
Big news, everyone! Billionaires donât like socialism.
By Alan Macleod – February 3, 2020
In response to a rising progressive tide in the United States, a new genre of stories has emerged in corporate media: rich guys warning against taxing them, or really changing anything about the system at all. Just as the press are keen for you to know that Medicare for All is a very bad idea (FAIR.org, 4/29/19), they are equally anxious to make sure that the voices of beleaguered, unheard plutocrats are given as much of a boost as possible.

A case in point is CNBCâs recent article (1/22/20) headlined, âBPâs CEO Chides AOC and Bernie Sanders for Their âCompletely Unrealisticâ Green New Deal Ideas.â Reporter Jessica Bursztynsky begins:
Outgoing BP chief Bob Dudley on Wednesday criticized sweeping climate proposals from Sen. Bernie Sanders, a top-tier 2020 Democratic presidential candidate, and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a champion of the far left. âThey have a completely unrealistic idea of the complexity of the global energy system,â Dudley told CNBCâs Squawk Box from the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
To sum up the story, a CNBC journalist went to Davos (where the cheapest hotel room last year was $1,000 per night) to get ideas about socialism and the environment from the CEO of BP, one of the 100 corporations responsible for over 70% of the worldâs emissions. At no point did Bursztynsky warn the audience or even allude to the enormous conflict of interest the oil multi-millionaire might have in discussing solutions to the climate crisis. Instead, his views are presented as a straight and important news story.
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In contrast, the first sentence primes the reader against AOC and Sanders by presenting them as âfar leftâ â in other words, as some sort of out-there crazies, even though their ideas are supported by the majority of the American people (FAIR.org, 1/23/19). It allows Dudley to claim that there is a distinct âlack of realismâ from his critics (emphasis added):
âThereâs just a lot of people, very well-meaning people, who want to believe that there is a simple solution,â Dudley said at the Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition & Conference.
Jeez, I wonder what oil CEOs at an energy forum in a Mideastern monarchy think about renewable energy? Good thing CNBC is on the case.

Not content with hearing only one CEOâs opinion, on the same day CNBC (1/22/20) published another Davos interview, called âJPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon Takes on Socialism, Says It Will Lead to an âEroding Society,ââ where Dimon told readers that âsocialism has failed everywhere itâs been triedâ and claimed that millennials donât understand what it really is. A billionaire investment banker doesnât like socialism!? Stop the presses!
CNBC is a particularly frequent culprit of publishing non-news such as this. Last year it ran an article (6/20/19) titled âBernie Sanders âDoesnât Have a Clue,ââ featuring supposed wisdom from multibillionaire Goldman Sachs alum Leon Cooperman, who stated bluntly: âWe have the best economy in the world. Capitalism works,â and that Sandersâ âfar-leftâ agenda is âcounterproductive.â âIâm not in favor of raising taxes. Taxes are high enough,â Cooperman predictably said.
Neither article mentioned JPMorgan and Goldman Sachsâ role in the 2008 global financial crash, the up to $29 trillion bailout their industry received, and how these corporations need capitalism to continue regardless of whether it âworksâ or not. Instead, these tycoonsâ bland statements are treated as important facts from experts. Media present their position as CEOs of oligarchic corporations as making their opinions inherently noteworthy. That might be true on some issues, but on questions like this, their invested positions actually make them less credible.
Yet CNBC (4/16/19) not only allowed United Healthcare CEO David Wichmann to claim that Medicare for All would âdestabilize the nationâs health system,â leading to a crisis and a âsevere impact on the economy,â without a word of scrutiny, it also bolstered his credibility, telling readers that he ârarely discusses politics,â implying that this was a highly reliable expert opinion, and certainly not scaremongering from a giant for-profit organization making billions annually off the sick.
It is already debatable if plutocratsâ entirely predictable pronouncements on economic issues are even news at all, given their obvious incentives. And there is also the question as to whether CNBC should be using its considerable resources to give a megaphone to some of the most powerful people in the world, letting them define and set the agenda of public debate. But to constantly feature these people without even mentioning the massive and glaring personal and economic conflict of interests they hold in pushing these ideas is tantamount to journalistic malpractice.

This practice is hardly limited to just CNBC. For example, a number of prominent outlets, including NBC News (4/13/16), the Wall Street Journal (4/13/16), Business Insider (4/13/16), USA Today (4/14/16), CBS News (4/13/16),  Politico (4/13/16) and Fortune (4/13/16), covered a Verizon CEOâs LinkedIn blog post (4/13/16) that claimed Sanders held âuninformedâ and âcontemptibleâ views on the economy. âBut when rhetoric becomes disconnected from reality, weâve crossed a dangerous line,â Verizonâs Lowell McAdam wrote, insinuating that the rich were âtargetsâ in potential danger.
In many of the write-ups, Sanders came across as a dishonest rabble-rouser readying the pitchforks, rather than a popular political leader critiquing the greed and power of the extremely wealthy. Is a LinkedIn blog post really newsworthy enough to garner so many national headlines? Evidently, if it says the right thing, then the answer is âyes.â
The fight for a $15 minimum wage has also, predictably, been attacked by restaurant owners who are among the stingiest when it comes to wages. Fox Business (6/6/19) repeated former CKE Restaurants CEO Andy Puzderâs claims that âBernie Sandersâ proposals will kill economic growthâ and lead to a reduction in wages for those he claims to represent. Surely it would have been more honest to at least mention that the ex-boss of the Carlâs Jr. and Hardeeâs restaurant franchises might have a conflict of interest on the matter?
And surely when Ken Langone described Sanders as âthe Antichristââa particularly ugly epithet to hurl at a Jewish politicianâthe Wall Street Journal (5/10/18) should have at least pointed out that the multibillionaire founder of Home Depot and major Republican donor might be a biased commentator. And it certainly was not obliged to present a man whose net worth has increased by nearly 60% in five years as some kind of ultra-philanthropist, a modern-day Francis of Assisi.

Yahoo! Finance (1/24/20) offered its own entry in the musings-from-Davos genre, interviewing Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan, who told editor-in-chief Andy Serwer: âOne of the things weâre trying to get everybody to understand, is you can be capitalist and make progress for society. But donât challenge capitalism.â Yahoo!âs write-up did mention that Moynihan had been paid $26.5 million in 2018, and that he âhas faced scrutiny over politicized issues like executive pay.â
By reporting what multimillionaire and billionaire CEOs say about efforts to change a system they so clearly have a huge stake in staying the same, without highlighting, or even mentioning, their conflict of interest, corporate media are doing their audiences a disserviceâeffectively propagandizing them into supporting a model their owners and advertisers benefit from. If media are to perform their role as the fourth estate properly, they should really be scrutinizing power, not uncritically amplifying it.
Featured image:Â CNBCÂ interview (6/20/19) with billionaire investor Leon Cooperman.

Alan MacLeod
Alan MacLeod is a member of the Glasgow University Media Group and a Senior Staff Writer for MintPress News. After completing his PhD in 2017 he published two books: Bad News From Venezuela: Twenty Years of Fake News and Misreporting and Propaganda in the Information Age: Still Manufacturing Consent, as well as a number of academic articles. He has also contributed to FAIR.org, The Guardian, Salon, The Grayzone, Jacobin Magazine, and Common Dreams.
- Alan MacLeod




