The Great
Capitulation
Dec. 16, 2024
Michelle Goldberg
By Michelle Goldberg
Opinion Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/16/opinion/trump-tech-leaders-support.html
At a press conference at Mar-a-Lago on Monday, Donald Trump
described recent visits from Tim Cook, C.E.O. of Apple, Sergey Brin, a
co-founder of Google, and other tech barons. “In the first term, everyone was
fighting me,” he said. “In this term, everyone wants to be my friend.” For
once, he wasn’t exaggerating.
Since Trump won re-election — this time with the popular
vote — many of the most influential people in America seem to have lost any
will to stand up to him as he goes about transforming America into the sort of
authoritarian oligarchy he admires. Call it the Great Capitulation.
Following Jan. 6, Mark Zuckerberg, the Facebook co-founder,
suspended Trump’s account. But last month at Mar-a-Lago, The Wall Street
Journal reported, Zuckerberg stood, hand on heart, as “the club played a
rendition of the national anthem sung by imprisoned” Jan. 6 defendants. (It’s
not clear if Zuckerberg knew what he was listening to.) He’s pledged a
million-dollar donation to Trump’s inauguration, as did the OpenAI C.E.O. Sam
Altman and Jeff Bezos’ company Amazon, which will also stream the inauguration on
its video platform.
After Time magazine declared Trump “Person of the Year,” the
publication’s owner, the Salesforce C.E.O. Marc Benioff, wrote on X, “This
marks a time of great promise for our nation.” The owner of The L.A. Times, the
billionaire pharmaceutical and biomedical entrepreneur Patrick Soon-Shiong,
killed an editorial criticizing Trump’s cabinet picks and urging the Senate not
to allow recess appointments.
Most shocking of all, last week ABC News, which is owned by
the Walt Disney Company, made the craven decision to settle a flimsy defamation
case brought by Trump.
As you may remember, a jury last year found Trump civilly
liable for sexually abusing the writer E. Jean Carroll. In a memorandum, the
judge in the case explained that while a jury didn’t find that Trump had raped
Carroll, it was operating under New York criminal law, which defines rape
solely as “vaginal penetration by a penis.” It did find that he’d forcibly
penetrated her with his fingers.
“The finding that Ms. Carroll failed to prove that she was
‘raped’ within the meaning of the New York Penal Law does not mean that she
failed to prove that Mr. Trump ‘raped’ her as many people commonly understand
the word ‘rape,’” wrote the judge. “Indeed, as the evidence at trial recounted
below makes clear, the jury found that Mr. Trump in fact did exactly that.”
The ABC News anchor George Stephanopoulos appeared to be
using this broader definition when, in March, he said on-air that a jury had
found Trump “liable for rape.” Trump, who regularly threatens, and sometimes
files, defamation cases against his perceived enemies in the press, sued. And
though his case seemed absurdly weak, ABC News decided to settle in exchange
for a $15 million donation to Trump’s future presidential library or museum, $1
million in legal fees and a public statement of regret from Stephanopoulos and
the network.
Displays of submission aren’t limited to tech and media.
Christopher Wray, the head of the F.B.I., agreed to step aside before the end
of his 10-year term rather than make Trump fire him. Several Democrats have
signaled their willingness to work with Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, whose
so-called Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, seems poised to hack
away at our already threadbare safety net.
In The New Yorker, Jonathan Blitzer wrote of the current
administration’s refusal, at least so far, to renew the humanitarian parole of
immigrants from countries such as Venezuela and Haiti to possibly shield them
from deportation under Trump. “For a president who considers Trump a fascist
and has warned about the horrors of mass deportation, the atmosphere of Biden’s
White House has struck several people I spoke with as curiously sedate,”
Blitzer wrote.
Different people have different reasons for falling in line.
Some may simply lack the stomach for a fight or feel, not unreasonably, that
it’s futile. Our tech overlords, however liberal they once appeared, seem to
welcome the new order. Many hated wokeness, resented the demands of newly
uppity employees and chafed at attempts by Joe Biden’s administration to
regulate crypto and A.I., two industries with the potential to cause deep and
lasting social harm. There are C.E.O.s who got where they are by riding the
zeitgeist; they can pivot easily from mouthing platitudes about racial equity
to slapping on a red MAGA hat.
Some Democrats appear to think that they might steer DOGE in
a productive direction and that, regardless, they’ll get credit for
bipartisanship. The electorate, after all, has rendered its verdict on
#Resistance.
One of Kamala Harris’s pollsters, Politico reported,
recently warned the Democratic National Committee leadership against
pearl-clutching over Trump’s transgressions, including the wildly unfit
characters he’s announced for his administration. The voters, she said, “don’t
care about who he’s putting in cabinet positions.”
Collectively, all these elite decisions to bow to Trump make
it feel like the air is going out of the old liberal order. In its place will
be something more ruthless and Nietzschean.
“The individual has the intrinsic moral right to live his
life in a special and fulfilling way without subordinating to the universal
collective,” Marc Andreessen, the software engineer and venture capitalist at
the forefront of Silicon Valley’s rightward lurch, wrote on X last week.
“Purveyors of abstract guilt must not steal that from you.” Even powerful
people who didn’t vote in favor of this harsh new world can find their
consolations in it.
Michelle Goldberg has been an Opinion columnist since 2017.
She is the author of several books about politics, religion and women’s rights,
and was part of a team that won a Pulitzer Prize for public service in 2018 for
reporting on workplace sexual harassment.
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