"This is systemic corruption at a grand and intolerable scale," one advocate said of the billionaire's call to "delete" the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
Summary
Elon Musk called to “delete” the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), which has returned nearly $20 billion to Americans since its creation after the 2008 financial crisis.
Critics, including Public Citizen, argue Musk’s stance is driven by conflicts of interest, as the CFPB recently finalized a rule to supervise large tech companies offering digital payment services—a business Musk appears poised to enter.
“In short, Musk is calling for elimination of the consumer protection regulator over a business line he seems poised to enter… This is systemic corruption at a grand and intolerable scale,” one advocate said.
The CFPB has long faced opposition from corporations and conservatives but is praised for combating financial abuses and protecting consumers.
Musk has publicly praised the book, 'The Capitalist Manifesto: Why the Global Free Market Will Save the World,' that came out last year. The book, as you would assume, advocates for essentially unregulated, free market capitalism. I think Musk, and others like him, see a second Trump term as an opportunity to try and bring about the capitalist utopia that the book envisions.
If you're a capitalism supporter, this is likely good news. And long may the free market reign. If you're a socialist, well, you better be organizing workers like there's no tomorrow.
If you're a capitalism supporter, this is likely good news.
It's not good news for intelligent capitalists either. The current systems are in place because real capitalists, starting with Adam Smith in 1776, know that regulations are critical for the success of capitalism.
People who champion deregulation are always looking to destroy the free market for their personal profit.
Well, they have to balance their commitment to global free markets with their desire to destroy countries run by Communists, or any country that isn't sufficiently Western and liberal in their political or economic philosophies. China is especially problematic, because they've accounted for so much of the global growth that's occurred over the last several decades, but they are ultimately run by Communists, and they are certainly not liberal or Western enough.
The important thing is that musk is a classic libertarian grifter.
His cars are propped up by government subsidies (or they were, I think he's running into problems), starlink is heavily used by NASA, and the boring company is just another way to extract government money.
He'll pretend to be a global libertarian, but what he really wants is sky high tarrifs so he doesn't have to compete with Chinese electric cars.
Meh, these people are pure corporatist fascists, not free-market capitalists. These are very different things.
If you want to see an actual free-market capitalist who also has power and is not just a guy in the internet, check out Argentina's still miraculously current president Milei.
The fact that trump was elected, or even close to it. And musk is now in the position he's in, just makes it feel like our society is falling apart. Like death throes, or the calm before the storm.
This all really feels like societal collapse. I hope I'm wrong.
I like to remind people that businesses are not the best way to run a government.
The government imposes the rules business need to follow. I seasiously doubt business would have stopped child labor, insisted on workers' safety, or minimum wage, without the government being there being rules that need to enforce the rules.
If the boot licking workers want to experience what this would be like. Go to Asia and get a job at any manufacturing site, and you'll be at your "dream job"