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Several senior executives of America's leading tech companies – including major tech companies like Palantir and Facebook – have recently and proudly boasted publicly that they had just become commissioned officers in the U.S. Army. Even though they had no previous career path in the military, the Chief Technology Officer of Palantir and Facebook and others of that kind, were just made lieutenant colonels out of nowhere. Strange and sudden as that is, one could write it off as symbolic. This integration is multi-pronged, has been developed over many years and it has serious implications. We’ll analyze that.
Fire.org is, in my view, the most reliable and non-partisan free speech and free press group in the country. We've talked about that many times and we are delighted to have back on the show the group's executive vice president, Nico Perrino, to discuss the free speech implications from CBS News paying $15 million to settle that lawsuit Trump brought over the editing of Kamala’s interview by “60 Minutes.” The reason for this is clear, though it's not the one CBS gave: CBS's parent company is in the process of a big merger and acquisition, selling itself, and it needs the approval of the U.S. government to do so. Several other big media outlets have similarly paid to get out of lawsuits brought by Donald Trump, even though they are lawsuits any lawyer will tell you, let alone one specialized in press freedoms or media law, are just cases that would instantly be thrown out.
Social media platforms and big tech companies in general have obviously become extremely powerful and consequential, playing an increasingly central role in almost every aspect of our public lives. For that reason, we have covered that industry extensively in all sorts of different ways, starting with their censorship and the government's attempt to control their content, to pressure them to censor, but many other ways as well.
One of the topics I've reported on, though not as much as others, but might be ultimately the most consequential of all, even if it's gradual, is the continuous, inexorable integration of social media companies on the one hand and tech companies, like Palantir, Facebook and Google on the other hand, with the U.S. government and the U.S. military, so that it's a virtual merger.
There have been some developments and events along those lines that got way too little attention, far less than they deserve, in my view. So we want to do a segment explaining these recent developments and understanding exactly why this is happening and what the implications and the real dangers are.
Here's The Wall Street Journal from June 13, just a couple of weeks ago: “The Army's Newest Recruits: Tech Execs From Meta, OpenAI and More.”
Everybody wins. New wars, massive profit for the tech sector, and a merger of the U.S. military and the corporations that know the most about you and that can most control your communication, the information you receive and how you think.
We often throw around the word fascism. I mean “we” as Americans, “we” as people in the West who comment on politics. Calling Donald Trump a fascist has become almost obligatory in liberal circles; lots of other leaders, including those who are democratically elected, get called fascist, typically if they're right-wing populists. I think a lot of people use that term without ever stopping and thinking about what it means.
Typically, when you study fascism as a kind of scholarly pursuit, you look at the dogma as shaped and defined by Mussolini and the thinkers on which that fascist government was based, and then, obviously, Adolf Hitler as well. One of the primary defining factors is that there's no more separation between the public sector and the private sector, which has been foundational, at least in theory, to the United States. Instead, there's a merger: corporations and government working in conjunction with one another for the same goals and no longer separately.
That's exactly what this is.