Opinion
By David Nasaw
New York Times
Elon Musk is now the proud owner of Twitter. The danger here is not that we have a rogue billionaire in our midst – that has happened before, and it will happen again – but that this one will be in control of what he has rightly referred to as our 'digital town square."
Mr. Musk is the face of 21st-century tech-based, extreme capitalism, just as the robber barons, who built our railroads, and Andrew Carnegie, who supplied those railroads and the builders of modern American cities with steel, embodied the exuberant and expansive industrial capitalism of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Mr. Musk has exploited the opportunities emerging in a rapidly disintegrating regulatory state apparatus and acquired a small army of investors and a fleet of lobbyists, lawyers and fanboys (known as Musketeers). He has sought to position himself as a tech genius who can break the rules, exploit and excise those who work for him, ridicule those who stand in his way and do as he wishes with his wealth because it benefits humanity. He’ll rescue the planet with his electric cars and save Ukraine with his satellite systems — but he must be freed of government interference to do these good deeds.
For more than two centuries, American moguls like Mr. Musk have transformed our economy and our daily lives (and enriched themselves) by playing a winning game with governments. They sought and received from those governments enormous subsidies and protection, while demanding that they be left alone to conduct their business as they pleased. The railroad robber barons built their fortunes on government-supplied land on which they laid their tracks and then collected government subsidies for every mile of it.
Carnegie and the steel barons elected Republican lawmakers and presidents committed to protecting their companies’ profits by levying high tariffs on foreign competitors. Mr. Musk’s companies, and his fortune, were built with billions of dollars worth of subsidies for his electric-car company, Tesla, and billions more in NASA contracts to ferry American astronauts into space, launch satellites and provide high-speed internet services tethered to his fleet of some 3,000 satellites.
What makes Mr. Musk particularly powerful and potentially more dangerous than the industrial-era moguls is his ability to promote his businesses and political notions with a tweet. The effect of such instant communications is enhanced by his firm understanding of media and market dynamics in this era of meme stocks, day trading, instant communications, misinformation and disinformation.
Carnegie kept his companies private because he did not want to be beholden to outside investors, influence and market conditions. Mr. Musk has done the opposite. His wealth is based not on factories he has built, products he sells or real estate he has acquired, but on the billions of dollars of shares he owns in Tesla, SpaceX, cryptocurrency companies and Twitter.
In August 2018, he tweeted that he was considering taking Tesla private at $420 a share. The Securities and Exchange Commission said Mr. Musk’s “misleading tweets” caused Tesla’s stock price to jump by over 6 percent and slapped him with a securities fraud charge. He then agreed to step down as Tesla’s chairman and to pay a $20 million penalty. Tesla paid another $20 million.
The Kennedy family patriarch, Joseph P. Kennedy, was always adept at manipulating stock prices, but as the first chairman of the S.E.C., he feared that capitalism would never recover from the Great Depression if manipulators and fraudsters were free to do as they pleased. Under Kennedy, the commission outlawed many of the practices that he had exploited to make his fortune, including short selling on insider information.
Mr. Musk has no such fears and no such scruples. As The Economist noted in April, Mr. Musk “promotes the idea that the normal rules of investment do not apply. He paints stewards of fair play – regulators and boards – as pettifogging enemies of progress.” He refers to S.E.C. officials as"those bastards."
The likely consequences of Mr. Musk’s Twitter ownership will be political as well as economic
disruption. By declaring that he intends to allow Donald Trump back on the site, he has signaled his opposition to policing it for political disinformation and misinformation.
disruption. By declaring that he intends to allow Donald Trump back on the site, he has signaled his opposition to policing it for political disinformation and misinformation.
He has identified himself as a "free speech absolutist" and has repeated several times that ghe opposes and will limit censorship and will likely loosen content moderation rules.
It is not unreasonable to expect that a Musk-owned and controlled Twitter will, in the name of free speech, allow disinformation and misinformation to be tweeted ad infinitum so long as it discredits his political opponents and celebrates and enriches himself and his allies.
Mr. Musk is correct that “free speech” must be honored and protected. But is it not time that we, as a people and a nation, engage in a wide-ranging, inclusive public debate on when and how free speech creates “a clear and present danger” – as Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. wrote a century ago – and whether we need government to find a way, through law or regulation or persuasion, to prevent this from happening?
Elon Musk is a product of his – and our – times. Rather than debate or deride his influence, we must recognize that he is not the self-made genius businessman he plays in the media. Instead, his success was prompted and paid for by taxpayer money and abetted by government officials who have allowed him and other billionaire businessmen to exercise more and more control over our economy and our politics.
It is not unreasonable to expect that a Musk-owned and controlled Twitter will, in the name of free speech, allow disinformation and misinformation to be tweeted ad infinitum so long as it discredits his political opponents and celebrates and enriches himself and his allies.
Mr. Musk is correct that “free speech” must be honored and protected. But is it not time that we, as a people and a nation, engage in a wide-ranging, inclusive public debate on when and how free speech creates “a clear and present danger” – as Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. wrote a century ago – and whether we need government to find a way, through law or regulation or persuasion, to prevent this from happening?
Elon Musk is a product of his – and our – times. Rather than debate or deride his influence, we must recognize that he is not the self-made genius businessman he plays in the media. Instead, his success was prompted and paid for by taxpayer money and abetted by government officials who have allowed him and other billionaire businessmen to exercise more and more control over our economy and our politics.
15 comments:
It's Musk takes over "Twitter," Montoya
sheesh.
Cheeto Donald Trump will only spread hate and racism.
Who needs that? - Republicans.
You Tweet on Twitter.
get it?
The bird is free...fly..fly..
Why hadn’t you asked for a public debate on when and how free speech creates “a clear and present danger” when the fake media owned and operated by Democrats had a free hand on all news aired and or printed for years. Now that a non-partisan owns twitter you want a debate. No debate! Free speech is just that free speech. Trump and all Americans will finally be allowed to have their voices heard. You and your democratic friends can go shed tears elsewhere.
trump is coming to tweeter again que suerte! pinche mamon
I don't recall anyone telling the Indians who ran Twitter to polish up their knowledge of the First Amendment. Musk threw out that trash right away.
Blacks are the most racist.
October 28, 2022 at 11:39 AM
You make it sound like the racist republicans just came out of a rat hole and are clueless. ANOTHER LIE TYPICAL...
October 28, 2022 at 4:13 PM
5 STAR GENERAL CLLUSTER TRIED BUT DECIDED TO ELIMINATE THE PROBLEM OR AT LEAST HE TRIED. PENDEJO going out on the field with documents which nobody can read specially los indios
"The New York Times" enough said. Pure garbage. Same as CNN, MSDNC & Washington Post. You really read that crap Montoya? Read Voltaire.Net (Thierry Meyssan) read Al Jazeera, read Alfredo Jalife-Rahme.True global experts.
"We loved when Twitter blocked the Hunter Biden story" Which was proven to be true.
"We love the left spreading misinformation on Twitter, but we don't want the right saying a darn thing here"
Elon Musk is doing what NASA dreamed about but never could accomplish: sending routine flights to space, in re-usable rockets, in a reliable manner. But now he took the Twitter toy from the extreme left's hands, so everybody has to attack him please!!!
Horse crap!
Why this great fear and continues discussions on Trump? He is just another man. Do you fear that if he comes back he will take your food stamps and welfare checks? If this is the case just start looking for a job. Problem solved.
October 28, 2022 at 11:39 AM
"fake media owned and operated by Democrats", are you really serious? You must be an M.R. (mental retard). Must have just come out of a rat hole. baboso
y bpub sill corrupt and the suspended ceo at the island happy as a crow... and with her wife she also took 60 days off with pay at the cob... now digest that taxpayer
Y la prsidenta del bpub board will get a pay raise as soon as the suspended ceo gets, back a promise is a promise.
Yes, Musk is taking over and maybe opening accounts for everyone. If so, it will be spreading more hate and racism against one another. Such a rich man who took subsidies from governments to fulfill his wishes, came to our city and mesmerized County and city politicians. They rolled out the red carpet to do as he pleased with the beaches and bought out peoples property at Boca Chica beach dirt cheap. Did these salivating politicians get personal perks? Asking for a friend.
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