of course, our own
Yanis Varoufakis. -
Not SyncedAnd I'm delighted to welcome to
DiEMTV for the first time, -
Not SyncedCory Doctorow,
the science fiction author, -
Not Syncedactivist, and journalist,
and DiEM25 member.
And of course, we have you,
you out there.
If you've got thoughts, comments, rants, -
Not Syncedsomething that you really think
should be said in this debate -
Not Syncedthen put it in the YouTube chat
and we'll put it to our panel.
Some very quick housekeeping, -
Not Syncedif you'd like to hit the bell there
on YouTube, the bell icon, -
Not Syncedyou won't miss any of our new videos,
-
Not Syncedor if you prefer to hear us on a podcast,
just go to your favourite podcasting app -
Not Syncedand enter the word DiEM25
and you'll find our podcast there. -
Not SyncedLet's kick it off with Cory.
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Not SyncedCory, how did we get here?
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Not Synced[Cory] Well, I'll tell you how I got here,
-
Not Syncedmy first encounter with Elon Musk.
-
Not SyncedSo I had a friend and colleague who's a
science fiction writer named Ian Banks, -
Not Syncedwho is a legendary
socialist science fiction writer. -
Not SyncedAnd one day on Twitter,
I saw a tweet from Elon Musk -
Not Syncedsaying he considered
himself a Utopian socialist -
Not Syncedin the mold of Iain Banks.
And Iain had died not that long before, -
Not Syncedand I said, I knew Iain, and he was
an ardent trade unionist -
Not Syncedand he would not
have been happy about -
Not Syncedbeing identified with
a man who's in trouble -
Not Syncedwith the National Labor Relations Board
for virulent union busting. -
Not SyncedAnd Musk came back and he said:
-
Not SyncedWell the thing is that in Iain Banks's
famous culture novels -
Not Syncedthere are no trade unions
-
Not Syncedand that's why I think I can
consider myself in his mold. -
Not SyncedAnd I said: You know,
with all due respect -
Not SyncedIain Banks culture novels
are set in a future -
Not Syncedwhere faster than light ships
-
Not Syncedthat hold a trillion people
-
Not Syncedand are piloted by galactic scale super
intelligences roam the galaxy, -
Not Syncedthe fact that there's no
trade unions in that world -
Not Syncedtells us nothing about whether
they need to be here. -
Not SyncedAnd he said: Well, if Banks
could have seen -
Not Syncedthe degree of automation in a Tesla factory,
-
Not Syncedhe would have not expected me
to unionize my factories either. -
Not SyncedAnd I said: You know, again,
-
Not Syncedthere is a world of difference
between faster than light travel -
Not Syncedand eking out marginal gains
in the production of cars. -
Not SyncedAnd then, he blocked me and
called me an enemy of humanity. -
Not SyncedHe is one of these guys that,
as a science fiction writer, -
Not Syncedyou run into as immortalized in
that great tweet, -
Not Syncedyou know, as a science fiction writer,
-
Not SyncedI've written a novel about
the torment nexus -
Not Syncedso that you don't
create the torment nexus. -
Not SyncedTech bro, I have created
the torment nexus. -
Not SyncedAs William Gibson always says:
-
Not SyncedCyberpunk was a warning,
not a suggestion. -
Not SyncedWhenever I think about Musk,
-
Not SyncedI feel some personal responsibility
-
Not Syncedbecause there is a kind
of cadre of tech billionaires -
Not Syncedwho've read our dystopias and
mistaken them for business plans. -
Not SyncedI always come back to this great
quote from A Fish Called Wanda: -
Not SyncedAristotle was not Belgian,
-
Not Syncedthe principle of Buddhism is
not every man for himself, -
Not Syncedthe London Underground
is not a political movement, -
Not Syncedthese are all mistakes,
I looked them up. -
Not SyncedWhen I hear Elon Musk
talk about his views -
Not Syncedand how they connect to
world historical phenomena, -
Not Syncedto the literature he's metabolized,
-
Not Syncedto the ideologies he claims to espouse,
-
Not Syncedmost notably free speech absolutism,
-
Not Syncedsomething I have some connection to
-
Not Syncedgiven my long association with
speech fights on the internet -
Not Syncedthrough the Electronic
Frontier Foundation, -
Not SyncedI think of him as being
one of these people -
Not Syncedwho has absorbed just enough of
things that are kind of in his orbit, -
Not Syncedthat he can deploy them tactically
-
Not Syncedto justify what is the
ultimate view of Musk, -
Not Syncedwhich is Wilhoit;s view
of conservatives, -
Not Syncedthat conservatism has one tenet,
-
Not Syncedthat there are in-groups whom
the law protects but does not bind, -
Not Syncedand out-groups whom the law binds
but does not protect. -
Not SyncedAnd I think that is Muskism
in a nutshell there. -
Not Synced[Mehran] Thank you very much
for that explanation of Musk.
Before I hand the floor over to Yanis, -
Not Syncedare there any I mean, in terms of
looking at the aggregation -
Not Syncedand the consolidation of power
-
Not Syncedthat big tech has got
to this point where -
Not Syncedwe're in this situation
today with Musk, -
Not Syncedcan you take us, like,
give us a lightning speed, -
Not Syncedbecause it's shifted a lot
in the last eight years as well. -
Not SyncedSo if you can give us that background
just to bring us up to speed to 2025? -
Not Synced[Cory] I think like Trump, Musk is best
understood as a result and not a cause. -
Not SyncedThat there's a kind of sociopathic
billionaire shaped hole in the world, -
Not Syncedsomeone who can inveigle
sweetheart government contracts, -
Not Syncedsomeone who is better at PR
than he is at engineering, -
Not Syncedsomeone who is capable
of abusing the law -
Not Syncedto force people who actually invented
things that he subsequently bought, -
Not Syncedto describe him as the inventor
is part of his myth building. -
Not SyncedMusk has bought everything
successful he's done, -
Not Syncedfrom SpaceX to Tesla to Donald Trump,
another thing he's recently purchased, -
Not Syncedand he nevertheless
characterizes himself -
Not Syncedin the tradition of all these tech
billionaires is a self-made man. -
Not SyncedWhen we decided that we
would no longer enforce policies -
Not Syncedthat prohibit predatory acquisitions,
-
Not Syncedthat prohibit lock-in,
-
Not Syncedthat give a special advantage to
incumbents over new entrants, -
Not Syncedwe created a kind of
winner-take-all lottery -
Not Syncedwhere whatever mediocrity
scrambled to the top of the heap, -
Not Syncedyou know, stabbing people in the back
on their way most quickly, -
Not Syncedcould then convert that to
a durable advantage. -
Not SyncedThe difference now,
between now and then, -
Not Syncedis not that in the old days
when tech was better, -
Not Syncedthat we had better people leading it.
-
Not SyncedIt was that they faced more constraint.
-
Not SyncedThey had to worry about
competitors because -
Not Syncedour policies promoting competition were
not yet completely destroyed. -
Not SyncedThey had to worry about regulators
-
Not Syncedbecause they hadn't fully captured
the regulatory apparatus. -
Not SyncedThey had to worry about
their workers leaving because -
Not Syncedtech workers were then
the princes of labor, -
Not Syncedpeople whose labor was
in such short demand -
Not Syncedand whose skills were were
so hard to find in the market -
Not Syncedthat they could just tell their
bosses to 'F' off
whenever their bosses asked them to do things -
Not Syncedand they had to contend with
wonderful nature of digital technology -
Not Syncedwhich is that new technologies
can always be plugged into old ones -
Not Syncedso when when Mark Zuckerberg
started Facebook, -
Not Syncedhe had this billionaire problem.
-
Not SyncedHis billionaire problem
was called Rupert Murdoch, -
Not Syncedwho owned another
service called MySpace. -
Not SyncedEveryone who wanted social media
was already on MySpace, -
Not Syncedand it was a big lift to ask people
-
Not Syncedto leave all their friends behind
and go to Facebook. -
Not SyncedRather than make them ask that,
he just gave them a bot, -
Not Syncedand you logged into Facebook,
-
Not Syncedyou gave it your MySpace
-
Not Syncedlogin and password.
-
Not SyncedThe bot would go to MySpace
several times a day, -
Not Syncedscrape all the messages waiting for you,
-
Not Syncedcome back to your Facebook account,
put them in your Facebook inbox. -
Not Syncedand then, you could reply to them and it
would send them back to MySpace. -
Not SyncedYou didn't have to worry about that.
-
Not SyncedThat interoperability was
kind of par for the course -
Not Syncedwith technology and it gave new market
entrants enormous advantage -
Not Syncedover big established incumbents.
-
Not SyncedIn the memorable phrase of Jeff Bezos:
our margin is my opportunity. -
Not SyncedIf HP is selling $10,000 a gallon ink,
-
Not Syncedthat's an opportunity for someone
who wants to sell $100 a gallon ink -
Not Syncedbecause people wIll jump on that offer.
-
Not SyncedWhat we've done in the years since is
we've made IP laws so expansive -
Not Syncedthat it not only allows
these large incumbents -
Not Syncedto ignore regulation
when it comes to privacy, -
Not Syncedlabor protections, consumer rights,
-
Not Syncedbut also to wield regulation
against new market entrants -
Not Syncedand shut them down,
stop them from taking advantage -
Not Syncedof that latent power of technology.
-
Not SyncedSo you combine these four changes,
-
Not Syncedthe drawdown of competition,
the capture of regulators, -
Not Syncedthe deployment of regulation in the
form of IP against new market entrance -
Not Syncedand the gutting of labor
power for tech workers. -
Not SyncedWe've seen it's now over 400 ,000
tech layoffs in the last 24 months -
Not Syncedin the United States alone
-
Not Syncedand you've got a place
where people who -
Not Syncedare no better than they
used to be, and no worse -
Not Syncedcan simply act on their worst nature
-
Not Syncedwithout facing any
constraint or consequence -
Not Syncedso that you unleash the id
of someone like Elon Musk -
Not Syncedsomeone who has
no principles except for -
Not Syncedthese kind of weird Muskist kind of
every man for himself and me first -
Not Syncedprinciples without any constraint
and with unlimited access -
Not Syncedto a capital market fattened on
quantitative easing and huge bailouts -
Not Syncedand you get what we have now,
-
Not Syncedyou get this weird,
manifestly unfit, paranoid -
Not Syncedultimately very stupid man, who's become
extremely important to our politics. -
Not Synced[Mehran] Thank you, Corey.
-
Not SyncedYanis, you've heard
Corey's diagnosis. -
Not SyncedWhat's your take?
-
Not Synced[Yanis] It's so good to be
hearing and listening to Corey, -
Not Syncedbecause so far, for a while now, we've
been reading each other's books, -
Not Syncedwe have been endorsing each other,
promoting each other's books. -
Not SyncedIt's very good to actually be,
-
Not Syncedeven if it's only in two dimensions,
through the medium of cloud capital. -
Not SyncedIt's great, Corey, to be
on the same timeline -
Not Syncedand not just exchanging
text messages. -
Not SyncedLook, the only reason why we're
talking about Elon Musk -
Not Syncedand not Jeff Bezos or Zuckerberg
-
Not Syncedpresently is because
he has become -
Not Syncedthe de facto vice president
of the United States.
He purchased a very cushy position in the administration. -
Not SyncedIt was an amazing, an astonishing investment
for a couple of hundred millions, -
Not Synceda couple of hundred billions,
actually more. -
Not SyncedI don't think there is a
better return to one's dollar -
Not Syncedthan what he has already achieved.
Okay, so this is why
we're talking about him. -
Not SyncedI personally don't care at all, if he
writes an op-ed in XXX -
Not Syncedabout his support of the AFD.
-
Not SyncedI believe in free speech.
-
Not SyncedIf he wants to support
poor excuses for human nature -
Not Syncedin the German elections,
let him do it. -
Not SyncedPersonally, I don't think
this is what is worrying. -
Not SyncedIt's not just him, of course.
-
Not SyncedThere is a gentleman that
you all know, Peter Thiel, -
Not Syncedthat he has also engaged with himself.
-
Not SyncedThese people who have joined the
Trump campaign relatively early on. -
Not SyncedPeter Thiel supplied the
actual vice president, right? -
Not SyncedIt was a former employee
of Peter Thiel. -
Not SyncedAll these things are perfectly legitimate
reasons to feel sick in the stomach. -
Not Syncedwhen you have men, the
brolicarchy of tremendous wealth -
Not Syncedwith a very sordid history.
-
Not SyncedDon't forget the way that they've been
treating the mothers of their children, -
Not Syncedtrying to impoverish them
through the courts, -
Not Syncedthe way they've been endorsing
books that are justifying torture -
Not Syncedand laugh at the notion of human rights,
-
Not Syncedthe zillions that they are
making from government -
Not Syncedand milk XXX that particular procurement,
-
Not Syncedthe manner in which they are targeting
any government program -
Not Syncedwhich doesn't enrich them,
-
Not Syncedbut it does something little
in order to assist the poor. -
Not SyncedThis is all nauseating stuff.
-
Not SyncedMore recently, we saw Giorgia
Meloni, the Italian Prime Minister, -
Not Syncedvisiting Miami and having
a little tête-à-tête with Elon Musk. -
Not SyncedI can tell you that one of the reasons
why Elon Musk is so enamored of her -
Not Syncedand doesn't want her
to be deposed unlike -
Not SyncedNigel Farage that for some reason,
suddenly he's in his bad books. -
Not SyncedHe wants, instead of giving
him 100 million pounds, -
Not Syncedhe wants to depose him from the
leadership of the reform UK party. -
Not SyncedThe reason is that Meloni has effectively
-
Not Syncedoffered him the opportunity of having
the Italian state move away from IRIS-II, -
Not Syncedthe satellite network that the
European Union was planning to -
Not Syncedcreate in competition with Starlink.
-
Not SyncedThat is a reason to
be extremely worried -
Not Syncedwhen you have such deals
being concocted in Mar-a-Lago -
Not Syncedbetween the Italian neo-fascist
Prime Minister and Elon Musk. -
Not SyncedI don't need to add
any adjectives to him. -
Not SyncedBut, having said all that, and let me
just add one more thing, -
Not SyncedHe's not a free speech absolutist,
-
Not Syncedhe's an absolutist, he's a totalitarian,
-
Not Syncedbut that doesn't mean he
cares about free speech -
Not Syncedunless it is his own free speech.
-
Not SyncedSupposedly, he's supporting
Tommy Robinson's free speech, -
Not Syncedand the fact that Tommy Robinson
is in prison for contempt of court, -
Not Syncedfor actually lying about
a refugee, a Syrian refugee, -
Not Syncedin court and outside of court.
-
Not SyncedBut, when Julian Assange was rotting,
-
Not Syncedrotting in the Belmarsh
High Security Prison, -
Not SyncedElon Musk said not one word,
because for him, -
Not Synceda man who is convicted of nothing
-
Not Syncedshould rot in prison if he goes against
the interests of the CIA, of the NSIA, -
Not Syncedof the Pentagon, and of Elon Musk.
-
Not SyncedSo give it a rest, Elon.
You don't give a damn about freedom of
speech and freedom of expression, -
Not Syncedespecially for the free press.
-
Not SyncedBut the point of...
-
Not SyncedNow I'm going to play, to
some extent, devil's advocate -
Not Syncedin actually arguing that we need to ask
ourselves what is really new about this? -
Not SyncedBecause many people are pretending
that what is happening with Musk, -
Not Syncedwith Thiel, and with the other members
of the Brotherhood of the Old Brolicarchy, -
Not Syncedthat this is something really new.
-
Not SyncedWell, is it?
-
Not SyncedIs it really new?
-
Not SyncedI mean, yes, but not for the
reasons that most journalists -
Not Syncedof the liberal establishment
press tell us. -
Not SyncedJohn D. Rockefeller, he headed a dynasty
that makes Musk look an amateur. -
Not SyncedHenry Ford, he bought newspapers
-
Not Syncedand canvassed and effectively forced
municipalities to rip out tramways -
Not Syncedand to replace them with
-
Not SyncedFord automobiles and buses.
-
Not SyncedThomas Edison electrocuted famously,
an elephant at Coney Island -
Not Syncedjust to demonstrate that Westinghouse's
-
Not Synceddirect current electricity was dangerous,
-
Not Syncedsorry, alternating current was dangerous,
whereas Edison's direct current wasn't. -
Not SyncedBig business has always enjoyed a revolving
door kind of relationship with government. -
Not SyncedRemember that Bill Clinton appointed
Rubin, the CEO of Goldman Sachs, -
Not Syncedto the to the treasury, as
his treasury finance minister, -
Not Syncedin order effectively
to remove all and every -
Not Syncedshackle that was, since the 1930s,
holding back Goldman Sachs -
Not Syncedfrom effectively committing the crimes
that they committed immediately after
the Clinton administration
allowed them to do this.
And then, Obama brings the same person back in, -
Not Syncedin order to bail out the same banks
-
Not Syncedafter 2008 collapse
that these bankers had created. -
Not SyncedSo we have to keep all this in mind.
-
Not SyncedBut here's how we can
complete this long thought. -
Not SyncedThere is one thing which is new
-
Not Syncedand that is the new form of capital
that these people actually possess. -
Not SyncedEverybody knows that
I call it cloud capital. -
Not SyncedIt's not a produced means of production.
-
Not SyncedIt's a produced means of
behavioral modification. -
Not SyncedIt's effectively a new hyper weapon,
-
Not Syncedwhich these broligarchs, these
cloudalists, as I call them, -
Not Syncedor techno feudal barons or lords,
they possess, which, a Henry Ford, -
Not Synceda Thomas Edison, a Westinghouse,
a Rockefeller didn't. -
Not SyncedUnless we understand
the manner in which -
Not Syncedthis new form of capital,
which I call cloud capital, -
Not Syncedoperates, and the way
that it usurps markets, -
Not Syncedit replaces them,
it replaces profit with rent, -
Not Syncedit effectively turns capital,
cloud capital, into a gigantic parasite, -
Not Syncedwhich is a hundred times,
a million times bigger than -
Not Syncedthe organism on which
it is parasitic. -
Not SyncedThe organism is traditional capitalism
-
Not Syncedand of course, the labor force
-
Not Syncedand, of course, the surplus value
that these workers produce. -
Not SyncedWe need to understand that because this new hyper weapon of the lords of big tech, of the Musks
of the world, not just Musk, Gates, Google, don't forget them, right?
Even though they are Democrats, they've always been in this game and they're already in the
inner circle of Trump or they will be very soon.
It is important to hone in on the political economy of the phenomenon of which Musk is simply
an epiphenomenon.
Thank you, Yanis.
Before I hand the floor back to you, Corey, a couple of questions and comments from the chat.
Subradeep says, Musk is the face of right-wing extremism.
His extension of support for British anti-immigrant parties is a clear sign.
Kirk Doherty says, an open market system should be open to everybody without regulations to
stop these rich boys from monopolising markets.
When I was a kid, monopolies were broken up.
Now they're not.
Sandoz says Musk bought Twitter specifically to be able to use his power to control the narrative.
He's a real life bond villain.
And Anonymous Friend notes that it's a menace to U.S.
national security, to the U.S.
national security state, to allow someone to get this wealthy. -
Not SyncedCorey, hand it back to you.
and you'll turn to Yanis.
Yeah, I think that it's important to understand what Musk is actually doing. -
Not SyncedSo Yanis used the phrase behavior modification and there's different ways of people deploying that phrase when they describe how tech works.
I think some of them are quite useful.
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