Every generation expands its definition of equality…
Now
it’s time for our generation to define a new social contract. We should
have a society that measures progress not just by economic metrics like
GDP but by how many of us have a role we find meaningful. We should
explore ideas like universal basic income to make sure everyone has a
cushion to try new ideas.
-Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook CEO
Here we go. Get ready for the media to start hammering the basic income meme.
Why
is someone worth $62 billion complaining about inequality? Why is the
world’s 6th richest man lecturing the public on the wealth gap, and
floating ideas like the government spreading OUR wealth around while
hoarding his own?
In
2015, Mark Zuckerberg claimed he would give his entire fortune away to
charity in his lifetime, and promptly formed an LLC for that purpose… as
opposed to, you know, a charity.
This means that instead of using his own money to help people, he can
spend that money on lobbying politicians in Washington to use YOUR money
to help people.
See how generous these rich philanthropists are with everyone else’s money?
No, I guess true charity is the responsibility of the rest of us.
Mark
Zuckerberg could give away hundreds of thousands of free expensive
college educations without his net worth dropping 2%. He could provide a
$12,000 grant to 1.7 million people if he actually cares about giving
them a chance to “try new ideas”, and still have $42 billion left for a
rainy day.
If
he is so concerned about people having a cushion to fall back on, why
not start a charity that gives free room and board to anyone who wants
to come and explore their options for meaningful employment, like an
internship?
That’s what I would do, literally open the doors to anyone who
feels that they have no other options, provide them that safety net,
and train them in the meantime based on their desires and pursuits. He
could do this. He could empower people with his wealth.
But he doesn’t.
Instead, Zuckerberg appeals to a victim mentality:
Today, we have a level of wealth inequality that hurts everyone…
When
you don’t have the freedom to take your idea and turn it into a
historic enterprize we all lose and today our society is way over
indexed on rewarding people when they are successful and we don’t do
nearly enough to make sure people can take lots of different shots.
Facebook
profits $4 billion per year. Why doesn’t Facebook hand out 200,000
$20,000 grants per year to promising young entrepreneurs who could then
solely focus on their business venture, giving them the same opportunity
Zuckerberg had to create (or steal) Facebook?
Facebook
knows its users well–too well you might say. Facebook knows its users
so well in fact that the company could provide a free quality online
education to every one of its users based on their interests, skills,
and desires.
But Mark Zuckerberg has other motives.
I
have empathy for the poor, for those who truly don’t have an
opportunity, and I would sleep easier seeing everyone with a more robust
safety net. But what I can’t stand is being lectured by somebody who
actually could do something about it, acting helpless without government
intervention.
The
government has the money to solve poverty. In this quick video, I run
through the numbers which make it obvious that the government is the
wrong organization to provide that cushion that Zuckerberg talks about.
Ignore Zuckerberg. Take a Page from 50 Cent
You know who didn’t have a safety net? 50 Cent. I recently read
The 50th Law of Power by Robert Green, who details how 50 Cent, orphaned at the age of eight, built himself from literally nothing.
Do you think a basic income would have been conducive to his drive when it was the very fact that he had to
make it that forced him to be successful? That would have allowed 50
Cent to settle, to fall back on the cushion instead of pushing through
to realize his dreams and build a business empire.
Most
people are so placated and dumbed down by TV and the media that they
would find endless distractions to keep them from doing something
meaningful. The ones who have drive find a way, despite their
circumstances.
As
Robert Green points out, the masses are far from the helpless peasants
of the past. Today, we need only reach out and grab our freedom, our
equality, and our wealth. Zuckerberg’s view of America is one based on
fear.
In fact, the reality of 21st century America is something more like the following:
Our physical environment is safer and more secure than any other moment in our history….
In
the Past, only white males could play the power game. Now, millions
upon millions of minorities and women have been given entrance to the
arena forever altering the dynamic…
Advances
in technology have opened up all kinds of new opportunities. Old
business models are dissolving leaving the field wide open for
innovation. It is a time of sweeping change and revolution.
We
face certain challenges as well. The world has become more competitive.
The economy has undeniable vulnerabilities and is in need of
reinvention. As in all situations, the determining factor will be our
attitudes, how we choose to look at this reality.
If
we give into the fear, we will give disproportionate attention to the
negative and manufacture the very adverse circumstances that we dread.
If we go the opposite direction, attacking everything with boldness and energy then we will create a much different dynamic.
The
government is a fear machine. The government welfare, their “help,”
always keeps people in poverty instead of raising them out of it. The
war on drugs, the great society, the public housing ghettos: these are
the reasons people like 50 Cent were born into poverty. Only a fool
would trust the government to solve these problems that they created.
Mark
Zuckerberg’s ideas represent the old style method of control. A
universal basic income would only preserve the old power structure by
keeping the masses from participating in this revolution of technology
and innovation.
Zuckerberg
represents this generation’s white liberal elite identified by Malcolm X
who want to keep the poor dependent and helpless. Every government
program, bill, and regulation that they support is sold as a help to the
poor masses when in reality those championing the government control
build their power on the backs of those they claim to help.
What
Zuckerberg champions will not free the masses, it will exploit them for
political gain. It will make them satiated pawns to do the bidding of
the elite, while Zuckerberg consolidates his control over the future.
Zuckerberg’s Zombie Nation
You
know what most of those people would do with their universal basic
income? They would sit on Facebook all day and be advertised to by
Zuckerberg, and buy the things that Zuckerberg sells them which neither
free them nor cushion them.
So
who would end up collecting that basic income? Who would benefit from
more tax dollars being stolen from working Americans who create wealth
and produce goods and services which we need to live?
That
money would be transferred to those who tell the people what they want
to hear, who provide entertaining manipulations to the masses. Mark
Zuckerberg would collect that cash because he is the one with the data,
he knows how to wrest the dollars from the people.
He
feigns his commitment to allowing people to have the type of success he
has enjoyed by freeing them from all pressure, from all worry, doubt,
and anxiety. He claims that his success with Facebook would not have
been possible without the safety net that he enjoyed.
Well, then why not put his vast fortune where his mouth is?
He should be leading by example, and his failure to do so shows his true intentions.