The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - No Mercy / No Malice: The Line
Episode Date: November 25, 2023https://www.profgalloway.com/the-line-2/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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I'm Scott Galloway, and this is No Mercy, No Malice.
The Line.
Open AI Summary of Events
The board fucked up and fired CEO Sam Altman.
But over the next several hours, days, the situation was unfucked.
As of this writing, the state of play is Altman is back
as CEO, and a majority of the board has resigned. Whether or not that status survives a long
weekend, the ultimate outcome has been clear since Sunday night. Altman reinstated at OpenAI.
The board's last stand was Daryl Hannah in a tree, refusing to come down and protest
illusory relevance with the half-life of a Planet Fitness seven-day pass.
Microsoft hiring the entire OpenAI workforce was never realistic, despite the made-for-TV moment
of 500 people boarding a plane for Seattle. Some of the problems?
Broken employee and partnership agreements with OpenAI and infringement of its IP rights.
Microsoft's assimilation of 500 different comp
and equity agreements.
The response of OpenAI investors,
for example, A16, Coastal Ventures, Sequoia, Thriving Tiger,
to their multi-billion dollar stakes getting
effectively transferred to Microsoft, and antitrust concerns over even greater concentration
of AI power. Satya knew this and was careful to say he welcomed the opportunity to work with
OpenAI again should Altman return, which was the better, more viable outcome for
both of them all along. The near collapse of the Valley's most important and successful startup
is a $90 billion lesson that profit and mission don't mix. OpenAI was founded as a non-profit,
then birthed a for-profit subsidiary, serving, open quote, all of humanity, close quote,
was adorable until 90 billion distractions showed up and the management team and investors began
avoiding eye contact with the original mission. All men on the board were supposed to straddle
that divide, but it proved impossible. If this was a battle between capital and
concern for humanity, capital smothered
humanity in its sleep. We should abandon the mythology that the market alone can produce
the great taste of capitalism, shareholder returns, without the calories, pick your poison,
climate change, labor exploitation, autocracy. Nothing drives innovation
and value creation like the profit motive. But it can't be trusted to do anything but make money.
That's why we need stronger government regulation and greater enforcement.
The best ESG investment of 2023 was taxpayers' investment in the SEC and DOJ,
which are sending the CEOs of FTX and Binance to jail.
The fiduciary obligation to humanity belongs with democratic institutions. It can't be dependent
on the greater angels of billionaires. However, the pursuit of profit has limits.
And that brings us to the other major news of the week, which I believe is more serious
and consequential. Last Wednesday, what Elon Musk had previously cloaked in dog-whistling
retweets and bluster broke into the open with an explicit public endorsement.
You have said the actual truth, he wrote in response
to the claim that Jews are pushing hatred against whites and flooding their country with minorities.
This follows months of warnings from outside groups that anti-Semitic and other hateful
content has surged on X. Mr. Free Speech has sued several of these groups and blamed the Anti-Defamation
League for undermining X's advertising business. What has ensued is apologists contextualizing the
statements of their friend, idol, and potential client. These same leaders were quick to judge
the idiocy of a 19-year-old at a campus rally, but they've decided there's nuance when it comes to one of their own.
It's fucking gross.
You don't need to be able to see into his ketamine heart.
You are your actions.
You are your words.
And Elon Musk is an anti-Semite.
Whether you agree this is what the man is,
or believe he's cosplaying a Nazi for
business reasons, or believe he's just a misunderstood genius, the question remains,
what is to be done when the richest man on the planet, who controls the world's most valuable
car company and a global satellite communications network, uses his wholly-owned social media platform to increasingly and
unapologetically aid and abet bigotry and anti-Semitism. This is just the latest incarnation
of an old problem. I wrote about this a year ago, when another well-known figure was promoting the
same dangerous feculence. The Post wasn't about him, Kanye, but the appropriate response to his
statements. The fallout continues for Ye, formerly known as Kanye West, whose recent anti-Semitic
comments have caused public outrage. This morning, Adidas, which helped make the rapper's Yeezy shoe
and clothing line a multi-billion dollar business, severed ties with him.
We're reading it again because our response to Elon is more important, not only because of his
power and reach, but because the situation has grown more dire. Hate crimes in the U.S. have
been rising for a decade and were up another 7% in 2022, while anti-Semitic incidents were up 36%. In 2021,
there were eight bomb threats against Jewish institutions. In 2022, there were 91.
That was before October 7 and the war in Gaza. This October registered a nearly 400% increase in anti-Semitic incidents, and violence
begets violence. Islamophobic incidents nearly doubled in the same period. As we argued when
we ran the following post last year, these trends have tragic historical echoes. The price of doing
business with those who traffic in hate is not measured in dollars,
but in lives. What this post is ultimately about is the difference between opinions and principles.
Opinions are easy to hold and cheap to change, and their value commensurate. Principles,
on the other hand, are things for which you are willing to sacrifice, willing to draw a line.
The following post was originally published in October of 2022.
There was controversy this month involving Kanye West. I won't reiterate it. I believe Kanye is ill, and I'll return to ignoring
him soon after this post. This post is about Adidas, Gap, CAA, and his other corporate partners.
It is about the moral obligation we have to draw a line. Authoritarian power, fascism especially, often rests on the persecution of a group.
Fascists ascribe the problems of society to the influence of a minority and argue that controlling
or eliminating that group will solve a social ill. The most popular target for this form of
social weaponization for hundreds of years has been the Jews.
Making up 2% of the U.S. population and only 0.2% of the world's population,
Jews are, year after year, the target of more anti-religious hate crimes than any other group.
In the two-year period 2001 to 2002, bookending 9-11, when Islamic terrorists killed
3,000 people, the FBI identified 636974 anti-Jewish hate crimes,
three times as many as directed at Muslims,
more than half the religious hate crimes committed during the period.
The anti-Islam number was the anomaly.
Year after year, more hate crimes are committed against Jewish Americans
than against any other group except black Americans.
There are six times as many black Americans, and in total they suffer twice as many hate crimes.
The situation is similar abroad and over time.
Persecution of the Jews is so common, there's a Yiddish word for being massacred, pogrom. QAnon is strange
and vile, but likely ends up only a stain on this American era. However, anti-Semitism is history's
most enduring and deadly conspiracy theory. That's why special attention should be paid to tropes like the Jewish media.
The real demon, of course, is demonization of any target.
The history of discrimination and violence against outgroups is extensive,
from the Armenian Genocide to the mass killings of Christians by ISIS
to China's detainment of Uyghurs and much, much more.
In fact, the Nazis did not limit their attacks to Jews alone. They targeted Romani people, black people, homosexuals,
and the handicapped. Whoever the target, identifying a group, blaming them for society's
problems, and encouraging persecution, including violence, against them is the fascist playbook.
We cannot ignore these tactics in the rantings of billionaire celebrities,
regardless of what we think of their music, their shoe designs, or their mental health.
A companion tactic is the assertion of victimhood by the fascists themselves.
Replacement theory is the noxious combination of both,
asserting that the persecuted minority will somehow supplant the majority.
The rhetoric of fascism is like a battery drawing energy from contradiction.
A self-proclaimed billionaire, for example, wailing about how oppressed he is. We have incorrectly conflated the liberal
tradition of free speech with neutrality, with protecting the dark shoots of fascism
in the name of tolerance. By the time speech has flowered into actions that cannot be ascribed
to a lone wolf or the mentally ill, it has ripened into a movement.
Movements are harder to stop,
and the cost of resistance becomes so high
that good people stop doing and saying the right thing
as the understandable instinct for self-preservation kicks in.
Later, we find eloquence and grace only in our regret. A quote from Eleanor Roosevelt,
I have the feeling that we let our consciences realize too late the need of standing up against
something that we knew was wrong. We have therefore had to avenge it, but we did nothing to prevent it.
I hope that in the future, we are going to remember that there can be no compromise at any point with the things that we know are wrong.
Standing up against the rhetoric of hatred has nothing to do with censorship.
There is no law forbidding people from employing the rhetoric of oppression,
nor should there be. But no principle obligates us to accept them in media or business relationships.
A pillar of state-sponsored horror is the steady normalization of stereotyping and blaming.
One person ranting about the Jews or anyone else is readily identified as an outlier and ignored.
But as these claims multiply, as they have recently, they seem less outrageous.
Political scientist Joseph Overton postulated that at any time there is a range of policies the population deems acceptable,
but this window of discourse is not constant.
It's become a strategic objective of extremist groups to shift the Overton window over time toward their position by using rhetoric and advancing policies just outside the current
scope of societal acceptance. And as the volume of hateful rhetoric rises, as research has shown,
so too does hate crime. The rise of fascism, the normalization of hatred, is concomitant
with the accommodations of powerful people who register political and financial gain
by looking the other way. Appeasement is historically associated with Neville Chamberlain,
the UK Prime Minister who caved to Hitler's territorial demands rather than risk war with
Germany, only to make the eventual war more costly. Chamberlain is unfairly singled out.
Much of the British ruling class supported his position, and the U.S. Congress passed law
after law barring aid to those threatened by the Nazis until Pearl Harbor made such a position
untenable. Accommodation inside Germany began years earlier with Hitler's rise to power via
an election in 1932. Although Chamberlain is the poster child for appeasement,
often the key enablers of fascism are not politicians, but corporations.
Large companies benefit from stability,
the expansion of their nation's sphere of influence,
and the centralization of power at the expense of the individual.
Many of the central themes of fascism.
It's no surprise that corporate power is often the handmaiden to authoritarian rule.
I write that not as an indictment of corporations.
Corporations are essential.
They are how we organize human effort to accomplish extraordinary things,
from electric cars to vaccines.
But as corporations become
more powerful, their rejection or enablement of hate speech takes on additional importance.
Corporate accommodation of and support for the Nazis is well documented, from Adidas to Volkswagen
to Krupp to IG Farben. Multinationals flooded into Pinochet's Chile as he murdered his political
opponents by the thousands. Vladimir Putin's Russia has made oligarch, once simply a term
for a member of a ruling clique, into a synonym for business leader. The risk is even greater
today, considering the role corporations play in modulating our national discourse.
The pure pursuit of profit can lead to dark places.
There has to be a line, a moral consideration in place.
Drawing that line can be hard, because the leaders of large companies are culturally inclined toward, if not political neutrality, avoiding political
adventurism. Corporations take political positions for business reasons, and 99% of the time,
the best position is none. Donate to both sides, lobby for regulatory capture,
and then stand on the sidelines. But neutrality in the face of evil is not neutrality.
Amorality is too easily hijacked by the immoral. Hannah Arendt was fascinated by Adolf Eichmann,
the architect of Hitler's death camp system. He evidently had no ideology of his own, just a manifest shallowness, she wrote,
quote,
which made it impossible to trace
the incontestable evil of his deeds
to any deeper level of roots or motives, end quote.
If meta were to change its name again,
manifest shallowness strikes me as a decent fit.
This quote from Desmond Tutu,
If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor.
Which brings us back to Kanye and to the corporations that did business with him.
Their decision to sever ties is important.
Not because they need to cancel Kanye.
It's not about Kanye.
But drawing a line, arresting the normalization of the demonization of a minority.
In the case of Adidas, the ink for this line will cost shareholders hundreds of millions,
if not billions, in shareholder value.
The shoemaker has been criticized for waiting 10 days to cut ties.
10 days is an eye-blinking history, and even if management made the decision in 10 minutes,
the logistics and legalities of responsibly disentangling a multi-billion dollar relationship
take time. The company should be commended for its actions. As expensive as it was, Kanye did Adidas, the corporate world,
and maybe America, a favor. As John Oliver put it, quote, the answer to where you draw the line
is literally always somewhere, end quote. If you never draw one, you forget how. So when someone goes to DEFCON 3,
society's writing hand rediscovers penmanship.
It helps to practice our cursive so we know we can do it.
Drawing a line is a chance to remind yourself,
your employees, your shareholders, and your customers
that you'd rather take a stand now
when the cost is only
profits versus something much worse. In writing and presentations, I often point out that much
of my success is due to my circumstances, being born in America, getting a state-sponsored
education, etc. But the real roots of my good fortune run even deeper. During the Blitz, my mom was a four-year-old Jew sleeping
in the London Tube. Had the British not drawn a line, and then the Americans and Russians,
it's likely that a 21-mile-wide strip of water would have been breached, and my mother's life
would have ended with a train ride, and someone else would be writing this newsletter.
It should be noted, the Allies drew a line against fascism and potential invasion,
not anti-Semitism. The costs would have been less dear had we drawn those lines earlier.
The line on Kanye should have been drawn sooner. Every elected leader, citizen, and CEO must ask themselves,
where is my line?
To answer the question, we must first decide there is one.
Life is so rich.