Anand Girihadaras writes in his blog “The Ink” that the billionaire elite have given up their pretense of using their fortunes to make a better world. Two events stripped away the veil: one, the greedy gaudy wedding of Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez in Venice and the announcement by Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan that they are abandoning their lofty goals of curing the world of disease.
Naked greed is in, big-hearted philanthropy is out. The oligarchs revel in their splendor.
Anand writes:
Like bottomless mimosas and a mother’s unsolicited advice, eras don’t just end. The new thing elbows its way in, the old thing lingers like a houseguest, and they compete for primacy. Only eventually — sometimes long after — do you notice the eclipse.
No one was ever going to announce that the era of performative elite do-gooding had ceded to the era of naked oligarchy. But this week three events made that eclipse clear.
The first was the multi-billionaire Jeff Bezos’s wedding, in Venice, to Lauren Sánchez, who would surely float if she fell into a canal. As celebrities poured into a city already strained by tourism, and the happy couple was photographed frolicking in a literal foam party aboard a yacht, there was an almost refreshing, well, nakedness to the avarice, to the carelessness, to the not-giving of civic fucks.
There was a reminder of the omnipotence and the utter loneliness at the commanding heights: you can get anyone you want to your wedding, and the people you want are the people you’d invite if you told your assistant to run to the dentist’s office, pick up People magazine, write down names in it, and invite them. These are people who have everything, and who don’t have the thing everybody else does.
The second was the inevitable announcement by multi-billionaire Mark Zuckerberg’s charitable foundation, run with his wife, Priscilla Chan, that it is no longer focused on ending all the diseases, as it once promised. Rather, in the Trump era, it is focused on things that would not be any trouble to Trump. “Can we cure all diseases in our children’s lifetime?” read a screen behind the couple at a rehearsal in 2016. The answer turns out to be: No. The Washington Post, owned by the oligarch in the above item, nonetheless rightly warned, in the Zuckerberg-Chan case, of “the risks for communities reliant on wealthy private donors.”
The third event was the passage today of Donald Trump’s and the Republicans’ budget, a document of searing meanness that former Labor Secretary Robert Reich calls the “Worst Bill in History” — a “giant budget-busting, Medicaid-shattering, shafting-the-poor-and-working-class, making-the-rich-even richer bill.” Like the Bezos wedding and the Zuckerberg-Chan pivot, the bill had one refreshing quality, though. It made zero effort to mask its ugliness. It said the cruel part out loud.
There is a nakedness to our oligarchy now, and it is pruny as hell. But at least there is this: As far as I can tell, the era of highly performative elite do-gooding is passing. The billionaires who felt the need to give TED talks about eradicating poverty while also causing poverty. The incessant blabbing about Africa by oligarchs who rarely left Connecticut. The pledges to save democracy, save the planet, and, yes, end all diseases. The buy-one-donate-one products. Red things involving Bono.Subscribe
I wrote a whole book about that era and its maneuvers and deceptions and costs, and it occurs to me now that the entire complex of activities I chronicled is giving way to something altogether different. What is ascendant now is nakedness — of greed, of sociopathy, of power thirst. Somewhere along the way, the professed goal of the elite morphed from fighting inequality from above to defending their castles in the sky.
There is a kind of progress in this, because what is naked is easier to see, even if pruny.
This eclipsing of performative virtue by pungent avarice, of fake billionaire “change” by real billionaire wolfishness, is part of why figures like Zohran Mamdani are rising. When I published Winners Take All in 2018, the things I was trying to deconstruct took explaining. That is, after all, why you write a book. I’m not sure a book is needed now.
The moves, the lust, the underlying goals — all of it is in the open. This era is less confusing. And people are voting accordingly.
It’s also why a generation gap is opening. The old guard power elite, seeing Mamdani’s rise, is terrified that the Soviet Union could soon be coming to a bodega near them, even though they probably don’t live near any bodegas and probably think the word “bodega” is Arabic. But their children and grandchildren are not afraid of free buses and childcare. They’re willing to take a chance on something that would switch their trajectory off the track from nothing to nowhere and on to a course of life.

The thought occurred to me just now driving back from town…
What happens when this MAGA/Heritage Foundation/Oligarch greedfest fails (and it will fail because we have piles of evidence thereof going back to the Gipper.)
What rage will the poor and middle class who voted MAGA feel? And, in what ways will their anger be manifested?
Or, will this latest chapter of human cruelty to humans just sink below the surface, even more quickly buried below the tsunami of life online in 2025?
Hell, 1.2 million of our fellow citizens died of COVID 19. Remember when people thought “everything is going to change”. Not.
Meanwhile, the young guy down the road keeps working on his falling apart car. Lit up by lanterns, the sound of his impact wrench mixed with the summer night. He can’t get to work because he can’t keep the car running. And, he can’t get a better car because he can’t get to work. And, work only pays enough to buy some parts for the junker. Still he has time to pet my dog and joke around when we stop by.
There are floods. Then there are the very, very slow moving disasters that subsume us all.
LikeLiked by 2 people
I love the way you put the economy into your society with the story of the neighbor. This is what it’s all about. It’s not the Hokey Pokey.
LikeLiked by 2 people
My inner francophile reminds me as we approach “le quatorze juillet,” that the French had a a way of dealing with a self-serving, greedy over class, but let’s hope it doesn’t come to that in this country. We need to vote and remind all our family and friends to take this duty seriously like our lives depend on it because it just may be true this time.
Thanks for this post. Girihadaras is a engaging writer with vivid imagery and an important story to tell. Billionaire greed is not good for working families, and we need to vote out their enablers.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Well said, Anand. The last couple of paragraphs sum it up nicely and provide a day of hope.
The UFT is holding a rare summertime Delegate Assembly this afternoon. We’re voting on who to endorse for mayor of NYC in the coming election.
That there’s any question of who will best represent the best interests of working class union members is telling and sad. The mainstream media has been busily at work discrediting Mamdani. The elite know how to manipulate public opinion. I hope we choose him. As does my daughter. As do all of her friends. They’re fed up with this bullshit.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Did the American public ever imagine that billionaire philanthropists would rescue a society where the top 1% swallows up more national wealth than that held by its entire middle class?
LikeLiked by 1 person
Say the quiet part out loud: hallmark of Trump era.
LikeLiked by 1 person
For the record: the UFT has voted to endorse Mr Mamdani.
Change doesn’t happen overnight, but it often starts with strong, basic, initial statements and actions.
LikeLike