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In the Age of Trump, Tech CEOs Cast Themselves As the New Statesmen (buzzfeed.com)

An anonymous reader shares an insightful story on Buzzfeed News: Mark Zuckerberg isn't running for president of the United States, but you could be forgiven for thinking otherwise. On Tuesday morning, the Facebook CEO kicked off the company's annual developers conference in San Francisco with a glancing shot at Donald Trump, followed by a reiteration of the company's oft-repeated pledge to bring the world together. Zuck's not alone. Last month Apple CEO Tim Cook led his keynote with a similar stump-speech vibe. He dove right into the company's national security and privacy fight against the FBI. Two weeks ago Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella told attendees of the company's annual Build developers conference of plans to "move our society forward," asking "profound questions" of his developers:"Is technology empowering people or is it displacing us? Is technology helping us preserve our enduring values such as privacy, or is it compromising it?" Google CEO Sundar Pichai hasn't delivered his big keynote yet (it's coming up May 18), but late last year he issued an open letter in support of Muslims after Donald Trump suggested he'd blanket-ban the religious group from entering the United States. Welcome to 2016: where tech's biggest leaders are no longer selling themselves as innovators, creative geniuses, or domineering tycoons, but as world leaders -- statesmen shaping the course of human history.According to a report from last month, several tech executives -- including Tim Cook, Elon Musk, Larry Page, and Sean Parker -- met recently to discuss how to "stop Donald Trump." Musk, however, later refuted such reports.

11 of 180 comments (clear)

  1. Nothing New by ranton · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Companies banding together to exert control on governments is nothing new. This only seems new because it at least appears they aren't doing it for financial reasons, but instead are doing it for a real public good. This appears to be a good shift to me, but the cynical side of me still smells a rat.

    --
    -- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
    1. Re:Nothing New by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Actually they ARE doing it for financial reasons -

      Zuckerberg heads up a PAC which is trying to open up more immigration and H1Bs - because, y'know, he *cares* about the people and it has nothing at all to do with getting cheaper tech labor into the states. That goes for all the tech CEOs listed here.

      Trump is adamantly against that so he must be taken down.

    2. Re:Nothing New by bangular · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think the reason so many CEO's attack Trump specifically is because he's not bought and paid for. They don't have him in their pocket, so there's no telling what he'd do as president. He's a wild card. Many people assume he'd "make America great again" but most likely he'd just do whatever got him a lot of news and made him popular.

      He already has money. At his age he probably started to think about death and if people will remember him. Win or lose, people are going to remember Trump.

    3. Re:Nothing New by flopsquad · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think the reason so many CEO's attack Trump specifically is because he's not bought and paid for. They don't have him in their pocket, so there's no telling what he'd do as president. He's a wild card. Many people assume he'd "make America great again" but most likely he'd just do whatever got him a lot of news and made him popular.

      No need to attribute to plutocratic machinations that which can be adequately explained by logic.

      You're spot on about Trump being an unpredictable loose cannon. Large, established businesses and financial markets abhor precisely the kind of chaos Donald Trump promises to bring to the White House.

      Say you run a business or manage investments. You'd like to have at least some vague idea of how things are going to go over the next week, month, quarter, year, and so on, so you can make somewhat-informed decisions about market conditions, raw materials, domestic and global trade conditions, capital outlays, etc.

      So Donald Trump is POTUS. You wake up in the morning, and legitimately wonder if today President Trump is going to:

      - Begin a campaign of mass deportations;
      - Decide we shake down Mexico for billions of dollars and divert significant steel and cement production to build a big ass wall;
      - Decide to cut an entire federal agency;
      - Decide to end a major work visa program;
      - Be totally cool with, or maybe start a war over, Putin's latest incursion into Eastern Europe;
      - Simultaneously shit on the tourism industry and the Constitution by announcing an entire religion is forbidden from entering the country;
      - Say some offhanded ridiculous thing that stirs up outrage/protest here or abroad;
      - Say some offhanded ridiculous thing that makes it harder for people in $your_industry to do business here or abroad;
      - Say something cute about [minorities/women/Muslims/poor people/some other group he thinks are 'total losers"] that paints America and American businesses in a bad light;
      - Embarrass the country; act like running the country is a reality TV show;
      - Try to shout over, or interfere with, or shut down a media outlet that's giving him problems;
      - Refuse to raise the debt ceiling and/or let us default on some obligations;
      - Cause worldwide condemnation and mutiny by ordering our armed forces to kill terrorists' family members;
      - Pull troops out of Japan and South Korea and try to hand them nukes to make up for it;
      - Start a WWIII-sized trade war;
      - Start actual WWIII.

      Regardless of what kind of job he's done running his own private sector interests, his unpredictability and volatility (a source of personal pride for him) would cause perpetual fear and chaos in the global economy. So it makes sense than just about any large corporation would look at that and say, "No thanks."

      --
      Nothing posted to /. has ever been legal advice, including this.
    4. Re:Nothing New by sjames · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If there was an actual shortage, they would be open to hiring older workers and they would be open to hiring entry level and sending them to school.

      They certainly wouldn't be participating in 'no poaching' agreements of questionable legality.

  2. Nothing New by KermodeBear · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is nothing new. Highly successful, rich business people have a long history of trying to affect society and government policy.

    --
    Love sees no species.
  3. "an insightful story on Buzzfeed News...." by Stray1 · · Score: 5, Funny

    You lost me....

  4. In the age of Trump "Liberals" love CEOs by mi · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In the Age of Trump, Tech CEOs Cast Themselves As the New Statesmen

    ... and the supposed champions of the people are now happy with the corporate influence.

    Because some CEOs are more equal than others... Oh, wait, Koch brothers hate Trump too, so let's suspend this campaign.

    The noble aim of #NeverTrump justifies all means, does not it? Principles are for wussies anyway...

    --
    In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
  5. Meh, who gives a rats ass by Virtucon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "My sheep listen to my voice; I know them, and they follow me." John 10:27

    --
    Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
  6. Big Companies can inspire us to move forward by postmortem · · Score: 4, Insightful

    By paying their fair share of taxes, and not using tax havens.

  7. Ephemeral polling by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 4, Informative

    >> Unless the Democrats do better than anointing Hillary, his chances are pretty good

    Says who? All the polling to date suggests Hillary would wipe the floor with Trump.
    http://www.realclearpolitics.c...

    The amusing thing about polling data is that they are so ephemeral.

    Why, if we had the election in November, we could have elected Carson!

    And at that same time, Nate Silver was predicting Rubio would get the nomination, because endorsements are a much better predictor than polling data, dontcha' know.

    A couple of months ago polls gave Trump a 70% chance of winning the nomination, now he's a coin flip.

    The problem with relying on polling data is that it makes the assumption that the election would be held right now. While that might be useful for future planning, it still has assumptions.

    Not the least of which is that Trump hasn't been focusing on the general election at all, so he's been letting Clinton slide (until recently). Or that the media is lumping all polling data together, when it's well known that some polls are biased.

    I read an analysis which posited a list of things that would turn the election around for Trump, and virtually *none* of them are in Clinton's direct control. Such as:

    1) Another terrorist attack
    2) Clinton gets indicted
    3) The US *declines* to indict Clinton
    4) Clinton collapses due to stress/exhaustion
    5) Trump stops being provocative and gets a more presidential attitude
    6) Trump makes some common-sense promises, such as to fix airport security and simplify the tax code
    7) Trump starts spending money on the campaign, instead of relying on free publicity

    I forget what the other three were, but they definitely weren't something Clinton could affect.

    If the polling data were that accurate, we wouldn't need to have an election at all

    ...except for that pesky thing about how the results keep changing.