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“This excellent book reveals the threat of ‘progressive’ corporations to humanity, democracy and the environment. It offers a compelling and urgent call for us to wake up to ‘woke capitalism’ before it is too late!” Peter Bloom, University of Essex “Woke Capitalism testifies that management and organization scholars are abreast – or perhaps even ahead – of the important changes in society, and ready to share their knowledge with the interested public.” Barbara Czarniawska, University of Gothenburg

WOKE CAPITALISM

WOKE CAPITALISM How Corporate Morality Is Sabotaging Democracy Carl Rhodes
First published in Great Britain in 2022 by Bristol University Press University of Bristol 1-9 Old Park Hill Bristol BS2 8BB UK +44 (0)117 954 5940 bup-info@bristol.ac.uk Details of international sales and distribution partners are available at bristoluniversitypress.co.uk © Bristol University Press 2022 British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 978-1-5292-1166-5 hardcover ISBN 978-1-5292-1168-9 ePub ISBN 978-1-5292-1169-6 ePdf The right of Carl Rhodes to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved: no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the prior permission of Bristol University Press. Every reasonable effort has been made to obtain permission to reproduce copyrighted material. If, however, anyone knows of an oversight, please contact the publisher. The statements and opinions contained within this publication are solely those of the author and not of the University of Bristol or Bristol University Press. The University of Bristol and Bristol University Press disclaim responsibility for any injury to persons or property resulting from any material published in this publication. Bristol University Press works to counter discrimination on grounds of gender, race, disability, age and sexuality. Cover design: Nicky Borowiec Bristol University Press uses environmentally responsible print partners. Printed in Great Britain by TJ Books, Padstow
Contents About the Author Acknowledgements 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 viii ix The Problem with Woke Capitalism Corporate Populists The Woke Reversal Capitalism Goes Woke Shareholder Primacy A Wolf in Woke Clothing All that Glitters Is Not Green The CEO Activist The Race to Wokeness Racial Capitalism/Woke Capitalism The Best a Woke Corporation Can Be The Right Hand Gives Getting Woke to Woke Capitalism Notes and References Index 1 17 29 42 57 71 84 98 111 124 138 151 167 177 221 vii
About the Author Carl Rhodes is Professor of Organization Studies at the University of Technology Sydney. His central focus is on how corporations can and should be held to account for their actions by citizens and by civil society. This work endeavours to critically question and reformulate the role of business in society such that prosperity can be shared by all. Carl regularly writes for the mainstream and independent press on ethics, politics and the economy. His work can be found publications such as Fast Company, Business Insider, The Guardian, Common Dreams and The Conversation. Carl’s most recent books are CEO Society: The Corporate Takeover of Everyday Life (Zed Books, 2018, with Peter Bloom) and Disturbing Business Ethics (Routledge, 2019). International in scope, his work has been translated into Chinese, Dutch, Hungarian, Italian, Korean, Polish, Spanish and Turkish. viii
Acknowledgements First and foremost, I respectfully acknowledge that I live and work on the land of the Gadigal people of the Eora nation. The Gadigal people have cared for their community, land and waters for thousands of generations, based on their deep knowledge of their country. I pay my respects to their Ancestors and their Elders and acknowledge their ongoing status as the First Peoples of this land. In writing this book, I have benefited greatly from the generosity of friends and colleagues who have taken time and care to provide feedback on draft versions of the manuscript. Specifically, I would like to thank Daryl Adair, Michelle Baddeley, Peter Bloom, Alan Bradshaw, Tom Calvard, Peter Fleming, Joel Hietanen, Wal Jarvis, Kate Kenny, Celina McEwen, Dave Michayluk, Janet Page, Alison Pullen, Robynne Quiggin, Gaby Ramia, Leona Tam and Nareen Young. Special thanks also go to Paul Stevens, senior editor at Bristol University Press. As well as working with me through the mechanics of the editorial process, Paul has been unwavering in his encouragement, support and personal interest in this project. Through the course of writing the book, I had the opportunity to discuss the main ideas with Alan Bradshaw and Joel Hietanen as part of their Quarantined Market Podcast. A version of that discussion was published as a chapter in their book The Dictionary of Coronavirus Culture (Repeater Books, 2020). I thank Alan and Joel for this opportunity to develop my thinking about the phenomenon of woke capitalism. Another such opportunity arose in a conversation with Helen Trinca, the managing editor of The Australian newspaper. Helen’s curiosity and insightful questions provided an early opportunity to articulate my central thesis. Thanks also to Helen for writing about ix
WOKE CAPITALISM this in an article titled ‘New challenges for “woke capitalism”’, published in The Australian on 26 May 2020. As work on the book progressed, I also had the opportunity to publish five op-ed articles exploring the relevance of woke capitalism to key political events. The first of these examined how corporations responded to the Australian bushfire crisis of early 2020 and how this reflected a change in public sentiment towards climate change. The article, published by ABC News on 18 January 2020, was titled ‘When corporations back woke capitalism, it means climate change action has gone mainstream’. The second article was ‘Where are the woke capitalists now?’, published in Common Dreams on 1 April 2020, and explored how corporations had – or more precisely, had not – responded to the social consequences that arose in the early stage of the pandemic. The third article was published in Independent Australia on 11 June 2020 and was called ‘The Morrison government’s antidemocratic response to COVID-19’. Here I look at how the Australian government addressed the challenges of COVID-19 and why it reflected a dangerously elitist and authoritarian politics. On 25 August 2020, I published the fourth article, ‘Don’t be fooled by a wolf in woke clothing: how the world’s billionaires are cashing in on COVID-19’, in Common Dreams. The article showed how, despite their progressive rhetoric, the world’s billionaires were cashing in on the pandemic while the economic wellbeing and security of too many working people were being devastated. Finally, ‘Pandemic profiteers go woke to grab political power’ was published in Independent Australia on 14 January 2021. In this article, I reflect on how some of the world’s richest people made massive philanthropic pledges during 2021, and how this apparent generosity masks a move to claim political power. I thank the editors of each of these outlets for publishing these articles and allowing me to gain crucial feedback on the ideas that inform the book. x
1 The Problem with Woke Capitalism ‘If you’re woke, you dig it’ was the headline of William Melvin Kelley’s 1962 article in The New York Times.1 In the article, Kelley notes that the language associated at the time with beatnik culture had been appropriated from the lexicon of Black America, often after its originators had stopped using it. Men were cats, women were chicks, to be hip meant to be fashionable or informed, if something was good it was cool, and if you dig something, it meant that you liked or understood it. Interestingly, while Kelley used the term ‘woke’ in the title of his article, he did not explain it explicitly in the main text. Perhaps as a criticism of the White appropriation of Black language, he decided to keep the meaning of the eponymous word secret. The secrecy was part of Kelley’s message. African Americans had learned to create their own words prior to the abolition of slavery to be able to speak without the master knowing what they were saying. If we fast forward to June 2017 the term ‘woke’ had become so widespread in its usage in the US and across the world that it was added to the Oxford English Dictionary. Whereas the previous dictionary entry simply listed woke as meaning to wake up, they now added the more contemporary meaning. They noted that ‘participial use of woke in some African American varieties of English has generated an adjectival meaning that has recently become prominent in general American use’. Acknowledging Kelley as the first person to cite the word, the dictionary’s definition 1
WOKE CAPITALISM of woke was now part of the mainstream, referring to being ‘well informed’ or ‘alert to racial or social discrimination and injustice’.2 In his 1962 article, Kelley also noted the fluid nature of African American language use. The language can be modified, he wrote, to ‘give a word, already in use, its opposite meaning. [For example] at one time the connotations of “jive” were all good; now they are bad, or at least questionable’.3 This change in meaning has certainly happened to the word ‘woke’ today, although ironically it was done by those of a politically reactionary persuasion. Today a conventional use of the term ‘woke’ does not only mean being alert to social injustice. Instead, it refers to a person who affects a false, superficial and politically correct morality. Think, for example, of mega-rich celebrities like Leonardo DiCaprio and Katy Perry. They fly by private jet to a climate summit at a luxury resort in Sicily funded by Google. It is difficult not to be cynical about the authenticity, or at least consistency, of their politics.4 Such cynicism leads to the view that to be woke is merely an ethical fashion statement that is in favour of apparently radical political causes as they relate to, for example, movements against sexism, racism, and other forms of discrimination and oppression. Other supposedly woke causes are environmentalism, mental health awareness, LGBTQI+ rights, and economic inequality. Crucially, the negative use of the term ‘woke’ proposes that those people who support progressive political causes are insincere as well as ineffective in their politics. If someone disparages you as a ‘woketard’ or a member of the ‘wokerati’ then you are accused of being obsessed with appearing ethically right-on on issues ranging from environmental protection to identity politics. You are also being accused on taking on ‘wokeness’ because you think it is a fashionable thing to do. There have even been reports of a trend that cultural commentator Serena Smith calls ‘wokefishing’.5 Wokefishing involves people, usually men, deceptively presenting themselves as woke to attract sexual partners. Wokefish fear that their real political beliefs would be a turn-off. Smith explains that to counter this they ‘first present themselves as a protest-attending, sex-positive, anti-racist, intersectional feminist who drinks ethically sourced oat milk and has read the back catalogue of Audre Lorde, twice’.6 Deploying another neologism, these people adopt a ‘fauxgressive’ position that falsely uses progressive politics to pursue 2
The Problem with Woke Capitalism a set of goals, in this case predatory sexual conquest, that is entirely inconsistent with that politics. Criticisms of fauxgressiveness are not limited to falsely pretended sexual relationships. Indeed, such complaints reach something of a crescendo when those advocating for particular political causes do so from a position of privilege and where they have no real personal stake in the political issue they champion and certainly are not in any danger of harm or discrimination. You might even compete in the ‘Woke Olympics’, a game that writer Maya Binyam insightfully mocks in terms of the politics of White anti-racism in the US. As Binyam writes: The Woke Olympics – broadcast live on twitter, promoted by the likes of Woke Clothing – is the multiround tournament to which these games belong. It’s players, almost all of whom are white, are disciples of the refrain ‘stay woke’, a reminder to name racism when it appears, or, rather, to name fellow white folk who are lagging behind. […] The best players are those who accumulate the names of people who ‘are’ racist or of things that ‘have’ racism in them.7 The point that Binyam makes is that the purpose of this game is less about addressing pressing political issues such as racial discrimination and inequality, and more about establishing the politically correct moral credentials of the players. To be woke is cast as a form of insincere self-righteousness. Those chastised are said to be hypocritical and unbefitting of the high moral ground from which they profess. They engage in ‘virtue signalling’ whereby they wear their righteousness on their sleeves for the whole world to see. Critics rebuke the woke for being self-obsessed and shallow on account of their inauthentic self-branding and impression management. The labelling of people as woke is part of a culture war fought largely between liberal progressives and reactionary conservatives. In recent years, progressive causes have dominated the public imagination through, for example, highly publicized debates over racism, same-sex marriage, climate change, animal rights and gender equality. These are serious responses to entrenched social, political and environmental causes. Those who don’t believe 3
WOKE CAPITALISM in them, however, have responded not just by making reasoned counter-arguments but by trying to undermine the sincerity of the people who make the original arguments. While it may be the case that some people take on political positions because they appear fashionable, that does not mean that all people who support those causes are inauthentic, or that the causes themselves are not worthwhile. Disparaging people as woke to discredit the political position they advocate is a prime example of an ad hominem argument. Rather than engaging in an honest discussion of the issues, the credibility of the person raising it is brought into question. Ad hominem arguments are, however, well known to be a false and underhanded way to get one’s point across without actually dealing with the substantive matters at hand. An example might best illustrate this newly pejorative application of the term ‘woke’. The media has long accused the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle, of being woke. Harry was dubbed the ‘Prince of Woke’, whose formerly fun-loving ways had drastically changed since he married. As the UK tabloid headline announced: ‘Prince Harry has since swapped partying for posturing on a range of “woke” issues with his wife Meghan Markle’.8 Things heated up even more in early 2020 when the royal couple made a bold announcement. On 8 January, Markle sent out a message on Instagram. Beneath the smiling faces of her and her husband, it read: After many months of reflection and internal discussions, we have chosen to make a transition this year in starting to carve out a progressive new role within this institution. We intend to step back as ‘senior’ members of the Royal Family [… this will provide] our family with the space to focus on the next chapter, including the launch of our new charitable entity. The press went wild! As much as the announcement was a shock, not the least of the media’s energy was directed as a personal attack against Markle. Markle had always been controversial. A divorced American woman of mixed African American and European American parentage, when she started dating Harry in 2016, she immediately attracted the ire of the worst kinds of bigoted 4
The Problem with Woke Capitalism conservatism. While women who married into the royal family had long suffered press harassment, Markle received an exceptional level of abuse on account of her multiracial heritage. In one of the most hateful and immature expressions of racism possible, when Markle’s son Archie was born in 2019, a BBC radio broadcaster turned to Twitter to post a picture of a couple holding a chimpanzee as if it was a child. He captioned it ‘Royal baby leaves hospital’.9 As Michelle Ruiz reported in Vanity Fair, Markle was subjected to ‘outright racism of the overwhelmingly White press corps during her pregnancy – including unsubtle nods to the “angry black woman” stereotype, and a certain discomfort with a woman of color finding a fairy-tale romance’.10 Things were so bad back in 2016 that on 8 November of that year Harry released a formal statement on the royal family’s website. In the statement, he condemned the press coverage of his then girlfriend based on ‘the racial undertones of comment pieces; and the outright sexism and racism of social media trolls and web article comments’.11 With the announcement of their stepping back from official royal duties the attacks on Markle took on a new type of venom. Radio host Eamonn Holmes called her ‘woke, weak, manipulative, spoilt’.12 TV host Piers Morgan lambasted the royal couple. He stated that: [T]hey want to be super-woke celebrities (with all the outrageous ‘Do as we say not as we do’ hectoring hypocrisy they’ve already brought to that status) who get to keep all the trappings of royal life without any of the hard, boring bits and the right to cash in on their status however they choose.13 Those who might defend the duke and duchess are not spared the woke whip either. The Sun, a British tabloid newspaper, retorted with ‘we are sick […] of woke morons crying racism over Press criticism of Meghan and Harry’.14 Crucially, what this example illustrates is the perceived insincerity of progressive left-wing political positions, especially when they disrupt what is perceived to be the natural order of a particular conservative political order. On the one hand, the duke and duchess, as members of the royal family, are at the very apex 5
WOKE CAPITALISM of the British class system. On the other hand, they were well known for supporting political causes such as women’s rights, racial equality, HIV/AIDS activism and clean water activism.15 But they also embody a level of power and wealth that is virtually incomprehensible to the rest of us. As members of the royal family, they symbolize a class system that has long perpetuated the structural inequalities that still dominate British society. Indeed, this was another reason that Markle was deemed suspicious; as a middle-class kid made good, she represented the very class mobility that threatens the establishment. Nevertheless, that royalty might espouse political positions that disavow the very privilege that they enjoy, while at the same time not impeding that privilege in any way, resulted in severe levels of derision. Precisely because of this they were condemned as woke. That those who benefit most from inequality might position themselves as progressive and align themselves with left-leaning political causes epitomizes what conservative pundits diagnose as the very heart of the woke problem. Another dimension of the pejorative use of the term ‘woke’ concerns the perceived lack of effectiveness of woke politics. Complaining that people are woke implies that they fail to engage in politics that lead to any real changes. This line of argument was epitomized in 2019 in statements by none other than former US president Barack Obama. When addressing the Obama Foundation Summit in Chicago, Obama opined on contemporary US politics: This idea of purity and you’re never compromised and you’re always politically woke, and all that stuff – you should get over that quickly. The world is messy. There are ambiguities. People who do really good stuff have flaws. People who you are fighting with may love their kids and share certain things with you […] I do get a sense among certain young people, and this is accelerated by social media, that the way of me making change is to be as judgmental as possible about other people and that’s enough. Like if I tweet or hashtag about how you didn’t do something right, or used the wrong verb, then I consider that I can feel pretty good about myself because, ‘man did you see how woke I 6
The Problem with Woke Capitalism was, I called you out’ […] That is not activism, that is not bringing about change. If all you’re doing is casting stones, you are probably not going to get that far.16 Obama’s statement reflects on some fundamental elements about what the term ‘woke’ means when people use it to criticize political activity. By this account, when people go woke, it is not only all talk and no action, but it is also a form of superficial selfaggrandisement that serves little or no benefit other than to shore up the sense of righteousness of the woke person. This wokeness, for Obama, is not a way of addressing serious political issues in a meaningful way or making lasting positive change. Beneath simplistic criticisms of wokeness, however, lie much more complex power relationships as they relate to progressive politics. Writing in the Black Agenda Report, political analyst Danny Haiphong criticizes Obama as reflecting a cynicism about youth activism and the emergence of a new politically aware generation. If anything, Haiphong argues, the mainstreaming of wokeness has been a means through which the political establishment has tried to neuter political activism. Haiphong pulls no punches: ‘Call out culture’ commodified movement culture and channeled activists into profitable modes of expression that promoted individual recognition, academic prestige, and careerism rather than the plight of the poor, especially the Black poor. […] ‘Wokeness’ and ‘purity’ must be shot down by Obama because it threatens the legitimacy of political class actors like him who expect to be praised for their intelligent leadership over the great race to the bottom.17 Undermining serious political causes by calling them woke is a way of diluting resistance to the political status quo. Such woke name calling serves a definitively conservative function: it shields existing power structures from criticism so that they do not face any real challenge. This recasting of wokeness as shallow, self-serving, moralistic and insincere reaches one of its peaks when it comes to business and capitalism, the central topic of this book. Indeed, with its 7
WOKE CAPITALISM growing use in English vocabulary from the mid-2010s, it did not take long for the term ‘woke’ to be applied to corporations who publicly supported socially progressive causes. This was far from positive, with reactionary critics shaming such corporations. Such critics use woke capitalism as a descriptor for the increasing number of corporations, especially multinationals, who align themselves with social movements while using that alignment in widespread publicity and advertising. These mega-corporations are charged with ‘woke washing’: a marketing and public relations exercise whereby companies hope that by being associated with right-on political causes they will gain customer support and ultimately commercial gain. There are many examples. Gillette was accused of everything from ‘perpetuating a war against men to donning a cloak of wokeness to cash in on the progressive air of our current cultural climate’ for its ad campaign addressing toxic masculinity.18 When Ben and Jerry’s introduced the Pecan Resist ice cream flavour to ‘peacefully resist the Trump administration’s regressive and discriminatory policies’,19 Fox News reported ‘Ben & Jerry’s has a new ice cream flavor, dedicated to the resistance. And like the resistance, it contains nuts.’ They went on to dismiss this as ‘another example of how the left injects politics into everything’.20 When clothing retailer Zara released a collection of ‘ungendered clothing’ they were decried, with one critic suggesting that these clothes were a way for Zara to say ‘“Look, we’re woke!” into a giant, megaphone, expecting a cookie’.21 When Adidas campaigned to remove Native American mascots from school sports teams’ names and uniforms, they were accused of ‘sanctimoniously virtuesignaling about others’ behavior’.22 In 2021, the US state of Georgia was embroiled in controversy for changing its voting laws in a way that would suppress Black people from voting. In protest, US Major League Baseball decided to move its annual all-star game away from Georgia’s capital of Atlanta, to Denver, Colorado. Writing in the conservative magazine the National Review, Philip Klein described the league’s move as a ‘seminal moment in the development of woke capitalism’. Coca-Cola and Delta Airlines similarly condemned the law. Klein decried their move as the very exemplification of how ‘major corporations have grown into the central cultural enforcer of the Left’.23 8
The Problem with Woke Capitalism To the extent that woke corporations may be pilloried for being weak, opportunistic and hypocritical, what has also dominated much public discussion of ‘woke capitalism’ to date is the criticism that it is bad for capitalism itself. Distracted by causes that do not support the proper function of business to maximize profits for shareholders, woke capitalism is a threat to prosperity and economic growth, the critics argue. According to these conservative detractors, corporations are increasingly enthralled by politically correct social issues in a way that goes beyond simple woke washing. The conservative fear is that executives are serious about their wokeness. Even worse, this seriousness might lead them to pursue woke causes at the expense of what should be the true purpose of their business. Progressive politics and conservative economics simply are incompatible, and, for the sake of capitalism, should not be mixed. Writing in The American Conservative, a magazine published by the libertarian-conservative American Ideas Institute, political commentator Rod Dreher announces that ‘woke capitalism is our enemy’. Why so? This is what he had to say: The familiar left vs. right categories no longer serve as reliable guides to our cultural reality. The cultural left has captured the bureaucracies at American corporations […] I have seen personally how companies will do politically correct things that actually hurt their business model, but that win its management pats on the back among their social cohort. [They assert] that the total politicization of the company’s culture is critical to its business success … [This is] a recipe for creating intense anxiety and suspicion within the company. It’s as clear as day. You cannot imagine why any sensible company would embrace these principles and techniques, which can only hurt its ability to compete.24 Those, like Dreher, who condemn woke capitalism do so because they believe that it is an affront to capitalism’s true virtues. Commonly trotted out as a defence is Nobel Prize-winning US economist Milton Friedman’s 1970 maxim that ‘the social responsibility of business is to increase its profits’. As Friedman 9
WOKE CAPITALISM elaborated, ‘that responsibility is to conduct the business in accordance with their desires, which generally will be to make as much money as possible while conforming to their basic rules of the society, both those embodied in law and those embodied in ethical custom’.25 What is unstated is the assumption that the prevailing ‘ethical custom’ does not contradict the idea that businesses should pursue shareholder financial interests with scant concern for anyone else. Friedman’s position encases a normative position that entirely disregards the possibility that the societies where capitalism operates might develop an irresolvable tension between the ethical custom of a community and the financial interests of the owners of capital. What is missing is an acknowledgement that ethics might just be more than a limiting condition setting out what businesses should not do in pursuing profits. Ethics can also question the very system that capitalism is built on. Friedman’s basic position, that businesses should be directed primarily by shareholder financial interest, remains dominant in much criticism of woke capitalism. Jon Pritchett and Ed Tiryakian, writing for the libertarian think tank Foundation for Economic Education, epitomized this when they announced: ‘Milton Friedman was right on corporate guidance, and “woke” CEOs ignore him at shareholder peril’. The peril they fear is that it is a form of ‘corporate groupthink’ that is ‘hostile to capitalism’ because it is a distraction from what is seen as the principal purpose of business.26 Debates about wokeness in business tend to imagine that the political choice is limited to two opposite options. On one side, we have the woke position that corporations should be actively involved in progressive political causes for the benefit of society. On the other side, we have a politically conservative position that corporations should keep their noses out of politics and stay focused on ensuring commercial success for the benefit of their shareholders. The problem with this simplistic rendering of progressive politics is that it is a somewhat flimsy – although effective – set-up by those on the right side of politics to cement the value of the economic status quo that they believe in. This status quo, established over at least the past 40 years, resulted in a process of massive growth in corporate power,27 coupled with vast expansion in inequality28 on a global scale. From this perspective, woke capitalism receives criticism because, in detracting business from its true economic 10
The Problem with Woke Capitalism mission, it has become a dilution of capitalism itself. If we accept this woke vs. conservative arrangement, we are left with little space to move if we wish to maintain a commitment to progressive democratic politics while at the same time bringing into question the injustice of a corporate capitalist system that appears to see no end in the production of inequality for its own benefit. Is it possible that the corporate adoption of wokeness does the very opposite of what conservative critics condemn it for? Rather than being the death knell of capitalism, might business becoming woke serve to extend the power and reach of capitalism in deeply problematic ways? If so, and this is the central idea that informs this book, then woke capitalism needs to be opposed and resisted on democratic grounds because it allows for public political interests to become increasingly dominated by the private interests of global capital. If we follow this line of thought, problems for democracy arise as the considerable weight of corporate resources gets mobilized to capitalize on public morality. Corporate selfinterest is never far behind as our morality itself becomes captured and exploited as a corporate resource. Cloaked in the apparent moral glow of self-righteous and often facile political positions, civic debate and democratic dissent are replaced with the self-congratulatory slickness of marketing and public relations campaigning. This is often done in line with what Helen Lewis calls the ‘“iron law of woke capitalism”: ‘Brands will gravitate toward low-cost, high-noise signals as a substitute for genuine reform’. Meanwhile, as Lewis goes on to explain, ‘Those at the top – who are disproportionately white, male, wealthy, and highly educated – are not being asked to give up anything themselves.’29 As Lewis suggests, care needs to be taken not just to dismiss corporate wokeness as being meaningless, but rather to be attuned to the seriousness of its political implications, especially as they involve bolstering a socially unequal status quo. In particular, the implications of woke capitalism for the future of democracy are considerable, as the democratic tradition that values equality, freedom, voice and debate between participating citizens becomes overwhelmed by a corporate voice speaking its soundbite-size version of morality. What you will find in this book is an extended exploration of the central themes and practice of woke capitalism as an affront 11
WOKE CAPITALISM to democracy that needs to be replaced with an invigorated democratic spirit. We need to be careful here how we use this term ‘democracy’. As political theorist Wendy Brown reminds us, the idea of democracy is not to be conflated with the idea of the modern liberal democratic state. She argues that at our current historical juncture ‘democratic state commitments to equality, liberty, inclusion and constitutionalism are now subordinate to the project of economic growth, competitive positioning, and capital enhancement’.30 That is not to say that economic prosperity is not essential, but rather the direction of the subordination would need overturning to preserve democracy. The democratic ideal would see economic prosperity at the service of the people, not the other way around. In place of a woke corporate power, real democracy is based on a fundamental belief in popular sovereignty. If anything, the massive yet still growing power of corporations and their grip on contemporary politics is a regression to a neo-feudalism where political authority rests with the economically powerful rather than being the will of the people. American constitutional attorney John W. Whitehead gets straight to the point when he argues that large corporations comprise a new elite who are fast superseding democratic government in their power over society. Politically, these corporations increasingly determine the laws which are supposed to govern them. Economically, they dominate through the elimination of competition and securing large government contracts. Our age, Whitehead convincingly claims, is one where ‘corporate-state rulers dominate the rest of us’.31 Woke capitalism is today’s extension of this revamped feudalism, one that cedes not just legal authority to corporations, but also moral and political authority. This book will explore the contours and expressions of woke capitalism, charting its dangerous course to the ‘de-democratization of democracy’, to borrow a phrase from Yannis Stavrakakis, professor of political science.32 As Stavrakakis explains, democracy requires the institutionalization of political antagonism and political competition such that no single authority holds power in perpetuity. Totalitarianism and authoritarian power are ever-present threats to democracy. They disavow the forms of political difference and contestation that are democracy’s hallmarks. The central ambiguity of democracy is that it is practised by a united community of citizens who are simultaneously characterized 12
The Problem with Woke Capitalism by antagonistic political positions. ‘To cover up the ambiguity in democracy’, Stavrakakis argues, ‘is to de-democratize democracy’.33 In the case of the expansion of corporate political power of which woke capitalism is a constitutive part, de-democratization amplifies when politics moves from the public-political sphere to the private-economic sphere. In this context, political dominance is pursued not through the contest of political views in public political forums, but rather through the loudness of the voices of those with economic power. Thankfully, de-democratization has not been achieved, with corporations regularly being held to account publicly for their words and deeds. Nevertheless, it is in the direction of de-democratization that woke capitalism is moving. By implication, if we are to retain the values of freedom and equality that are central to the democratic promise, we need to resist woke capitalism. Woke capitalism is a growing and troubling dimension of contemporary economic and political life, especially among the mammoth multinational corporations that dominate so many aspects of our lives. To be critical of this dangerous trend does not mean having to align with the reactionary conservative pundits. They decry wokeness as an affront to the self-interested profitseeking heart of capitalism. By contrast, the real danger of woke capitalism is not that it will weaken the capitalist system, but rather that it will further cement the concentration of political power among a corporate elite. That this trend continues is a threat to democracy. It is also a threat to a progressive politics that dares to retain hope in the possibility of equality, liberty and social solidarity. To better understand this threat, this book begins by illustrating the meaning of the term ‘woke’ by exploring the unresolvable irony that is manifest when business corporations lay claim to public purpose and social responsibility while profiting handsomely along the way. From that start, the history of woke capitalism is assessed as it can be charted from its disparate antecedents in 1950s corporate social responsibility, through the early days of 1980s neoliberalism, to the present time. This corporate history is traced alongside the emergence of the term ‘woke’ in Black American culture and its adoption and mutation by mainstream culture, eventually intersecting with the corporate world in the form of ‘woke capitalism’ in the late 2010s. As well as teasing 13
WOKE CAPITALISM out the emergent meaning of woke capitalism, this leads to a discussion of the various political causes that have been taken up in global capitalism: for example, LGBTQI+ rights, marriage equality, #MeToo, #BlackLivesMatter and the prevention of sexual harassment. What is perhaps most revealing about this are the social causes that big business has not supported, such as income and wealth inequality, the labour movement and corporate tax evasion. As central themes, the book explores the specific corporate activities that comprise woke capitalism in practice. Political activism is a particular focus, examining how corporations and chief executive officers (CEOs) are personally becoming spokespeople for social justice causes and how this conflates corporate and social power while at the same time making ethical heroes of managers and the businesses they lead. Corporations are deploying their considerable power through marketing, advertising and public relations activities not to directly sell products, but to spread the message of social justice causes. The book considers what the brand association between those causes and corporate products means for democracy. Also discussed is how corporations capitalize on changing patterns of public sentiment when they seek to align themselves with and influence the moral positions of consumers. Similar issues are considered in terms of corporate philanthropy and its escalation in size and scope in recent years. This book is clearly and deliberately an extended critique of woke capitalism as practised by large, usually multinational, corporations. To be clear, this is not meant as a condemnation of business activity per se. Rather, it draws attention to the political problems created by how business is increasingly practised at the big end of town. Businesses make a significant contribution to society, most obviously through the provision of goods and services, and employment. They also harbour the potential to support democracy, especially through the payment of fair taxes, following the rule of law, abstaining from unfair competition, and paying decent wages that promote equality. Too many corporations do not behave in this way. They engage in elaborate practices of tax avoidance and even illegal tax evasion. They bend and break laws, or pressurize politicians to change the rules for their commercial advantage. They pursue monopolistic control of the markets they operate in and engage in vicious price 14
The Problem with Woke Capitalism gouging. They pay workers as little as possible, lobbying against fair wages and moving operations around the world to get the cheapest labour possible. On top of all of this, these same corporations can promote themselves as ‘purpose driven’, ‘socially responsible’, ‘stakeholder driven’ and even ‘ethical’. Woke capitalism is an attempt to break the compromise between corporate moral legitimacy and capitalist inequality. Part and parcel of this is the removal of the distinction between the private interests of business and the public interests of the democratic state, such that business can simply appropriate political power for its own purposes. Existing responses to woke capitalism, however, tend towards two dominant, yet opposing, directions. From the right, we have the view that left-wing activists have hoodwinked businesses into supporting progressive politics. Corporate wokeness is slammed as a pathetic form of virtue signalling that is a harbinger of the end of the prosperity afforded by liberal economies. These critics see this woke capitalism as having distorted the true purpose of business. According to this view, woke capitalism should be abandoned and corporations should return to their natural purpose of maximizing shareholder return. Many with more progressive political leanings hold the view that corporations are, and should be, engaging in a new era of enlightened capitalism. Corporations have a social purpose that they should address directly, and business can be a force for good when it comes to the social, political, economic and environmental problems we all face. By this account, the term ‘woke capitalism’ underestimates the morally authentic motives that businesses have when they support progressive political positions. This book advances a third position: that the problem with woke capitalism lies in shifting the balance of power from the political sphere of democracy to the economic sphere of capitalism. To this end, woke capitalism represents the surreptitious extension of capitalism’s reach by backing safe-bet political causes. By adding progressive righteousness to the corporate agenda and image, capitalism is strengthened rather than questioned. If anything, the rise of woke capitalism is a symbol of the vast and growing impact that corporations now have on our everyday life. No longer content to just influence our spending habits and lifestyles, with woke capitalism big businesses enrol the very heart of our moral beliefs into their commercial strategies. This book will explore 15
WOKE CAPITALISM the perils of woke capitalism and what it means for the future of democratic freedom. Across the scope of issues and practices explored throughout these pages, the intention is to prise apart and better understand the origins, workings and weaknesses of woke capitalism. To some this may appear to be a negative or cynical enterprise. It is not intended to be. What is important is that becoming alert to the workings of woke capitalism serves as a warning as to how changes in the behaviour of corporations in recent years pose a deadly threat to the very promise of democracy. This is a promise that political power ought not to be held by the wealthy elite, but by all citizens. It is also a promise of freedom from domination, the right to criticize those who would seek that domination, and the values of solidarity and citizenship. Woke capitalism offers the very opposite as big business and billionaires use their economic might to infiltrate and control the political sphere. In the name of democracy, and for the benefit of the many, woke capitalism must be resisted. 16
2 Corporate Populists I started writing this book in early 2020 as bushfires raged across Australia, the place where I live and work. It was as devastating as it was heart wrenching. More than 1,500 people lost their homes, reduced to ash and rubble by the unrelenting onslaught of flames. Most tragically, 33 people died in the fires themselves,1 with an estimated 417 dying as a result of smoke inhalation.2 The environmental effects were overwhelming. Twelve million acres of land burned, destroying wildlife and natural habitats. An estimated one billion animals were affected.3 So massive were the fires that the smoke was visible over Chile, some 11,000 kilometres away.4 The record-breaking inferno that engulfed Australia was described as a ‘global catastrophe, and a global spectacle’. The images of devastation appeared like scenes from the end of days. It was also as if all of the horrors of climate change we had been warned about had arrived. As reported in the New Statesman, Australia had come to symbolize ‘the extreme edge of a future awaiting us all’ as a result of climate change wrought by the hand of humankind.5 It was international headline news. ‘Australia is burning’ reported The New York Times. ‘Australia orders evacuation of fire-ravaged town’ ran the Times of India. ‘Firefighters battle catastrophic wildfires’ wrote the Financial Times in London. Images of out-of-control blazes, apocalyptic scenes of red skies at noon, and pictures of homes destroyed dominated the television news. It looked and felt like Australia was a war zone. Australia has always had bushfires, but this was different. The events of 2020 confirmed what many had warned of for years. A statement by the Australian Academy of Science laid out the 17
WOKE CAPITALISM facts clearly: ‘The scientific evidence base shows that as the world warms due to human induced climate change, we experience an increase in the frequency and severity of extreme weather events.’6 The process of industrialization driven by the burning of fossil fuels had created global warming, which was a significant contributor to the conditions that enabled the bushfire catastrophe of 2019 and 2020. The Australian government’s inquiry into the bushfires unequivocally reported that ‘it is clear that we should expect fire seasons like 2019–20, or potentially worse, to happen again’.7 If we turn the clock back to less than a year earlier, 15 March 2019 marked the day that 1.4 million children turned out at locations around the world, on ‘strike’ from school in support of action against climate change. Inspired by the unwavering activism of 16-year-old Greta Thunberg, kids from 150 countries joined forces to demand that something be done to save a world that appeared intent on destroying itself.8 In Australia, the strikes were especially targeted at the government’s dismal record of inaction, with many politicians being dyed-in-the-wool climate change deniers. More than 300,000 people participated in the strike across Australia. They carried signs saying ‘why should we go to school if you won’t listen to the educated’, ‘you’ll die of old age, I’ll die of climate change’, and ‘wilful denial of climate facts is a violent act’.9 The Australian prime minister, Scott Morrison, was vocal in his criticism of the strikes. He wanted students to stay in school instead of engaging in democratic protest. His public statement declared: I want children growing up in Australia to feel positive about their future, and I think it is important we give them that confidence that they will not only have a wonderful country and pristine environment to live in, that they will also have an economy to live in as well. I don’t want our children to have anxieties about these issues.10 Downplaying or even denying climate change has long been a refrain around the world, not the least in Australia where coal is a primary export, peaking at A$69.6 billion in 2019.11 Morrison has been centre stage with this for many years. He is infamously 18
Corporate Populists remembered by many for holding up a piece of coal in parliament as a protest against those politicians campaigning for renewable energy. “Don’t be afraid, don’t be scared, it won’t hurt you. It’s coal,” Morrison jibed as his tittering colleagues passed the black lump between them.12 But as the harsh smell of smoke filtered into the houses and offices in Sydney, no one was laughing. Many wondered what kinds of anxieties the youth of Australia must have been feeling as they watched the blaze’s devastating sweep over the country, leaving destruction and death in its wake. What does all of this have to do with ‘woke capitalism’? Woke capitalism, as we have already begun exploring, is a term used to criticize corporations who publicly support ‘progressive’ political causes and take on political roles traditionally reserved for the state. A Pepsi ad featuring the celebrity Kendall Jenner handing out cold cans of cola to police officers during a Black Lives Matter protest was called woke capitalism.13 Walmart CEO Doug McMillon pledging US$100 million of his company’s money to support racial equity has been called woke capitalism.14 Woke capitalism was used to describe the public proclamation by Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, that ‘Capitalism must be modified to do a better job of creating a healthier society, one that is more inclusive and creates more opportunity for more people.’15 That is not, of course, to suggest that all corporations have made a progressive turn in either word or deed. Many have not as they continue their quest for unveiled capitalist accumulation. Nevertheless, there is a significant and observable trend of corporations, especially global ones, going woke. The political causes such corporations have backed include marriage equality, addressing domestic violence, combating sexual harassment, fighting racism, ensuring rights for LGBTQI+ people, promoting equality for people with disabilities, raising awareness about mental illness, and of course action against climate change. It was in the era of woke capitalism that flames were ravaging Australia. The Australian government of the time had long worked hard to downplay or even deny climate change,16 and many corporations supported this. Billionaire mining magnate Gina Rinehart, for example, had not long earlier been revealed as a multi-million-dollar funder of the Institute of Public Affairs, the climate-denying right-wing think tank.17 That said, many other organizations seized on the zeitgeist in calling Australia to arms 19
WOKE CAPITALISM to fight climate change. Rinehart’s mining rival Andrew ‘Twiggy’ Forrest, for example, promised a donation of A$70 million to bushfire relief. While not explicitly linking the fires to climate change, he did go public with the statement: ‘I would like to say, unequivocally, in my view climate change is real. I accept that the warming of our planet is a primary cause of the catastrophic events we have been experiencing.’18 All well and good, until you look the gift horse in the mouth. Of the A$70 million, $10 million went directly to bushfire victims, and the same amount was given to fund an ‘army of helpers’ who would help in the recovery. The remaining $50 million went to research in ‘fire mitigation’ to be conducted by his very own Minderoo Foundation, with questions raised about whether the findings would need to align with their boss’s interests.19 All of a sudden, the donation looked more like an investment. In a telling example of another manifestation of woke capitalism, on 11 January 2020 luxury jewellery company Tiffany & Co. placed full-page advertisements in leading Australian newspapers. Suddenly Tiffany had started to behave like a dyed-in-the-wool climate activist. The ads demanded action from Prime Minister Scott Morrison on climate change. The statement read as follows: WE STAND WITH AUSTRALIA Dear Prime Minister Morrison, As the brave people of Australia continue to battle bushfires that are devastating communities and wildlife, now is the time for bold and decisive climate action. This disaster of climate change is too real, and the threat to our planet and to our children is too great. TIFFANY AND CO.20 Why did Tiffany & Co. do this? It is a prime example of woke capitalism where apparent corporate generosity comes hand-inhand with the pursuit of self-interest, in this case in the form of brazen publicity.21 Head of Tiffany & Co.’s Australian operations, Glen Schlehuber, was clear in expressing how the ad was intended to position his company: ‘I feel very proud to work for 20
Corporate Populists an organization who is willing to stand up and take action on climate change.’22 It would appear that redirecting the company’s advertising spend to a climate-related ad was what he thought constituted political action. It would be easy to be cynical and dismiss this ad as a calculated stunt designed to bolster the Tiffany brand, with politically correct messages positioned as a substitute for real action. Right-wing Australian tabloid The Daily Telegraph ran the headline ‘Posh mineral retailer goes woke’.23 Elsewhere the Australian media claimed that Tiffany and Co.’s ad used ‘the pain and hardship of bushfire victims to sell itself to Australians’.24 While Tiffany and Co. were perhaps the least subtle in expressing their woke corporate activism, they weren’t alone. Billionaire Australian tech entrepreneur Mike Cannon-Brookes of the software company Atlassian openly criticized the government for climate inaction. He also slated Australian businesses that argued that taking severe measures to address climate change would be ‘economy wrecking’.25 Meanwhile, Australian mega mining company Rio Tinto publicly pressurized Australian companies to take a positive stand on climate change advocacy.26 In more direct action, major banks offered grants to customers who had lost their homes, supermarkets delivered water and food to evacuation centres, and phone companies took care of the mobile phone bills of firefighters. This help was most welcome, of course, but it still raises the question of why corporations would act this way. Australia burning was a telling sign of gross political inadequacy. Lack of satisfactory action to combat climate change had made Australia prone to more and bigger fires, and the land finally succumbed to the flames. Woke capitalism is at play when corporations step in, or at least appear to step in, to address inaction on public issues by government; the response to the fires exemplifies this. On the one hand, this can appear as something to be welcomed in the spirit of solidarity and charity bequeathed by corporations and billionaire business owners. On the other hand, we need to ask what the long-term effects of this are on our political system. There was a time where corporations were inextricably associated with right-wing conservatism. Woke capitalism changed all of that with corporations directly and unequivocally touting themselves as progressive and politically active, often with a billionaire CEO as the conspicuous spokesperson cum (political) action hero. 21
WOKE CAPITALISM As we saw in the bushfires, major corporations were taking the type of action once considered the preserve of anti-corporate green activists, as well as bank-rolling activities that many would have expected to be funded by the state. The situation we have arrived at is one where a corporate and managerial overclass is shifting their power base to include not only the economic realm but also the political one.27 A range of questions are left open. Are corporations being authentic in the traditionally left-leaning politics that many of them have started to espouse? Why would organizations start supporting progressive political causes? What changed to make corporations engage in woke agendas? What are the effects of this type of corporate political activism on politics itself? While the fires were still burning, on 21 January 2020 the world’s elite gathered in the Swiss Alpine resort town of Davos. Politicians from around the globe rubbed shoulders with business moguls and high-minded celebrities. Their stated goal was to ‘shape the global, regional and industry agenda’.28 So, what shape were they promoting? They spruiked the importance of ‘stakeholders for a cohesive and sustainable world’. According to The New York Times, ‘Woke capitalism […] was the dominant motif at Davos 2020’.29 The talk at Davos was all about the way that big business should step up to directly address the grand challenges facing the world today, whether that be climate change, inequality, populism or the abuse of big data. And as William Burke-White from US think tank the Brookings Institution surmised: ‘Since governments seem unwilling or unable to address the challenges we face without corporate leadership, power and wealth must be united to drive the changes on which our collective future depends.’30 BurkeWhite’s statement sums up how, under the conditions of woke capitalism, it is big business and their billionaire owners who are called on to define the world’s moral agenda and to address the world’s problems. Little did we know, at the time of the Davos meeting, of the global devastation that was immediately to follow at the hands of COVID-19. What the bushfires showed in Australia was magnified to monstrous proportions by the pandemic. As the world mourned when more than a million people lost their lives to the virus, it became clear that the idea that people can dominate and control nature was an all-too-human hubris. This 22
Corporate Populists is the very arrogance that has defined the direction of humanity since at least the Industrial Revolution. It has also defined what we have come to regard as ‘progress’. The corollary of this ‘myth of progress’, that business corporations can and should harness this power for the good of humanity is as pathetic as it is dangerous. It is a myth that assumes that the human race has the capacity for God-like omnipotence to drive never ending positive development – materially through science and technology, and economically through market capitalism. In 2020, with the rapid human and financial devastation brought on by COVID-19 the promises made at Davos about a ‘better capitalism’ appeared laughable.31 Corporations would back progressive political causes out of genuine concern for others, Davos acolytes and enthusiasts told us. They would take over where governments left off in the provision of public goods, we were promised. So where were these corporations when COVID-19 hit? Were they eager to step up to meet their promised dedication to their stakeholders? Like fair-weather friends, big business did little to make any significant difference. A gesture of BlackRock’s CEO Larry Fink, leader among woke capitalism warriors, was especially telling. Come COVID-19 time, BlackRock’s contribution was to fork out just US$50 million of relief for those affected. Whoever benefited from that would be undoubtedly grateful. Still, it was a financial drop in the ocean for both the multi-trillion-dollar fund management firm or for its billionaire boss. In any case, by mid-2020 BlackRock’s stock price was up 14 per cent from the beginning of the year as a result mainly of multi-billion-dollar government injections into the US securities market.32 Meanwhile, more personally, the financial press heralded Fink as the highest-paid boss in his industry. Already a billionaire, his annual remuneration rose to US$25.3 million. That’s more than 500 times the median salary of workers in the US. This was just one example of how COVID-19 was lining the pockets of the woke elite, while so many regular people joined the breadline. In the lead-up to 2020 Davos meeting, right-wing commentators had been on their soap boxes decrying woke capitalism as a corporate capitulation to the snowflake left. ‘Woke capitalism is our enemy,’ they protested.33 ‘Woke capitalism corrupts business,’ they moaned.34 The conservative media vilified corporations 23
WOKE CAPITALISM for practising ‘corporate socialism’35 or ‘woke capitalism’.36 The claim was that business people should stay focused on the direct pursuit of commercial goals. Messing around with public purpose, political causes and social justice was simply none of their business. Conspiracy theorists asserted that an ‘agenda of the left’ had hijacked the corporate world.37 Others said that corporations had been ‘succumbing to progressive ideologies’.38 The reactionary right portrayed woke corporations as having been infiltrated by latte-drinking snowflake liberals hell-bent on undermining the future of capitalism. If it wasn’t clear before, 2020 showed that the reactionary pundits were wrong. Feel-good corporate self-righteousness did nothing to make any real changes to the heart of capitalism’s agenda; if anything, it strengthened it. Corralling wealth in the direction of the owners of capital remained the name of the game. The response to the COVID-19 crisis was a case in point. Nike, the poster child of woke capitalism, courted controversy in 2018 when it released an ad campaign featuring Colin Kaepernick, the American football player effectively excluded by the professional league for protesting against police killings of African Americans. The ad had an important impact in stimulating public debate about racism and police brutality in the US and around the world. There is more to it than that. It also bolstered Nike’s brand and presaged a US$6 billion increase in the company’s market value.39 By comparison, Nike’s contribution of US$25 million in response to COVID-19 in 2020 was pathetic.40 The list of other global corporate giants making token contributions was pitifully long. Amazon committed US$3.9 million in the UK in March 2020.41 Not bad for a company that had avoided US$100 billion in tax over the previous ten years.42 At the more generous end of the scale, as the pandemic took force the Gates Foundation and Netflix pledged US$100 million each.43 Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook, threw in US$25 million to develop treatments for the virus.44 Such amounts are chump change when it comes to the vastness of corporate wealth. Nike shares soared in price during the pandemic, increasing its market capitalization by 37 per cent to US$215.5 billion by the end of 2020.45 From the beginning of the pandemic to the end of 2020 Mark Zuckerberg’s personal wealth had increased by US$37 billion.46 In any case, corporate 24
Corporate Populists contributions were infinitesimal compared to what was needed to address the health and economic effects of COVID-19. Early analysis estimated that the bill would be at least US$5 trillion in the United States alone.47 There is more to it than that. As equality activist Luke Hildyard said at the time, the types of donations that were being made could also serve to overestimate the generosity of the givers: ‘Very generous individual grants can obscure the fact that on the whole, wealthy people’s charitable giving is pretty minimal. Indeed, studies show that poor people donate more than rich, as a proportion of their income.’48 Regardless of any woke pretensions, COVID-19 was a boon for the billionaire class. While workers suffered job losses, employment insecurity and wage stagnation, the 1 per cent raked it in.49 Oxfam calls it ‘pandemic profiteering’.50 What they were getting at was that: The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the deep systemic inequalities and massive failures in our economic system, leaving tens of millions of people in the United States without jobs, devastating public services, and bankrupting countless small businesses. Yet as we face our deepest economic downturn since the Great Depression, a subset of companies is experiencing dramatic, windfall profits. […] COVID-19 presents us with a choice as a society: Do we want to continue distributing our economic resources to the alreadywealthy and well-connected, or shall we choose to redeploy this money into the once-in-a-century fight against COVID-19 and the inequalities it brings in its wake?51 There were some big winners. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’s wealth grew by US$48 billion between March and June of 2020. Others who benefited significantly include Tesla’s Elon Musk who gained US$7.2 billion, and former Microsoft boss Steve Ballmer’s US$15.7 billion windfall.52 The 634 people on the Forbes annual list of the world’s billionaires increased their wealth by US$685 billion between March and April 2020. That’s up by around 25 per cent to a staggering US$3.7 trillion.53 Overall, the COVID-19 era saw 25
WOKE CAPITALISM the number of billionaires in the world increase to 2,189, as their collective wealth broke all previous records.54 Meanwhile, across the world inequality widened as working people took on more and more debt.55 The fact is that so-called woke capitalists handsomely profited while COVID-19 devastated the economic wellbeing and security of too many working people. This revealed that woke capitalists are not the socialists in disguise that reactionary conservatives accuse them of being. Instead, they represent a very real and dangerous side of contemporary capitalism. By tipping their hats towards progressive causes, billionaires are fast becoming corporate populists, trying to appeal to what they see as a shifting public sentiment. CEOs of major corporations are increasingly wanting to position themselves as good-hearted and socially responsible citizens. This posturing is the perfect distraction. As their wealth increases in a world beset by exacerbating inequality and income insecurity, the CEO billionaires stand proud as they profess deeply caring progressive values. Central to the devastation of COVID-19 was the sudden unemployment that affected so many working people the world over. Where were the woke corporations looking to address the financial catastrophe that so many people experienced? Where were they in building new forms of employment to put people back to work? Nowhere. Much easier to issue left-sounding platitudes and make a few tokenistic donations. That large corporations and their billionaire owners and CEOs achieve massive financial gain from their endeavours might on the surface seem at odds with an espoused social justice agenda.56 After all, inequality is one of the most significant social and political problems of our age.57 Look a little deeper and there is no contradiction. A central characteristic of populist woke capitalism is that it appeals to progressive politics while benefiting from widening economic inequality. Like other kinds of populism, woke capitalism appeals to people’s anxieties. In this case, it is the anxiety that selfish and greedy corporate elites will hoard the world’s wealth for themselves, pillaging a burning planet along the way. The bitter irony is that this appeal is actually helping them to get away with it. Talk of stakeholder inclusion, shared values and compassionate capitalism are misconstrued by many as the shenanigans of a newly left-leaning corporate world. Quite the opposite is true. Corporate 26
Corporate Populists populism is a diversion from what is going on. COVID-19 has magnified how espousing corporate purpose does nothing to curb the scourge of inequality. It makes it worse as the people who adopt it laugh all the way to the bank while sending others to the poorhouse. In 2019, the Business Roundtable (the US club for big-time CEOs) felt it reasonable to proclaim that the purpose of business had fundamentally changed. No longer beholden to shareholder primacy, CEOs were now dedicated radically to all ‘stakeholders’ – ‘customers, employees, suppliers, communities and shareholders’.58 Hmm? That these same CEOs failed to step up in any significant way to help with the COVID-19 crisis demonstrates the poverty of the Roundtable’s sanguine proclamations. That they used the crisis to feather their nests is a cruel and selfish joke. Come troubled times, corporations were lining up the world over crying poor-mouth in the hope of taxpayer-funded coronavirus government bailouts.59 For decades neoliberal dogma had privileged corporations by insisting on small government when it came to corporate regulation, welfare and education. Malignant self-interest is rife when those who fed ferociously from the neoliberal trough were the first in the (corporate) welfare line. The mass layoffs and surging unemployment that resulted from the COVID-19 crisis showed where corporate priorities lie. So did the risk of cashed-up corporates like Apple, Johnson & Johnson and Unilever bolstering their monopoly power by buying up smaller competitors struggling to survive.60 Corporates at the big end of town scrambling for more and more power as the world got sick marked a time not just to deal with COVID-19 but to plan for a different future. The onset of the COVID-19 clearly showed that the neoliberal experiment had failed to prepare the world for a crisis. Corporations might like to talk up their social credibility and political righteousness, but when times get tough they are nowhere to be found. Throughout the crisis, we saw the retreat of corporations and the market and the return of elected governments in setting the conditions for the future welfare of citizens, for better or for worse. The lesson from COVID-19 is that we need to get back to building a future that restores a socially driven democracy for the people. In the hour of COVID-19’s darkness, there arose a need 27
WOKE CAPITALISM to restore hope in a shared prosperity that does not cast its fate in the fickleness of fair-weather friends. What 2020 demonstrated was that woke capitalism is a dangerous trend that poses a real and distinct threat to both the idea and practice of democracy. As corporate power and influence increasingly infiltrate our lives we need to look the gift horse in the mouth and ask what the real effects are of businesses and billionaires claiming that they can, will and should direct the moral and political life of citizens. While it might be hard to refuse these gifts, there is still a need to question what is expected in return. When the answer to that question is that corporate righteousness is a Faustian bargain, whereby we trade away the democratic right to self-governance for gifts that the rich decide to give us, then it is time to resist woke capitalism. 28
3 The Woke Reversal Grammy Award-winning American R&B musician Erykah Badu is largely credited with introducing the word ‘woke’ into contemporary usage. Dubbed the ‘godmother of soul’ by The New Yorker, Badu has a long history of not only selling records in the millions, but also being a role model to others in her industry for her self-styled success and creative independence.1 One of the songs Badu is especially well known for is ‘Master Teacher’ from her fourth album New Amerykah Part One (4th World War), released in February 2008. The song recounts the trials of a woman who wistfully, if not at times hopelessly, asserts ‘a beautiful world I’m trying to find’. The problems are many, she recounts, when ‘yo baby ain’t got no money to support ya baby’, ‘the preacher tell you some lies and cheatin’ on ya mama’. Throughout this dream of a world without poverty, deception and racism, Badu sings the phrase ‘I stay woke’ repeatedly as an echoing conviction of what she aspires to be. As Badu explained later, ‘we say that [woke] means we just pay attention to what’s going on around us, and are not easily swayed by the media, or by the angry mob, or by the group. You know: Stay focused, pay attention.’ Adamant that being woke was about personal awareness rather than judging others, Badu admitted that by the late 2010s its meaning had strayed to become an excuse for a form of righteous abuse.2 By using the phrase ‘stay woke’ Badu joined a long tradition of African American culture that has used the metaphor of being awake to signal a general awareness of one’s sociopolitical context. This chapter traces part of the history of how woke arose from 29
WOKE CAPITALISM the American civil rights movement in the 1960s, to becoming popularized with the Black Lives Matter movement in 2013. It also traces how, in being absorbed into mainstream language, from the mid-2010s the meaning of woke was reversed to being a putdown aimed at vapid politically correct morality. It is in this latter sense that woke capitalism became a term used to refer, usually negatively, to the corporate world’s adoption of public stances on progressive political issues. In 1965, two years after his ‘I have a dream’ speech, Martin Luther King addressed Oberlin College, outlining what needed to be done to win the civil rights argument. This speech was called ‘Remaining Awake through a Great Revolution’.3 King recalled Washington Irving’s short story ‘Rip van Winkle’, published in 1819, but set at the time of the American Revolution. As King recounted it: When Rip Van Winkle went up into the mountain, the sign had a picture of King George the Third of England. When he came down twenty years later the sign had a picture of George Washington, the first president of the United States. When Rip Van Winkle looked up at the picture of George Washington – and looking at the picture he was amazed – he was completely lost. He knew not who he was. What King takes from this is the remarkable idea that someone could not be aware of the significant social and political changes that surrounded them, and by doing so could lose their very sense of identity. More specifically, he took the idea of being awake as a metaphor for social change. It was a way of advising his audience that they should be alert to what was happening with the civil rights movement. Despite ‘living amid a great period of social change,’ King said, some people ‘fail to develop the new attitudes, the new mental responses, that the new situation demands. They end up sleeping through a revolution.’ In the decades that followed the political meaning of being awake remained fairly stable, even though it was not in wide cultural circulation. It still appeared, however, in African American popular culture. In Barry Beckham’s 1971 play Garvey Lives!, about 30
The Woke Reversal Jamaican-born political activist Marcus Garvey, the character Barry Beckham asserts: ‘I been sleeping all my life. And now that Mr. Garvey done woke me up, I’m gon stay woke. An I’m gon help him wake up other black folk.’4 The reference is to Garvey’s post-First World War writings, which advocated for Black unity, emancipation and financial independence from White domination.5 A few years later, in 1975, Teddy Pendergrass’s song ‘Wake Up Everybody’ on the Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes’ hit album, articulated a similar political position. With smooth, soulful sincerity, Pendergrass sang: ‘Wake up everybody […]’, and that the world won’t change unless we change it: ‘you and me’. While its usage remained relatively dormant for some decades, given its legacy in African American culture it is apt that the term ‘woke’ was resurrected as a catchcry for the Black Lives Matter movement that started in 2013. Historian and activist Barbara Ransby explains that Black Lives Matter is a progressive and left movement focused on economic and racial justice, as well as the relationship between them. It is this focus on equality as a fundamental goal that identifies the movement as democratic. This is not the democracy of state institutions; however, it is a democracy that pursues justice and equality by questioning and seeking to reform those institutions. As Ransby articulated, Black Lives Matter offered hope in the ‘radically democratic impulses of inclusivity, non-sectarianism, and collaboration’.6 The Black Lives Matter movement arose in the aftermath of the tragic death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in Sanford, Florida. On 26 February 2012, Martin bought a bottle of iced tea and a packet of Skittles at a 7-Eleven store. He intended to take them as a gift to his father’s fiancée’s young son who lived nearby. Minutes later George Zimmerman, a civilian self-appointed to do neighbourhood watch, shot Martin dead in the chest at pointblank range. Zimmerman had reported Martin, who was wearing a black hooded top, to the police for being ‘suspicious’ minutes earlier. Zimmerman then gave chase and the two got into a physical altercation during which Zimmerman fired a deadly shot at the unarmed Martin.7 Zimmerman was arrested a little more than six weeks later on a charge of second-degree murder, leading to a highly publicized oneand-a-half-year trial. The massive coverage in the media was aided 31
WOKE CAPITALISM by significant support from politicians and celebrities, highlighting racial politics where a Black youth wearing a hoodie was singled out for special attention as being ‘suspicious’.8 The trial was so high profile that then-US president Barack Obama had something to say, commenting ‘when I think about this boy, I think about my own kids […] if I had a son, he’d look like Trayvon Martin’.9 After the prolonged trial, on 13 July 2013 a jury of five White women and one Hispanic woman declared that there was not enough evidence to prove that Zimmerman was guilty of either seconddegree murder, or the lower charge of manslaughter. Outside the courtroom protestors chanted: “No justice, no peace!”10 Support for Black Lives Matter continued to build. On 21 July, just eight days after the verdict, people in more than 100 cities across the US held protests. In New York, Martin’s mother, Sybrina Fulton, was joined by celebrity recording artists Jay-Z and Beyoncé and civil rights leader Al Sharpton. They chanted “No justice, no peace” and “I am Trayvon Martin.” Martin’s father was at the Miami protests. He said to the crowd that he had “come to realize George Zimmerman wasn’t on trial – Trayvon was on trial”.11 President Obama took the opportunity of a speech from the White House to address the issue again: You know, when Trayvon Martin was first shot I said that this could have been my son. Another way of saying that is: Trayvon Martin could have been me 35 years ago […] And when you think about why, in the African American community at least, there’s a lot of pain around what happened here, I think it’s important to recognize that the African American community is looking at this issue through a set of experiences and a history that doesn’t go away. […] There are very few African American men who haven’t had the experience of walking across the street and hearing the locks click on the doors of cars. That happened to me – at least before I was a senator.12 To the surprise of many in Washington, with these statements, Obama weighed in on a debate that was dividing the nation, as the reality of race relations in the US became shockingly transparent. 32
The Woke Reversal Obama’s comments were especially surprising. Throughout his presidency, he had done little to address American racism. He preferred to effectively take a colour-blind approach to his leadership of the American people, while not acting on pressing racial issues ranging from Black incarceration to police violence. Democratic intellectual Cornel West responded to Obama’s public statements in the wake of the Zimmerman acquittal with insightful and unexpurgated criticism. That Obama might identify at some level with Trayvon Martin as an African American is all well and good, West attested. The more important question he asked, however, was: Will that identification hide and conceal the fact there’s a criminal justice system in place that has nearly destroyed two generations of very precious, poor black and brown brothers? He hasn’t said a mumbling word until now. Five years in office and can’t say a word about the new Jim Crow. And at the same time, I think we have to recognize that he has been able to hide and conceal that criminalizing of the black poor.13 Writing in the Black Agenda Report, activist Danny Haiphong confirms that ‘Obama only began to pay attention when the movement for Black Lives forced policing and prisons into the national spotlight’. Effectively, the public backlash against Martin’s killing meant that even the president could no longer stay silent on matters on which he had long kept quiet. Whether Obama had a change of heart, or whether he had simply had enough is a moot point. The fact remains that he was responding to changes in public opinion led from the activist politics of civil society and not from the official political circles of Washington. This was not leadership on Obama’s part, but rather capitulation to a groundswell of public opinion that had been hard fought by activists and protestors.14 Change was happening and the president had to respond, even if just, as Cornel West described it, to ‘contain the rage’ about ‘mistreating poor people across the board, black and brown especially’.15 A quite different political response to Zimmerman’s acquittal was happening in Oakland, California. Alicia Garza, who heard 33
WOKE CAPITALISM the news on television, composed what has been described as a ‘love note to black people’ on Facebook. It read: ‘Black people. I love you. I love us. Our lives matter.’ The post was shared by her friend Patrisse Cullors with the added hashtag #BlackLivesMatter as derived from the original message. The two women joined together with Opal Tometi and created a plan to make America listen to the voices of African Americans. It worked! They established Tumblr and Twitter accounts that were widely used by people sharing and testifying to their experience of why #BlackLivesMatter, as well as organizing protests. Deploying the power of social media Black Lives Matter was beginning to emerge as an engine house for political awareness and solidarity in the face of institutionalized racism. After another unarmed African American teenager, Michael Brown, was shot dead in Ferguson, Missouri, on 9 August 2014, racial tensions in the US became even more emotionally charged. #BlackLivesMatter continued to build momentum as a means through which people could share information about what was going on outside the more formal corporate media outlets.16 Following the killing in Ferguson, demonstrations turned into riots and as the pressure intensified #BlackLivesMatter transformed from a slogan that united protestors into a social movement against the violence and injustice that African Americans faced, especially at the hands of police. Black Lives Matter was a movement that was active in planning and organizing demonstrations on a national basis.17 As Garza, Cullors and Tometi recall on the Black Lives Matter website: It became clear that we needed to continue organizing and building Black power across the country. People were hungry to galvanize their communities to end state-sanctioned violence against Black people, the way Ferguson organizers and allies were doing. Soon we created the Black Lives Matter Global Network infrastructure. It is adaptive and decentralized, with a set of guiding principles. Our goal is to support the development of new Black leaders, as well as create a network where Black people feel empowered to determine our destinies in our communities.18 34
The Woke Reversal There was also another key hashtag to the Black Lives Matter movement, and it came from the term ‘stay woke’ that Erykah Badu had been singing five years earlier. #StayWoke became a way to identify solidarity in the movement’s political struggle. #StayWoke’s meaning was culturally traceable to Martin Luther King Jr’s ‘Remaining Awake through a Great Revolution’ speech. It referred to a political consciousness that implored African Americans ‘to remain aware of what is going on around you and in society, more specifically, to remain politically aware or conscious’.19 Even more precisely, it meant ‘stay conscious of the apparatus of white supremacy, don’t automatically accept the official explanations for police violence, keep safe’.20 The idea of staying woke soon became part of more mainstream American culture. The American Dialect Society declared woke as the slang word of the year for 2016, noting ‘its status as an item of longstanding African American usage’. 21 Their definition was: ‘conscious, aware or enlightened, esp with regards to matters of social justice and racial inequity; freq in stay woke’.22 In the same year woke made it to the MTV list of ‘10 words you should know in 2016’. They offered a more general definition: ‘being aware – specifically in reference to current events and cultural issues’.23 Mainstreaming was especially evident when, in 2015, Buzzfeed published an article heralding popular television series ‘Orange is the New Black’ actor Matt McGorry as being ‘so bae and so woke’. If you haven’t come across the word ‘bae’ it is early 21st-century slang for a girlfriend or boyfriend, or more generally for a sexually alluring person. Why was McGorry a woke bae? Not just because he was strikingly attractive. He also publicly declared his support for the Black Lives Matter movement, wrote an article in Cosmopolitan about becoming a feminist, and acknowledged his privilege as a straight White man.24 In 2016, Kara Brown published a series of pieces on the feminist website Jezebel listing and describing ‘some of the men who displayed their best and wokest selves’.25 The ‘baes’ in question were calling out racism, supporting diversity, and going public on women’s rights. These references to being woke stayed true to the original meaning as it emerged from the Black Lives Matter movement, albeit in a more frivolous manner. It did not take long, however, for #StayWoke, as a symbol of political awareness and unification 35
WOKE CAPITALISM of African Americans against systemic racism and racist violence, to be appropriated by wider American society for entirely different purposes. Initially, the call to stay woke extended to mean an awareness of social injustice in general, rather than being restricted to racism and police violence against African Americans. But by 2015 and 2016 the term ‘woke’ was also being used to criticize people, especially White people, who bragged about their selfrighteous positions on political issues.26 The use of this terminology was built on an already established cultural trend that called out political hypocrisy among elites. In a book published in 2000, Bobos in Paradise,27 for example, David Brooks humorously depicted what he saw as a new class of people who combined the values of the bohemian with those of the bourgeoisie. By Brooks’ account, counter-culture hippies and capitalist success could go hand in hand in the 21st century. For Brooks, this was not so much political as it was cultural, as a new breed of success-hungry entrepreneurs turned to the creative bohemian tradition as a means to boost their ability to build their wealth. The bobos marked the apogee of what Thomas Frank identified as the ‘conquest of cool’. With this term, he denotes how the business world had, progressively from the 1960s, adopted culturally radical dispositions to fuel its own economic and politically conservative agendas. As Frank commented back in 1997: Nike shoes are sold to the accompaniment of words delivered by William S. Burroughs and songs by The Beatles, Iggy Pop, and Gil Scott Heron (‘the revolution will not be televised’); peace symbols decorate a line of cigarettes manufactured by R. J. Reynolds and the walls and windows of Starbucks coffee shops nationwide; the products of Apple, IBM, and Microsoft are touted as devices of liberation; and advertising across the product category spectrum calls upon consumers to break rules and find themselves.28 What both Brooks and Frank identified was the way that 1960s counter-cultures had effectively been depoliticized such that they could be adopted as corporate and middle-class-friendly fashions. 36
The Woke Reversal In effect, the rebelliousness and non-conformism of a previous age had been fully incorporated into a corporate-led consumer society. In so doing, cultural insurgence had become nothing more than a fashionable selling point for big business.29 The adoption of the term ‘woke’ marks a cultural recognition of and resistance to the ‘conquest of cool’, especially when that coolness is associated with political progressivism. To call out a person or a corporation as being woke is a way of saying that they are either deliberately insincere, or have been ignorantly manipulated in their holding of particular political views. In one sense anti-wokeness emerged as a backlash against the conquest of cool, at least insofar as left politics is seen as part of that coolness. Anti-wokeness marks a double hit when it comes to appropriating and diluting left positions. With the first hit, the value of progressive politics is diminished because it becomes seen as something that can be adopted fashionably and superficially by both individuals and corporations. With the second hit, the sincere basis of progressive politics can be vilified by its opponents by criticizing those who adopt those politics either partially or insincerely (or by claiming that anyone else who espouses such politics must be similarly insincere). Why exactly the term ‘woke’ was the one used to describe such a reactionary position is unclear. What we do know, however, is that it follows an age-old historical trend of cultural and linguistic transmission from Black American culture to mainstream culture. As Elijah Watson describes it, ‘like anything created by black people, the phrase was appropriated by the masses, transformed into a trend term before ultimately mutating into a meme and becoming a form of irony’.30 Social media played a key part, enabling the global dissemination of the word. By 2014, woke started being used to refer to political positions outside Black Lives Matter. While the meaning of woke remained one of political vigilance, it was cynically adapted to reactionary political statements such as #AllLivesMatter as well as to insignificant if not petty things.31 Business was central to this, as the activist and cultural commentator Sam Whiteout observes: Companies and brands and celebrities recognize that, particularly on social media platforms, doing good is 37
WOKE CAPITALISM powerfully attractive to people, which makes being woke marketable and profitable. As with anything that scales up to the so-called mainstream, aka white pop culture, this presents complications. And as expected, there are examples that run the gamut from brilliant modes of leveraging the social clout of wokeness to do good to gross and obvious attempts to profit off wokeness.32 The idea of profiting from wokeness was key to the transformation of its meaning. Essentially, woke transmuted from being a political call for self-awareness through solidarity in the face of massive racial injustice, to being an identity marker for self-righteousness. Whether it be personal self-interest or corporate self-interest, woke became ‘all about me’. Emerging from its initial popularization, from 2015 the ironic use of ‘the woke’ emerged as a way of making fun of progressive politics. At a time when right-wing populism had built itself on a platform against ‘political correctness’ and the assumed dominance of progressive politics in certain parts of the media and culture industries, the term ‘woke’ may well have simply been a convenient label to misappropriate. Whatever the case, the reversal of the meaning of woke is a blatant form of cultural appropriation where the African American vernacular is wrenched out of context and used for purposes for which it was never intended. Writing in the online creative and cultural platform GRIOT, Celine Angbeletchy explains that it is the spread of language through social media that has allowed the word ‘woke’ to be so distorted and misinterpreted. This leads her to ask: ‘has the Internet Era sparked the “awakening” of the masses – with special regards to racism and racial historical discrimination – or has it prevented it by juxtaposing the concept to mundane or ridiculous trends?’33 For the most part, it would seem that the latter is true. This is a great misfortune. An opportunity for the broader population to be engaged in an awareness of the lived realities of American racial politics has been lost. The reversal of the meaning of the word ‘woke’ as a means to mock a vacuous politically correct morality is a blatant distortion of the democratic potential of the original #StayWoke. Celebrities are perhaps the most visible when it comes to being called out as 38
The Woke Reversal woke in its reversed meaning. A startling example of this happened in January 2020 when Ricky Gervais hosted the Golden Globes Awards ceremony. His approach was to introduce the event by roasting and insulting the assembled celebrities who were eager to find out who would win the Tinsel Town accolades. Gervais held nothing back. He made jokes about celebrities’ friendships with infamous child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. He jibed Hollywood executives for being afraid of being identified as abusing their power for sex. He condemned the Hollywood foreign press, who were hosting the event, as being racist. Then, in conclusion to the opening speech, he harangued the celebrities for being woke hypocrites: ‘You say you’re woke, but the companies you work for. I mean, unbelievable: Apple, Amazon, Disney. If Isis started a streaming service, you’d call your agent, wouldn’t you? So if you do win an award tonight, please don’t use it as a platform to make a political speech. You’re in no position to lecture the public about anything. You know nothing about the real world. Most of you spent less time in school than Greta Thunberg. So if you win, come up, accept your little award, thank your agent and your God and fuck off.’34 The press lapped it up, applauding Gervais for ‘bursting the woke bubble’,35 exposing ‘Hollywood’s “woke” culture’,36 and slamming ‘woke Hollywood’s sanctimony’.37 The support that Gervais received was notable for its deep political conservatism. Even the American evangelical news outlet The Christian Post got in on the act, cheering Gervais ‘for courageously “speaking truth” to power and by “taking a massive dump” on Hollywood elites for their hypocritical “woke” culture’.38 This echoed a spirit of populism that supported Donald Trump’s ascendancy to the US presidency just a few years earlier. Combined with a more general political zeitgeist of ‘right-wing incivility’, this amounts to the idea that smugly and viciously insulting people for their progressive political positions is socially acceptable, if not desirable. Defended as a form of truth telling, for the anti-woke right, freedom of speech translates as the freedom to attack those who disagree with them.39 39
WOKE CAPITALISM Perhaps the most telling comment came from Piers Morgan, the British broadcaster and journalist well known for his conservative, if not reactionary, political positions. Writing in the right-wing British tabloid The Daily Mail, Morgan congratulated Gervais for attacking the fake wokery of Hollywood. He took pleasure in noting how Gervais had punched ‘a gigantic crater in the absurdly two-faced PC-crazed balloon that infests modern Hollywood’. Woke culture, according to Morgan, was to be condemned on account of its political positions, with the woke being castigated as left-wing idiots: an ‘intolerant radical liberal mob intent on sucking every ounce of freedom and joy out of life’. Gervais, on the contrary, was described by Morgan as a ‘shining shaft of free speech’, a conservative icon. Hollywood celebrities and media personalities taking shots at each other for their wokeness? Right-wing commentators encouraging making fun of famous people for the assumed hypocrisy of their public moral positions? We are a far, far cry here from the solidarity and strength of the Black Lives Matter movement that first claimed the political strength of staying woke. The radical democratic politics that invigorated Black Lives Matter was reduced to a tit-for-tat conservative stoush over celebrity moral positioning. In reality, however, Black Lives Matter was ‘radical democracy in action’, which included its way of organizing. Staying woke was something that everybody in the movement needed to contribute to and take ownership of, rather than being told what to do by authority figures. As Barbara Ransby explains, staying woke was a form of organization based on the idea that the ‘top-down, male-centered, charismatic model of leadership [was] a political dead end’, which disempowered the poor, the working class and women. In contrast, the group-based leadership of the movement eschews the leader-as-saviour model in favour of a democratic form of collective responsibility.40 Emerging from a radical democracy activated through open dissent to an unjust sociopolitical system centrally that is characterized by the oppression and domination of African Americans, woke was a call for equality and justice that has been wilfully twisted through its popularization. What was rooted in a politically switched-on, community-led and solidarity-based political practice became transformed into a hollow shell of self40
The Woke Reversal important and individualized righteousness. In their book Stay Woke: A People’s Guide to Making All Black Lives Matter, Professors Tehama Lopez Bunyasi and Candis Watts Smith clearly distinguish between the original and reversed meaning of woke. They implore us to ‘beware of woker-than-thou-itis’: Striving to be educated around issues of social justice is laudable and moral, but striving to be recognized by others as a woke individual is self-serving and misguided. So, to those of you who are making a competition out of racial consciousness and progressive politicking, please get over yourself! […] Let us all […] orient ourselves to advocate passionately, and in the spirit of the collective.41 It is this reversed, conservative sense of the word ‘woke’, the same one that Gervais used against his star-studded Golden Globe audience, that is deployed when woke is applied to corporations and to capitalism more broadly. It is also the same form of conservative backlash that condemns woke capitalism as being a shallow morality. The difference is that while Gervais seemed to hold genuine contempt for the celebrities, the conservative scorn for woke capitalism is based on a desire for a more ‘real’ capitalism where corporations would return to the primary goal of making money. The conservative ideal that is used to criticize woke capitalism desires a return to a political and economic order when corporations were not tainted by association with political causes identified with progressive and left-wing politics. Reflecting on this nostalgic longing raises the question of whether woke capitalism is a corporate betrayal of the left, as conservative critics assume, or a corporate appropriation of progressive causes for the purpose of building an even stronger and more powerful corporate capitalist system. Either way, the progressive and emancipatory politics that first inspired people to ‘stay woke’ is reversed and threatened in a world where economic interests take precedence over political convictions rooted in justice and equality. 41
4 Capitalism Goes Woke It is difficult to pinpoint precisely when the term ‘woke’ came to be associated with corporate activity and capitalism more generally. One of the earliest examples came from The New York Times columnist Ross Douthat in 2018.1 Douthat was responding to what he saw as changes to corporate America that had emerged since the election of Donald Trump as president of the United States. Gun control was a case in point, especially as it related to Trump’s lack of action in response to events such as the shooting at the Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, which left 17 people dead on 14 February 2018. Trump offered the usual thoughts and prayers to the victims, effectively resisting any substantial change to gun control laws.2 While Trump failed to respond to calls to condemn the position of the powerful gun lobby group the National Rifle Association (NRA), the same was not the case for corporate America. More than 20 corporations dissociated themselves from the NRA, especially by withdrawing discount programmes for NRA members.3 Douthat has suggested two possible explanations for the type of corporate engagement in politics that was seen in the aftermath of the Parkland shooting. The first was that changing public opinion, together with Trump’s regressive approach to issues such as gun control, transgender rights and immigration, had prompted corporations to develop a genuine conscience. The second was that corporations were playing a trick on the public by appearing progressive to the public eye while benefiting handsomely from Trump’s right-wing economic policies, especially corporate tax cuts. Douthat was less than sanguine in his assessment, arguing that: 42
Capitalism Goes Woke Corporate activism on social issues isn’t in tension with corporate self-interest on tax policy and corporate stinginess in paychecks. Rather, the activism increasingly exists to protect the self-interest and the stinginess – to justify the ways of C.E.O.s to cultural power brokers, so that those same power brokers will leave them alone (and forgive their support for Trump’s economic agenda) in realms that matter more to the corporate bottom line.4 Douthat submitted that corporations were engaging in a ‘performative wokeness’. By this, he meant that corporations were using woke causes to manipulate the political system in their own favour. Going woke was a much subtler strategy than direct corporate lobbying. It involved becoming associated with progressive and left-activist political and social causes so that governments would be less likely to increase taxes or force regulation on the corporations themselves. While Douthat did not necessarily doubt the sincerity of the corporate employees behind the woke campaigns, he also observed that woke corporate behaviour generally operated on the fringe of corporate activity without affecting the core business. Nevertheless, he asserted that brand identification was powerful enough to mean that corporations could offer a viable alternative for the collective values that had been decimated through a hollowing out of contemporary American community life.5 Douthat’s article suggested a fundamental shift in the relationship between business, politics and society. What he foresaw was how corporations were using their significant financial and cultural power to weigh in on political issues. Moreover, they were doing this as part of an each-way bet where they could profit from economic windfalls of right-wing economic policy, while also benefiting from the cultural legitimacy afforded by being associated with ‘good’ progressive causes. There was much more going on here than corporations simply being hoodwinked by persuasive progressives pressurizing them into adopting their causes. Writing in The Atlantic, Derek Thomson saw this move as a significant pivot point in US politics. As he described it: It would be easy to write off this moment by saying these companies are simply reacting to an online mob, 43
WOKE CAPITALISM or following each other like lemmings. But the fact that companies, rather than Congress or the courts, are shifting in response to political activism in the United States says something profound – about American tribalism, the demise of political cooperation, and the rise of a sort of liberal corporatocracy.6 What this means is that woke capitalism is not just about corporations behaving like do-gooding snowflake lefties. Instead, they are playing hardball by working to seize political power from the institutions of democracy, those very institutions that Trump had been consistently undermining throughout his presidency. Corporations pounced on this opportunity, eager to fill the void that Trumpism was recklessly creating. But how did we get to this point? Is woke capitalism the kind of fundamental change in corporate behaviour that pundits such as Douthat and Thompson have suggested? To address these questions, we need to look back to debates about social responsibility from the 1950s and 1960s, the terms of which set the scene for today’s woke capitalism. The similarities between the rhetoric of mid-20th-century American social responsibility and that of early 21st-century global woke capitalism are remarkable. Historically, however, they emerged under very different conditions. Social responsibility arose in an era of shared prosperity and increasing living standards, while woke capitalism was created at a time when inequality was widening significantly. The implications of this have serious consequences. The injustices created by our present economic system are being criticized by the very people who benefit from them the most – the business prime movers adopting the high moral ground on progressive political issues. As Thomas Piketty7 has convincingly argued, the increasing concentration of wealth in the hands of the few has deleterious consequences for social and political harmony. While Piketty proposes a defensible solution of progressive taxation and wealth distribution, woke capitalism offers a different answer: retain the inequalities and control them through political influence and the moralization of the corporation itself. A good starting point to understand how we got to the current state of affairs is to go back to 1953 when Howard R. Bowen published a book called Social Responsibilities of the Businessman.8 44
Capitalism Goes Woke At the time, social responsibility was already a contentious topic of discussion that had been growing since the early 20th century. This was a response to what, at around the same time, Morrell Heald referred to as ‘the inhuman offspring of greed and irresponsibility’.9 As early as 1902 William J. Ghent had identified capitalism as creating a ‘benevolent feudalism’ that involved ‘conspicuous giving […] always shrewdly disposed with an eye to the allayment of pain and the quieting of discontent’.10 This reflected a more general trend to ‘humanize’ corporations and capitalism in the first half of the 20th century. Building on these developments in business practice, Bowen was the first person to address the specific topic of social responsibility explicitly and comprehensively. Bowen made clear from the outset that the idea that businesses have social responsibilities was about the effective operation of capitalism, understood as the ‘role of businessmen [sic] in an economy of free enterprise’.11 Bowen acknowledged the increasing power and influence of business on American life in the 1950s and saw this as the basis of why social responsibility was important. In his words, ‘The decisions and actions of the businessman have a direct bearing on the quality of our lives and personalities. His decisions affect not only himself, his stockholders, his immediate workers, or his customers – they affect the lives and fortunes of us all.’12 Bowen’s version of social responsibility did not attend to the same kinds of progressive political causes associated with woke capitalism today, however. For him, social responsibility was much more about business activity itself. The dimensions of business he saw as attracting social responsibility included employment, economic growth, income distribution, product availability, industrial organization, labour-management relations, worker satisfaction, resource utilization, international relations and national culture. In all of Bowen’s considerations, power was central. He asked whether corporations have a responsibility to society as well as to shareholders, given the substantial growth in the power and influence of business. For Bowen, the answer was a resounding ‘yes’. He added that this was the prevailing view of the business people of his time. He wrote: ‘It is becoming increasingly obvious that a freedom of choice and delegation of power such as businessmen exercise would hardly be permitted to continue without some assumption of social responsibility’.13 45
WOKE CAPITALISM Bowen’s statement reflects a slippage of reasoning. On the one hand, businesses should take up social responsibility because the power that they hold means they have a moral obligation to do so. On the other hand, businesses should take social responsibility because if they do not corporate power might be brought into question and possibly diminished. It is this disjuncture and coexistence of a moral argument for social responsibility and a case based on the preservation of corporate power that still dogs corporate social responsibility today, especially in the form of woke capitalism. The terms have changed, as have the sociopolitical dimensions of business attended to. Still, the crux of the issue remains the maintenance of the social legitimacy of corporate capitalism and the attendant power of individual corporations. The more common terminology nowadays is ‘social licence to operate’, understood in terms of corporations requiring broad public approval for their undertakings to avoid public conflict that might be detrimental to the achievement of business objectives.14 In other words, businesses adopt social responsibilities and support social causes to advance their interests, while ostensibly presenting themselves as being interested in the wellbeing of others. Bowen situated his argument for social responsibility in the history of corporate regulation. He described very clearly how such regulation had developed from the 19th century to address the problems that arose from a laissez-faire economic system. The right to unionize, labour laws, anti-monopoly legislation, the formation of public utilities, social security, health and safety regulation, free public education and progressive taxation were all named by Bowen as ways that government had intervened to ensure that capitalist business activity did not harm the public good. Bowen worried that government intervention into business had gone so far that it was threatening free market capitalism itself. By the 1950s, he argued: We have reached a point […] from which the continued burgeoning of controls by government and by organized economic groups could lead us to some form of state socialism. The continuation of well-established trends toward greater government control might jeopardize our essential freedoms and curtail the spirit of enterprise, 46
Capitalism Goes Woke of initiative, of productivity, and of freedom that has distinguished American economic life.15 What we see here is that as much as it might have been presented in terms of moral requirements to address social needs, businesses taking on social responsibility was primarily a defensive tactic to ward off what was seen as a real threat of socialism. Effectively, this promised that if businesses would manage their social responsibilities, then government would no longer have to intervene to coerce them to produce fair outcomes for all members of society. At the same time, Bowen noted that leading up to the 1950s social attitudes in the US were changing, with much greater belief in social justice and care for humanity. Changing public expectations, the growth of trade unions, improved education and the professionalization of management notwithstanding, behind the adoption of social responsibility by business was ‘the tacit threat of further control by government or labor’,16 Bowen argued. The social responsibility of business was, at its core, an anti-socialist movement. We need to be clear here that from the outset the adoption of social responsibility by business was always a project designed to strengthen the capitalist economic system, no matter how dressed up it is in leftie-sounding good causes. Bowen was explicit in associating social responsibility with the perpetuation of corporate power and self-determination within a capitalist economy. Just as happens now with woke capitalism, critics of the day often failed to see this, instead accusing supporters of social responsibility of being feeble-minded do-gooders who were distracted from the true vocation of business. In 1958, management consultant Theodore Levitt penned a scathing parody in Harvard Business Review about how corporate executives were being ‘taken in by pretty words and soft ideas’. He mockingly wrote: Concern with management’s social responsibility has become more than a Philistinic form of self-flattery practiced at an occasional community chest banquet or at a news conference celebrating a ‘selfless example of corporate giving’ to some undeserving little college in Podunk. It has become more than merely intoning 47
WOKE CAPITALISM the pious declarations of Christian brotherhood which some hotshot public relations man has pressed into the outstretched hands of the company president who is rushing from an executive committee meeting to a League of Women Voters luncheon. It has become a deadly serious occupation – the self-conscious soulsearching preoccupation with the social responsibilities of business.17 Levitt invoked a tone of elitism and misogyny as he dismissed social responsibility as being superficial and womanish, unbefitting the manly pursuit of business. If the language of the 2020s were available to him, no doubt he would have invoked terms such as snowflake, virtue-signaller, cuck or libtard to describe the advocates of social responsibility. These were the people he so clearly despised as inferior to his self-exalted status. ‘The business of business is profits,’18 Levitt retorted. While Bowen saw social responsibility as a defence against centralized state power, Levitt called it out as its harbinger. Moreover, this would not arrive through democratic government but on the wheels of a new form of ‘corporate statesmanship’. This was a dystopia, Levitt averred, where the corporation in its growing social power would return society to a kind of undemocratic feudalism. The arguments represented by both Bowen and Levitt, as they were circulating in mid-20th-century America, shared a conviction that the free enterprise capitalist system needed to be preserved and celebrated. Their differences lay in the means through which this could be done. From one point of view, social responsibility would shore up capitalism’s public legitimacy. From the other, social responsibility was an abrogation of the central purpose and functioning of capitalist enterprises. It is this latter view that was most famously articulated by the University of Chicago professor Milton Friedman in his 1962 book Capitalism and Freedom.19 Friedman acknowledged that the idea of business leaders having a social responsibility beyond their responsibilities to shareholders had become increasingly widespread. His opposition to this was unequivocal, describing it as a ‘fundamental misconception of the character and nature of a free economy’.20 He went on to issue his most famous credo and the one that has been a go-to catchcry for 48
Capitalism Goes Woke unreconstructed capitalists ever since. Friedman’s doctrine is still wheeled out to this day as a way of criticizing woke capitalism:21 There is only one social responsibility of business – to use its resources and engage in activities designed to increase its profits so long as it stays within the rules of the game, which is to say, engages in open and free competition, without deception or fraud.22 Friedman invoked the even more famous economist, Adam Smith. Friedman concurred with Smith that in pursuing profitability for the direct benefit of the owners of capital, managers would be moved as if by an ‘invisible hand’ to produce better outcomes for society, even if they never intended to do so. For Friedman, social responsibility subverted and distorted the fundamental principle of self-interest that he saw as animating capitalism. Capitalism required a strict division between public and private interests. In this view, corporations should operate only in the private interests of shareholders and not trouble themselves with politics. As much as Friedman promoted the economic freedom of the corporation, he also sought to preserve democracy. The reason that Friedman decried social responsibility as being subversive is because it is not a corporation’s place to interfere in the social realm. Friedman asked: ‘Can self-selected private individuals decide what the social interest is? Can they decide how great a burden they are justified in placing on themselves or on their stockholders to serve that public interest?’23 Such functions, Friedman declared, are the responsibility of elected officials who represent the people, and business should keep its nose out. Friedman’s faith in laissez-faire capitalism supported by a strict demarcation between the economic and political spheres was far from ubiquitous at the time. As William C. Frederick24 argued in California Management Review in 1960, the post-war interest in social responsibility resulted from a collapse of the laissezfaire system from the beginning of the 20th century. Whether it be Soviet communism, Italian fascism, German Nazism or the American New Deal, Frederick conceded that the early decades of the 20th century had seen a global transformation away from capitalism and towards central economic planning. Frederick noted 49
WOKE CAPITALISM that concomitant with this was the growth of large and powerful corporations run by professional managers. He argued that these power shifts meant that Smith’s invisible hand was no longer functioning in the way that Friedman assumed. Why? Because the flow of the free market system was interrupted by the interference of politicians and managers. Frederick saw social responsibility as an intervention that could restore the social benefits of the invisible hand, in a sense by making it deliberate and visible. He observed that a central tenet of the doctrine of social responsibility was: The deliberate and voluntary assumption of public responsibility by corporate managers, even though at times such a trusteeship might cause a managerial group to forego immediate profits for the sake of the public good. Management, according to this concept, has a multiplicity of obligations – to the stockholders, to the employees, and to the public at large.25 What is remarkable is how this argument from management theory in the mid-20th-century United States so closely resembles today’s globalized woke capitalism. The common claim is that business will engage in socially responsible acts out of a genuine sense of civic duty and moral commitment to others. By way of example, we can look again at the Business Roundtable’s 2019 ‘Statement on the purpose of a corporation’. The statement specified that corporations should no longer be exclusively dedicated to the interests of shareholders. They should ‘share a fundamental commitment to all of our stakeholders’, by ‘delivering value to our customers’, ‘investing in our employees’, ‘dealing fairly and ethically with our suppliers’, ‘supporting the communities in which we work’ as well as ‘generating long-term value for shareholders’.26 As could be expected, this statement quickly became associated with woke capitalism. Writing in the Telegraph, Linda-Eling Lee commented: ‘Whilst the ideas behind stakeholder capitalism aren’t new, the growing number of business leaders pledging fidelity to the manifesto indicates a new sensitivity among global elites, if not yet a new chapter in “woke” capitalism.’27 Not new indeed. The debates from the US in the 1950s and 1960s were being repeated in the same terms almost seventy years later. 50
Capitalism Goes Woke What also still holds is Frederick’s argument against the assumption that businesses are interested in social responsibility out of some sense of quasi-religious morality or voluntary trusteeship of the public interest. While Friedman made the descriptive observation that business should pursue profit as its principal objective, Frederick made the argument that they would do so irrespective of their attestation to social responsibility. He argued that it is ignorant to expect that the ‘essentially materialist and self-seeking basis of business enterprise as it emerged in Western culture’28 would suddenly dissipate. He proposed that it was ‘preposterously naïve’29 to assume that, within a capitalist system, we can simply escape from the ‘very powerful motive of private gain and profit’.30 The same criticism applies to the Business Roundtable’s statement of the purpose of the corporation, as well as to woke capitalism more generally: one would have to be truly gullible to believe that the capitalist leopard has changed its spots. Coming back to the mid-century United States, there was still a widespread belief that there had been a fundamental shift in social expectations and business attitudes. Keith Davis, a management professor who would go on to become one of the founding theorists of corporate social responsibility, wrote in 1960 that ‘as our culture changes, it is appropriate – even mandatory – that businessmen re-examine their role and the functions of businesses in society’.31 Like others before him, Davis emphasized power. He argued that the growing size and influence of corporations implied that they had an obligation to take on responsibility for the full implications of their actions beyond business matters. The motive, however, is not the form of moralism that Frederick saw as naive, but rather a more sophisticated mode of self-interest. This is the same kind of self-interest that Douthat was commenting on when he first used the term ‘woke capitalism’, and that Bowen defended in explicating social responsibility. Davis described this as follows: To the extent that businessmen do not accept social responsibility opportunities as they arise, other groups will step in to assume these responsibilities. Historically government and labor have been most active in the role of diluting business power, and probably they will continue to be the principal challenging groups. 51
WOKE CAPITALISM I am not proposing that this should happen, but on the basis of the evidence, it appears that this will tend to happen to the extent that businessmen do not keep their social responsibilities approximately equal to their social power.32 As Davis wrote sometime later in a 1967 article in Business Horizons,33 politics was a major reason that businesses had become interested in social responsibility. Most significantly this was in the form of a fear that government would instil restrictive forms of control and deregulation over corporate activity. Social responsibility would forestall ‘giving government […] cause to intervene’. While Davis’s arguments were not entirely novel, what was new was that he offered them as a direct rebuke to Milton Friedman’s criticisms in Capitalism and Freedom. Davis argued that the Friedmanite doctrine that the only responsibility of business was to maximize profit essentially assumed a free market system of pure competition. In such a system, power is accorded to the market rather than to the actors in it. Acknowledging that perfect competition did not characterize the capitalism contemporary to his time, Davis argued that businesses, especially large ones, had developed to have considerable amounts of both economic and social power. Davis invoked what he now called the ‘“Iron Law of Responsibility”: those who do not take responsibility for their power ultimately shall lose it’.34 In other words, taking on social responsibility is in the interest of corporations, at least insofar as the maintenance of power is part of that interest. Davis remained sanguine about this social power. By the early 1970s, he was confident that the question of social responsibility for business had already been decided in the US and most other economically developed nations. What was the decision? That ‘society wants business as well as all other major institutions to assume significant social responsibility’ and that ‘social responsibility has become that hallmark of a mature, global civilization’.35 As we have seen, the parallels of the debates about social responsibility in the 1950s and 1960s and the debates about woke capitalism today appear eerily similar. On the one hand, we have a purely economic argument that business’s direct responsibilities 52
Capitalism Goes Woke are only to shareholders. By this account, corporations that interfere in social issues are effectively overstepping their authority by influencing that which should be democratically controlled. On the other hand, we have the social responsibility argument that proposes that the expansion of corporate power has meant that the responsibility of corporations has increased. Moreover, if corporations wish to retain that power, for the sake of long-term profitability, they should engage in socially responsible activities. Despite the similarities in the rhetoric of social responsibility and woke capitalism, as pointed to earlier, there are also some crucial differences. The burgeoning theories of social responsibility from the mid-20th century on were limited mainly to the US and occurred alongside a period of significant economic growth. In a 1971 report called Social Responsibilities of Business Corporations, the Committee for Economic Development set out what it saw as ‘a fresh and enlightened point of view about the role of business as an important instrument for social progress in our pluralistic society’.36 The ‘enlightened self-interest’ of corporations that the report’s authors attested to came at a time of significant economic growth in the US. Moreover, this growth was shared across society. As the report states: American business has provided increasing employment, rising wages and salaries, employee benefit plans, and expanding career opportunities for a labor force […] Most important, the rising standard of living of the Average American family has enabled more and more citizens to develop their lives as they wish with less and less constraint imposed on them by economic need. Thus, most Americans have been able to afford better health, food, clothing, shelter and education than the citizens of any other nation have ever achieved on such a large scale.37 This period of post-war prosperity and baby boom optimism was one where the idea of corporations being socially responsible would have had a particular resonance. The success of those corporations was widely accepted as the reason for vastly improved living standards. But the conditions of the mid-20th-century 53
WOKE CAPITALISM United States are a far cry from the context in which woke capitalism has emerged. For one, woke capitalism is a much more global phenomenon, especially in relation to the participation of multi-national corporations in the woke agenda. The much more significant contrast, however, is that we are now in a time of persistent and widening inequality that, even in the US, is eroding the middle-class affluence that provided the context for the growth of the acceptance of corporate responsibility generations earlier. In today’s US, three people – investor Warren Buffett, Microsoft’s Bill Gates and Amazon’s Jeff Bezos – hold as much personal wealth as the bottom half of all Americans. It’s been getting worse. Today the richest American is worth more than 20 times the richest American was worth in the early 1980s. Widening inequality is not just happening in the US; it is a global phenomenon. The richest 1 per cent of the world’s population owns almost half of the world’s wealth. The inequality is even starker if we compare the wealth of individuals to that of countries. The ten richest people in the world have a combined wealth of US$745 billion. That is more than the individual GDP of Switzerland, Sweden, Thailand or Argentina.38 The reality is that over the past 40 years, inequality has become progressively worse all over the world, effectively ending the liberal democratic promise of shared prosperity that characterized the post-war period.39 The obscenity of inequality in today’s world has become so extreme that philosopher Frédéric Gros refers to ours as an ‘age of indecency’.40 Gros uses the word ‘indecency’ to draw attention to how ‘injustice’ is no longer an adequate term to describe the inequalities present in today’s world. He explains: The remuneration of the heads of large firms, the payments of the sports celebrities in the media, the emoluments of artists, have become obscene. Inequalities have reached the point at which they could only be justified by the assumption of two different humanities.41 The two different humanities that Gros refers to consist, on the one hand, of an elite class of the ultra-rich, and on the other hand, the rest of us. Of course, this second group differs considerably in 54
Capitalism Goes Woke income and comfort, but for Gros they are still entirely separate from the extreme minority of people who have been able to accumulate increasing proportions of the world’s bounty. Back in 1789, Benjamin Franklin, one of the ‘founding fathers’ of the US, quipped that ‘nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes’.42 By the 21st century, while still not having figured out how to cheat death, the extreme wealth of the super minority has broken Franklin’s once self-evident edict. One recent report in the US revealed that the top 1 per cent of the richest people accounted for 70 per cent of all tax evasion. That is almost US$90 billion per annum that stays in their own back pockets.43 Globally, the top 1 per cent are wealthier than everyone else taken together, with this massive disparity being enabled by never-beforeseen levels of tax avoidance and tax evasion. Oxfam International describes the situation with frightening honesty: While millions across the world live in poverty, rich individuals and companies, exploiting the secrecy provided by tax havens, are continuing to dodge their taxes, depriving the poorest countries from being able to provide vital services. […] When it comes to paying tax, there is one rule for the super-rich and big companies and another for ordinary people.44 Tax evasion by the world’s biggest corporations is similarly horrific. Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz has identified corporate tax avoidance as a ‘particularly toxic aspect of globalization [that] has not received the attention it deserves’. In making this assertion, Stiglitz is referring to how multinational corporations have effectively been able to engage in complex accounting arrangements whereby they funnel revenues to lowtax countries. The upshot is, they don’t pay proper tax in the places where they are doing real business. The cost of this is estimated at around US$500 billion each year. In effect, companies like Amazon, Netflix and General Motors can get away with paying no tax whatsoever in the US despite raking in tens of billions of dollars in profit. Stiglitz refers to this as a ‘race to the bottom’ that will lead to different countries competing for an ever-diminishing amount of corporate tax revenue, as tax rates continue to drop globally. 55
WOKE CAPITALISM This ‘benefits no one other than corporations’, he explains, and they do so at the expense of widening inequality.45 This is far from insignificant. In 1980, average corporate tax rates internationally stood at just under 45 per cent of profits. Today that number has fallen to about 25 per cent.46 In a global economy where billionaires and large corporations hoard greater and greater proportions of the world’s wealth, the democratic promise of equality is sacrificed. Human values of community, sharing and justice become regarded as quaint when faced with the inevitable consequences of an economic system based on the pursuit of greed. Coming back to Gros, although he does not use the term ‘woke capitalism’ specifically, he does alert us to a particular mode of reasoning that underpins it. This reasoning is not one where social responsibility is built on the hope of shared capitalist prosperity. It is one where woke capitalism buttresses a self-satisfied ruling elite who believe that their wealth is deserved. Gros argues that it is not just that the world has become increasingly unequal and unfair, but that the vast minority who enjoy the spoils of this feel entirely morally justified about their exalted positions. The experiential realities of the ‘demented monstrosity of inequalities’ are sidestepped in the assumption that those who do not enjoy extreme privilege harbour an unmet aspiration to do so.47 Even worse, this can mean that the 1 per cent’s exalted economic status makes them feel pious about their moral positions. Finally, the compromise between wokeness and extreme personal wealth is broken. It is assumed that the rich man can pass through the eye of a needle en route to heaven, as if extreme wealth based on profiteering and exploitation is entirely compatible with values of fairness and equality. Assuming this compatibility is the condition of woke capitalism; one where corporations are widening inequality while at the same time positioning themselves as the moral arbiters of capitalism. The existence of this cultural logic raises the question of what has happened that corporate moralization is allowed to rise alongside corporate greed and its attendant inequality. The answer to this question is the key to understanding woke capitalism. But to get to this answer, we need to look more closely at what happened in the intervening period between mid-20th-century social responsibility and 21st-century woke capitalism. 56
5 Shareholder Primacy On 11 October 1985, at the height of her global power and political influence, British prime minister Margaret Thatcher addressed a buoyantly confident audience of proud members of her Conservative Party. Just two years after her landslide election victory, Thatcher’s second term in office saw the beginning of a new economic boom in the UK. The bitter class feud of the coal miners’ strike that had defined Thatcher’s leadership up until then had largely been won. Thatcher’s right-wing economic policies of privatization, trade deregulation, small government and labour market liberalization were in full swing. As she stood at the conference podium in the seaside town of Blackpool, Thatcher was nothing if not self-congratulatory. Reflecting on her six years in power she said: Do you remember the Labour Britain of 1979? It was a Britain – in which union leaders held their members and our country to ransom; – A Britain that still went to international conferences but was no longer taken seriously; – A Britain that was known as the sick man of Europe; – And which spoke the language of compassion but which suffered the winter of discontent.1 Boasting of her government’s record of union busting, removing controls on prices and wages, selling state-owned housing, and denationalization, Thatcher pronounced that ‘enterprise is coming to Britain’. Central to Thatcher’s vision of a newly innovative Britain was the idea that capitalism, in its practice and ethos, should not be 57
WOKE CAPITALISM limited to the traditional owners of capital. Everyone could, and indeed should, be a capitalist according to Thatcherite values. In the 1985 conference speech she articulated a dream of a Britain reinvigorated by the spirit of entrepreneurialism. Most practically, Thatcher called for ‘resurgence of enterprise, with more people selfemployed, more businesses and therefore more jobs’. She also called for a new Britain ‘where owning shares is as common as having a car’. While Thatcher was uttering these words in the frayed workingclass holiday town of Blackpool, what she was saying reflected a new cultural zeitgeist of which she was the chief protagonist. While, traditionally, capitalism was based on a much stricter class division between the owners of capital and those who worked in capitalist organizations, Thatcher envisioned a world where everyone thought of himself or herself as a property-owning entrepreneur. Whether it be through business ownership, share ownership or home ownership, the enterprising spirit of capitalism was something that should inspire all of Britain’s citizens. Liberal capitalism may have decreed that economic organization should be based on free trade and private property, but in what later came to be called neoliberalism, Thatcher wanted those very same values to be adopted by all members of society. Gone would be the old identities that saw working-class people identify with each other in solidarity and unite to fight for working rights against the interests of capital. Instead, the spirit of capitalism would filter through the entire social body. Such was the moral justification of the still maturing neoliberal order. The 1980s was a significant time of social, cultural, political and economic change where the values of a socially expanded liberal capitalism were becoming entrenched across the globe. In the US, President Ronald Reagan was spearheading broad-based trade liberalization and deregulation. The crashing down of the Berlin wall that, symbolically and practically, separated communist East Germany from liberal democratic West Germany marked the end of the cold war. The Soviet Union was soon to dissolve into 15 independent states, each no longer beholden to their communist past. By the end of the 1980s, it appeared that liberal democratic capitalism was an inevitable historical destination for all countries around the world – the ‘end of history’ as political scientist Francis Fukuyama dared call it.2 58
Shareholder Primacy It was at this end of history that the threat of socialism that justified the ideas of the early advocates of social responsibility had by and large dissipated. Before that, the cold war had been raging between the United States-allied West and the Soviet Union-allied East. As much as anything, this was a war fought on social and moral grounds, with Reagan dubbing the Soviet Union an ‘evil empire’, and the cold war itself as a ‘struggle between right and wrong and good and evil’.3 Thatcher and Reagan were both ardent anti-communists, and the end of the cold war was as portrayed as a moral victory in which the ‘good’ of democracy and capitalism had ‘won’ over the ‘evil’ of state socialism. Reagan and Thatcher had worked hard for this success, and the victory was not simply political. Economically it was a vindication of their zealous advocacy for market capitalism, and the need for political intervention to ensure the prevalence of the ‘free’ market. The new right-wing ideas championed by Thatcher and Reagan spread globally, not just through amorphous cultural transmission, but also through the direct policies of the international financial bodies the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. The influence of this cannot be underestimated as these institutions predicated the apparent necessity of low taxation, reduced corporate regulation, removal of tariff barriers, the free-floating of currency, cuts to public services and privatization of public organizations.4 This new economic orthodoxy was coupled with deregulation of labour markets and moves to limit the power of organized labour.5 Capitalism was being unleashed, and an unbounded faith in the market mechanism animated a new promise of economic growth and prosperity.6 While there is no space here to discuss the complex and contested history of neoliberalism,7 it is important to consider how what was understood as the social responsibilities of business changed from the 1980s and how this fits into the genealogy of woke capitalism. As Thatcher intimated, central to the neoliberal project was to make every person a capitalist. ‘Popular capitalism is nothing less than a crusade to enfranchise the many in the economic life of the nation’,8 Thatcher declared to the 1986 Conservative Party conference. Neoliberalism was not just a functional matter of wanting people to engage differently in the economy. It was a deeply held aspiration to fundamentally change the way that working people understood who they were as individuals. 59
WOKE CAPITALISM Thatcher’s ‘popular capitalism’ meant that everybody should be a capitalist, and privatization was a key route to that end. To ensure this would take place, the UK government even funded a massive advertising campaign, replete with class stereotypes, to get workingclass people to take up share ownership through privatization. One of the earliest thinkers to identify the trend of neoliberal identity politics, even before Thatcher adopted it, was philosopher and historian Michel Foucault. Foucault was clear in his lectures from the late 1970s that the social and political changes going on around him were not merely about free market economics understood in the classic liberal tradition. Instead, Foucault identified how the changes occurring were such that market economic principles had moved beyond economics to influence society more generally. As he describes it, neoliberalism prized the liberal free market and minimal government intervention in markets, while seeking to impel citizens to apply the same economically liberal values to their own lives. In his words: Neo-liberal governmental intervention is no less dense, frequent, active and continuous than in any other system. But what is important is to see what the point of application of these government interventions is now. Since this is a liberal regime, it is understood that government must not intervene on effects of the market. Nor must neo-liberalism, or neo-liberal government, correct the destructive effects of the market on society […] it has to intervene on society as such, in its fabric and depth. Basically it has to intervene on society so that competitive mechanisms can play a regulatory role at every moment and every point in society and by intervening in this way its objective will become possible, that is to say, a general regulation of society by the market.9 Thatcher’s plan, launched just a few years after Foucault issued these words of warning, was precisely not only to regulate the economy, but to regulate society through the mechanism of the market. ‘Economics are the method; the object is to change the heart and soul,’10 she asserted. People would be freed from the paternalistic 60
Shareholder Primacy shackles of the welfare state and would use that freedom in a sober and orderly quest for economic self-improvement. Thatcher’s was a moral project as much as it was an economic one, to instil discipline, independence and self-reliance in the British people.11 The ‘soul’ Thatcher sought to create was one that would be both enterprising and capitalist in orientation and was reflected in broader changes to business culture as well. The year 1983 was an especially important turning point. It was when the term ‘shareholder value’ became part of the everyday business lexicon. The term had been used sporadically in the business press from the mid-1960s, and was increasingly present in academic research in the 1970s. It wasn’t until the early 1980s, however, that its usage exponentially amplified as it became a central focus in corporate boardrooms. By the 1990s, shareholder value was thoroughly entrenched as representing one of the fundamental values expected to be held by businesses.12 Shareholder value was entirely in keeping with Thatcherite devotion to enterprise and the desire to turn Britain into a nation of shareholders whose financial wellbeing would be at the mercy of corporate commercial success. It is worth remembering that Milton Friedman was an adviser to Thatcher when she was prime minister, and both shared an unwavering dedication to economic liberalism. When it came to privatization, labour markets, unemployment, inflation, monetary sovereignty and government debt, the Thatcherite policy drew directly from Friedman’s economic theories.13 As Thatcher said on the occasion of Friedman’s death in 2006: Milton Friedman revived the economics of liberty when it had been all but forgotten. He was an intellectual freedom fighter. Never was there a less dismal practitioner of a dismal science. I shall greatly miss my old friend’s lucid wisdom and mordant humour.14 It was Friedman’s insistence that managers were morally obliged to take actions to maximize the financial interests of shareholders, which formed the basis of a new direction in corporate governance. Shareholders were principals, and managers were their agents, no more, no less. While generations before had debated the implications of the separation of corporate ownership from 61
WOKE CAPITALISM corporate managerial control,15 the 1980s embrace of shareholder value asserted that executives should maximize shareholders’ financial value in terms of the share price. Moreover, they should ignore any consequences that pursuing this singular objective might have for anyone else.16 A fundamental shift in the balance of power between shareholders and managers had occurred, with shareholders (especially institutional investors) calling the shots.17 The long-held acceptance that ‘managers had become the princes of industry and [that] no effective means existed to control them’ had finally been broken. Shareholders became primary.18 In principle, shareholder value refers to the financial benefit that a business creates for shareholders in terms of both distributed dividends and the increasing value of shares themselves. It has been referred to as the ‘shareholder value movement’. The focus on share value as an organizational value gained steam in the 1980s to the point that it became the driving motivation of increasing numbers of corporate executives. This refocusing was a response to economic stagnation in the 1970s, especially in Britain and the US, driven in part by the new competition corporations faced in a globalizing economy. The legitimacy of prevailing attitudes to corporate governance was deeply questioned, laying the ground for a radical change in approach. The 1980s was a turning point at which shareholder value became widely viewed as the principal goal of corporations, with all other goals such as growth, profitability, market share or attending to the needs of anyone other than shareholders, were at best secondary. It was now widely accepted that ‘instead of the previously dominant business strategy, which focused on company growth and reserving and reinvesting profits – the “retain and reinvest” strategy – serving the immediate shareholder interest became key in the 1980s’.19 As a new ideology of corporate governance, shareholder value was embraced first in the US and the UK, soon spreading to Europe and affecting the whole world through the actions of large multinational corporations.20 In effect, Milton Friedman’s arguments from the 1960s and 1970s, that the sole responsibility of corporations was to the owners of capital, had won. Writing in Business Horizons in 1985, management professor Bernard Reimann summed up what was being enthusiastically embraced as the new management orthodoxy: 62
Shareholder Primacy The pursuit of excellence – be it in product quality, competitive position, or innovation – will not be undertaken for its own sake, but with the best interest of the corporation’s shareholders explicitly in mind. The creation of shareholder value can thus become a matter of conscious decision rather than being left to chance. This is the only way that shareholders can benefit from the ‘excellence’ of their corporations.21 In no small measure, Thatcher and Reagan’s advocacy ushered in this new era of shareholder primacy, especially as state intervention into corporate takeovers was diminished on the grounds of increasing competition, efficiency and enterprise.22 As the 1980s saw a slew of hostile corporate takeovers, the market value of a company became a growing concern for managers who did not want their organizations to be subject to this hostility. At worst, a corporate raider would buy the majority shares in a low stock price company, only to sell off their assets for a value greater than the purchase price. This form of corporate raiding and asset stripping reached its heyday in the 1980s. While it had all but ended by the 1990s, its legacy was a fundamental shift in power from managers to shareholders. Shareholder primacy led to a revamping of executive compensation. New pay schemes were designed to ‘incentivize’ growing shareholder value, smooth over antagonism between managers and shareholders, and to protect corporate interests by ensuring those executives who made the biggest bang for the shareholder buck didn’t get poached by another employer. Executive pay packets were directly tied to shareholder value in the form of share ownership, stock options and share-price-linked bonuses. It is hardly surprising that this time saw massive increases in executive remuneration compared to that of average workers. In the US for example, in 1978 CEOs earned about 30 times that of average workers. This ratio doubled to around 60 by the end of the 1980s. It was up to 400 by the end of the 1990s.23 Summing up these trends, economic sociologists Johan Heilbron, Jochem Verheul and Sander Quak explain how: The spread of shareholder value as a central business objective was […] accompanied by a considerable 63
WOKE CAPITALISM increase in executive compensation, which partly explains why the new doctrine was relatively quickly embraced by manager ial elites. The spread of shareholder value during the 1980s and the beginning the 1990s coincides clearly with the rise of executive compensation, which explains a significant part of the rising inequalities in income and wealth.24 With stock-related incentives in place, managerial decision making changed as executives launched business strategies that would reap benefits to their own hip-pockets.25 As executive pay packets bulged, there was an accompanying broad trend towards corporate downsizing and employee layoffs, not as a means to respond to financial crises, but as a way to boost share value during times of economic growth. The result was not only the loss of jobs once taken for granted as a source of livelihood. It was also the beginning of increased job insecurity and precarity across the economy.26 Thatcher’s promise of shared prosperity through capital ownership was revealed at best as a pipe dream and at worst as a scam. The shareholders were primary and they and their managerial agents were taking greater shares of global wealth at the expense of everyone else.27 The very idea of shareholder value as a renewed form of capitalist authority would seem to be at odds with the forms of social responsibility advocated from the 1950s, especially given Friedman’s opposition to any such ideas. In considering this, we should not be too quick to assume that Friedman’s dismissal of managerial responsibilities to anyone other than the owners of capital came into force purely on Friedman’s terms. In fact, from the 1980s calls for social responsibility did not go away. Quite the contrary, the reality is that the era of shareholder value saw a concurrent burgeoning of support for corporate social responsibility, or CSR as it came to be referred to commonly. The key difference with the new corporate social responsibility, however, was that it too became part of the armoury of shareholder value. Less a primary concern for society or a substitute for socialism, social responsibility was even more fully incorporated into self-interested corporate strategy. The ‘business case for social responsibility’ was at the fore of these changes. In this new form, social responsibility was a part 64
Shareholder Primacy of a corporate strategy that managers could deliberately leverage to improve shareholder value. If a corporation were to embrace CSR, it would do so because there was a business case that justified it by demonstrating that it would result in increased financial performance. The corollary of this, of course, was that if socially beneficial corporate activities did not contribute to shareholder value, corporations should entirely avoid them. The prevailing trend was that ‘most companies devote resources to CSR initiatives as a means of maximizing long-run value rather than out of a prior commitment to stakeholders’.28 Most particular, the strategic connection was seen to arise because CSR could improve the public legitimacy of corporate activity, enhance goodwill, and ultimately mitigate the risk of stakeholder resistance to blunt capitalist exploitation. As the hackneyed phrase has it, ‘good ethics is good business’, or at least the appearance of good ethics is. In this way social responsibility became seen as entirely consistent with the corporate goal of shareholder value maximization. Corporate governance researchers Paddy Ireland and Regine Pillay sum up the connection between shareholder value and CSR. They acknowledged that earlier versions of CSR did include attempts to challenge shareholder primacy, but by the dawn of the 21st century things had changed considerably: Ideas about CSR tend to be premised on a shareholderoriented model of the corporation as a private enterprise in which directors owe enforceable duties only to shareholders. While the earlier idea of the socially responsible corporation had a genuinely transformative edge […] contemporary CSR is essentially ameliorative, seeking to temper without unsettling or displacing the idea of the corporation as a private, exclusively shareholder- and profit-oriented enterprise.29 So why did the shareholder value movement need CSR? While shareholder primacy may have ruled in the 1980s and 1990s, its value was deeply questioned in the first decade of the 2000s. Faith in corporations waned as the public witnessed the corporate accounting scandals of companies like Enron in 2001 and WorldCom in 2002. The financial crises of the dot.com crash of 65
WOKE CAPITALISM 2000 and the global financial crisis of 2007 also led many to doubt the efficacy of the economic system. Global capitalism no longer seemed the high road to prosperity that Thatcher and Reagan had promised. Instead, these events were widely seen as a result of CEO greed, stock market fanaticism and corrupt self-interest. In response, CSR became a salve for shareholder primacy that made it more palatable without fundamentally changing it. What we have is what some call ‘enlightened value maximization’ where ‘each dollar of investment in a corporate stakeholder group should be justified by at least a dollar of expected return over a finite time horizon’.30 While an earlier generation had hotly debated whether corporations should be socially responsible or responsible only to shareholders, in the wake of Thatcher and Reagan CSR was fully subsumed as a corporate strategy that would enhance shareholder value. Let us not underestimate how widespread CSR had become in the corporate world. By the 21st century, CSR was largely institutionalized within large corporations. While technically it was voluntary, in practice all corporations were expected to invest in CSR activities – anything from corporate philanthropy to selling ‘ethical’ products to environmental management – all justified based on an assumed business case.31 Perhaps the most influential recognition of this came from Harvard professors Michael Porter and Mark Kramer. In their influential 2011 article ‘Creating shared value’,32 they argued that the best corporations had moved on from a myopic and old-fashioned conception of ‘value creation’ focused on short-term financial results. They suggested that corporations would achieve their long-term interests only if they found ways to maximize value for themselves while also addressing societal challenges. Porter and Kramer named corporations like General Electric, Wal-Mart, Nestlé, Johnson & Johnson, and Unilever as exemplars of this approach. With Porter and Kramer’s notion of shared value, what were once social problems became recast as strategic opportunities for business – in other words, a means to enhance shareholder value. While such a concept was broadly popular in the business world, it glossed over the tensions between business interests and social problems, ignored widening inequality, and vastly simplified the complexities of business activity. Conveniently for organizations, shared value pretended to ‘rethink the purpose of the corporation without questioning the sanctity of corporate self-interest’.33 66
Shareholder Primacy As shareholder value took hold as a guiding principle of corporate governance, corporations had become increasingly dominant in a globalizing economy. So powerful were multinational corporations that they have been described as achieving a level of sovereignty traditionally reserved for nation states. If the gross domestic product of nation states are compared to the sales revenues of global corporations, by the turn of the century, 51 of the world’s largest economies were corporations.34 It is important to acknowledge here that the power shift towards corporations is not just about the wealth and power of individual corporate entities, but rather a shift in the political system that cedes power to the corporate sector and to capitalism more generally. After all, individual corporations come and go. In a telling analysis, finance professor David Michayluk tracked companies with ‘single-letter ticker symbols’ through the history of the New York Stock Exchange. The single-letter symbols were given to the most elite companies with the highest volume of stock trading, enabling a single keystroke to be used to track transactions. From the beginning of the 20th century to the beginning of the 21st century, and especially from the 1960s, the value of single-letter ticker symbol firms declined massively. It has reached the point where these symbols are barely used today. By and large, these companies either died off or declined in importance.35 Corporate capitalism has proven to be successful as a system that adapts to its changing environment by recreating itself through new corporations and practices. The moralization of corporations through corporate social responsibility is a key example of this in recent times. In the era of corporate sovereignty, social responsibility has taken on the new purpose of extending corporate power through a moralization of business. The move was to establish corporate ethical credentials that would provide a smokescreen for their rapacious global expansion.36 Management professor Bobby Banerjee lays out the conditions in stark terms: [D]espite its emancipatory rhetoric, discourses of corporate citizenship, social responsibility and sustainability are defined by narrow business interests and serve to curtail interests of external stakeholders. [They are] ideological movements that are intended to legitimize the power of large corporations.37 67
WOKE CAPITALISM Whereas the forms of social responsibility present before the 1980s endeavoured to temper corporate power to preserves capitalism, by the 2000s things had changed. Now the apparent responsibilization of business was all about maintaining and extending corporate power to enhance corporate capitalism.38 What we see here, at last, is the full incorporation of social responsibility into the idea of shareholder value. The connection of social responsibility with corporate power and shareholder value formed the basis of what would become woke capitalism. The key shift was that rather than corporations taking advantage of business cases for CSR, woke capitalism relies on what we might call a ‘political case’. The corporate ambit is broadened with woke capitalism as corporations engage in seemingly responsible behaviour that is no longer directly related to their core business activity. Most commonly, this relates to the public support and funding of progressive social causes. It would be easy to conclude that this is simply a matter of corporate branding, with businesses wanting to benefit from being associated with political issues they think have broad public appeal. While that may be the case, woke capitalism goes much further in terms of corporations muscling in to control the public sphere that, at least in the democratic tradition, has been the realm of the state and civil society. Woke capitalism is primarily about corporate power: it involves breaking the chain that has long connected liberal democracy and capitalism so that corporations can continue on the path of global domination in the political as well as the economic realm. An important signal of the shift to the new era of woke capitalism is that by 2020 the whole debate about shareholder value seemed to be over. Nowhere was the international impact of this more evident than at the World Economic Forum’s convention held in Davos in the Swiss Alps. As we saw in Chapter 2, in 2020 the conference’s explicit theme was ‘stakeholder capitalism’. The Forum’s stated purpose is to engage ‘the foremost political, business, cultural and other leaders of society to shape global, regional and industry agendas’.39 Every January, a global elite of world leaders, billionaires, celebrities and other power brokers convene to do this ‘shaping’. The year 2020 was an especially interesting conference, because not only was it the Forum’s 50th anniversary, but also 68
Shareholder Primacy because it marked the coming of age of woke capitalism. Walking around the conference, Columbia law professor Tim Wu observed that members were spruiking the message that ‘the corporate world is cleaning up its act’. While Thatcher may have defended the virtues of enterprise and free market some 40 years earlier, Wu’s observation of Davos’s wokeness was that he thought he had mistakenly stumbled in to ‘a business-casual Bernie Sanders rally: unrestrained capitalism has gone too far; corporate greed has endangered the planet; the time has come for radical change’.40 Capitalism was wearing the cloak of anti-capitalist socialism! What Wu was alluding to was the World Economic Forum’s manifesto that was released to coincide with the 2020 get-together. The manifesto avowed the need for ‘a new form of capitalism’ that moved beyond what was depicted as the economically unsustainable nature of shareholder capitalism. Describing itself as ‘a set of ethical principles to guide companies’, the manifesto offered a set of non-binding feel-good statements about the purpose of corporations. Businesses were to ‘engage all its stakeholders in shared and sustained value creation’. In this context, customers are offered an attractive value proposition, workers are treated with respect, suppliers are partners, taxes are paid to government, and corporations regard themselves as global citizens with a duty to improve the world. That might all seem like a utopian vision of a new form of ‘loving’ capitalism, where once self-interested, profithungry, share-price maximizers would realize the errors of their ways and start using their power for the common good. Here’s the rub. The manifesto makes the motive for its principles clear: all of the ‘stakeholders’ should be animated by ‘shared commitment to policies and decisions that strengthen the long-term prosperity of a company’.41 Woke capitalism, although dressed in progressive sheep’s clothing, remains fundamentally and primarily wedded to long-term corporate interests. Moreover, what appears on first glance like a genuinely other-focused programme of corporate generosity, when read more closely is revealed as a corporate attempt to appropriate all members and institutions of society into its web of self-interest. As IKEA’s retail chief Tolga Öncü described it when he was at Davos: ‘It’s good business to do good.’42 Jeremy Cliffe, an international editor of the New Statesman, provided a telling analysis of Davos’s woke agenda. Essentially 69
WOKE CAPITALISM the new manifesto was a response, at least a rhetorical one, to the corporate excess and inequality that had been unleashed by Thatcher and Reagan in the 1980s and grown to maturity by the early 21st century. In an era of populist backlash to widening inequality and the disenfranchisement of large swathes of the world’s citizens, Cliffe called out the new woke capitalism as being ‘as much as an insurance policy against hacked-off workers, consumers and voters as it is a serious answer to the world’s problems’.43 As a direct affront to social democracy based on wealth distribution through taxation, state regulation of markets and the unionization of workers, with woke capitalism, it is the capitalists who call the political shots. What makes today’s woke capitalism different from the corporate social responsibility of the past is that it is not just about maintaining legitimacy, preventing revolt and forestalling regulation; it is about the direct takeover of democracy, both ideologically and practically. 70
6 A Wolf in Woke Clothing ‘Unnerved by fundamental economic changes and the failure of government to provide lasting solutions, society is increasingly looking to companies, both public and private, to address pressing social and economic issues.’1 So wrote Larry Fink, billionaire head of the investment management company BlackRock. The message came in his 2019 annual letter to the CEOs of the corporations in which his company invests. The letter was a platform from which Fink proselytized about what he saw as the responsibilities of corporations to society. Fink painted a picture of a bleak world where financial markets were uncertain, confidence had ebbed, wages were stagnant, and technology was threatening jobs. The result, he opined, was a wave of social unrest that was manifesting around the world in ‘popular anger, nationalism, and xenophobia’. Democratic states were dysfunctional and trust in public institutions was deteriorating. What can be done to emerge from such dark times? Fink answered that people wanted corporations to come up with the solutions. Whether it be about environmental protection, sustainable retirement incomes, gender inequity or racial discrimination, corporations, according to Fink, needed to come to the rescue. ‘The world needs your leadership,’ he explained to the CEOs with an air of moral certainty. This position wasn’t a radical departure for Fink. It reinforced what he had said in his 2018 letter to the same CEOs. In that missive, he also insisted that ‘society increasingly is turning to the private sector and asking that companies respond to broader societal challenges’. His message was clear: ‘Society is demanding that companies, both public and private, serve a social purpose.’2 71
WOKE CAPITALISM Fink’s letters attracted significant attention in the media with pundits hotly debating his insistence that corporations need to have a social purpose. On the far-right, Breitbart News responded in 2018 with the sensational headline ‘BlackRock’s betrayal: #WokeWallStreet pushes leftist agenda on corporate America’. For Breitbart, Fink insisting that CEOs have a responsibility to ensure that the corporations they manage contribute to society was an abuse of power. Moreover, it was a socialist conspiracy with Fink using his position nefariously so that companies would ‘adopt left-wing policy goals in the name of corporate responsibility’.3 Fox Business made a similar assessment, labelling Fink’s stance as exemplifying a dangerous trend of ‘corporate socialism’. Fox cited Charles Elson, a professor of corporate governance at the University of Delaware, who asserted the hackneyed right-wing credo that ‘A CEO shouldn’t use house money to further a goal that may not create economic returns.’4 Herein lies a standard kneejerk critique of woke capitalism: that it is dangerous, if not outright morally bad, because it had succumbed to the corrupting allure of progressive left-wing politics. There were similar responses when Fink released his 2020 letter to CEOs. This time it was environmental matters that were on his mind. With direct reference to the climate change protests in 2019 that saw millions of people take to the streets demanding action, Fink implored the CEOs to understand ‘how climate risk will impact both our physical world and the global system that finances economic growth’. Fink’s message was that CEOs had a responsibility to support a global transition away from using fossil fuels as an energy source. This wasn’t just friendly advice; the power of Fink’s company and its ability to steer the direction of investment dollars means he carries a big stick, and he promises that he will use it. In what appeared as a veiled threat, he stated clearly that: ‘[BlackRock] will be increasingly disposed to vote against management and board directors when companies are not making sufficient progress on sustainability-related disclosures and the business practices and plans underlying them’. In other words, he was threatening CEOs that unless they support addressing climate change, BlackRock would be taking its money elsewhere.5 BlackRock was not just rehearsing empty woke-washing rhetoric. In January 2020, the company formally announced that it would pull 72
A Wolf in Woke Clothing out of investments that had high levels of sustainability risk. In what only years earlier would have appeared like a political impossibility, environmental activists rallied behind Fink and his firm, declaring this to be a ‘historic moment’ and ‘a remarkable breakthrough’.6 Many applauded Fink, positioning him as a model of the contemporary CEO. Peter Horst, writing in Forbes magazine, compared Fink’s 2018 letter to the invention of the internet and the launch of the iPhone. The similarity? They all ‘stand out as watershed moments that re-define the environment and re-direct the course of events’. Horst describes the letter as ‘electrifying’. It was nothing less than a ‘clarion call for CEOs to seize the mantle of leadership in making the world a better place, beyond simply delivering profits’.7 Fink was not bluffing. ‘BlackRock punishes 53 companies over climate inaction’ was the headline in the Financial Times on 14 July 2020. What they were referring to was a report that BlackRock had released naming companies that it had assessed as not having made adequate progress on climate changes. The long list named 244 companies who were chastised for not having done enough. This included big names like auto manufacturer Daimler, coal mining giant Peabody, and the electricity company Fortum. The shortlist of 53 companies were those that BlackRock had taken direct action against at annual shareholder meetings. The main outcome was BlackRock using its shareholdings to vote against the re-election of directors and to block proposed management decisions. BlackRock was not afraid to threaten others who dared to consider not complying. Some companies were told they had been put ‘on watch’ by BlackRock for lack of progress. They were instructed to clean up their acts within 12 to 18 months. What happens if they fail to comply? According to BlackRock they ‘risk voting action in 2021 if they do not make substantial progress’.8 Despite these strong-arm tactics, the motives behind Fink’s divestment decisions were called into question as bowing to ‘populist pressure to do more to save the planet’.9 It is noteworthy that this populism appears very much a domestic issue. Despite its woke proclamations at home, BlackRock has been widely criticized for hypocrisy, given its massive holdings in greenhouse gas-gushing businesses in China.10 That this might reflect Western populism affirms the idea that corporations get involved in woke capitalism because they are following a fashion that has public 73
WOKE CAPITALISM support. Taking this even further, there is a view that in following the woke trend, corporations are being bullied into turning left with their politics. There are plenty of historical examples that demonstrate the effectiveness of pressure groups on redirecting corporate activity. Think, for example, of the pressure Nestlé came under in the 1980s for promoting powdered breast milk to women who did not have access to clean water, or the global boycott of French products in the 1990s following the French government’s testing of nuclear weapons at the Mururoa atoll. Woke capitalism is different. Rather than just complying with the demands of activists and protestors, corporations are taking the lead in promoting their causes, and blowing their trumpets about it too. BlackRock is quick to trot out the names of, in its own words, ‘just a few examples of the numerous organizations recognizing BlackRock for our leadership in corporate social responsibility, sustainability, investment stewardship, transparency and inclusion and diversity’: America’s Most JUST Company for 2020; ‘A+ for Strategy & Governance in the Principles for Responsible Investment (“PRI”) Assessment Report’; included in the Dow Jones index of most sustainable companies in North America.11 And just a week after proclaiming that ‘every government, company and shareholder must confront climate change’, in February 2020 Fink boarded his company’s US$98 million private jet in New York to travel 16,000 kilometres to Sydney to lecture the Australian finance industry on the global state of play. En route, the luxury plane burned 1,100 kilograms of jet fuel per hour. Hardly surprising that the press dubbed him self-righteous or hypocritical.12 The Spectator has described Larry Fink’s actions as being indicative of a ‘more general trend of “woke capitalism”, whereby companies that would not dream of taking sides in party political battles enter the culture wars’. By this account, corporations are bowing to the pressure of an angry political mob of lefties who threaten their livelihood if they do not comply with their anti-business demands. The Spectator opined that ‘Extracting coal, oil and gas from the ground is not an antisocial act which calls for punishment by “enlightened” bankers; it is part of a process that has transformed living standards beyond all recognition over the past two centuries […]’.13 BlackRock, however, has simply succumbed to the green tyrants whose aim is to attack capitalism. 74
A Wolf in Woke Clothing What we see in these responses to Fink’s words and deeds is indicative of the broader right-wing criticisms of woke capitalism as being a direct and misinformed assault on the very virtues of a purer form of capitalism. It is suggested that corporations have lost sight of their true vocation as well as the ideological economic conservatism that supports it. Woke capitalists are positioned as weak willed and puny in their inability to resist the left-wing con artists peddling the likes of climate activism, political correctness or identity politics. Samuel Gregg, of Emory University’s Acton Institute, puts it bluntly: ‘woke capitalism corrupts business’.14 This is so, he argues, because it shows how progressive politics have seduced corporations, and in so doing, have forgotten their true social purpose. Businesses, Gregg argues, have a particular purpose and that in pursuing it they should not stray by meddling with pesky leftwing agendas. This purpose is limited to the economic sphere, which leads to the conclusion that involvement in political causes (especially progressive ones) is outside a business’s primary goals, and therefore should be avoided in their entirety. The focus on politics marks a big difference between contemporary criticisms of woke capitalism and those of social responsibility. People condemn woke capitalism not just because it involves corporations engaging in activities that are not strictly business, but also because those activities are considered politically progressive. Calling out corporations for being woke is part of a larger move in conservative politics to attack left-wing ideas wherever they arise. That is not to say that the conservative position is that businesses don’t contribute to society, but rather that, at least for Gregg, such contributions are limited to ‘the creation and growth of the wealth that provides for people’s material needs and wants’. With conservative bravado, Gregg asserts that ‘business does not exist to engage in Marxist-like consciousness-raising exercises, alter family structures, establish world peace, or even right a nation’s historical wrongs’.15 It would seem that woke capitalists were radical communist entryists infiltrating capitalism in a Trojan horse full of blue-suited bankers and financiers! Rod Dreher, senior editor at The American Conservative magazine, has been especially vocal about the idea that business should keep its hands out of anything woke. Dreher declares that ‘woke capitalism is 75
WOKE CAPITALISM our enemy’, with the ‘we’ in question being political conservatives. He sees woke capitalism as being both totalitarian and manipulative in its attempt to convert people into what he describes as a kind of religious fervour that comes along with progressive politics. ‘[Woke capitalism] is all about coercing people into accepting and participating in a cultural revolution by redefining the revolution’s goals and methods as good for business, and a chance for employees to exercise virtue’,16 he railed. For Dreher, woke capitalism is a form of ‘cultural imperialism’ or ‘soft totalitarianism’ whereby corporate adoption of progressive positions exerts considerable political pressure on others – for example, employees – also to espouse those same positions, even if they don’t believe in them. An example he gives is Swedish furniture company IKEA firing a man for objecting to the company’s support of the gay pride movement because it contravened the man’s religious beliefs.17 To the extent that woke capitalism is yoked to progressive causes culturally, as already mentioned, the conservative critique also extends to the idea that it is an abrogation of the true and virtuous values of ‘real’ capitalism. Woke capitalism is simply leftwing brainwashing that has captivated CEOs and led them down the garden path of anti-capitalism. But, coming back to Fink, if you read his letters this is not what he is saying at all. While he implores CEOs to go woke for numerous reasons, chief among them is that it is good for business. Fink is not appealing to the CEOs’ moral consciousness; he is trying to get them to redirect their views on the best ways to make money, especially in the long term. If anything, Fink sees himself as a saviour of capitalism. By following his gospel, business can be redeemed so as to invigorate its economic rule. While Fink espoused how corporations can and should address public issues, the question of motive was also answered. ‘Companies that fulfill their purpose and responsibilities to stakeholders reap rewards over the long-term,’18 he wrote. What kinds of rewards would these be? Fink answers in the negative, warning that companies not dealing with public issues might lead to forms of civil unrest and industrial militancy that would threaten corporate activity. A second motive that Fink offered was that, as a new generation emerges, the financial value of companies and their long-term profitability will be increasingly based on ‘environmental, social, and governance issues’.19 On 76
A Wolf in Woke Clothing environmental matters, for example, Fink states: ‘climate change has become a defining factor in companies’ long-term prospects’. What this means is that people should invest in climate-friendly companies so that they can make more money. There is no interpretation or analysis needed here. Fink says it directly: ‘Our investment conviction is that sustainability- and climate-integrated portfolios can provide better risk-adjusted returns to investors.’20 It is reasonable to conclude that Fink is genuine in his conviction, rather than having been duped by scurrilous lefties into believing that progressive causes should be pursued on the grounds of the collective good. No. He appeals to private interests, as represented by the CEOs to whom he is writing. As much as he advocates for corporations to take on greater social responsibility, care for the environment, care about workers’ retirement incomes, and support communities, what it boils down to is that ‘companies that fulfill their purpose and responsibilities to stakeholders reap rewards over the long-term. Companies that ignore them stumble and fail.’21 In other words, go woke or go broke! Fink’s position shows that woke capitalism is not an abrogation of capitalism that has coasted in on the crest of a resuscitated socialism. Woke capitalism emerges as a way for capitalism, or at least corporate capitalism, to adapt to present conditions to preserve its future viability. For some, this is a reason to celebrate. Writing in Forbes magazine, Harvard Business School’s Bill George went on the front foot by stating not only that ‘Fink is not a socialist’ but that he ‘is one of the world’s great capitalists’. Why so? According to George, it is because when a company has a social purpose, its employees, in a bid to make their lives meaningful, will align their sense of purpose with that of the company. The result is that they work harder and are more innovative, and ‘that, in turn, leads to increased revenues and ultimately greater profitability – the basis for creating ongoing shareholder value’.22 In other words, acting woke is a way to squeeze productivity out of people without paying them any more. Responding specifically to criticism that Fink’s public purpose message was socialism in disguise, Mark Kramer, a social impact strategist also at Harvard Business School, asserted that ‘business leaders must finally, once and for all, let go of the outdated and erroneous notion that social factors […] are irrelevant to the 77
WOKE CAPITALISM economic success of our companies [and] that economic success is strongly determined by the way a company addresses social issues’.23 He goes on to argue that this shows how Fink’s actions are about reshaping his organization for future success, as indeed he believes all corporations should. After all, social impact is competitive advantage dressed up as do-gooding. So far, we have considered three responses to Fink’s CEO letters on social impact and purpose. The first is to embrace him on account of his dedication to society. The second is to condemn him for peddling a nefarious green-left political agenda that will destroy the lucrative beauty of corporate capitalism. The third is to go back to celebrating him, not because of his social credentials, but rather because he has found a novel way to make money using social impact as the new driver of shareholder value. This latter position posits that his approach will be the saviour of corporate capitalism. The first position is naive, if not gullible. The second and third remain fundamentally economically conservative in their values, even if they disagree on the methods that will best ensure the longevity of the dominance of the corporate system. There is another, more political and much more worrying perspective that I am advocating in this book. It is that woke capitalism is a subterfuge for the corporate takeover of democracy. It is a means through which private companies are trying to take political power away from government and put it in their own hands. One does not have to read too far between the lines of Fink’s letters to see this. In the 2018 letter, he admitted that since the 2008 global financial crisis ‘those with capital have reaped enormous benefits’, while those without capital suffered from ‘low wage growth, and inadequate retirement systems’. The result, he asserts, is a polarized world between the haves and have-nots, hinting that this polarization presents as a risk to the wealth of the people he just classed as ‘those with capital’.24 Fink’s high moral ground on social purpose suddenly looks more like class-based selfinterest. We might legitimately ask whether his concern for people without capital is based on a genuine sense of justice and concern for others. Could it be the result of an anxiety that emerges when the billionaire class of which he is a member are frightened that they have pushed capitalist inequality so far that those who are disaffected might, at last, revolt? 78
A Wolf in Woke Clothing There is no need for exaggeration or overinterpretation as Fink states it clearly without the need for analysis. In his 2019 letter, Fink admits that the vast inequalities that capitalism has created have ‘fueled popular anger, nationalism, and xenophobia’. In other words, the fact that latter-day capitalism has created such massive inequality serves as a threat to the continued existence of capitalism itself. This threat, he argues, does not come from socialism, but from fascism. If corporations do not, collectively, do something about it, they risk, according to Fink, the full-scale effects of ‘great political and economic disruption’.25 Fink’s apparently goodhearted words suddenly appear as a manifestation of deep fear. A fear that what he calls ‘economic disruption’ that might even jeopardize capitalism itself. Fink’s proposal is not to restore democratic values of equality and solidarity, but that corporations should take over – with hostility, if necessary – the functions of government. If they don’t, he holds deep worries that the system that enables the inequality he personally benefits from is at risk of destruction. The purpose of woke capitalism is thus revealed as being to save capitalism itself. Fink is explicit in arguing that the public wants corporations to step in because governments have failed. In 2019, he affirmed the ‘failure of government to provide lasting solutions’ to economic uncertainty,26 just as in 2018 he referred to ‘governments failing to prepare for the future’ as far as workers’ financial survival is concerned.27 In style befitting an investment banker, instead of trying to fix a broken democratic system Fink proposes a hostile takeover by corporations and for corporations. He justifies this by saying that it is members of society themselves – political citizens – who are demanding that corporations step up and fill the gaps that governments have failed to fill. This attestation to ‘society’ is itself an abrogation of democracy. Fink proposes that the reason corporations need to step in is because ‘society’ – that is, the people – are demanding it. He is claiming that corporations have some kind of democratic mandate to interfere in the affairs of the state, even if they do so, primarily, for their own long-term financial benefit. He repeats: ‘Stakeholders are pushing companies to wade into sensitive social and political issues – especially as they see governments failing to do so effectively.’28 79
WOKE CAPITALISM The fundamental problem with Fink’s solution to a world being broken by escalating economic inequality and the populist response it has created, is not to restore democracy but to destroy it. While claiming an uncounted popular mandate, Fink is disguising the real implication of his proposal: that corporations can and should take over the democratic functions of the state. Although Fink appears pragmatic, this is a pragmatism that hides the political implications of his position. The problem is, of course, that corporations are ruled by private interests that have long resisted democratization, whether it be through worker representation in the form of trade unions, or the sharing of decision rights with workers.29 But when private interests seek to take over public functions, no matter how ethically it is couched, this is the high road to the end of democracy and the advent of a new plutocracy where nations are governed by the wealthy rather than by the elected. It would be easy to dismiss Fink as a lone wolf in how he pursues a woke agenda, or in how he uses that agenda to bolster the power and profits of his organization. This is far from the case, however, with Fink being something of an ambassador for the more general expansion of woke capitalism. A point in case is the Business Roundtable, an association of CEOs representing ‘the chief executive officers of America’s leading companies’.30 In August 2019, Business Roundtable released an official ‘Statement on the purpose of a corporation’.31 In this statement, they made what appeared to be a solemn admission. They confessed that each version of the principles of corporate governance that they had published since 1997 had stated that ‘corporations exist principally to serve their shareholders’. In an apparent mea culpa moment, the 2019 communiqué had made a policy about-turn, to, in their words, articulate a set of principles that ‘more accurately reflects our commitment to a free market economy that serves all Americans’. What is this commitment? Reiterating Fink’s phobic response to the inequality that contemporary capitalism had exacerbated, the statement read: ‘If companies fail to recognize that the success of our system is dependent on inclusive long-term growth, many will raise legitimate questions about the role of large employers in our society.’ Again, we see writ large that woke capitalism is about ensuring that capitalism, and the inequalities that it produces, can survive without popular revolt. 80
A Wolf in Woke Clothing Roundtable’s statement offered a range of commitments to those people it listed as its stakeholders. The ideal is that value is delivered to customers, employees get paid fairly, suppliers are dealt with ethically, communities are supported, and long-term value is generated for investors. Roundtable’s new feel-good and inclusive approach to business met with mixed responses. For some, it was a welcome turnaround, announcing a new age of enlightenment for capitalism. Rick Wartzman of the Drucker Institute proposed that, while ambitious, the statement was ‘a monumental step toward setting broader standards for corporate leadership’.32 For others, it was woke capitalism gone mad, with corporate America finally succumbing to the worst excesses of the left. This was all part of a trend whereby businesses that were situated ‘comfortably on the left side of the political spectrum [used their] social position and market share to impose their cultural priorities on a disagreeable public’, reported Matthew Continetti of the left-leaning think tank the American Enterprise Institute.33 Looking beyond these polarized and somewhat simplistic responses means looking the gift horse in the mouth. What we find in Roundtable’s statement is the same woke rhetoric issued by Fink. Also similar is that this rhetoric is a thin mask covering a deepseated fear that the excessive greed of contemporary capitalism has gone too far and seeded its own destruction. Alan Murray, president and CEO of Fortune magazine was straightforward: ‘For more than two decades, the influential Business Roundtable has explicitly put shareholders first. In an atmosphere of widening economic inequality and deepening distrust of business, the powerful group has redefined its mission.’34 The form of neoliberal capitalism that made people like Larry Fink into billionaires is also what has resulted in massive increases in inequality. We are talking here again about what is broadly referred to as ‘neoliberalism’, a set of political and economic reforms that took force in the UK and the US in the 1980s and soon became a global movement. The neoliberal focus has been on small government, privatization of public organizations, lower taxes, deregulation, and general trust that the efficiency of global markets would lead to economic growth and prosperity. The promise was that if government policy allowed for corporations and their shareholders to prosper, then that prosperity would somehow 81
WOKE CAPITALISM ‘trickle down’ to regular working people, resulting in shared prosperity. The term ‘trickle-down economics’ is commonly used to criticize the convenience of the self-justifying, but ultimately flawed, logic of neoliberal ideology. Put simply, trickle-down economics is a sham, with empirical research showing that the result is quite the opposite, with the real direction of income transfer being from the poor to the rich.35 Woke capitalism is, to a great extent, a nervous response to this by attempting to bathe business in an ethical glow so that the excesses of inequality it has produced don’t create an angry mob hell-bent on destroying it. A report written by Mike Konczal, Katy Milani and Ariel Evans for the Roosevelt Institute lays out the facts. Using the US economy as an example, they show that neoliberal economic policies have delivered exactly the opposite of what they promised. While the economy grew by 3.9 per cent per annum from 1960 to 1980, after 1980 growth slowed to an average of 2.6 per cent. So, while deregulation did not lead to economic growth, it did result in the trickle-up effect of widening inequality. From 2000 to 2011 the share of income paid to workers fell from 85.3 per cent to 78.5 per cent, with average hourly wages only going up by 0.6 per cent each year.36 These trends are not limited to the US. A recent report by the World Inequality Lab showed how ‘in recent decades, income inequality has increased in nearly all countries’.37 The report also states that, while in 1980 the top 1 per cent of wealthy people collected 16 per cent of the world’s income, the share going to the bottom 50 per cent was stagnant at around 9 per cent. Central to this was the transfer of public capital to private companies through privatization and changes to taxation systems to better favour corporations and the rich. The coming realization that the very rich have skimmed all of the spoils from 40 years of neoliberal reform is reason for the rich to be scared. Rising tides of political populism across the world, symbolized at its extreme by Donald Trump’s US presidency, provided sure signs that people downtrodden by the neoliberal excesses of the rich are directing their anger through a renewed right-wing form of anti-establishment politics. Big corporations are very much part of that establishment. The rise of populism is a direct reflection of what Fink has been saying. He wrote in his 2019 letter to CEOs: 82
A Wolf in Woke Clothing Around the world, frustration with years of stagnant wages, the effect of technology on jobs, and uncertainty about the future have fueled popular anger, nationalism, and xenophobia. In response, some of the world’s leading democracies have descended into wrenching political dysfunction, which has exacerbated, rather than quelled, this public frustration. Trust in multilateralism and official institutions is crumbling.38 Woke capitalism is a defensive move that serves to quell this frustration, to preserve, if not enhance, a status quo where corporations hold an increasing share of political power. This is a power, however, that can no longer be justified by the assumption that the invisible hand of capitalism will lead to shared prosperity. That is a myth that has very much been busted by the facts of history. In place of the invisible hand, with woke capitalism, corporations seek a moral justification for their existence, positioning themselves as the saviours of the exploitative inequality-generating system that they produced. This is being achieved by a hostile takeover of democracy. First, in Fink’s words, by pointing the finger at the ‘failure of government to provide lasting solutions’,39 and second, by positioning themselves as the saviours that ‘the people’ have been waiting for. It is essential to see through this self-serving and weakly constituted authoritarian logic if the equality promised by democracy is to be retained as a cherished vision. Not doing so risks being fooled by a wolf in woke clothing. 83
7 All that Glitters Is Not Green On 17 February 2020, Jeff Bezos, founder and then CEO of the giant technology company Amazon, took to Instagram to announce the launch of the Bezos Earth Fund. He made a staggering US$10 billion commitment to the fund with the stated aim of working ‘alongside others both to amplify known ways and to explore new ways of fighting the devastating impact of climate change on this planet we all share’. Bezos designed the fund as a vehicle to payroll projects by scientists, activists and non-governmental organizations to develop ways to ‘preserve and protect the natural world’.1 This was not a commitment from Amazon’s corporate coffers. Bezos, the richest man in the world, was using his own money. And quite a lot of money it is. Around the time of him announcing the Bezos Earth Fund he had amassed a staggering personal fortune of US$131 billion.2 Bezos’s multi-billion-dollar gesture came just after what had been described as the ‘year of climate consciousness’.3 The year 2019 marked an unprecedented growth in climate change awareness and activism. This development was in no small part due to the effectiveness of the political activism of 16-year-old Swedish school student Greta Thunberg. In 2018, Thunberg skipped school to protest the lack of action in addressing climate change. A sole figure, she sat outside the Swedish parliament next to a homemade placard that read ‘School strike for climate’. This simple act of resistance triggered a global movement that not only made Thunberg a household name but also led to a worldwide protest movement against the stubborn inaction by government and business on climate change. Things reached a head in September 84
All that Glitters Is Not Green 2019 when four million people from 185 countries around the world took part in the biggest climate change protest ever seen. Climate change could no longer be ignored, and the rich and powerful were becoming intimidated by the influence that Thunberg had garnered. Thunberg had achieved such a high level of influence that she attracted the ire of many world leaders who have long had vested interests in the status quo of climate devastation. Then US president Donald Trump said that Thunberg ‘must work on her anger management problem’.4 Russian president Vladimir Putin dismissed her as a ‘kind but poorly informed teenager’.5 Meanwhile Thunberg had been twice nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, and was named Time magazine’s 2019 person of the year. The Collins Dictionary listed ‘climate strike’ as the word of the year.6 At the end of 2019, Thunberg was addressing the United Nations Climate Change Conference for the second year running, schooling the international delegation of government officials in the meaning of democracy: I have seen it, but it does not come from the governments or corporations. It comes from the people. The people who have been unaware, but are now starting to wake up. And once we become aware, we change. People can change. People are ready for change. And that is the hope because we have democracy and democracy is happening all the time. Not just on election day, but every second and every hour. It is public opinion that runs the free world. In fact, every great change throughout history has come from the people. We do not have to wait. We can start the change right now. We the people.7 In sharp contrast to Thunberg’s popular democratic grass-roots activism, Bezos’s climate fund was an explicit action from the very apex of the world’s financial elite. Perhaps ironic, or perhaps hypocritical, Bezos’s high-profile public embrace of action against climate change came at a time when his company admitted to being responsible for emitting the equivalent of 44.4 million metric tons of carbon dioxide each year. As far as corporations go, this puts 85
WOKE CAPITALISM them in second place, with fossil fuel companies taking the number one spot.8 While Amazon may have committed to reducing its carbon footprint, it had long been under pressure to do so from its staff,9 and many argue that it was too little too late. Quicker action to reduce Amazon’s creation of carbon emissions and cutting ties with the extraction industries would have had a much larger and direct impact. But that would have been far less public and sensational than the promise of a multi-billion-dollar gift.10 So, if that is why Bezos made the gift, why did he do so at this particular time? In the past, Bezos had been criticized for lack of engagement in philanthropic work, despite his astronomical wealth. Indeed, his previous donations have been quite small in relative terms. Prior to the Earth Fund, among his biggest personal gifts were US$10 million to Seattle’s Museum of History and Industry, US$15 million to the Princeton Neuroscience Institute (both in 2011), and US$2.5 million to support same-sex marriage advocacy in 2012.11 Things began to change in 2018 when he gave US$2 billion to help schools and homelessness charities.12 Because of that donation, Bezos was named America’s number one philanthropist. The total amount given by the top 50 philanthropists combined in 2018 was US$7.8 billion.13 That was dwarfed by Bezos’s single commitment to climate change in 2020. While Bezos’s climate fund pledge was especially excessive, it is an example of the established trend of the world’s billionaires coming forward to put their own money towards causes of their choice. Berkshire Hathaway’s Warren Buffet has given billions to fight poverty and support social justice. Microsoft founder Bill Gates has given similar amounts for vaccine development, and towards HIV and malaria prevention. Business tycoon and former mayor of New York, Michael Bloomberg, has used his substantial wealth to fight drug addiction and support education.14 Fighting climate change itself has been something of a pet project for many billionaires and large corporations. The year 2019 saw Michael Bloomberg pledge half a billion dollars towards shutting down coal-powered electricity plants. In the same year investment bank Goldman Sachs promised three quarters of a billion dollars for ‘sustainable finance projects’. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation also backed the cause by formally adding climate change to its priorities when deciding what to do with the return on its US$47 billion endowment.15 86
All that Glitters Is Not Green In many ways, Bezos was simply outdoing others in the billionaire class as they race to give more and more away, even though their fortunes continue to grow as a result of their business interests. High-profile philanthropy is a great way to divert attention to the systemic problems caused by capitalism while casting its CEO and billionaire agents as the good guys.16 Wealth information specialists Wealth-X report that the mega-wealthy hand out more than US$150 billion a year worldwide.17 More than half of that goes to education, health, arts, culture and sports.18 Notable among the biggest givers are businessman Michael Bloomberg, the late hotelier Barron Hilton, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, and Walmart’s Jim Walton.19 This kind of giving has become so widespread that conservative political commentator Tucker Carlson declared 2019 to be ‘The year of the woke billionaire’. Tucker commented with scathing, if not ill-informed, right-wing sarcasm: So, what is the message? Rich people are highly progressive now, and you can see why. They love mass immigration – it brings them servants. They support federally-mandated snobbery, masquerading as environmentalism. Abortion is essentially a sacrament to them, especially when practiced in poor neighborhoods.20 Knee-jerk reactionary criticism of woke capitalism such as that epitomized by Tucker is notably facile. His position points to woke billionaires as faux-socialist elitists. The unchecked assumption is that the mega-rich adopt pretentious political positions to destroy regressive conservative values in pursuit of their self-interest. These billionaires, so the story goes, are out of touch with real people and their values as they pursue lofty and misguided progressive goals. The right-wing critique of woke capitalism is a direct extension of contemporary conservative populism that has seen the rise of a new cadre of national leaders, like the US’s Donald Trump and UK’s Boris Johnson. Theirs is a politics that dismisses experts as out-of-touch boffins, and condemns any form of perceived cultural elitism as being pretentious and inauthentic. Similarly, for such populists, woke billionaires are seen as one-dimensional narcissistic do-gooders frittering their money on worthless progressive causes. 87
WOKE CAPITALISM Unsurprisingly Bezos’s multi-billion dollar giving has also been characterized as woke. For some years he was described as ‘the first woke billionaire philanthropist’.21 With his US$10 billion excess he was named as the prime mover in what has been disparaged as the ‘epidemic of “climate woke-ness” sweeping the world’.22 As well as this, Bezos is widely regarded as a left-leaning liberal. For one thing, he owns The Washington Post, well known as a left-centre newspaper. Then there is Bezos’s long-standing public feud with Donald Trump. Trump took to Twitter regularly to criticize Bezos, and his paper The Washington Post, for publishing anti-Republican (read anti-Trump) propaganda. With his typical schoolyard bully name-calling style, Trump referred to the Amazon boss as ‘Jeff Bozo’.23 When The Washington Post published a story about how Trump’s affair with pornographic movie star Stormy Daniels was damaging the Trump family’s businesses, he was quick to hit back. The very next day, he unloaded on Twitter with a claim that Amazon had ‘scammed’ billions of dollars from the US postal service in a distribution deal. ‘This Post Office scam must stop. Amazon must pay real costs (and taxes) now!’ Trump tweeted on the short drive from his Mar-aLago property to the Trump International Golf Club.24 Bezos has not been afraid to go head-to-head with Trump. In 2017, he was especially outspoken in criticizing Trump’s policy of not giving visas to people from a hand-picked list of Muslim majority countries. While Trump played the well-worn populist anti-immigration card, Bezos said of the US: ‘No nation is better at harnessing the energies and talents of immigrants.’25 Elsewhere, Bezos’s vocal and financial support for progressive causes such as same-sex marriage won him the Human Rights Campaign’s equality award.26 He has also been lauded for helping families in need and supporting early childhood education.27 Despite criticisms, the philanthropy of mega-rich capitalists such as Bezos could be understood simply as a genuine form of giving whereby altruistic billionaires put their money where their mouths are to bankroll social and political causes. Instead of selfishly hoarding the gargantuan profits accrued through the exercise of their enterprising spirits – or so the story goes – they are giving something back to society. This behaviour is presented as nothing less than a sign of the benevolence and magnanimity 88
All that Glitters Is Not Green of the billionaire lending a helping hand to those less fortunate than they are. It all resounds like some sort of happy-ending fairy tale where billionaire heroes come to the rescue of the hapless citizens who are unable to effectively look after their own interests on account of their impoverishment. The billionaires are cast as corporate action heroes – and male ones at that, with only about one in seven of them being women28 – whose business acumen and personal chutzpah can be redirected to serve the good of all of the people.29 Can the philanthropy of the mega-rich be explained away so easily? Is it really plausible that billionaires are the heroes of a 21st-century morality tale? Might there be a more self-interested explanation of billionaire ‘giving’ that is more in keeping with predatory capitalism and the escalation of corporate power? Should we just naively assume we have entered a new era of loony-left billionaires? To simply stereotype tycoons like Bezos as bleeding heart liberals defies even the most casual consideration of the facts. The idea that billionaires have made a genuine shift to the political left is radical if not entirely preposterous. As political commentator, Tom Perret analyzes the situation: […] ‘Woke Capital’ provides an opportunity for the Right to assert that large corporations are in fact, the tools of a left-wing elite that is hostile to the common man, and so doing, to downplay the culpability of capitalism itself. […] this is arguably one of the most galling examples of the hypocrisy of corporations who cynically feign awareness and progressivism while continuing the profiteering.30 In one sense, as Perret argues, woke capitalism is a means of aligning corporations with contemporary social values to help them in marketing their goods and services. The aura of corporate billionaire wokeness might foster a façade that the mega-rich are, in Perret’s words, ‘ideologically-motivated, left-wing, virtue signalling elites’. More profoundly, however, this does little to undermine the capitalist structures that enabled the billionaires to earn their billions in the first place. Offering some light relief of the symptoms does nothing to change the underlying disease. 89
WOKE CAPITALISM Bezos is certainly a case in point of Perret’s argument, and while he may be dishing out huge dollars for climate change, education and LGBTQI+ rights, the way he manages his business tells an entirely different story about rapacious capitalism. Tax avoidance is a particular example. We need to remember here that paying tax is the main way that corporations can contribute to society. By paying a fair share of tax, they are providing the resources that contribute not only to the government and legal services on which they rely, but also to the upkeep of the schools, hospitals and social services that members of society use. Paying tax is the corporate social responsibility and a means through which a share of corporate profits can be allocated for the provision of social goods by a government that, in liberal democratic countries, is at least notionally able to represent the interests of the people. Not so for Amazon, however, who has long been the poster child as a tax avoider par excellence. Let us be clear. No one is accusing Amazon of doing anything illegal. What they are accused of is using every mechanism possible to take advantage of tax loopholes within countries, and booking revenues in lower-tax jurisdictions, aggressively avoiding paying as much tax as possible. On account of this extreme tax aggressiveness, in the decade from 2010 to 2019 Amazon paid US$3.4 billion in tax despite earning revenue of US$960.5 billion and amassing a profit of US$26.8 billion. That is an effective tax rate of 12.7 per cent compared with standard corporate tax in the US of 35 per cent.31 In 2018, Amazon paid no corporate tax in the US whatsoever despite earning profits of US$11 billion. Profits in 2019 were US$13 billion, but the effective tax rate was just 1.2 per cent.32 It is hardly surprising that Bezos’s Amazon has been dubbed the ‘worst offender’ within a rogues’ gallery of corporate tax dodgers that include international corporate giants such as Facebook, Google, Netflix, Apple and Microsoft.33 As much as tax avoidance can be cast as a matter of corporate selfishness, it is also a matter of shifts in power from governments to corporations. The US$10 billion that Bezos gave to fight climate change is three times what his company paid in tax over ten years. This shows a clear transition of decision making over public issues from tax-funded democratic government to private individuals, billionaires in particular. By way of comparison, the amount of 90
All that Glitters Is Not Green tax that Amazon avoided in the UK in 2018 was estimated to be equivalent of the amount of money required to employ 2,400 nurses for an entire year.34 Because of its aggressive tax avoidance, Amazon has come under sustained criticism for its failure to make a fair contribution to the governments of the countries in which it operates. Further, this tax avoidance has allowed Amazon to drive an anti-competitive business strategy. Fair Tax Mark, a not-forprofit organization that accredits businesses for paying their fair share of tax, issued this statement about Amazon’s fiscal shenanigans: The company is growing its market domination across the globe on the back of revenues that are largely untaxed, and can unfairly undercut local businesses that take a more responsible approach. The situation is unlikely to reverse soon given the $9.3bn of operating loss carryforwards available to offset against future profits and taxes.35 What Fair Tax Mark were getting at is that not paying tax is not just a way of making unfair profits. As well as that, it is a strategy to gain power and domination over business rivals. Amazon’s aggressive approach to business is not limited to its tax affairs. A similar form of hostile business practice has also been the basis of extended and harsh criticism of how Amazon treats its workers. Back in 2014, CNBC released a documentary that opened the lid on the inhumane working conditions in Amazon’s warehouses. Titled Amazon Rising,36 the film showed in stark terms the extreme physical and emotional demands that working for Amazon entailed. Describing the workplace as being like a ‘prison’, the documentary made public what so many Amazon workers already knew: the company operates to ensure customer satisfaction and efficiency at any cost. Central to that is the human toll taken by the merciless speed at which the warehouse workers are expected to operate. As one warehouse worker described it, with temperatures approaching 40 degrees Celsius, ‘people were passing out from the heat, and having trouble breathing […] they want you to make 100% regardless and in the heat it’s so much harder to make it. It’s excruciating.’ The result was a broad range of complaints, legal cases, and worker protests. 91
WOKE CAPITALISM Other workers complained of mandatory overtime, minimal work breaks, and a surveillance-based management style that put a workers’ every move under harsh scrutiny. As one former employee described it: ‘I felt like Amazon was a prison. You had a set time that you could go to the bathroom, if you weren’t out of the bathroom within that time period, then they were looking for you. You could not stop if you were getting sick, you could not stop to get a drink of water, without them questioning where you are at.’37 Despite the exposé, things did not change and the maltreatment of workers around the world continued unabated. In 2018, a report told of warehouse workers in Britain urinating in bottles rather than going to the toilet, so that they did not miss their performance targets or were not disciplined for being idle. In 2019, Amazon workers in Germany went on strike, with their trade union asserting that the extreme pressure workers were put under amounted to ‘withholding basic rights’.38 In New York, in 2020, 600 of Amazon’s workers delivered a petition to management demanding basic items such as decent break times, reduction in injury rates (which were three times the US average), and an end to impossible working conditions. One of the stowers, the workers who manage the inventory in the warehouse, described it like this: You’re being tracked by a computer the entire time you’re there. You don’t get reported or written up by managers. You get written up by an algorithm […] You’re keenly aware there is an algorithm keeping track of you, making sure you keep going as fast as you can, because if there is too much time lapsed between items, the computer will know this, will write you up, and you will get fired.39 So infamous was the work of the stower that Swagazon,40 a company that makes satirical t-shirts for people who work at Amazon, released such a shirt emblazoned with the statement: 92
All that Glitters Is Not Green BEING A STOWER IS LIKE RIDING A BIKE EXCEPT IT’S ON FIRE AND YOU’RE ON FIRE & EVERYTHING IS ON FIRE & YOU’RE IN HELL At the time of writing the shirt could even be purchased on Amazon’s US website.41 Amazon’s response to the risk of transmission of COVID-19 in its workplaces was no different. From the very beginning, Amazon workers protested the lack of COVID-19 protections in their workplaces, to little avail. By October, just under 20,000 Amazon workers had been infected.42 Activists joined Amazon workers in the ‘Make Amazon Pay’ campaign, stating: We are warehouse workers, climate activists, and citizens around the world, taking on the world’s richest man and the multinational corporation behind him. During the Covid-19 pandemic, Amazon became a trillion dollar corporation, with CEO Jeff Bezos becoming the first person in history to amass $200 billion in personal wealth. Meanwhile, Amazon warehouse workers risked their lives as essential workers, and faced threats and intimidation if they spoke out for their rights to a fair wage.43 The case of Amazon exemplifies one of the apparent contradictions of woke capitalism. On the one hand, corporations espouse and support social and political causes that would generally be considered progressive, liberal or even left-wing: in Amazon’s case, climate change, poverty, education, same-sex marriage and human rights. On the other hand, their business operations demonstrate extremes in capitalist greed and exploitation, as exemplified above in terms of aggressive tax avoidance and worker exploitation. When it comes to unpicking the machinations of woke capitalism, however, the question is whether this contradiction is real. Is it 93
WOKE CAPITALISM possible that those corporate actions that appear to be generously focused on the common good are really just a more sophisticated means through which to pursue corporate financial interests? In other words, is woke capitalism entirely compatible with more traditional and obvious corporate strategies that seek to minimize cost and maximize the extraction of labour from workers? Jeff Bezos’s multi-billion-dollar pledge to address climate change is especially telling. On the surface, this appears to be a simple act of a multi-billionaire businessman throwing his financial might behind the biggest challenge to humankind’s continued existence. There is much more to the idea that Bezos was simply coming to the planet’s rescue, however, with some even speculating that this move was a potential early step in Bezos mounting a campaign for the US presidency in 2024.44 More conservatively, a key to considering the motives of billionaire philanthropists such as Bezos has been critically analyzed by Anand Giridharadas in his book Winner Takes All: The Elite Charade of Changing the World.45 Giridharadas notes that the world’s ultra-rich are engaging in bold acts of philanthropy and overtly generous engagement with social, environment and political causes. The reason for this, however, is not so much to ‘make the world a better place’ as it is to preserve, or even enhance, the status quo that has led them to their extreme riches. If there is any change, it is ‘fake change’ that is limited to that which can be tolerated by the rich and powerful.46 Social progress and equality are not enhanced by this apparent altruism. Instead, it reinforces the existing social structure that places the rich and powerful on the top and the rest of us at their mercy. A key point that Giridharadas makes is that the apparent generosity of the rich in addressing political problems is profoundly undemocratic, most especially in that the solutions involve circumventing government. Moreover, the ‘solutions’ preferred by the billionaire class, of which Bezos is at the zenith, generally focus on ‘improving lives within the faulty system rather than tackling the faults’.47 This amounts to a gesture of giving something back to society, without acknowledging the harm that has been done to the environment and to social equality by the very activities that allowed them to accumulate the wealth that they have pledged in the first place. Proposing that billionaires will come to the world’s 94
All that Glitters Is Not Green rescue is tantamount, Giridharadas argues, to declaring democracy as having failed. In his words: What is at stake is whether the reform of our common life is led by governments elected by and accountable to the people, or rather than by wealthy elites claiming to know our best interests. We must decide whether, in the name of ascendant values such as efficiency and scale, we are willing to allow democratic purpose to be usurped by private actors who often genuinely aspire to improve things but, first things first, seek to protect themselves.48 The primary focus on self-protection and self-interest has never escaped Amazon. Despite the intentions of the Bezos Earth Fund, Amazon has come under massive criticism for the effects of its business activities on climate change. In April of 2019, 8,703 Amazon employees sent a letter49 to Bezos demanding that the company take more action to address its contribution to the climate crisis. The letter complained vociferously about Amazon’s lack of leadership in reducing carbon emissions, support of extractive industries, political donations to legislators who support climate denialism, and lack of adequate sustainability goals. When Bezos announced his Earth Fund in early 2020, the Amazon Employees for Climate Justice were quick to point out the inconsistencies. The real questions, they insisted, were much closer to home: When is Amazon going to stop helping oil & gas companies ravage Earth with still more oil and gas wells? When is Amazon going to stop funding climatedenying think tanks like the Competitive Enterprise Institute and climate-delaying policy? When will Amazon take responsibility for the lungs of children near its warehouses by moving from diesel to all-electric trucking? Why did Amazon threaten to fire employees who were sounding the alarm about Amazon’s role in the climate crisis and our oil and gas business?50 95
WOKE CAPITALISM Still left unanswered is the even bigger question of why Bezos would make such a massive and public gesture towards dealing with climate change without doing anything about it in his own company. Writing in The Atlantic, Franklin Foer argues that Bezos’s somewhat bizarre and unanticipated donation is a sign of basic political dysfunction as billionaires fund projects that were once the domain of the state. Bezos’s giving is a sign of the growth of a new ‘private state’ where the personal whims and predispositions of the ultra-wealthy determine the future of the world’s citizens. As Foer goes on to discuss, ultimately this ability to shape the climate debate will be of immense value to Amazon itself. After all, Bezos would not want government policy to turn in a way that would be harmful to his business. Would a project funded by Bezos’s billions be able to ask serious questions about the effects of the global network of fast-paced delivery networks? In Foer’s words: A reasonable debate about planetary future would at least question the wisdom of the same-day delivery of plastic tchotchkes made in China. Then there are the policies that permit companies, like Amazon, to pay virtually nothing in taxes – revenue that would ideally fund, say, a Green New Deal. It hardly seems likely that the Bezos Earth Foundation [sic] will seek to erode the very basis of the fortune that funds it.51 What all of this shows is that woke capitalism is an extension of plutocracy: a government by the rich. In Bezos’s case, the richest man in the world was able to make a personal US$10 billion donation that was on par with the investment made by the entire US government to combat climate change.52 Of course, US plutocracy is nothing new, and Bezos himself has long been held up as an exemplar of how the rich dominate US politics, political lobbying and campaign finance.53 Woke capitalism extends this when private individuals and corporations start directly taking on the provision of public goods and taking on responsibility for solving public problems. The difference is key to the profound risk that woke capitalism poses for democracy. While government is at least on some level accountable to the people, the same is not the case for Bezos who 96
All that Glitters Is Not Green acts entirely as an individual citizen beholden to no one but himself within the confines of the law. Even worse, the effect of this can be that democratic government can itself seem redundant when it comes to dealing with the world’s problems. Bezos is a case in point of a more general trend in capitalism, whereby the ultra-rich present themselves as the saviours of a system that they have been central to creating and that has garnered them their billions. The gifts are the pieces of silver that are paid in exchange for the end of democracy. 97
8 The CEO Activist Once upon a time, the heads of major corporations were thought to be rather conventional characters. As corporate employees, their main interests were directly pursuing the commercial goals of the firms that they led, and they did so as members of a conservative and wealthy elite. This image of a managerial class was in stark contrast to that of the political activist. The activist was a nonconformist who resisted the status quo in the name of progress and righteousness. While corporations represented the establishment, activists fought against the inequalities and injustices that the dominant system had created and exploited. Woke capitalism has turned this order on its head. Today’s CEOs are increasingly using their positions as platforms for what appears suspiciously like political activism. Take, for instance Starbucks’ head Kevin Johnson who closed shop so that all of his staff could attend training designed to prevent racism in his organization. In terminology borrowed from critical race theory, Johnson bemoaned ‘the violence, hatred, and empowerment of white supremacists’.1 Then there is Apple’s Tim Cook who, in defiance of former president Donald Trump, has been a long and vocal supporter of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy. This policy enables undocumented immigrants who entered the US when they were minors to be granted permission to stay.2 In another example, after the violence of the neo-Nazi Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017 that saw one person killed and 19 injured, CEOs banded together in protest. Intel’s Brian Krzanich, Merck’s Kenneth Frazier, and Under Armour’s Kevin Plank were all high-profile CEOs who very publicly resigned 98
The CEO Activist from President Trump’s American Manufacturing Council. They did so to express their disdain at his lack of leadership against the racist extremism displayed in Charlottesville.3 Depicted as the ‘moral voice of America’, CEOs such as General Motors’ Mary T. Barra and Walmart’s Doug McMillon were also outspoken in their condemnation both of the demonstrators and of Trump’s lack of decisiveness. In a direct rebuke of the president, Barra’s statement was: Recent events, particularly those in Charlottesville, Virginia, and its aftermath, require that we come together as a country and reinforce values and ideals that unite us – tolerance, inclusion and diversity – and speak against those which divide us – racism, bigotry and any politics based on ethnicity.4 President of the Ford Foundation, Darren Walker, described this example of CEO activism as ‘a seminal moment in the history of business in America. […] In this maelstrom, the most clarifying voice has been the voice of business.’ No longer portrayed as exemplifying elite authority, Walker suggested a new form of executive dissidence when he opined that ‘these C.E.O.s have taken the risk to speak truth to power’.5 ‘Speaking truth to power’ is a phrase that has been historically used to describe the public courage of human rights defenders, whistle-blowers, anti-war protestors, left-wing intellectuals and dissident novelists, but CEOs? CEOs would have once been regarded as the elite power holders to whom the truth needs to be spoken, not the ones who are speaking it to others! In 2018, JPMorgan Chase boss Jamie Dimon topped it off with a call to arms ‘CEOs: Your country needs you!’ Walker was proselytizing about how corporations could and should flex their muscles to address a full gamut of social problems ranging from affordable housing, racial economic inequality, poverty and unemployment, to worker education.6 Two years earlier Bank of America chief Brian Moynihan held a straight face when he expressed how ‘[o]ur jobs as CEOs now include driving what we think is right […] on issues beyond business’.7 The reasons proffered for this activist trend among corporate bosses are varied. The simplest, and most corporate-friendly, 99
WOKE CAPITALISM explanation is that current times have seen the ascent of a higher purpose for business that extends beyond the profit motive. Building on a longer tradition of ‘enlightened capitalism’, we might accept that the corporate profit motive can be entirely compatible with ethical virtues. Woke executive can just ‘do well by doing good’ by addressing social ills through business activity.8 Positive media attention, the creation of an aura of authenticity, improved employee engagement and stronger brand allegiance have all been posited as ways that CEO activism can drive dollars straight to the bottom line.9 It has also been suggested that activism allows CEOs to exercise their power in the name of their own ethical and political beliefs. Unlike many grass-roots activists, CEOs are in a powerful position of influence. Their activism can be especially effective when they take advantage of their public profiles to raise awareness and leverage the financial power of their companies for political purposes.10 Further, while business leaders have weighed in on politics in the past, this has more reach in the present day because of the ease with which social media allows them to do so. That there is more CEO activism today is only half the story, and as marketing consultants Frank Grillo and Mark Blessington assert, the more substantive differences are, first, that ‘more CEOs are taking liberal, rather than conservative or religious, stands on political issues’, and second, that the positive relationship between liberal activism, brand success and stock price can now be better exploited by those companies that want political activism to be a central part of their ‘brand strategy’.11 Culturally, at a time where corporations are more powerful than ever, and control more and more of the world’s resources, it can be made to appear fitting that they also take over the role of political activists. It has been argued that it is overly simplistic to castigate CEO activism as just a ‘brand gimmick’ that uses wokeness to pursue less sanguine motives. Political scientist Cory Maks-Solomon goes as far as to say that CEO activism is ‘a sincere engagement with the policymaking process’. Maks-Solomon’s own research shows that between 2008 and 2017 almost half of large US companies were open in their support of rights for LGBTQI+ people, and advocacy for racial justice. Meanwhile, not a single of these companies took a conservative position on the same issues. To the extent that CEOs did back progressive causes, this was positively correlated with their political ideology.12 100
The CEO Activist It would seem, then, that at least in some cases, CEOs are using their powerful positions as business leaders to advance their political agendas in the public sphere. Even better for them, doing so can boost the commercial achievements of their companies too. If this is true, then CEO activists would be going from strength to strength when it comes to filling their pockets and at the same time feeling the warm glow of moral righteousness. That CEOs might exercise their power in this way appears even less surprising at the present time in history. This is a time when a new breed of populist politicians, from the US’s Donald Trump to the UK’s Nigel Farage and beyond, have been all too eager to target big business as the source of the economic problems affecting regular citizens. Corporate activism might just be a way of fighting back to reclaim moral ground.13 Marc Benioff, internet entrepreneur and multi-billionaire head of cloud computing company Salesforce, exemplifies this by describing the role of the CEO activist as follows: What we’re doing is advocating on behalf of our employees. We’re a company of 20,000 employees. […] That traditionally has not been part of business. But if I were to write a book today, I would call it CEO 2.0: How the Next Generation CEO Has to Be An Advocate for Stakeholders, Not Just Shareholders. That is, today CEOs need to stand up not just for their shareholders, but their employees, their customers, their partners, the community, the environment, schools, everybody. Anything that’s a key part of their ecosystem.14 What is revealed in Benioff’s statement is the view that CEOs, as rich and powerful members of society, have both the right and moral responsibility to represent their various constituents on political matters. These executives place themselves in the self-contradictory position of being non-elected democratic representatives, whose political authority is justified purely by their economic power. This development marks a contemporary evolution of what it means to be a leader of a corporation. The narrative is that CEOs are arising to provide strong public leadership that is sorely lacking in the contemporary era of insecurity.15 The danger, of course, is that 101
WOKE CAPITALISM instead of trying to fix the failures of democracy, CEO activism reflects a trend towards a new corporate plutocracy. One of the key social issues that CEOs have been particularly vocal about is equality for LGBTQI+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex and other) people. Indeed, LGBTQI+ activists have explicitly targeted corporations to garner support. This was so effective that by the 2000s many big businesses had become active and enthusiastic backers of the cause. Where only a few decades ago corporations were either apathetic or resistant to LGBTQI+ rights, we have more recently seen a complete turnaround. Companies as diverse as Apple, Google, Marriott and Walmart have all taken an open and visible stand, with LGBTQI+ groups having been especially active in encouraging corporates to support marriage equality. As part of direct and organized campaigns, activists applied pressure through personal meetings with senior corporate executives, facilitating the creation of coalitions of corporations, and public acknowledgements of companies who were prepared to express their support.16 This is a clear example of how what might appear to be a bold initiative by corporations to support progressive goals is the result of democratic action from citizens who are creatively using their influence in the name of equality. Corporations are the followers, not the leaders. The marriage equality plebiscite held in Australia in 2017 provides a telling example of how corporations come to support progressive causes. More problematically, it shows how this support uses public debate about fundamental aspects of democratic equality to serve corporations’ interests. In November 2017, a public postal survey was held to determine whether same-sex marriage should be legalized in Australia. The lead-up to the vote was a case study in inflammatory rabble-rousing politics from the right. Some conservative opponents argued that marriage equality was really about religious freedom because it would prevent religious schools, hospitals, welfare agencies and aged care services from discriminating against LGBTQI+ people, whether they be staff, students, patients or residents.17 Religious intolerance was being espoused in public, entirely unveiled. The joint submission by the Christian Schools Australia and Adventist Schools Australia to the government inquiry on religious freedoms that took place after the plebiscite spelled it out: 102
The CEO Activist If freedom of religion is to remain a legitimate hallmark of Australian education then the rights of school communities to operate in accordance with religious beliefs must be upheld. This must include the right to choose all staff based on their belief in, and adherence to the beliefs, tenets and doctrines of the religion concerned. Faith communities, including Christian schools, must be able to take action that separates individuals from that community when their actions undermine the community.18 Essentially, they were arguing that their religious beliefs gave them the right to discriminate against and publicly vilify people based on their sexuality and gender. Other reactionary responses included baseless incendiary claims that children raised by same-sex couples were at high risk of being neglected or abused.19 Posters were put up on the streets of capital cities emblazoned with the slogan ‘stop the fags’, falsely asserting that ‘92% of children raised by Gay Parents are abused. 51% have depression. 72% are obese’.20 Print materials were distributed claiming that homosexuality was a ‘curse of death’. Reactionary political pundits even tried to whip up a storm by asking whether the expansion of LGBTQI+ rights would mean that bakers would be able to refuse to make wedding cakes to celebrate gay or lesbian nuptials on religious grounds.21 The God-fearing right seemed hell-bent on ensuring that religious bigotry should take precedence over democratic freedom and equality. In the end, just under 80 per cent of Australians chose to cast a vote in the voluntary survey. It was a massive turnout that led to a landslide victory for equality, with 61.6 per cent saying ‘yes’ to the question ‘Should the law be changed to allow same-sex couples to marry?’ A majority ‘yes’ vote was recorded in every single state and territory in the country.22 This victory marked the end of years of bitter political debate where majority conservative governments had wilfully and deliberately stood in the way of marriage equality despite overwhelming public support. Thirteen years before the same-sex marriage plebiscite, the ruling right-wing government had gone so far as to make constitutional amendments to try to ensure that their dogmatic and minority prejudices would be 103
WOKE CAPITALISM inflicted on all Australians. The Marriage Legislation Amendment Bill that was passed in 2004 enshrined discrimination in law that stated unequivocally that: marriage means the union of a man and a woman to the exclusion of all others, voluntarily entered into for life. […] A union solemnised in a foreign country between: (a) a man and another man; or (b) a woman and another woman; must not be recognised as a marriage in Australia.23 The plebiscite in 2017 was a triumph for freedom, equality and democracy in Australia, as the public made it clear that years of discrimination and injustice that had been constitutionally enshrined had to come to an end. The country celebrated. Big business played a significant part in the campaign for the ‘yes’ vote. More than 800 corporations publicly aligned themselves with the Equality Campaign and with public opinion by signing the Australian Marriage Equality open letter. The letter stated: Australians are increasingly supportive of marriage equality, with a recent […] survey showing seventy-two percent, believe same sex couples should be allowed to marry. We agree. Of the remaining twenty-eight percent only fourteen percent strongly opposed the proposition.24 While corporations offered little by way of financial support, banks, auto manufacturers, major retailers, brewers and tech companies were among those who put their names behind the campaign.25 The most vocal and high-profile supporter was Alan Joyce, the CEO of Qantas, the third oldest airline in the world.26 As he said at the time: I believe we have to get behind it and make sure that we have a Yes vote and certainly I will be out there strongly campaigning for a Yes vote. […] I think it is very important for our employees, customers and our shareholders, and that is why Qantas is a supporter of marriage equality.27 104
The CEO Activist And campaign he did. As well as personally donating US$1 million to the cause, he pressurized other companies to join him in support of marriage equality, and spoke candidly and publicly about the subject. His efforts were so high profile that he was acknowledged internationally by being named on the Financial Times’ OUTstanding list as the most influential LGBT executive in 2017.28 He even got involved in a very public stoush with Peter Dutton, Australia’s Immigration Minister at the time. Dutton, well known for his right-wing populist approach to politics said: Mr Joyce is an exceptional CEO. He’s a good person and I know him personally – I have no gripe against him. But if he has a particular view on any issue it should be expressed as an individual. It is unacceptable that people would use companies and the money of publicly listed companies to throw their weight around […] Don’t use an iconic brand and the might of a multi-billiondollar business on issues best left to the judgements of individuals and elected decision-makers. I’d prefer publicly listed companies stick to their knitting and that is delivering the services for their customers and providing a return for their shareholders.29 Perhaps unknowingly, Dutton had entered into the classic debate about corporate social responsibility, taking the Friedmanite stance that corporations had no business meddling in things beyond their capitalist remit. His invocation of the role of government in preserving a democracy led by ‘elected decisionmakers’, however, did seem more about political positioning than a real ideological commitment. As well as being a loud and opinionated opponent of marriage equality, Dutton is part of the conservative faction of the Australian Liberal Party that concocted the divisive and unnecessary postal vote on marriage equality. The plebiscite was part of a long-term reactionary strategy of using LGBTQI+ rights as a political tinderbox. In this case, the gambit was the hope that if the government’s opposition, the Labor Party, supported same-sex marriage, then Labor voters who disagreed might change their votes to Liberal.30 As it turned out, the plebiscite was shown to be ultimately unnecessary, as for 105
WOKE CAPITALISM many years polling had consistently shown that the majority of Australians were in support.31 The case of the campaign for same-sex marriage rights in Australia raises the question of whether CEO activists such as Joyce are true to their word when they claim that their intentions are based on a desire to shape society for a better future.32 Such claims of woke socially and morally driven motives run counter to much research into why contemporary corporations associate their brands with social causes. Indeed, one does not have to be too cynical to realize that connecting brands with popular political positions is likely to enhance the commercial success of those brands.33 Well before ‘woke’ capitalism had developed into a widespread phenomenon, business ethics professor David Vogel coined the term ‘the market for virtue’.34 In its most simple terms, this is a market where ethical behaviour (or at least the appearance of ethical behaviour) is exchanged for an improved public image or for warding off regulation. By this account, corporations engage in socially responsible activities with a business mindset. They invest in them if there is a commercial pay-off. In one way this provides corporations with an incentive to take up what they see as socially beneficial activities. On the other, however, it sets out the limits of how much corporations can or will really do. By Vogel’s account, corporate virtue is regulated by a market mechanism, and subject to market constraints. As such, the limits are based on the exchange value of the actions taken. This type of corporate activity is, of course, a far cry from what we would understand as a civic political responsibility to civilians, where people’s freedom, equality and solidarity are the primary goals. With the market for virtue, virtue itself is a means to an end, rather than being an end in itself. If pursuing their commercial interests makes executives feel righteous, that is a bonus. If we examine Alan Joyce’s defence of his political position the way that he is trading in a market for virtue becomes clear. This trading was displayed in relief when Joyce responded to Peter Dutton’s condemnation of him wasting shareholders’ money on the pursuit of his political convictions. In a public statement, he said: There is an economic argument for marriage equality, backed by research. In short, more open societies 106
The CEO Activist attract better talent. But basically, Qantas is one of 200 Australian companies that has publicly pledged support for marriage equality because we don’t think some people should have fewer rights than others. Polls show that’s also what the majority of the Australian community believes – people who are our shareholders, customers and employees. So, we’re comfortable with our position and on speaking out about it.35 What we see here is an apparent conflation of the economic and political arguments for marriage equality. On the one hand, legalizing same-sex marriage is a matter of fundamental human rights. On the other hand, it is economically productive for organizations like Qantas. In claiming a business case for supporting marriage equality, Joyce backed up his position by referring to a study by the consulting firm Deloitte.36 The Deloitte study found that LGBTQI+ customers, as well as those from an Indigenous background or who have a disability, were three times more likely than other customers to avoid an organization if it had a bad reputation on ‘diversity issues’ such as being treated with respect and fairness. A quarter of overall respondents to the Deloitte study, and over 40 per cent of younger people, said that an organization’s stance on marriage equality influenced their buying decisions. As is typical of woke capitalism, what we have here is a blurring of the distinction between the economic and the political. Should marriage equality be supported because it is a basic dimension of democratic freedom and equality, or should it be supported because it is good for business? Joyce’s assertion that these two arguments were consistent must surely be more than a happy coincidence. We might ask, what would happen if the political argument and economic ones were at odds with each other? Would society simply give up on the rights of LGBTQI+ citizens if it could be proven that they were bad for business? If Joyce’s justification was taken at face value, then the answer would be ‘yes’. In practice, while the business case is often cited by activist CEOs as a justification for engaging in politics, it is rarely that simple or economically rational. Research has shown that executives’ own beliefs affect what causes their businesses pursue, and that cost– 107
WOKE CAPITALISM benefit analyzes are often the justification for taking on political causes, rather than being the actual underlying reason.37 These findings add an ideological dimension to the activism – executives are more likely to back a cause they strongly believe in rather than just the ones that yield their corporations the best bang for the buck. As much as business and moral cases might be debated, when it comes to CEO activism there is a powerful political motive at play that seeks to enhance the power of the corporation by aligning it with what are perceived to be important and popular political positions.38 We can see this in the fact that businesses like Qantas only backed marriage equality after it had majority support in Australia. This is good news for those of us who believed in marriage equality, at least because it was a sign that Australians were backing a fundamental dimension of equal rights for all, irrespective of sexuality. There is little doubt, too, that Joyce was of this view. The issues are bigger than one person’s ethico-political convictions, however. By the late 2010s marriage equality was a very established political issue and people had been fighting for this cause for many years. What had changed, however, was the business case. As it had been justified by the Deloitte study, supporting LGBTQI+ rights was good business, so companies started leaping on board. Despite the individual convictions of Joyce or other CEOs, under woke capitalism commercial logic places a limit on what is politically possible. By 2017, LGBTQI+ rights were tradeable on the market for virtue in a way that they had never been before. Backing marriage equality had become an easy proposition for businesses. It cost very little to send out a press release or have prominent executives talk favourably about the cause in public. Further, as the Deloitte study pointed out, having a good reputation on this issue promised a positive impact on employees and customers, especially the younger demographics who will make up the majority of consumers in the future. In such cases, ethical pursuits, even if business leaders support them personally, cannot be pursued at the expense of commercial interests. Executives and businesses have a narrower range of interests than society as a whole, often simply hitching themselves to one political cause that they have an affinity to. While CEO activists can be dismissed as hypocrites, that would be a vast over-simplification. 108
The CEO Activist For example, Joyce is openly gay and his personal contributions to the campaign show that his support was genuine.39 Still, while the corporate support of marriage equality was positive, on a broader scale it demonstrates an inherent risk of the growth of woke capitalism. As businesses become political actors in areas beyond their direct commercial interests, the personal and commercial limits of their interests will increasingly shape, as well as potentially limit, public debate. Unsurprisingly, for example, tax avoidance is rarely mentioned in the corporate social responsibility reports produced by major corporations, nor is it condemned by CEOs. This is so, despite the importance of paying tax for education, healthcare and poverty elimination. Instead, corporations focus on other forms of nominally ethical behaviour such as environmental and diversity programmes. What the Qantas case shows is that while Joyce was on the right side of history in this instance, his politics combined his personal beliefs with the interests of his employer. Of course, when corporate interests have a say in which issues get political airtime, important matters like taxation, income inequality and insecure work are likely to be left out. Wealth and income are especially relevant; nevertheless, while being among the most pressing political problems of our time,40 they are rarely addressed head on by CEO activists. In this case, the personal financial interests of the CEOs themselves come into the equation of what kind of politics corporations will or will not fight for. Just after he campaigned for marriage equality, Alan Joyce became the highest-paid executive in Australia, with his pay packet estimated to have been A$23 million in 2018.41 Whatever Joyce’s social justice instincts on other issues, he is not the person to talk about inequality. It is not just that he was silent on this issue. Instead of retreating to his counting house when his extravagant salary was made public, he came out swinging in defence of his earning almost 300 times the average Australian income. ‘My salary was determined by our shareholders,’ he said. ‘That’s because our market capital went from just over $2 billion to $10 billion. And our shareholders did exceptionally well out of it.’42 Joyce’s comments reflect a fundamental tenet of woke capitalism: commercial selfinterest is not at all incompatible with corporate activism. As a corollary, support for a limited range of progressive social causes is 109
WOKE CAPITALISM entirely compatible with defending the inequality epitomized by super-size executive salaries. While Joyce justified his salary on commercial grounds only, when it comes to CEO activism there is an added political and moral justification. In Joyce’s own words, his support of marriage equality was his and Qantas’s democratic duty. Not only was there a ‘big business case’ but it was ‘the morally right thing to do’.43 It would appear, however, that while moral righteousness has a place in taking action on marriage equality, it can be rapidly sidestepped so as to avoid facing up to income inequality. Woke capitalism is only interested in politics that do not threaten the commercial interests of corporations, or the personal financial interests of its executives. So, what does this mean for democracy? Declaring, as Joyce has done, that unelected corporate executives have a responsibility to use their privileged position in the economic pecking order to push business-friendly political causes is, at best, controversial. At worst, it represents the belief that big business bosses have the right to represent people who have not chosen them as political representatives. Such political self-appointment is a central dimension of woke capitalism, and it is downright antidemocratic. More practically, this means that the fair distribution of economic prosperity among working people has been left off the democratic table. Such are the limits of woke capitalism. 110
9 The Race to Wokeness On the first Monday of September 2018, former National Football League (NFL) quarterback Colin Kaepernick’s post on Twitter marked the start of a political maelstrom. The tweet, accompanied by a black and white image of the top half of his head, read ‘Believe in something, even if it means sacrificing everything. #JustDoIt.’ Although the sports shoe company Nike was not mentioned in the tweet, their famous slogan ‘just do it’ made it clear that they were somehow involved. Famously, former president of the United States Donald Trump was so provoked by Nike’s endorsement of Kaepernick that the next day he too went to his infamous Twitter account. ‘Nike is getting absolutely killed with anger and boycotts. I wonder if they had any idea that it would be this way,’ he pronounced. A few days later, and in apparent desperation, he tweeted: ‘What was Nike thinking?’1 Kaepernick’s original tweet was posted just before the start of the NFL season. Nike’s launch of a major print and television advertising campaign quickly followed. Called ‘Dream Crazy’ and narrated by Kaepernick, the television ad called for people to follow their dreams, no matter what the obstacles. ‘Don’t become the best basketball player on the planet, be bigger than basketball,’ Kaepernick narrates. Alongside, we see National Basketball Association (NBA) superstar LeBron James opening the I Promise elementary school in Akron, Ohio, which his family foundation supports. German boxing star Zeina Massar, Paralympic basketball player Megan Blunk, and ‘rebel queen of skateboarding’ Lacey Baker, are also among those who are portrayed as backing 111
WOKE CAPITALISM Kaepernick’s statement: ‘Don’t ask if your dreams are crazy. Ask if they’re crazy enough.’2 At face value, this might seem like just another ad campaign playing up to the mythology of the American dream. The idea that with passion, hard work and determination, anyone can rise to the top of his or her chosen field is reinforced. Whatever the structural barriers of race, class or gender a person is born into, it is individual merit that determines achievement, so the story goes. Failure to achieve this American dream is an individual failure, not a social one, with each person taking responsibility for their own success. Whether you were born into a wealthy White New York family, or brought up in the neighbouring housing projects, it is simply down to your initiative as to whether you make it in life. That Nike played on long-standing fantasies embedded in American culture is clear, but there was much more to ‘Dream Crazy’ than that. Most especially this is because Nike decided to make Kaepernick the central figure of the campaign. As much as he was known for his football career, in the years preceding the release of the ad, Kaepernick had become a household name on account of his direct, uncompromising political activism for the rights of African Americans. This activism was especially focused on protesting against police violence towards, and killing of, Black men in the US.3 Kaepernick achieved such a high profile for his activism that he was named ‘citizen of the year’ for 2017 by men’s fashion and culture magazine GQ. Kaepernick was described as ‘a lightning rod and a powerful symbol of activism and resistance’.4 The most compelling image of Kaepernick sees him kneeling at the beginning of football games while refusing to sing along to ‘The Star-Spangled Banner’. The kneeling was in explicit protest at the epidemic of African Americans killed at the hands of the police. That all started back in 2016 when Kaepernick was the quarterback for the American football team the San Francisco 49ers. He had been playing for the team for some six years. On 26 August 2016, in a pre-season game against the Green Bay Packers, as the American national anthem was played before the game, Kaepernick remained seated while other players stood as a traditional symbol of patriotism. He did not stand for the anthem in the next game too. On this occasion, his African American teammate Eric Reed went 112
The Race to Wokeness down on one knee beside him in solidarity. When interviewed, Kaepernick explained his reason for not standing: I am not going to stand up to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color. To me, this is bigger than football and it would be selfish on my part to look the other way. There are bodies in the street and people getting paid leave and getting away with murder. […] This is not something that I am going to run by anybody. I am not looking for approval. I have to stand up for people that are oppressed. […] If they take football away, my endorsements from me, I know that I stood up for what is right.5 As the football season started, Kaepernick consistently kneeled when the anthem was played. A national controversy ensued. Bolstered by an era of Trumpian populism, reactionary conservatives unimaginatively damned Kaepernick for disrespecting the US. Some even went so far as to burn replicas of his football jersey in effigy.6 Such extreme acts of disapproval did not stop Kaepernick’s determined activism leading to powerful and meaningful results. As Margaret Kimberley of Black Agenda Report, the Black left-wing news website, described it, Kaepernick emerged as a ‘revolutionary figure’ who stood up to racial violence in America in a way that so many elected officials and public figures failed to do.7 Described as ‘the face of the new civil rights movement’, Kaepernick resurrected public awareness and political debate, albeit through a commercial platform. Heralded by civil rights activists under the banner of the United We Stand Coalition, Kaepernick had done nothing less than reinvigorate calls for racial equality in America. As Stephen A. Green, president of civil rights group the People’s Consortium, explained at the time: When you think about what he has put on the line for himself personally, with what he could lose and what he has already gone through, that’s not [hyperbole]. He has risked a lot to elevate the issues that affect black and brown bodies in America. For our community, we can’t afford to let him be silenced.8 113
WOKE CAPITALISM Kaepernick’s work as a leader of political protest has been a centrally important part of marshalling action to combat discrimination and police violence against African Americans. As political scientists Christopher Towler, Nyron Crawford and Robert Bennet demonstrate, ‘Kaepernick significantly influences black political action, specifically encouraging action beyond voting’, concluding that ‘activism by black professional athletes matters to black political action’.9 Kaepernick paid heavily for his acts of protest. At the end of the 2016–17 football season, his sporting career was prematurely over. In 2017, he left the 49ers and became a free agent. No other team offered him a contract despite his skills and accomplishments placing him ahead of many others in the league. The NFL circled their wagons. Having concluded that Kaepernick’s protests were not in their commercial interests, the league effectively excluded him. As Joe Lockhart, head of communications at the NFL at the time of Kaepernick’s protests, confessed some years later: ‘No teams wanted to sign a player – even one as talented as Kaepernick – whom they saw as controversial, and, therefore, bad for business.’10 It was US president Donald Trump who once again poured fuel on the fire of the Kaepernick controversy in 2017. While Nike’s position was to dare people to dream crazy, Trump played the American dream card a very different way with his ‘Make America great again’ (MAGA) sloganeering. As Noam Chomsky describes in his Requiem for the American Dream, the 1950s and 1960s was the golden age of the American dream, with the economy growing, and the benefits of that growth being distributed relatively equitably: It was pretty egalitarian growth, so the lowest fifth of the population was improving about as much as the upper fifth. And there were some welfare state measures, which improved life for much of the population. It was, for example, possible for a black worker to get a decent job in an auto plant, buy a home, get a car, have his children go to school and so on. And the same across the board.11 The present day is radically different from this. In one sense, this is because economic growth accrues largely to the rich as inequality 114
The Race to Wokeness widens across the world.12 But there is a much more qualitative difference, as Chomsky explains. In the US, as well as in many other liberal democratic countries, the post-war period was a time of hope, and ‘an expectation that things were going to get better’. Such hope is much harder to come by today, and whether we are dreaming crazy or believing that America can be great again, we are leveraging the hopefulness of a previous age. Trump was clear to distinguish Nike’s American dream of racial progress and equal opportunity, from that of MAGA’s White supremacy and blind patriotism. By 2017, although Kaepernick was out of the NFL, his protest had spread with other players either not appearing for the anthem, or following Kaepernick in kneeling when it was played. Speaking in Alabama on 22 September 2017, Trump went into full rabble-rousing mode: ‘Wouldn’t you love to see one of these NFL owners, when somebody disrespects our flag, to say, “Get that son of a bitch off the field right now. Out. He’s fired. He’s fired!” You know, some owner is going to do that. He’s going to say, “That guy that disrespects our flag, he’s fired.” And that owner, they don’t know it. They don’t know it. They’ll be the most popular person, for a week. They’ll be the most popular person in this country.’13 Trump’s statement appealed not only to a certain variety of American patriotism, it also pointed to one of the most fundamental elements of traditional capitalism: the assumption that those who own capital have the right to control labour. Trump politicized this power relation by demanding that the owners of NFL teams exercise their authority based on a conservative vision of what loyalty to the US means. By Trump’s account, Kaepernick was unpatriotic because of the way he expressed his protest at the history of violence, killing and racial injustice towards African Americans. This represents a deeply reactionary politics that stands in the way of progress by using all means possible to silence dissent. It is also a blatant attempt to infringe the first amendment to the United States Constitution that states unequivocally that there can be no legal basis to prohibit the exercise of free speech. In doing so, what is also 115
WOKE CAPITALISM silenced is any acknowledgement or responsibility for ‘America’s original sin’ of White racism, exercised first in the genocide of Native Americans, and second by the enslavement of Africans.14 To this day, the enduring legacy of that sin is unreconciled with espoused American values of equality and freedom.15 It is for his unwavering commitment to addressing the racial contradiction at the heart of America that Kaepernick was excluded from the league while being publicly pilloried from the highest political office in his country. It is worth noting that the symbolism of going down on one knee, rather than just sitting, was borrowed from an American military tradition whereby soldiers would show respect by kneeling by the grave of those who had lost their lives in war.16 Indeed, Kaepernick had adopted kneeling as a form of protest for precisely this reason after he had been advised on the matter by Nate Boyer, a Green Beret in the US Army and war veteran.17 The kneeling was not seen as respect by Trump, however, who used the protests to foment rage among his followers. It was a populist move that was deliberately divisive and politically self-interested. The division that Trump sowed had a distinctly commercial tone to it, yet one that was ignorant of the growing trend of woke capitalism. Part of Trump’s claim was that the protests were hurting the NFL because ratings were down on television broadcasts on account of fans not tuning in as a counter-protest to the kneeling. Trump’s position was thus revealed as one that did not acknowledge any distinction between the political and the economic. In practice, the belief that the bosses would fire the players for commercial reasons was conflated with the idea that they would do it for patriotic reasons. This was by no means a traditional defence of capitalism on the basis that businesses should keep out of social matters and focus entirely on profit making. Instead, Trump believed that businesses should be involved in politics, at least insofar as those politics aligned with his brand of regressive Republican conservatism. In bringing Kaepernick in as the spokesperson of their ‘Dream Crazy’ campaign, Nike were betting on the complete opposite commercial and political logic to that which Trump espoused. We might cast our minds to 1990 when basketball megastar Michael Jordan’s Air Jordan range of shoes had just gone global as a hugely successful Nike brand. Since its inception, the range 116
The Race to Wokeness has netted Jordan an estimated US$1.3 billion18 as well as having been touted as ‘one of America’s most successful examples of marketing’.19 But it was marketing of a particular kind. In 1990, when quizzed about whether he supported Republican candidate Jesse Helms or Democrat Harvey Gantt in the Senate ballot for North Carolina, Jordan refused to answer. Instead, he reportedly quipped ‘Republicans buy sneakers too.’20 The joke, of course, was that taking political positions ran the risk of alienating potential customers, and hence would be a bad commercial decision. Fear of losing customers was what motivated the actions of the NFL in the 2017 debacle. What Trump and the NFL had not realized was that the function of capitalism in culture had changed drastically in the intervening years, rendering Trump and his like practically anachronistic in their approach to business. Nike, on the other hand, was an early adopter of the woke capitalist way of doing business, despite Jordan’s protestations. As far back as the late 1970s, they aligned with the women’s movement, naming their women’s running show ‘the liberator’. Connecting their brand with socially conscious causes has been a motif for Nike ever since. In 1988, Nike addressed ageism by featuring an 80-year-old runner in its very first ‘Just do it’ advertisement. A year later, Paralympian Craig Blanchette was featured in support of people with disabilities, just as in 2007 wheelchair basketball player Matt Scott was in another Nike ad. In 1995, Nike ran a campaign featuring HIV-positive runner Ric Muñoz as part of their ‘socially conscious branding’.21 While Nike advertising campaigns were designed to benefit from the controversy of aligning with socially progressive political positions, Nike attracted attention of a different kind when it came to how its shoes were produced. In the late 1990s, Nike was denounced for the abuses that went on in the sweatshop factories in Asia where its shoes were made. These were places where workers, some of them children, lived in poverty, were forced to work inhumanely excessive shifts, and were exposed to dangerous amounts of toxic gas. In 1991, labour activist Jeffrey Ballinger released a report that exposed child exploitation in Nike’s factories in Indonesia. Later that decade Jim Keady’s documentary ‘Beyond the Swoosh’ revealed the inhumane living conditions that Nike’s factory workers were forced into on account of the poverty wages they were paid.22 117
WOKE CAPITALISM It was an international scandal that posed a fundamental threat to Nike’s business. Nike promised to fix the working conditions in their factories, but despite significant publicity not much changed. As human rights activist Leila Salazar put it in 2001, ‘Nike has continued to treat the sweatshop issue as a public relations inconvenience rather than as a serious human rights matter.’23 It worked. In the decades that followed, Nike had been able to downplay its image as a sweatshop exploiter and strengthen its identity as a socially progressive leader of woke capitalism. Nike achieved this despite continued accusations of horrendous working conditions in its factories to this day.24 Nike’s ‘Dream Crazy’ ad was a great success. On the one hand, it was an antidote to Nike’s image as a sweatshop profiteer. On the other, it demonstrated how the old-style capitalism followed by the likes of Trump and the NFL was no longer the only game in town. Responses at the time were polarized along political lines. Those on the right complained that Nike was kowtowing to pressure from the woke left. There were even those whose token acts of regressive resistance involved burning their Nike shoes and cutting the famous swoosh trademark off their Nike clothing. Concurrently, there were also those on the left enamoured by a major corporate brand supporting Kaepernick’s activist cause, even though this support was not explicit in the campaign.25 These divisions, however, did nothing to stand in the way of Nike capitalizing financially on its association with Kaepernick. The commercial peril of taking divisive positions that Jordan joked about in the 1990s did not play out in the late 2010s. In the end, the campaign proved to be a huge commercial success, with the risk of being associated with a polarizing and uncompromising political figure such as Kaepernick paying off handsomely. Nike had experience with controversial marketing that they could draw on. After all, they had continued to back NBA star Kobe Bryant when he was charged with sexual assault. They didn’t stop their support for Manchester United’s soccer star Eric Cantona when, wearing a Nike boot, he kicked a fan and then punched his head. They stuck with golfer Tiger Woods when he faced the full brunt of an infidelity scandal. Revenues kept growing.26 If anything, supporting Kaepernick’s kneeling against racism, while politically controversial, was much easier to defend. 118
The Race to Wokeness The ‘Dream Crazy’ ad won a Creative Arts Emmy in the category of Outstanding Commercial.27 Financially, after the release of the ad Nike’s stock price rose 5 per cent, adding some US$6 billion to its market value. Revenues and share prices have risen consistently year on year since, much to the envy of their competitors. What was Nike thinking of? They were making a calculated risk that worked out in their favour. Banking market strategist Art Hogan explained Nike’s motives frankly: ‘I don’t think they just randomly decided to put this ad out, thinking, “Let’s commit political-correctness suicide”. People vote with their wallets, and the one clear winner in athletic apparel remains Nike.’28 Exemplifying the central tenet of woke capitalism, Nike proved that being associated with progressive political causes was in no way inconsistent with standard commercial objectives. Indeed, it went so far as to show that the exposure that was harnessed through controversy had extremely positive commercial outcomes for the Nike Corporation. At the same time, the ‘Dream Crazy’ ad was largely consistent with Nike’s long-term marketing strategy of getting sports celebrities to be seen wearing their shoes, whether it be on the court, on the track or on the street. Nike’s extended and long-term relationship with Michael Jordan is a case in point. The Air Jordan 11s released in 2019 were Nike’s best-selling shoes of all time,29 and the Jordan range of products remains to this day a multi-billion-dollar business for Nike.30 With Serena Williams also featuring in the ‘Dream Crazy’ ads, this follows the same trajectory in terms of Nike’s endorsement strategy. The key difference, especially with Kaepernick, is that the positions of Jordan and Williams as African American cultural role models were based on them representing dominant American social values of individualism, success, competition and determination. The ‘Dream Crazy’ campaign reinforced those same ideals, adding to them democratic values of freedom and equality in the form of fighting against racism and for social equality. The shift of Nike towards this political position suggests that they believed that it would enhance their commercial position, itself indicative of the woke shift within capitalism. While socialism is founded on a fundamental questioning of the injustices created and abetted by capitalism, woke capitalism’s association with progressive politics does not recognize this. 119
WOKE CAPITALISM For the woke capitalist there is no necessary contradiction been righteousness and capitalism even though the idea of being woke is associated with left progressive politics. Kaepernick has been described as ‘the face of the new civil rights movement’ and, as we have seen, he attracted the ire of right-wing populists all the way up to Donald Trump.31 With ‘Dream Crazy’, Nike demonstrated how woke capitalism operates, because embracing a controversial character like Kaepernick and his progressive politics was entirely consistent with their expansionist corporate agenda. Let us remember that many Americans had vilified Kaepernick for his political positions. Take, for example, Republican Senate candidate for Kentucky, Alex White. Building on Trump’s condemnation of Kaepernick, he contributed: Kaepernick is by definition racist, totally detached from reality that The United States is one of the best cultures in world history, our service members deserve respect and honour, and that murderous-communistdictators should be hung and shot in public squares – not celebrated and worn on T-shirts.32 The reference was to an old photo of Kaepernick wearing a t-shirt with a picture of a meeting between 1960s Black rights activist Malcolm X and former communist leader of Cuba, Fidel Castro. Colin Kaepernick was not the first African American sports star to use a public and media profile to protest racism. At the height of the civil rights movement in the US, John Carlos and Tommie Smith stood on the winners’ podium to collect their gold and silver medals for the 200 metres sprint at the 1968 Olympic Games in Mexico City. They each wore a single black glove in a clenched fist raised above their head as a potent symbol of the demand for equality for African Americans. This was not a spurof-the-moment action. Carlos and Smith were associated with the Olympic Project for Human Rights, of which Smith was one of the founders. The idea was to promote Black liberation through the platform and publicity available via international sports. Just like Kaepernick decades later, this act brought criticism from mainstream America. One reporter described the protests as ‘an ignoble performance that completely overshadowed a magnificent 120
The Race to Wokeness athletic one’, and denounced Smith and Carlos as ‘a pair of darkskinned storm troopers’.33 Such reactionary responses entirely elide the cultural and political importance of the success of African American sportspeople. Competitive sports rely on the idealistic notion of a ‘level playing field’, contrasting sharply with the prejudice, discrimination and division that characterize other domains of life. Historically, professional boxing is a special case in point, with White boxers in the US refusing to fight African Americans up until the early 20th century. The exception came in 1908, when African American heavyweight Jack Johnson beat the Canadian titleholder Tommy Burns in 14 rounds. This was the first time a Black heavyweight boxer had gone into the ring with a White man. The match was so controversial that no city in the US would agree to host it. It was in Sydney, Australia, in front of 20,000 spectators, that the bout took place, with those watching as eager to see the fight as to yell racial insults at Johnson. The dominant White society could simply not bear to see a Black man proving himself superior at anything.34 As another heavyweight champion, James J. Jeffries, said at the time: Burns has sold his pride, the pride of the Caucasian race […] The Canadian never will be forgiven by the public for allowing the title of the best physical man in the world to be wrested from his keeping by a member of the African race […] I refused time and again to meet Johnson while I was holding the title, even though I knew I could beat him. I would never allow a negro a chance to fight for the world’s championship, and I advise all other champions to follow the same course.35 Two years later Jeffries went back on his word. ‘I am going into this fight for the sole purpose of proving that a white man is better than a Negro,’36 he said in the lead-up to the fight. With Jeffries hailed as the ‘great white hope’, the contest in Reno was always about race, and from the perspective of the White American media it was about restoring the belief in White supremacy by returning Johnson, as a symbol of Black America, to what they saw as his rightful place of subordination. As it was reported in The Chicago Defender newspaper, the fight would ‘settle the mooted question 121
WOKE CAPITALISM of supremacy’.37 The New York Times opined that ‘If the black man wins, thousands and thousands of his ignorant brothers will misinterpret his victory’.38 It did not happen that way. After 15 rounds of punishment Jeffries’ corner threw in the towel, and Johnson held on to his title. Riots ensued across the US and White America responded violently, in some cases with deadly force, to the piercing of the insecurity over their self-proclaimed supremacy.39 There is a direct lineage between Johnson and Kaepernick, even though Johnson was not explicitly making a political protest, nor did he even stand in solidarity with other African Americans.40 As psychiatrist J. Corey Williams explains, however, the backlash that they both received is part of ‘an entire history of blacks stepping outside of the social order – or protesting it – only to be told they can’t. [This reflects an] underlying hatred, disgust and impulses to punish prominent, “poorly behaved” black figures’.41 For Kaepernick, it meant being effectively exiled from the NFL. For Johnson, it meant being sent to jail on trumped up charges by an all-White jury. History records many other powerful examples of African American athletes serving as potent political activists, many of whom paid a heavy price for doing so. Jesse Owens won four gold medals at the Berlin Olympic Games in 1936 while being watched by Adolf Hitler, but his athletics career was scuppered after being boycotted for attempting to earn endorsements in an era when track and field was meant to be pristinely amateur. Mohammed Ali refused to be conscripted into the army to fight in Vietnam as a protest against American imperialism, leading to the suspension of his boxing licence. In the 1990s, basketball player Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf was suspended from the NBA for refusing to take part in the ovation for the national anthem, claiming that the US flag stood for ‘oppression and tyranny’.42 These are but a few examples of how African American athletes have used the platform of their star status to bring the harsh realities of racism in the US to public attention and to support broader political projects for equality and justice, at their own expense. What makes Colin Kaepernick different is that his activism was supported and capitalized on by a multi-billion-dollar corporation. Nike aligned its brand with Kaepernick in a deliberate move. With this move, political activism became deeply entwined with 122
The Race to Wokeness corporate marketing. Suddenly the commercial value of political protest and dissent was being fully realized. Along these lines, professional marketers began to ask themselves questions like: ‘Do you risk going with a Nike/Kaepernick-type approach on whatever issue your management and/or consumers care most about? Or do you just stick your head in the sand?’43 It is the presence of such questions that marks out how woke capitalists approach political activism. Of course, there is no reason to doubt that the corporate bosses involved (or at least some of them) have genuine political commitments to racial equality and an end to racially based police brutality. There is also no reason to doubt that they would only put their corporate reputation behind such a cause if they believe it will benefit them commercially. Some call it a ‘win-win’ scenario. Others call it crass opportunism and exploitation. Either way, this marks the limit of what kind of politics will get airtime in a world increasingly dominated by large multi-national corporations. For those who support the cause, the publicity that a corporation like Nike creates can be attractive, but it also worth looking the gift horse in the mouth. As urban sociologist Jordanna Matlon argues: the controversy surrounding Colin Kaepernick’s Nike contract [saw] the terrain of struggle […] transformed into one of brand visibility and consumer allegiance. Meanwhile Kaepernick’s endorsement, embraced as a victory, overshadows the fact that his appointment as a Nike spokesperson in no way altered the fragility of black life in the United States – not to mention the debased conditions of Nike’s sweatshop laborers abroad.44 As Matlon goes on to elaborate, we might well ask whether Nike’s actions have the potential to lead to real or significant change, or yet another example of racial capitalism that associates ‘blackness and manhood [with] capitalist registers of worth’. There is no reason to question the value or sincerity of Kaepernick’s protest in raising awareness of police violence against African Americans. There is every reason to ask whether corporations are simply riding the trend created by others for their benefit. 123
10 Racial Capitalism/ Woke Capitalism In July 2020, the National Football League (NFL) announced that at every opening game of the 2020 season the song ‘Lift Every Voice and Sing’ would be played immediately before ‘The StarSpangled Banner’. Given the controversies just a few years earlier surrounding Colin Kaepernick and others kneeling in protest as the American anthem played, this was an especially significant gesture by the league.1 The same NFL that had effectively boycotted Kaepernick for speaking out against racism and police brutality against African Americans seemed to have taken a political U-turn. The song ‘Lift Every Voice and Sing’ started as a poem written by James Weldon Johnson, a leader of the civil rights organization the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). The poem was put to music in 1899 by his brother John Rosamond Johnson.2 It grew in popularity among African Americans in the decades that followed, and in 1919 the NAACP declared the song as the ‘Negro national anthem’.3 This was the song that was sung in 1990 when Nelson Mandela was released from prison. It was played in 2009 when Barack Obama was inaugurated as president of the United States.4 Compared to the patriotic triumphalism of ‘The Star-Spangled Banner’, ‘Lift Every Voice and Sing’ exposed the opportunities and the contradictions inherent in the American dream; a dream where the promise of freedom is racially tainted. As Shana L. Redmond, professor of musicology and African American studies, describes it, the song gains its significance as ‘a living document of the Black 124
Racial Capitalism/Woke Capitalism experience’ and the battle for self-determination against a history of slavery, segregation, racism and oppression.5 Redmond explains that ‘To sing this song is to revive that past – but also to recognize, as the lyrics of the song reveal, that there is a hopeful future that might come of it.’6 Usually played and sung as a hymn, the song opens hopefully, attesting to the possibilities of the human spirit: Lift every voice and sing, Till earth and heaven ring, Ring with the harmonies of Liberty; But this is not a naive hope or a bitter pipe dream. The lyrics remind us of how the hardships of the past should never be forgotten in the pursuit of a better future: Stony the road we trod, Bitter the chastening rod, Felt in the days when hope unborn had died.7 In exploring the history and meaning of the song, Rudolph P. Byrd, professor of American studies, describes it as a statement of African American racial pride. Although the history of race and racialization in the US is not explicitly mentioned, the song contains both a remembrance of America’s foundation in slavery, as well as the hope that comes from the continued fight for freedom.8 This song has deep meaning in the African American community, and is considered widely as a source of hope and inspiration. It is also a song that has attracted controversy and served as a means to draw attention to the continued need to fight for racial equality in America.9 The announcement about ‘Lift Every Voice and Sing’ came not long after NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell released a video statement apologizing for how the league had dealt with protests against racism in the past. In vowing to do better in the future, he stated: We, the National Football League, condemn racism and the systematic oppression of black people. We, the 125
WOKE CAPITALISM National Football League, admit we were wrong for not listening to NFL players earlier and encourage all to speak out and peacefully protest. We, the National Football League, believe Black Lives Matter. I personally protest with you and want to be a part of the much needed change in this country. Without black players there would be no National Football League. And the protests around the country are emblematic of the centuries of silence, inequality, and oppression of black players, coaches, fans, and staff. We are listening, I am listening, and I will be reaching out to players who have raised their voices, and others on how we can move forward together for a better and more united NFL family.10 Goodell’s statement was in direct response to the global outcry following the brutal death of George Floyd as he gasped for his last breaths with the knee of police officer Derek Chauvin pressing mercilessly and lethally on his neck. On 25 May 2020 Floyd went to a convenience store in Minneapolis, Minnesota, to buy a packet of cigarettes. The cashier suspected that the US$20 note he used for the purchase was counterfeit and called the police. By the time they arrived Floyd was sitting in a car nearby. With guns drawn the police demanded that the unarmed Floyd make his hands visible. He was then forcibly pulled out of the car, handcuffed and arrested under the charge of ‘passing counterfeit money’. Just ten minutes after the police had arrived Floyd was handcuffed and lying face down on the ground. It was at that point that Chauvin started kneeling on his neck. In the 7 minutes and 46 seconds that followed Floyd complained more than 20 times that he could not breathe. ‘You’re going to kill me, man,’ Floyd said as he begged for his life. ‘Tell my kids I love them. I’m dead,’ he uttered. Minutes later, he was.11 Footage of the incident taken by bystanders on mobile phones spread like wildfire on social media. Widespread public demonstrations erupted across the US and around the world, once again having to assert that Black Lives Matter. This was an international show of outrage and solidarity against systemic racism and racial violence like no other before it. In the US, there were 126
Racial Capitalism/Woke Capitalism about a thousand protests in all 50 states, and across 400 different towns and cities. Especially notable was that the protests took place even in White majority conservative states that had not previously been outspoken about racial justice or police violence in any significant way. The jarring reality of watching George Floyd suffocating to death under the knee of a police officer led finally to mainstream support for Black Lives Matter.12 The placards read ‘silence is violence’, ‘racism is a pandemic too’, ‘no peace, no justice’ and most chillingly ‘I can’t breathe’. The protests soon went global with demonstrations held in more than a hundred cities across Europe, Asia, Canada and Australia. While Floyd’s murder was the trigger for these events, they were also a performance of solidarity for the long history of racial violence experienced by people the world over. In Australia, there was special solidarity. Floyd’s death brought back the painful memory of David Dungay, a young Indigenous man of the Dunghutti people of northern New South Wales, who died in prison in 2015. On 29 December prison officers entered his cell, to stop him eating a packet of biscuits, of all things. Dungay was diabetic. Given only two minutes to comply with the demand that he stop eating, five officers were deployed, using physical force to move Dungay to a different cell. Dungay screamed “I can’t breathe” 12 times before the officers sedated him. He immediately became unresponsive, and attempts to resuscitate him failed. He went into cardiac arrest and died soon after. Dungay died just weeks before he was scheduled to be released from prison.13 This was another tragic example of the plague of Aboriginal deaths in police custody in Australia, and one with the bitter refrain of ‘I can’t breathe’. Since 1991, 450 Indigenous Australians have died in police custody. No police officer has been held to account for any of these deaths.14 The widespread and effective political activism against the global scourge of anti-Black racism was enabled by well-organized Black Lives Matter organizations who provided support and guidance for the protests. The success of these protests reflected a shift in mainstream political opinion about racism. As social movements expert Professor Douglas McAdam summed it up: It looks, for all the world, like these protests are achieving what very few do: setting in motion a period 127
WOKE CAPITALISM of significant, sustained, and widespread social, political change. […] We appear to be experiencing a social change tipping point – that is as rare in society as it is potentially consequential.15 Faced with such overwhelming public support, it is not surprising that the NFL made a commercial decision to flip its position on racial violence and protest. They came to realize that their previous stance on Colin Kaepernick and the flag protests was out of favour, as the US and the world finally listened to the overwhelming evidence of racial violence and injustice. The NFL is a business, and as a business, it cannot afford to alienate its customers. If the world supports Black Lives Matter, then it makes commercial sense that it should too, even if it means flipping on its anti-protest stance, which just a few years earlier had been presented as an authentic statement of patriotism. Michael Bennett, NFL star and co-author of the best seller Things that Make White People Uncomfortable, described the NFL’s position as follows: I think it’s hard to say that you believe in these issues when you still have owners supporting Donald Trump. But I think the NFL is trying to find a common ground where they can find a balance of being a company and also being socially active. The question is whether this is about propaganda or is it about changing the lives of other human beings. I think the jury’s still out on that. […] I think the NFL is starting to see that the world is not going to accept blatant racism in the way that it used to.16 If the world is no longer going to accept blatant and overt racism, it would be a commercial catastrophe for businesses not to take the same line. There is no real change in corporate politics here; it is simply that the same commercial logic of self-interest is responding to a different set of circumstances. It took the success of an international social movement for businesses to realize that anti-racism was fast gaining majority support. Not speaking up for Black Lives Matter might just be a public relations disaster. This wasn’t limited to the NFL. Corporations of all types were quick to 128
Racial Capitalism/Woke Capitalism jump on the bandwagon by issuing public statements about their backing. In effect, it was in a political milieu of mainstreaming support of anti-racism that corporations around the world suddenly feigned their political awakening. The apparent hollowness of these statements was slammed by many as an example of ‘brand activism’, a practice whereby corporations act to align their brands with political causes. The most sanguine and naive approach presents brand activism as an activity of an enlightened corporation with a genuine desire to make a positive contribution to society. Marketing guru and corporate acolyte Philip Kotler describes it like this: Societies are saddled with social problems and governments seem too polarized or impotent to act. Business is the major institution with the resources to act and help improve the lives of people. Brand activism is a company’s declaration that it wants to take some social responsibility to advance the Common Good.17 Despite its unmitigated connection to corporate self-interest, Kotler evinces a different moral justification for brand activism. For Kotler, brand activism is simply a matter of corporations selflessly taking on sociopolitical responsibilities as a result of the failure of governments to do so. It is presented as an act of civic altruism that is engaged in without any thought of personal gain or advantage. True to form, this is also how corporations positioned themselves in their support of Black Lives Matter following George Floyd’s murder. The superfast marketing media of Twitter, Instagram and Facebook were the favoured platforms. The NFL’s decision to play ‘Lift Every Voice and Sing’ was a case in point. The NFL was publicly outspoken about its new stance on racism. It pledged significant funds to fight racism, releasing the statement: The NFL is growing our social justice efforts through a 10-year total $250 million fund to combat systemic racism and support the battle against the ongoing and historic injustices faced by African Americans. The NFL and our clubs will continue to work collaboratively with 129
WOKE CAPITALISM NFL players to support programs to address criminal justice reform, police reforms, and economic and educational advancement. In addition to the financial commitment, we will continue to leverage the NFL Network and all of our media properties to place an increased emphasis on raising awareness and promoting education of social justice issues to our fans and help foster unity.18 They even decided to promote the cause by displaying the words ‘it takes all of us’ and ‘end racism’ in the end zones of football fields. They also reneged on the previous rule of preventing players from displaying slogans on their helmets. From 2020, the names of victims of racism were allowed on the helmets.19 While on the surface we might think that the NFL was simply supporting an important political cause, there is much more to it than that. Rodney Coates, professor of critical race and ethnic studies, was both scathing and insightful in his assessment of the NFL’s newfound political consciousness. He described the NFL’s political about-turn as a case of ‘blatant pandering to public sentiment’ and an example of a vacuous ‘publicity stunt’. The issue that Coates alerts us to is that in making symbolic statements about Black Lives Matter, the NFL was not doing anything that would make any material difference to the real lives of Black people in America. ‘There are so many ways to show its commitment. If it were serious it would open pathways for opportunities in a number of ways. But a song? No,’ he said.20 This reflects the insidious development of a long tradition of the exploitation of Black male bodies for profit in American football. Seventy per cent of NFL players are African American, but the teams are almost exclusively owned by White men. Why just reap the profits from the brutality on the field, when racial politics offers further possibilities for bolstering earnings? Nolan Rollins, an executive in the sports business industry, expressed a similar sentiment in no uncertain terms, reflecting a growing view that the NFL was simply trying to placate those fans who disagreed with their earlier stance on Kaepernick. In Rollins’s words: 130
Racial Capitalism/Woke Capitalism The area to address in the African American community is the inability to be economically mobile. […] You can play ‘Lift Every Voice’ as much as you want, but it will not put a dime in anyone’s bank account. It will not put anyone to work. It doesn’t allow a father or mother to put food on the table. […] That song will not change anything.21 Even the apparently generous US$250 million pledge is not significant compared to the richest of the league. Spread over ten years, this amounts to US$781,250 per team per year.22 This sum is small change considering that on average quarterbacks rake in US$5.76 million from NFL each year. The personal earnings of Russell Wilson of the Seattle Seahawks significantly outstrip the entire US$25 million a year pledge. He is on a four-year contract worth US$140 million. Meanwhile, the overall spend on television advertising for NFL broadcasts was US$4.48 billion in 2019. It is clear where the priorities lie, and in the financial world of the NFL, the money spent on social justice initiatives amounts to less than a rounding error on their accounts. The NFL is far from exceptional, with many of the biggest names in the corporate world quick to join the action. McDonald’s took a break from its more common light-hearted Twitter and Instagram entries with a simple post listing seven names. It read ‘Trayvon Martin. Michael Brown. Alton Stirling. Botham Jean. Atatiana Jefferson. Ahmaud Arbery. George Floyd.’ These are all names of people who were fatally shot by police officers in the US. The accompanying video to the tweet stated that ‘the entire McDonald’s family grieves. It’s why we stand for them and any other victims of systemic oppression and violence.’23 Again, McDonald’s approach was far from unique. ‘We are not asking you to buy our shoes. We are asking you to walk in someone else’s,’ was Reebok’s message.24 Playing on its ‘Just do it’ slogan, Nike went with ‘For once, Don’t Do It’. ‘To be silent is to be complicit’ was Netflix’s contribution, while Warner Media quoted African American novelist James Baldwin: ‘Neither love nor terror makes one blind: indifference makes one blind.’ Starbucks encouraged ‘courageous conversations’.25 131
WOKE CAPITALISM Was this authentic support for the fight against the systemic racism that has seen the repeated murders of Black Americans at the hands of police? Or, was it an example of callous corporate opportunism seeking to capitalize on the shifting tides of public opinion? In considering this, marketing analytics company Ace Metrix provides a telling example of the corporate logics that lead to support for ostensibly contentious political causes. While consumers might consider whether they agree with the politics represented in ads like that of McDonald’s, Ace Metrix’s analysis proposes that the key to successful woke advertising lies in the balance between two factors. The first is customer perceptions of the extent to which the ads are ‘empowering’ (that is, portraying a positive and valuable position on a sociopolitical issue). The second is the extent to which they are exploitative (that is, using the sociopolitical issues to further corporate self-interest). The situation, as Ace Metrix sees it, is that in the wake of the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests, large corporations were expected by the public to speak up and take a stand. That they did is just a matter of responding to those expectations, rather than a sign of an established political position. Consumer response to the McDonald’s ad was especially telling. Just over half of consumers surveyed found that the message of the ad was empowering. Most also strongly agreed that it was exploitative, especially if their political position was aligned to Black Lives Matter. As one of the survey respondents stated: ‘McDonald’s waited until it was more socially acceptable with mainstream America to admit that they support Black Lives Matter. The message would have been more powerful when Kaepernick was getting slammed for just kneeling.’26 Questions of authenticity were central to the public questioning of corporate responses to Black Lives Matter marketing and advertising. Simply riding a wave of changing public opinion is certainly not a guaranty of being taken seriously. But riding such waves has long been deployed as a corporate marketing strategy. As Marcia Chatelain, professor of history and African American studies at Georgetown University, explains, ‘McDonald’s is staying on brand. […] They have consistently taken a position when they knew that that position was going to be supported not only by its consumer base, but also expand its profile.’27 132
Racial Capitalism/Woke Capitalism Laid bare is how the feigned political activism of corporations like McDonald’s is, primarily, self-interested. Such are the workings of woke capitalism. In her book Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America,28 Chatelain specifically explores the relationship between McDonald’s and Black activists in the US, tracing this back to the civil rights movement in the 1960s. While in the 1940s and 1950s fast food restaurants in the US were largely for White customers only or were racially segregated, things began to change in the 1960s. Following the murder of Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968, over 100 US cities turned into scenes of civil disturbance, looting and rioting. The assassination became a tinderbox that lit a fiery response to the anger and frustration of Black inner-city poverty, poor housing, lack of adequate school facilities and police harassment. This uprising saw many of McDonald’s White franchise owners unwilling or unable to return to business in predominantly Black neighbourhoods. This led McDonald’s to develop a whole new racially based business strategy.29 McDonald’s started to actively seek Black franchisees. This was the business spirit of the age, as ‘Madison Avenue and Wall Street were evaluating advertising and marketing reports that advised that companies could capture a lucrative and growing market of upwardly mobile black consumers’.30 Meanwhile, McDonald’s started donating money to civil rights organizations in an attempt to tie their corporate strategy to Martin Luther King’s dream. Despite King’s explicit anti-capitalist position, McDonald’s has continued to celebrate him as part of their public image to this day. As Chatelain observes, rather than being a sign of corporate support for Black America, the corporate support for this form of ‘black capitalism’ was more a sign of government neglect of the economic hardships faced by many urban Black Americans. This was woke capitalism in one of its earliest incarnations. Chatelain concludes that the history of McDonald’s relationship with Black America is one of ‘how capitalism can unify cohorts to serve its interests’ and how that unification was only possible because of the ‘stress of racial trauma, political exclusion, and social alienation’.31 It is because of this that Chatelain portrays McDonald’s relationship with Black America as an exemplar of ‘racial capitalism’, understood as ‘the deep connections between the development of modern capitalism and racist subjugation and 133
WOKE CAPITALISM oppression’.32 The racial capitalism to which Chatelain refers to has a long history dating back to the very beginning of American capitalism itself. The term ‘racial capitalism’ was first used by Cedric J. Robinson to explain how capitalism was and still is yoked to the imperial history of racism as realized in slave ownership, racial violence and even genocide. By this account, racism is not limited to being a political issue of human rights and equality, but is built into the structure of the economy. In the case of the US, to put it most simply, capitalism was founded on slavery.33 In his 1983 book Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition,34 Robinson argues that even before capitalism, racism was present in feudal Europe. This was, however, an ‘internal racism’ that created social stratifications based on racial divisions between dominant Christian groups and Jewish, Irish, Slavic and Roma peoples. For Robinson, capitalism did not arise as an entire break from feudalism. Instead, it extended the racial basis of economic activity and economic inequality in different directions, while still being based on the exploitation of racialized groups of people. Slavery marked the extreme of racial capitalism as, in Robinson’s words, ‘for more than 300 years slave labor persisted beyond the beginnings of modern capitalism, complementing wage labor, peonage, serfdom, and other methods of labor coercion’. Capitalism is about conflicts of interest and exploitation not just across class divisions, but also across racialized ones. This is evidenced, for Robinson, in ‘the persistent and continuously evolving resistance of African peoples to oppression’. It is this racially based antagonism, Robinson maintains, that the traditions of Black resistance and Black radicalism were born as an ‘encompassing and conscious experience of organized opposition to racism, exploitation, and domination’.35 These are precisely the traditions that have informed the Black Lives Matter movement. In their 2016 statement of policy demands called ‘A Vision for Black Lives’, the activist coalition Movement for Black Lives (M4BL) laid this out clearly on an international scale: Patriarchy, exploitative capitalism, militarism, and White supremacy know no borders. We stand in solidarity with our international family against the 134
Racial Capitalism/Woke Capitalism ravages of global capitalism and anti-Black racism, human-made climate change, war, and exploitation. We also stand with descendants of African people all over the world in an ongoing call and struggle for reparations for the historic and continuing harms of colonialism and slavery.36 In performing resistance and dissent against the often-deadly police violence that Black people suffer around the world, what also becomes more apparent is the continuities of racial capitalism from feudalism, to slave imperialism, to the present day. As critical race scholar Siddhant Issar explains, racial capitalism evokes an acceptance that race is and has always been central to the capitalist enterprise and to the exploitation that happens within it. This is important because it serves to ‘connect the histories of slavery and colonialism with the contemporary economic-material predicament of Black populations’,37 and how that history is permeated with White supremacy and imperialism. Issar’s point is that the Black Lives Matter movement is predicated on a conviction that ‘racial domination structures the capitalist economy […] from colonialism to slavery through food and housing redlining, mass incarceration, and surveillance’.38 This is a radical position that is far removed from that of the woke corporations who spruik Black Lives Matter slogans on their websites and via their social media accounts. When McDonald’s mourns the deaths of Black Americans whose lives have been brutally cut short by police, it excises the radicalism from Black activism for its image management purposes. The same goes for the NFL, and its willingness to perform an about-turn when its anti-resistance patriotism appeared to become unfashionable. Despite all the corporate kerfuffle, there is no mention by these or other corporations of, for example, Black Lives Matter’s demands for reparations for historical slave exploitation and oppression of Black people. Black Lives Matter’s political demands include: Reparations for past and continuing harms. The government, responsible corporations and other institutions that have profited off of the harm they have inflicted on Black people – from colonialism to slavery 135
WOKE CAPITALISM through food and housing redlining, mass incarceration, and surveillance – must repair the harm done.39 A Black Lives Matter tweet and a small donation to a charity are a pittance that do not even remotely come close to the reparations that have been demanded. If American capitalism has been built on slave labour, then for American capitalism to take responsibility is not the stuff of public relations slogans. Black Lives Matter has been taken on board by corporations in a massively deradicalized form so as not to disrupt the structure of capitalism, which, both in the past and the present, has been and is entwined with racial oppression. Deradicalized by woke corporations, Black Lives Matter is also stripped of its fundamental political character – the character that Barbara Ransby, in her book Making All Black Lives Matter, calls a ‘Black-led class struggle’.40 Ransby’s point is that racial justice and economic justice are inextricable from one another. To talk the political talk without walking the economic walk is, in effect, politically meaningless. Inequality, as a central feature of contemporary life under capitalism, is not a result of differential levels of merit and hard work, as conservative apologists would have it. Instead, inequality is too often rooted in the nexus of classism and racism, a form of oppression that has evolved from slavery and colonialism. In making this point, Ransby quotes Gwen Carr, whose son Eric Garner was killed in 2014 in New York by police when he was trying to break up a fight: At the time [Eric] was selling cigarettes to support his family. These two things are, of course, connected. They reflect the ongoing struggle the black community faces every day for racial and economic justice. They’re at the heart of the Black Lives Matter movement. Eric’s senseless death has forced our country to confront the toxic effects of police brutality. My hope is that together, we can also change the system that trapped him and so many black men and women across our city and nation into poverty too.41 Corporations making public statements of support is all well and good. But what is needed are fundamental changes that eradicate 136
Racial Capitalism/Woke Capitalism uneven levels of poverty and oppression based on race and class. If the superficiality woven into much corporate activism wasn’t enough, business enthusiasm for Black Lives Matter rubs more salt into the wounds when it demands that its fawning activism must also be regarded as a ‘business case’. Never mind avoiding reparations, corporations seek a financial and commercial payback from their dalliance with activism. When Black Lives Matter becomes appropriated by Black Lives Marketing we are not seeing real change, but rather a cynical extension of racial capitalism whereby Black resistance itself is leveraged for the sake of increasing corporate wealth and profit. Here woke capitalism is just another form of exploitation of Black and working-class people. Not limited to the labouring power of their bodies, the exploitation is extended to their struggle, politics, ideas and spirit. Commenting in the online magazine Black Enterprise, Tiffany Hogan expresses it like this: We are already seeing how some of these Black Lives Matter statements ring hollow. Many companies have a history of racial discrimination and exploiting people of color and have failed to hire, promote and fairly compensate their Black employees. The comments in their posts tell you a lot – current and former employees sharing stories of being overlooked, overworked, underpaid, and abused. Hypocrites and exploiters are being exposed.42 Indeed, it is all well and good, for example, for tech companies like Apple, Google, Facebook and Twitter to speak out in support of Black Lives Matter. But is this making a difference when they have failed to do anything about the fact that they have a largely White male workforce that has robbed working-class people of affordable housing in whatever vicinities they open offices?43 When woke capitalism meets racial capitalism, corporations might well be amplifying the slogans of the Black Lives Matter movement, but they are also exploiting that movement for their benefit, while simultaneously trying to strip it of the radical politics that is needed if capitalist inequality and exploitation are going to change. 137
11 The Best a Woke Corporation Can Be On Sunday 12 January 2019, Gillette released a television advertisement using the slogan ‘The best a man can be’. Ostensibly, the ad was a head-on challenge to toxic masculinity. There is no going back to the days where male sexual harassment, bullying and domestic violence were accepted as normal, the ad professed.1 The ad was somewhat of a turnaround for Gillette. Before this, it had long marketed its products in the image of the competitive go-getting alpha male, an image associated with the forms of dominant masculinity that it was now bringing into question. So how did it happen that Gillette suddenly took on political critique of masculinity commonly associated with leftist feminism?2 To go back to the beginning, the Gillette Company was founded in 1901 when King C. Gillette invented the safety razor. This was an innovation that revolutionized men’s grooming, allowing them to easily shave themselves at home rather than making regular visits to a barber. Building on a proud history of innovation, Gillette has remained one of the most well-known brands of shaving products to this day.3 In terms of their marketing, since the late 1980s Gillette’s advertising slogan was ‘The best a man can get’, a play on words suggesting that the company’s razors were the best available, and that this signified an apex of masculinity. The very first ‘best a man can get’ ad was played at the 1989 Super Bowl as the Cincinnati Bengals fought it out with the San Francisco 49ers to be crowned overall winners of the American National Football League. 138
The Best a Woke Corporation Can Be For the first time in the history of the competition, the Super Bowl game was tied at half time. The half-time entertainment, for which the Super Bowl is famous, featured a magician Elvis Presley impersonator, Elvis Presto. He and his backup singers, the Magic Wandas, did a routine called ‘BeBop Bamboozled’. In a set designed to look like a 1950s theatre, Elvis lip-synched and did magic tricks while the Wandas, dressed in pale blue halter-neck dresses with white polka dots, danced around him.4 Harking back to a foregone era of post-war American confidence, this was a bizarre spectacle celebrating an America where men were centre stage, and women fawned around them. Gillette’s 1989 Super Bowl ad was on theme in celebrating a traditional and conventional form of Western masculinity. The background music proudly resonated with lyrics portraying strong, masculine imagery about fathers and sons, races run and being a champion, ending with the well-known tagline ‘The best a man can get’. As these male champions are heralded in song, the ad portrays men as heterosexual breadwinners, who work hard and play hard. They are fathers who pass on their masculine cultural heritage to their sons, are doted on by loving wives, and enjoy wellbonded homosocial relationships with other men. These are wellgroomed, handsome, muscular and physically active men. They lift weights, run marathons, surf and play football. Whether they are Wall Street executives, professional sportsmen or astronauts, they are all winners. They are almost all White.5 The campaign was a runaway success for Gillette, so much so that in 1990 they stopped airing the ad on television, afraid that the demand for their product was increasing so much that their production could not keep pace.6 For the next 30 years, Gillette retained the slogan ‘The best a man can get’, with an image strategy rooted in dominant masculinity pretty much along the same lines as that of the 1989 Super Bowl ad. The best men were those who won in life’s competition. They had the best jobs, were the most handsome, the fittest, had the most beautiful wives, and raised their sons to be just like them. Independent winners, these men were rugged leaders who achieved their goals, and nothing could stand in their way. Despite these decades of success, by the late 2010s Gillette had begun questioning this strategy, asking whether it was still as relevant to the razor-buying market. In response, they began 139
WOKE CAPITALISM experimenting with marketing strategies that portrayed the ‘modern man’ as more sensitive and less stoical than his predecessor. ‘It’s no longer acceptable to tell men to man up, bottle it up and show no weakness,’ was the message from Gillette’s creative team.7 The ad that came out on 12 January 2019 took this new direction to its full potential. For a start, the slogan ‘The best a man can get’, was changed to ‘The best a man can be’. Who was this new man that Gillette was now portraying? The new ad begins calling out ‘bullying’, ‘sexual harassment’ and ‘toxic masculinity’ as significant social problems that affect girls and women, as well as men and boys.8 ‘Is this the best a man can get?’ the ad asks as startling images are portrayed of boys being bullied for being ‘sissies’, men catcalling and sexually harassing women, and executives mansplaining business to their female counterparts. ‘It’s been going on far too long’, we are told, and we need to stop using the old excuse that ‘boys will be boys’. In place, the ad portrays a new form of masculinity where men hold each other accountable for sexist and violent behaviour. We now see men stepping in to protect women from harassment, stopping other men from stalking women, raising their daughters to be strong, breaking up fights, and intervening when they see people being bullied. The ad ends with the message: ‘It’s only by challenging ourselves to do more, that we can get closer to our best.’ A massive controversy ensued as the ad, originally released on YouTube, went viral. It attracted some four million views within two days of its release. Supporters of the ad lauded Gillette for taking a stand against toxic masculinity. Glamour magazine, for example, offered glowing praise for a ‘self-assured piece of advertising that Gillette should be proud of ’. Gillette was extolled for its ability to change with the times and for taking the progressive stance that society, and men in particular, should no longer hide from the realities of sexual harassment. The ad allowed men to be empowered to hold other men accountable, advocates argued.9 That Gillette, as a major corporation, would take on this cause also suggested that they believed that it had mainstream appeal to their customers. As Jack Halberstam, professor of English and gender studies at Columbia University, put it at the time, ‘There’s clearly a cultural shift happening around masculine norms, and the fact that corporate advertising realizes it needs to modify the way it markets 140
The Best a Woke Corporation Can Be to men and represents masculinity suggests that the shift is not just happening at a subcultural level.’10 Suppose we were to be sanguine about the matter. In that case, we could say that Gillette was supporting and amplifying the voices of those who had long fought to draw attention to, and reformulate, the damaging effects that masculinity can have on men and women. To be more pessimistic would yield the conclusion that Gillette was trying to cash in on changing public sentiments towards gender identity, and masculinity in particular. After all, Gillette’s decision to change its advertising messages was not just because of ideology. It was informed by extensive research involving focus groups and surveys of men and women. Effectively, shifting perceptions of masculinity were identified as a ‘market trend’.11 Let’s not forget too, that just six months earlier the American Psychological Association had, for the first time, released Guidelines for Psychological Practice with Boys and Men. The guidelines, designed to help clinicians working with men and boys, were deeply critical of the limits of traditional masculinity and its deleterious effect on the psychological wellbeing of many men, linking it also to violence and discrimination against women and gender-diverse people.12 Responses to Gillette’s ad also showed, however, that not everyone shared progressive visions of the more diverse possibilities of masculinity. Detractors decried the ad as being anti-men. British television personality Piers Morgan was among those who led the charge against Gillette. He called the ad ‘PCcrazed bilge’. It’s nothing less than ‘man-hating’ and a ‘war on masculinity’, he ranted. Morgan held radical feminists and woke virtue signallers to blame for wanting to emasculate men by claiming that ‘it’s wrong, and harmful, to be masculine, to be a man’.13 Right-wing reactionaries like Morgan seethed around the world. Casting the ad as a ‘leftist’ conspiracy against men, many believed that the forms of masculinity castigated by Gillette were worth preserving. Selwyn Duke’s comment in The New American sums up this anachronistic position: ‘Men are the wilder sex, which accounts for their dangerousness – but also their dynamism. You can’t have male inventiveness, innovation, civilizationbuilding, and lifesaving without the explosive masculine energy that is their impetus.’14 141
WOKE CAPITALISM Extreme responses such as this echo the kind of snowflake sensitivity that conservatives often and easily accuse others of. That some men would respond so extremely to a challenge to their macho self-image itself indicates the anxiousness and fragility of traditional masculinity. Negative comments on Gillette’s YouTube channel outstripped positive ones ten-to-one, circulating around the idea that the ad was demeaning and stereotyping of men, and that Gillette products should be boycotted.15 James Woods, outspoken Hollywood actor and vocal Donald Trump supporter, exemplified the reactionary critique on Twitter. On 15 January 2019, he tweeted: ‘So nice to see @Gillette jumping on the “men are horrible” campaign permeating mainstream media and Hollywood entertainment. I for one will never use your product again.’16 Not surprisingly, Gillette was also cast as a woke capitalist antihero. The Spectator magazine, well known for its conservative political stances, epitomized the right-wing critique. The argument was not only that Gillette had made the ad as an attention-grabbing publicity stunt, but also that ‘The modern-day blight of right-on snobbery infecting the corporate world and a sign that, in these increasingly polarized times, there is no corner of life that will not be needlessly politicized by those who think they know better. Down with this woke capitalism.’17 Over in the US the people at the conservative think tank the Witherspoon Institute, were making similar claims, describing the ad as a perverse reaction to the ‘sentimental humanitarian milieu’ of our times. They griped that ‘business does not exist to engage in Marxist-like consciousness-raising exercises, alter family structures, establish world peace, or even right a nation’s historical wrongs’.18 The ‘sentimental humanitarianism’ that Gillette was accused of pandering to was that of the #MeToo movement. This was not by implication. #MeToo was explicitly named in the ad as a cultural turning point when it came to the social awareness of toxic masculinity. The Gillette brand was deliberately aligning itself with what had become a highly influential international social movement designed to call out and combat the sexual harassment and assault of women. The #MeToo movement had emerged suddenly only a few months before ‘The best a man can be’ was released, and had grasped the public imagination. It began on 5 October 142
The Best a Woke Corporation Can Be 2018, when journalists Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey published a breaking story in The New York Times about the big-name Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein.19 At the time, Weinstein was riding high on success, having spent the previous four decades creating a Hollywood empire. He produced or directed more than 200 movies, winning six Academy Awards for Best Picture. Sex, Lies, and Videotape (1989), Pulp Fiction (1994), Good Will Hunting (1997) and Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom (2013) are among the many critically acclaimed and commercially successful movies that he released. An active philanthropist, he supported charities addressing poverty, AIDS, diabetes and multiple sclerosis.20 Kantor and Twohey ran the headline ‘Harvey Weinstein paid off sexual harassment accusers for decades’. The New York Times investigative team had interviewed Weinstein’s employees and other people who worked in the film industry, as well as scrutinizing emails and documents from his businesses. What they found was that for three decades Weinstein had repeatedly been accused of sexual harassment, but brokered financial settlements with his victims to make those accusations go away. The article detailed this long history of abusive behaviour and how Weinstein used his massive Hollywood power and celebrity to manipulate and harass both famous and aspiring actresses. In the article, actress Ashley Judd gave personal testimony of how, in the 1990s, Weinstein invited her to the Peninsula Beverly Hills hotel for a business meeting. When she got there, she found that the meeting was to be held in his hotel bedroom. Dressed only in a bathrobe, Weinstein asked Judd if he could give her a massage. He also invited her to watch him shower. Other women offered accounts of how Weinstein would promise career-breaking opportunities in exchange for ‘massages’, and was often adamant in refusing to take no for an answer. Less than a week after Kantor and Twohey’s article came out, the exposé escalated when Ronan Farrow published ‘From aggressive overtures to sexual assault: Harvey Weinstein’s accusers tell their stories’ in The New Yorker.21 Farrow revealed even more testimonies of women who had been sexually assaulted and harassed by Weinstein. Horrifying stories were recounted about how he groped women, exposed himself to them, masturbated in their presence, lured them into his bedroom under false pretences, and forced them into oral sex. He was revealed as a malignant serial sexual predator 143
WOKE CAPITALISM and rapist. In March 2020 Weinstein was sentenced to 23 years of prison for sexual assault and rape by a Manhattan court.22 The outing of Weinstein as a serial sexual harasser kicked off a worldwide movement. In response to Weinstein being outed in the press, on the 15 October 2017, actress Alyssa Milano posted on Twitter: ‘If you’ve been sexually harassed or assaulted write ‘me too’ as a reply to this tweet.’ Thousands of women replied almost immediately. Some were celebrities like Lady Gaga and Viola Davis. Others were regular people who had suffered from sexual abuse. Harrowing stories of rape, bullying, intimidation and job loss flooded social media. Within weeks the #MeToo movement was an international phenomenon, bringing the world’s attention to just how common it was for women to suffer in this way.23 Gymnast McKayla Maroney testified to having been sexually assaulted by her former doctor, the convicted child pornographer Lawrence G. Nassar. Anthony Rapp spoke up about being aggressively propositioned by actor Kevin Spacey when Anthony was a 14-year-old child actor. Comedian Louis C.K. admitted that the accusations against him for sexual misconduct by a number of women were true. The list of perpetrators goes on and on.24 Celebrities, businessmen, politicians and powerful men from all walks of life were finally being called to account for their violent and abusive behaviours. The idea behind the hashtag #MeToo is not new. It was first used by political activist Tarana Burke back in 2006 to help young women collectively empower themselves. As Burke describe it: I started this work […] 2006–07 while working with young black and brown girls in the south – trying to find resources for them because they were survivors of sexual violence and sharing their experiences of sexual violence. […] And as a survivor myself it was important for me to find a safe space for them.25 With its viral spread through social media, the solidarity that Burke’s movement represented became a worldwide phenomenon, where Burke’s vision of ‘a world freed of sexual violence’ seemed closer than ever.26 In the latter months of 2017 #MeToo had become so strong that Time magazine named the movement’s ‘silence 144
The Best a Woke Corporation Can Be breakers’ as its ‘Person of the Year’. The power of solidarity was acknowledged as women the world over shared stories that had been hidden for years, sometimes lifetimes. Standing together, against fears of being dismissed, ridiculed, shamed, accused of lying, or losing a job, women were speaking up and being heard. Men were being held to account and legally prosecuted. Time described it as a ‘revolution of refusal’ that finally was resulting in real consequences for male perpetrators.27 It was amid this revolution that Gillette decided to link its valuable brand name to the movement. With ‘The best a man can be’ Gillette was aligning itself with the growing tide of public support against the kinds of toxic masculinity that the #MeToo movement was alerting the world to. Gillette exemplified a new type of corporate political activism28 – a central dimension of woke capitalism where corporations and their CEOs publicly backed political causes not directly related to their business activities. Whereas in the past, corporations could be expected to be the targets of political activists, for example on issues like climate change and worker exploitation, today’s woke corporations are becoming the activists. We need to be careful, however, not to think that corporate activism is the same as traditional political activism. Corporate activism is commercial as much as it is political – it is a marketing strategy geared at the management of corporate values and identity, as well as reputation building. Corporate activism has been explicitly identified as having the twin objectives of influencing public opinion and improving consumer attitudes towards the company.29 This is not to say that nobody at Gillette had genuine political beliefs in the causes their organization so publicly supported. What it does say, though, is that support would not have been given unless it passed the ‘business case’ test of being able to match the social benefits with the self-interested commercial interests. While none of this speaks to the authenticity of the socially minded motives of corporate activists, it does tell us something about the causes that they support. Put simply, when a corporation backs a progressive social cause it is because they believe that cause has mainstream support. That Gillette has aligned itself with the #MeToo movement is not something for them to be congratulated over. It is the #MeToo 145
WOKE CAPITALISM movement that deserves praise. Because of the very dedicated and often thankless work of the genuine activists #MeToo became a global social movement that has brought women’s experience of sexual harassment, abuse and assault at the hands of men out of the shadows.30 As well as Harvey Weinstein, without #MeToo it would have been likely that serial abusers such as financier Jeffrey Epstein, musical producer R. Kelly, comedian Bill Cosby and so many others would not have been publicly held to account. As law professor Penny Venetis explains: There really is a wave of various high-profile individuals who were protected by the criminal justice system, among other institutions, who are now being examined and are being prosecuted. […] Prosecutors will not indict someone and will not prosecute someone unless they think they have a really good case, and I think there might be a feeling that jurors are now more attuned to allegations of sexual abuse and sexual assault, and more willing to believe that this occurred, including by highprofile, rich, well-connected people.31 That great steps have been taken to achieve this is neither about selling razors nor vilifying men. It is about the power and solidarity of a collective social voice and celebrating a global movement that in the words of the #MeToo founder Tarana Burke, seeks to build ‘a world free of sexual violence’.32 In an era of woke capitalism, that Gillette chose to align itself with #MeToo is not at all surprising. What is much more interesting is how the ad was related to Gillette’s financial performance. By mid-2019 Gillette’s owner, Procter & Gamble, had written down US$8 billion on Gillette. This contributed to the parent company reporting a loss of US$5.24 billion for the quarter ending 30 June. This write-down had been a long time coming, as globally the market for shaving products was declining, especially in developing countries where social trends saw men shaving less often, if at all. In the five years to 2019 the market had declined by 11 per cent. Even worse for Procter & Gamble, Gillette’s share of that shrinking market had also begun to fall in 2018. Coupled with a strong US dollar, this meant that Gillette’s US dollar revenues 146
The Best a Woke Corporation Can Be were declining. The write-down was an action taken because of these market conditions. The stock market responded favourably to Procter & Gamble’s mid-2019 results, with the price of the company’s shares reaching an all-time high.33 Despite the write-down being a response to established trends in Gillette’s core business, the conservative press was keen to blame the financial situation on the ‘best a man can be’ ad. Conclusions were quickly and erroneously jumped to as headlines ran ‘Gillette cut by $8B loss after “toxic masculinity” ad’,34 ‘Gillette’s “woke” ad that insulted men cost P&G billions’,35 and ‘After going woke and losing $8 billion, Gillette embraces masculinity again’.36 The rightwing culture warriors used Gillette as a convenient, if not falsified, example to support their motto ‘get woke, go broke’. Writing in the right-wing blog RedState, Brandon Morse was direct in levelling accusations at Gillette and its CEO Gary Coombe: This is billions of dollars gone. You upset an entire sex by essentially telling them that every radical feminist claim about them is true. […] Coombe made a horrific call and the proof is in the numbers. Now we’ll see if the good Captain Coombe learns from it, or continues to poke massive holes into the side of his ship in the name of looking ‘woke’.37 Morse’s lesson in reactionary conservatism was not learned by Gillette, however. Coombe stood steadfastly by the brand’s position in masculinity: I don’t enjoy that some people were offended by the film and upset at the brand as a consequence. That’s not nice and goes against every ounce of training I’ve had in this industry over a third of a century. […] But I am absolutely of the view now that for the majority of people to fall more deeply in love with today’s brands you have to risk upsetting a small minority and that’s what we’ve done.38 In defending Gillette, it is noteworthy that the business reasons for supporting #MeToo were never far from Coombe’s mind. 147
WOKE CAPITALISM He saw the campaign as a means of securing Gillette’s future as social values concerning masculinity were changing. He believed that Gillette was in commercial danger on account of its image being associated with a bygone era. We ‘lost connection with the millennial generation. Gillette quickly became the brand of the millennial generation’s dads,’ he argued.39 The gap between Morse’s and Coombe’s positions exemplify two opposing positions on woke branding. From one perspective, going woke is a smart business strategy that can see brands retain relevance in a changing world. From the other perspective, politically progressive causes are socially divisive and hence pose an undue risk to business success. Amid all of this debate, the arguments are all about the best way to do business. Whichever side one might take, it is the real political issues that the #MeToo activists had so effectively and successfully brought to the fore that risk being rendered secondary to a commercial agenda. Again, here we see the democratic work of social activists being subsumed by woke capitalism. Gillette’s ad reflects a particular irony of woke capitalism. On the one hand, woke capitalism sees corporations co-opting political and social issues and aligning them with a corporate interest that is entirely independent of those issues. On the other hand, incidents like Gillette releasing its toxic masculinity ad can and do stimulate important public debates. As we have already seen, the advertisement divided opinion on the values of contemporary masculinity. Gillette did not do this unintentionally. As marketing professor Claudia Kubowicz Malhotra has explained, using politically divisive issues as the basis of marketing is a growing trend of corporations wanting to locate themselves amid social controversy: We’re at the very beginning of a curve or uptick in this type of advertising. There probably will be a period where it feels overcrowded, but I don’t see that any time in the foreseeable future. […] People don’t watch advertising as much as they used to, so you need to say or do something that catches people’s attention. Then, the whole social media aspect of amplifying that is also very critical.40 148
The Best a Woke Corporation Can Be The ad had worked. Traditional and social media were saturated by the public debate that followed. Gillette was headline news around the world. That not everyone supported Gillette wasn’t a problem. What mattered was that everyone was talking about them. While the ad may have stimulated important democratic debates, it is important to remember that generating democratic engagement was not its main purpose, if it was a purpose at all. Gillette CEO Gary Coombe was well aware that after watching the ad, 65 per cent of customers were more greatly disposed to buying Gillette products. Among millennials it was 76 per cent, and among women under age 35 it was 84 per cent.41 At this point it becomes hard to say whether #MeToo benefited from Gillette or Gillette benefited from #MeToo. What is clear, to borrow a phrase from Douglas Holt, a professor of marketing, was that Gillette was an ‘ideological parasite and proselytizer’42 riding on the coat tails of #MeToo. But the political implications are much broader than that. In plying the division between commercial self-interest and politically motivated democratic activism, corporations like Gillette were breaking down the traditional division between the political sphere and the economic sphere. This is a division that has long been central to the idea of democracy, with the economy intended to serve and sustain social and political life.43 Under neoliberalism conditions, the relationship between the economic and the political has radically changed. Woke capitalism is a symptom of this. Economist Yanis Varoufakis explains: ‘In our democracies today, this separation of economic from the political sphere, the moment it started happening, it gave rise to an inexorable epic struggle between the two with the economic sphere colonizing the political sphere to such an extent that it is undermining itself.’44 Woke capitalism is a particular form of this undermining and colonization. It was once assumed that the institutions of liberal democratic nations could be divided into three sectors. The first sector is the state and includes government, the police, the judiciary, state schools, hospitals, publicly owned enterprises and so forth. The second sector, or ‘for-profit sector’, consists of businesses of all kinds, ranging from giant corporations to corner shops and sole-proprietorships. Finally, there is the third sector which includes private non-profit-seeking organizations that are democratically 149
WOKE CAPITALISM controlled and independent of the state. This sector can include anything from churches to sports clubs to childcare providers to charities.45 Woke capitalism does not respect these boundaries. It involves second-sector organizations taking over the responsibilities of the other two. The issue with this is that while the state and the third sector are not motivated by profit, the second sector, by definition, is. When this profit motive bleeds into the activities of the other two sectors, things change. Most specifically, profit becomes the primary driver for the provision of public services, and in the promotion of democratic debate. Economist Branko Milanovic describes the especially crucial differences between the first and the second sectors: Modern capitalism societies are built on a dichotomy: in the political space decisions are (to be) made on an equal basis with everybody having the same say and with the structure of power being flat; in the economic space the power is held by the owners of capital, the decisions are dictatorial, and the structure of power is hierarchical.46 Woke capitalism involves this hierarchically controlled corporate power gaining undue influence over, or even taking charge of, political matters that affect everybody. In this sense, woke capitalism is fundamentally undemocratic, even when individuals within a democracy might agree with the political sentiments and convictions expressed by a corporation like Gillette. Reactionary conservatives who threatened to boycott Gillette because they didn’t agree with its political position completely missed the point. To only support people or institutions that one agrees with and to try to silence the others is the high road authoritarianism. From a democratic position, this is not the problem. The real problem occurs when the holders of private financial interests use their position and power to control a public agenda, while that control is still ultimately guided by the profit motive and not by a motive of pursuing the public good. Ultimately, Gillette intended to increase the popularity of its products among a new generation of consumers so that it could increase its share of a shrinking market for shaving products. #MeToo was a vehicle for it to do that. That is the best a woke corporation can be. 150
12 The Right Hand Gives In the summer of 2020, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation made a fundamental shift in how it distributed its grant funding. On 30 June the Foundation, endowed with more than US$6 billion, sent out a press release that heralded what they called a ‘transformational moment in our history’. It went like this: The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation today announced a major strategic evolution for its organization, prioritizing social justice in all of its grantmaking. The Foundation’s board has resoundingly endorsed a refined mission statement and updated program areas. While Mellon’s strategic shift – under the leadership of Mellon President Elizabeth Alexander – has been two years in the making, current events make the Foundation’s new social justice lens even more relevant to Mellon’s philanthropic efforts supporting the arts and humanities.1 Andrew W. Mellon, whom this foundation was named after, was one of the ‘robber barons’ who emerged after the American Civil War. Robber baron was a pejorative epithet given to a small cadre of American capitalists whose industrial empires grew to massive proportions in the latter part of the 19th century. They were called robbers because of how they accumulated wealth on a giant scale at the expense of others. They were called barons because of their elite social status. Their hallmark was being ‘cruel businessmen who used ruthless business practices to get ahead and showed no 151
WOKE CAPITALISM compassion for others, including the working class. […] Ultimately, the goal of a robber baron is to become a monopoly and completely dominate an industry.’2 Mellon exemplified this, and his business empire was as huge as it was diversified. Steel, coal, oil, chemicals, railways and construction were among the industries he dominated. He was in charge of 99 banks, and built five corporations that would be later listed on the Fortune 500. His company Alcoa has a full monopoly in the production of aluminium, and he owned Gulf Oil.3 Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner dubbed the post-Civil War period in the US ‘The Gilded Age’.4 Their 1873 novel of that name was a satire of its time, mocking the greed and selfishness of what was to become American industrial capitalism. This age was gilded in the sense of being gold plated. On the surface, American culture glittered like solid gold, but at its core was a much baser metal representing the similarly base possibilities of human motivation. Twain and Warner’s book, by Twain’s own account, was intended to illustrate the ‘all-pervading speculativeness’ of 19th-century American capitalism, and how it has led to a situation where ‘every man [sic] has his dream, his pet scheme, whereby he is to advance himself socially and pecuniarily’. Railing against the individualism, materialism and intemperance of this age, Twain saw this leading those in power into a ‘shameful corruption’ that spread like ‘pollution’.5 The robber barons were protagonists of the Gilded Age. The vast fortunes accrued by Mellon and his counterparts such as John D. Rockefeller, Cornelius Vanderbilt and Leland Stanford marked a new dawn of inequality brought on by industrial capitalism. These people remain household names to this day in terms of the legacy they left behind. They live on both in myth and in the cultural and educational institutions that bear their names, memorializing them in the hope of immortality. But this was a particular legacy enabled by the vast wealth accumulated in the hands of an elite few as the burgeoning American economy transitioned from being based on agriculture and materials to one that led the world in manufacturing and industry. While the robber barons were merciless in their pursuit of industrial greatness and the amassing of personal fortunes, they also became known for large-scale philanthropy. Many of them 152
The Right Hand Gives gave away large swathes of their fortunes during their lifetimes to establish charitable foundations and create public institutions. Without them, the US would not have Stanford, Duke, Rice or Yale universities. There would be no Carnegie Hall or Frick Museum in New York. A contemporary of Mellon, and the person who perhaps most exemplified the marriage of industrial wealth and social philanthropy, was Andrew Carnegie. Steel was Carnegie’s business. He amassed a large personal fortune; considered to be the richest man of all time, Carnegie’s net was worth equivalent to US$321 billion today. That leaves Jeff Bezos’s US$200 billion in the shade.6 In 1901, at the age of 66, Carnegie sold the Carnegie Steel Corporation for US$500 million, spending the next 18 years until his death in 1919 developing an international network of foundations, endowments and institutes to use his fortune for philanthropic purposes.7 By the time he retired from business, Carnegie had already set out the blueprint for his philanthropic endeavours. This blueprint came in the form of his 1889 essay ‘The gospel of wealth’, first published in the periodical The North American Review.8 The realities of industrial-scale inequality between the owners of monopoly capital and a newly created working class were never far from Carnegie’s mind. In the opening paragraph of the essay he writes: The problem of our age is the proper administration of wealth, so that the ties of brotherhood may still bind together the rich and poor in harmonious relationship. The conditions of human life have not only been changed, but revolutionized, within the past few hundred years.9 What Carnegie recognized was that the character and scale of the inequality that capitalism produced in the 19th century could easily lead to new forms of extreme conflict. This does not stop here, however. According to Carnegie, the central differences between the rich and poor were not simply a matter of wealth and money, but of culture and merit. For this system of inequality to be maintained, he was implying, something had to be done to ‘harmonize’ the relationship between those who profited from 153
WOKE CAPITALISM industrial capitalism and those whose labour kept its machinery moving. Carnegie was no socialist; he fully supported the capitalist system through which he had transformed his own life from his humble upbringing in Dunfermline, Scotland to becoming the world’s wealthiest man. Carnegie explicitly expressed the belief that the expanding cultural and economic chasm between the rich and the poor was a natural result of some essential differences between individuals, with some having what it takes to rise to the top of society and others destined to remain at the bottom. As Carnegie explained: This change […] is not to be deplored, but welcomed as highly beneficial. It is well, nay, essential for the progress of the race, that the houses of some should be homes for all that is highest and best in literature and the arts, and for all the refinements of civilization, rather than that none should be so […]. The price we pay for this salutary change is, no doubt, great. […] Rigid Castes are formed, and, as usual, mutual ignorance breeds mutual distrust. Each Caste is without sympathy for the other, and ready to credit anything disparaging in regard to it. Under the law of competition, the employer of thousands is forced into the strictest economies, among which the rates paid to labor figure prominently, and often there is friction between the employer and the employed, between capital and labor, between rich and poor.10 We have here a moral justification, or perhaps rationalization, of social and economic inequality as manifest in the rigid separation of the bourgeoisie as the owners of capital, and the working class as its foot soldiers. The creation of this inequality, for Carnegie, is not something that captains of industry such as him need take any responsibility for. They are after all ‘forced into the strictest economies’ by economic laws that are more powerful than them. In absolving the rich of any personal responsibility for how they acquired their wealth, Carnegie argues for the absolute necessity and inevitability of inequality for human progress. He also acknowledged that the new class system created by industrial 154
The Right Hand Gives capitalism leads to inexorable social antagonism that could well undermine if not overthrow the system that created them. For Carnegie, the material benefits accrued from industrialization across society outweighed the malaise of the inequalities that existed within it. His story was that vast inequality is simply the price of progress. With social Darwinist verve, he declared that while capitalist inequality ‘may be sometimes hard for the individual, it is best for the race, because it insures the survival of the fittest in every department’.11 It is here that Carnegie, in prefacing his advocacy of philanthropy, reveals his deep seated right-wing cultural and economic conservatism. For him, inequality is a natural feature of society in that it results from the exercise of superior human initiative on the part of those who become rich. Capitalism, for Carnegie, has served to separate what he refers to explicitly as the ‘drones from the bees’.12 This statement reveals a deep disrespect for, and feeling of superiority over, those very people who his business ventures have left as impoverished wage labourers. This is a philanthropy that, as much as anything else, justifies the value and righteousness of the rich as an essential part of society. It is bitterly ironic that charitable giving by the rich is the means by which extreme inequality is morally justified. The blueprint Carnegie set out was one where philanthropy was explicitly formulated as an anti-socialist political strategy. Despite the individualism that underpins capitalism and its ability to create vastly unequal distributions of wealth, Carnegie maintains that the ‘laws’ of capitalism as they relate to competition, private property and individual wealth accumulation are the ‘most valuable of all that humanity has yet accomplished’.13 He also suggests, however, that this system, which inevitably produces gross inequality, needs a little tweaking, rather than the revolution being demanded by the socialists of his time. Rather than giving ‘his’ (sic) wealth to his family or allowing it to be subject to inheritance tax following his death, Carnegie invokes the very wealthy to achieve a ‘reign of harmony’ of the rich over the poor by administering their wealth for the ‘common good’. Let us not forget that this is still a ‘reign’, and one that equates wealth with the right to have power over one’s fellow citizens in a manner that directly usurps democracy’s primary basis in the sovereignty of the people. In Carnegie’s world, capitalists should be kings. 155
WOKE CAPITALISM The only alternatives to the plutocracy that Carnegie entertains, neither of which he could countenance, were disharmonious inequality or communism.14 Harmonious inequality is what he strove for. Of course, instead of accumulating gross levels of wealth, employers could simply increase wages as a means of redistributing wealth. But Carnegie did not trust the working classes with money, instead regarding philanthropy as a much better way deploying massive fortunes. After all, it means that the superior ‘man’ would be making the decisions on behalf of the masses. At the heart of Carnegie’s philanthropy, and a sentiment that lives on in today’s woke capitalism, is the idea that the rich have the right to determine what constitutes the public good. Carnegie’s is a profoundly undemocratic position that assumes benevolent plutocracy as the ideal political system. In marrying paternalism with extreme capitalism, Carnegie asserts that ‘rich men should be thankful for one inestimable boon. They have it in their power during their lives to busy themselves in organizing benefactions from which the masses of their fellows will derive lasting advantage, and thus dignify their own lives.’15 Rich men are presumably thankful, then, that their wealth is not just about self-interested material gain, but that it also allows them to dominate those who are not rich. There is a strong trace of Christian ascetic moralism running through this. Carnegie insists that the wealthy should not direct their fortunes to drunken and indolent beggars. Instead, by controlling wealth, the rich can improve humanity, Carnegie informs us. Beyond the rhetoric and the political bluster, the particular initiatives that Carnegie supported were public parks where people can exercise and improve their minds, public art galleries to allow people to improve their cultural tastes, and public institutions such that promote the common good. Carnegie urged the wealthy few to fund universities, public libraries, hospitals, research institutes, concert halls and churches. From around 1870 to the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, America’s Gilded Age was characterized by political corruption, the creation of urban slums, worker exploitation, environmental degradation, extreme wealth inequality and a rapid escalation of corporate power. It was in the latter part of the Gilded Age, however, that its excesses were salved by progressive social 156
The Right Hand Gives reforms, of which Carnegie’s ‘Gospel of wealth’ was a primer.16 Carnegie was clear that his proposal for a new philanthropy was a way of addressing the problems of societies that are ‘face to face with socialistic questions’.17 His goal was to preserve what he saw as the progress in humanity that arises from industrial capitalism. While Carnegie’s focus was on addressing the disharmony of inequality, the philanthropic interests he promoted were largely cultural. The poor, or at least the ones he decided were deserving, were to be educated and granted access to the values of high culture. As artist and scholar Alisa Zhulina explains, central to this was an expansion of plutocracy by using ‘philanthropy as a way for the wealthy to take control of public policy’ as well as a ‘a cultural weapon in promoting the values of unbridled capitalism’.18 The early seeds of woke capitalism had been planted. Carnegie’s ‘Gospel of wealth’ set out a blueprint for the philanthropy of the Gilded Age and beyond. At the time of his death, Carnegie had distributed more than 90 per cent of the wealth he had amassed as an industrialist. He founded the Carnegie Institute of Technology, which merged with the Mellon Institute of Industrial Research in 1967 to form Carnegie Mellon University. He also funded the creation of over 2,800 public libraries, and built famous concert venues including Carnegie Hall in New York. Other robber baron riches were put to similar use. John D. Rockefeller’s oil fortune was used to support ‘the well-being of mankind throughout the world’. His money contributed to building the University of Chicago, funding medical research, and supporting public health education. The next generation of big-time industrialists were similarly inspired. Auto tycoon Henry Ford created America’s biggest charity the Ford Foundation, and petroleum magnate John Paul Getty established the biggest art foundation in the world under his name.19 These are but a few examples. Coming back to our opening example, one of the richest and most powerful men of his time, Andrew W. Mellon built and endowed the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC. For decades before that, he had been an art collector, specializing in the old masters. This sizeable personal collection was part of his donation. He also created the Mellon Institute for Industrial Research. Again, as with Carnegie’s vision, his focus of giving 157
WOKE CAPITALISM remained on a cultural level through art and education. While clearly this was political, in that it involved the creation of public institutions with private money, specifically political causes were not its focus. Mellon himself was a staunch right-wing Republican and a direct opponent of the progressivism of the 1920s. When later in life he became secretary of the US Treasury, his legacy was achieving tax cuts for the rich on the basis that it was the road to economic progress.20 This is why the statement at the opening of this chapter from the Mellon Institute in 2020 is so telling about the similarities and differences between robber baron philanthropy and philanthropy in the era of woke capitalism. The transformation is not about the anti-democratic aspirations of extreme-wealth plutocracy – that remains unchanged. With woke capitalism much of what has become associated with the left is incorporated into the capitalist system rather than being opposed by it. Carnegie’s foundational ideas of using philanthropy as a means to combat the civil unrest created by capitalist inequality and the threat of socialism that it creates remain. Today’s woke capitalism adds a new dimension to Carnegie’s vision. Now, the focus is less on creating public institutions, and more on backing progressive political causes summed up under the seemingly ubiquitous rubric of ‘social justice’. In a sense, this is a version of Carnegie’s doctrine, updated for 21st-century political pretensions. Was Carnegie’s vision achieved? A look at the history of economic inequality in the US tells the story. In 1913, the top 1 per cent of US income earners took home 18.6 per cent of the country’s earnings, while the bottom 50 per cent acquired a total of only 15.4 per cent. Fast forward to 2019 and the situation has worsened: the top 1 per cent claim 20.5 per cent while the bottom half gets just 12.7 per cent. Clearly, economic equality in the US is significantly worse today than it was a hundred years ago when the likes of Carnegie and Mellon were distributing their fortunes for the so-called public good. Remember, though, that this deterioration has not increased in a straight line from the early 20th century to now. Up until the dawn of neoliberalism in the 1980s things had been getting much better, with the bottom 50 per cent earning about twice as much as the top 1 per cent.21 Things started getting worse from there. Effectively, the advent of neoliberalism was the beginning of the end of the post-Second 158
The Right Hand Gives World War era, which saw prosperity more evenly shared. It also marked the return to a new era akin to the robber baron capitalism of old, although this time it was not mining and manufacturing that led the way, but financial services and technology. The escalation of economic inequality that was jump-started in the 1980s and came hand in hand with globalization and neoliberalism was not restricted to the US. A recent United Nations report on world inequality stated that since at least the 1990s the share of national income being paid in wages had declined in the majority of countries around the world. This was so because improvements in labour productivity enabled by technological advances had not fed into a wage increase for workers. The result was a general trend of wage stagnation for those on the lower half of income distribution, and the enrichment of those at the very top. The situation today is that globally the lower half owns less that than 1 per cent of global wealth. Meanwhile the richest 10 per cent own 85 per cent, and the richest 1 per cent own about half.22 It is indeed a rich person’s world. As the UN report assesses, this unjust state of affairs is an affront to democracy itself: Without appropriate policies and institutions in place, inequalities concentrate political influence among those who are already better off, which tends to preserve or even widen opportunity gaps. Growing political influence among the more fortunate erodes trust in the ability of Governments to address the needs of the majority. This lack of trust, in turn, can destabilize political systems and hinder the functioning of democracy. Today, popular discontent is high even in countries that have fully recovered from the 2008 financial and economic crisis and have benefited from steady growth in recent years.23 It is in the context of this popular discontent that woke capitalism emerged. It all came to a head in September 2011 when a handful of protestors set up camp just in front of Zuccotti Park in New York’s Manhattan, just down from Wall Street. The object of their protest was the vast inequalities created by corporate capitalism 159
WOKE CAPITALISM and exacerbated by the financial crisis just a few years earlier. The protest was focused especially on the bankers whose offices were just down the road. Calling themselves ‘Occupy Wall Street’, the protestors rallied behind the cry ‘We are the 99%’, registering the massive divide between the top 1 per cent of wealth holders in the world, and the remaining vast majority. As the New York protest grew, Occupy spread across the US and around the world. Protest camps were set up across Europe, Africa, the Americas, Asia and Oceania. The camps, which offered makeshift homes for the protestors, were deliberately visible. Between the public chanting of protests and the threats of forcible eviction issued to many of the camps, media attention boomed. The result was increasing awareness of and debate about the inequalities resulting from decades of globalization and neoliberal economic policy.24 So successful was the movement, that ‘occupy’ was the most used word in the media in 2011. In that same year ‘the protestor’ was named as Time magazine’s ‘Person of the Year’, an accolade that directly referenced the impact of the Occupy Wall Street movement.25 While Carnegie’s advocacy for philanthropy was in response to the social disharmony produced by the inequalities of his day, woke capitalism is a response to the new and even more extreme global inequality created by 40 disastrous years of the neoliberal experiment. In other words, it is a corporate-friendly response to the same problems that Occupy was protesting from an anticapitalist position. The Mellon Foundation’s ‘major strategic evolution’ of shifting its priorities from supporting the arts to backing social justice are symptomatic of this redirection in capitalist self-legitimacy. Of course, there is much more to woke capitalism than billionaire philanthropy, unlike what was happening in the Gilded Age; today, corporations are themselves getting involved in social and political causes, not just retired tycoons. Nevertheless, just like the 19th-century robber barons poured money into public institutions to preserve the capitalism that allowed inequality to skyrocket, today woke capitalism is prioritizing social justice for the same reasons. As an added sting, today’s philanthropists are insisting that the causes they support use methods derived from business in order to deliver their services. With corporate philanthropy comes 160
The Right Hand Gives the spreading of corporate culture to domains of activity that have traditionally been foreign to it.26 Behrooz Morvaridi offers a scathing assessment of capitalism’s renewed intrusion into philanthropy. He argues that contemporary philanthropy reflects a deep-seated ideological commitment to neoliberal capitalism in the form of market-based methods of social investment. Impact investing and micro-finance are cases in point of how capitalist methods are used to solve the problems caused by capitalism. Bringing capitalist ideas and methods to the not-for-profit sector is a way of securing corporate power that goes beyond the confines of the direct business activities of the corporation. As Morvaridi describes it, ‘Rich philanthropists are content to be concerned with poverty so long as it diverts attention away from their own assets and income and does not threaten the hegemonic structure through which they gain.’27 The result is that while some of the symptoms of the socioeconomic devastation that neoliberalism has wrought on the world might be eased, the system that created them goes from strength to strength. It is not surprising that Carnegie’s vision of philanthropy leading the way to create social harmony, by the uber-wealthy effectively controlling public policy, didn’t work. Nor will it work today as the calls for social justice have come hand in hand with the scam of ‘trickle down economics’ and the assumption that freeing the rich of taxes will create a market-led prosperity. If American history serves as a guide, the periods in which inequality narrowed were those where marginal tax rates were greatest and union membership was higher, as well as during the Great Depression. At the end of the Gilded Age itself, the inequality it produced was redressed by ‘higher taxes, stricter regulations of business and finance, and greater government investment in public enterprise’.28 While these policies continued as a feature of the post-Second World War economy, neoliberalism put an end to this legacy of a more equally shared progress. The policies implemented from the late 1970s served well to resuscitate a US economy wracked by stagnation and inflation, but the price was that those at the top of the financial hierarchy were the ones who claimed the lion’s share of the benefits.29 We might call this prosperity, but it is just that it has been distributed towards the wealthy at the expense of others. Woke capitalism might make 161
WOKE CAPITALISM some people feel a bit better about this because it means that they are ‘giving back’. Nevertheless, it does nothing to fix the system that enabled those people to ruthlessly take a grossly unfair share in the first place. This is the context in which the Mellon Foundation turned its strategic focus to social justice. In doing this, the foundation’s president stated that ‘There was nothing wrong with [the foundation’s] work […] but to focus it around the question of, how does each grant, every penny, contribute in some demonstrable way to a more fair and just society? What does that look like?’30 There is no inkling here to examine the historical causes of the problem as they can be traced back, at least in recent history, to the gross and expanding inequalities created by the neoliberal experiment. An example of the Mellon Foundation’s new social justice initiatives is instructive. In July 2020, they announced a US$5.3 million grant to the Million Book Project – an initiative run out of the Justice Collaboratory at Yale University. The money will be spent on sending a collection of 500 books to each of 1,000 prisons and 500 juvenile correction facilities. The result is that the inmates will be able to read great literature.31 In announcing this project, Yale Law School made the following statement: The US has the highest incarceration rate of any country on Earth, with overincarceration a cruel and unjust reality of the American penal system. Disproportionately, people of color bear the brunt of systemic inequities in our conception and application of the law. The Million Book Project creates a rhetorical and functional response to this specifically American fact, and offers the book as both a resource and a symbol of freedom, restoring hope, dignity, meaning and purpose to those incarcerated.32 It is easy to argue that giving prisoners access to books is a good thing. Suggesting that it is a ‘functional response’ is also believable. But it is what is unsaid that is especially pronounced. Any implication that the Million Book Project comes anywhere close to addressing the over-incarceration problem in the US and elsewhere in the world is patently absurd. 162
The Right Hand Gives In seeking to unpack the causes of mass incarceration, criminologists Anthony Lloyd and Philip Whitehead33 note that the world’s prison population has increased by about a fifth to 10.4 million people since 2000, with the highest rates of incarceration being in the US, China, Russia and Brazil. In countries like the US, England, Scotland, New Zealand and Australia minority groups are disproportionately represented on a significant scale. In the US, for example, a Black man is six times more likely to go to prison than a White man. So why is this the case? Lloyd and Whitehead’s analysis links increases in incarceration directly to changes in the criminal justice system connected to the neoliberal political and economic order of our times. They describe hyper-individualism and economic inequality as producing ‘bulimic effects’. What they are getting at is that increased inequality and insecurity are threats to social cohesion as more and more people are rendered unnecessary to the economy. The poor and unemployed are rendered as simply ‘surplus to requirements’ of neoliberal capitalism.34 In dealing with the increased crime rates that result, the neoliberal response is to prioritize punishment and imprisonment. To cater to this, across the world we have witnessed the criminal justice system creating new possibilities for mass incarceration. Those people who threaten the political order that benefits the wealthy are simply spewed up into a prison system as if some form of human waste, recycled as low-cost non-unionized prison workers: The bulimic turbulence of the neo-liberal order ejects its surplus human casualties into the turbulent waters of social insecurity, compounded by the transformed criminal justice response […] private providers of criminal justice functions and apparatus also collude in search of market share and profit, as do local and regional political leaders who seek investment and criminal justice employment opportunities in locales ravaged by the first strike of neoliberal expulsion, economic and social insecurity.35 Giving books to prisoners, while no doubt benefiting some people, is not a way of dealing with the historic catastrophe of 163
WOKE CAPITALISM mass incarceration. At best, the new philanthropy provides some light relief for the symptoms of the political and economic system that enabled philanthropists to get rich, without addressing the fundamental issues that caused them. What is happening with philanthropy is not limited to changes in the policies of robber baron foundations. As historian David Huyssen observes, since the 1980s many people have been describing the present era as a ‘New Gilded Age’ or ‘Second Gilded Age’. The reason for this comparison, Huyssen explains, is because just like it was back in the post-Civil War US we also have been witnessing the continual expansion of economic inequality coupled with the ‘excesses and egotism of great wealth’.36 What he also points out, however, is a key difference in the political contexts of the two eras. The first Gilded Age was fuelled by the development of industrial capitalism and the class conflicts that it created. Today, however, growing inequality has not produced any class conflict that threatens the capitalist system, even though it has been accompanied by de-industrialization and debt slavery in advanced economies. It is in this political context that a new generation of billionaires has embraced philanthropy. And while Carnegie and others of his age invested their wealth in bourgeois institutions of art and higher learning, the new philanthropists pursue quite a different set of interests. Chief among the purveyors of this new philanthropy are the founder of Microsoft Bill Gates and investment mogul Warren Buffett. These are both men who have long occupied the top ten spots on the list of the richest people in the world. As of 2020, Gates had a net worth of US$98 billion, with Buffett close behind with US$67.5 billion.37 In 2010, Gates and Buffett founded the Giving Pledge where they gained the support of 40 of the wealthiest people in the US to make ‘a commitment to give the majority of their wealth to address some of society’s most pressing problems’. The entry requirement makes this much more exclusive than even the richest country club. They put in writing that even to be considered you need to have ‘U.S. $1 billion in personal net worth and are ready to make a public pledge to donate the majority of your personal wealth to philanthropy’. There was a queue. Three years later the Giving Pledge became international, and 164
The Right Hand Gives by 2020 more than 200 billionaires had joined from 24 countries. Billionaires from as far afield as Australia, Brazil, China, Germany, Indonesia, Russia and Tanzania had all promised to hand over their fortunes to socially oriented causes.38 Michael Bloomberg, Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg are among their ranks. This is not about libraries and galleries. The hundreds of billions of dollars pledged is mostly for projects concerned with ‘climate change, education, poverty alleviation, medical research, healthcare services, economic development, and social justice’.39 In formulating its vision of a new age of billionaire philanthropy, the Giving Pledge has a direct lineage to the Gilded Age. Aligned with Andrew Carnegie, the idea is that billionaires use the pledge as a vehicle through which they give away amounts of their fortunes to good causes, both during their lifetimes and in their wills. Carnegie’s essay ‘Gospel of Wealth’ is often quoted. As John Fullerton from the economic think tank the Capital Institute elucidated at the time that the Giving Pledge was created: Andrew Carnegie’s essay titled Gospel of Wealth […] is the touchstone of the great American philanthropic tradition […] The Giving Pledge drive that Gates and Buffett are championing follows the inspiration of Carnegie […] Never mind that Carnegie’s call was to surrender essentially all of one’s wealth (after meeting family needs), not just for half of one’s wealth, which is the minimum of the Giving Pledge. Intention matters.40 In internationalizing Carnegie’s gospel as well as shifting its emphasis from giving to cultural institutions to directly intervening in socioeconomic problems, the Giving Pledge is a powerful symbol of woke capitalism. Francesca Sawaya, professor of English and American studies, explains this philanthropy as an attempt to fill the chasm left behind by the ‘retreat of the activist state’ since the 1980s.41 More telling is that this is the very chasm that neoliberal acolytes promised would be filled through the magic of the market mechanism and trickle-down economics. The need for this kind of philanthropy is a sign of a system that doesn’t work – market capitalism created a problem that governments are largely unwilling or unable to address. 165
WOKE CAPITALISM So, if we look at the billionaires’ gift horses in the mouth, what might be the motive behind their giving? Can it simply be that after lifetimes of ruthlessly self-interested business practice they have seen the light and decided to become altruistic social justice warriors? Such an explanation is beyond naive. Under woke capitalism, the state can no longer be relied on to address social injustice and poverty. Instead, society turns to the philanthropic crumbs that fall from the master’s table; crumbs that fall only in the places that the uber-rich deign them to. Through rose-coloured glasses this looks like a benevolent plutocracy. In the light of day, it looks like a complex ploy to ensure that the system that created the inequalities for which philanthropy is an ointment remains entirely unchanged. The Giving Pledge certainly hasn’t harmed the wealth of its founders. Gates and Buffett have kept their treasured spots on the world’s richest list for years. In the end, modern billionaire philanthropy is an exercise of capitalist power, effectively an extension of that power beyond the confines of the economy. It diverts private assets to public purposes, yet without any public accountability. It is profoundly undemocratic and serves to shore up the power and influence of contemporary society’s billionaire protagonists.42 What these mega philanthropists have learned is that their seemingly charitable enterprises offer a much smoother path to political power and the shaping of public policy than the traditional electoral process.43 Effectively, this means that while the right hand gives billions to philanthropic causes, the left hand takes away the hope of democracy and equality. Nothing changes in the underlying system that produces inequality – the deal is that the gifts of billionaires are exchanged for ensuring that there is no fundamental change to the system that made them billionaires in the first place. 166
13 Getting Woke to Woke Capitalism On 17 September 2020, US Senator Elizabeth Warren wrote a letter to the chair of the Business Roundtable.1 About a year earlier, Business Roundtable, whose members are the CEOs of major corporations from Amazon to Xerox,2 had released the new version of its statement of the ‘purpose of a corporation’.3 The new statement was a replacement for the one that they had issued in 1997. Back then, the Business Roundtable’s CEOs had endorsed the declaration that ‘The paramount duty of management and of boards of directors is to the corporation’s stockholders. […] The notion that the board must somehow balance the interests of stockholders against the interests of other stakeholders fundamentally misconstrues the role of directors.’4 These words were nothing less than a celebration of unfettered market capitalism. The 1990s statement trumpeted the assumedly natural rights of the owners of capital to reap the financial benefits borne of the labour of those people who worked for corporations. Come 2020, the Business Roundtable had made a U-turn, at least rhetorically. Admitting that ‘since 1997 [Business Roundtable] has endorsed principles of shareholder primacy – that corporations exist principally to serve shareholders’, the new statement affirmed ‘the essential role corporations can play in improving our society when CEOs are truly committed to meeting the needs of all stakeholders’.5 The changes made at the Business Roundtable symbolized the full mainstreaming of ‘woke’ capitalism. Two decades into the 167
WOKE CAPITALISM 20th century even the most conservative bastions of corporate capitalism were disavowing shareholder primacy. They were proclaiming that businesses should have a social purpose and asserting that they should care for all the constituents who have a connection to them. All ‘stakeholders’ are important, they declared. Corporations are committed to delivering value for each of them, they promised. Sent just over 12 months later, Senator Warren’s letter was a detailed questioning of whether the Business Roundtable’s promise had been kept. Noting the ‘great fanfare’ with which the announcement of the new purpose had been made in 2020, Warren pulled no punches in assessing whether anything had changed. She wrote: ‘It is clear that the signers of the Statement have not kept these commitments and that the BRT […] has been lobbying for these CEO’s narrow, short-term interests rather than the broad group of stakeholders espoused in the Statement.’6 Warren slammed the statement as a ‘public relations stunt’ that has made no difference whatsoever to the corporate self-interests being pursued by the leaders of the world’s biggest organizations. Warren complained that ‘it is difficult to identify how any of these [2020] commitments were widely operationalized, and corporate actions instead indicate that there may have been no intention to do so’.7 What Warren laid bare was that despite public attestations to woke capitalism, corporations were still operating in a way that benefited shareholders at the expense of consumers, workers and communities in general. This was a telling example of how woke capitalism operates, as well as one that served as a reminder that while the system has changed, its fundamental basis in neoliberal capitalism has not. Indeed, it is this absence of fundamental change that is a defining character of woke capitalism. This is a system where wealth and prosperity flow up to the rich, exacerbating inequality on a global scale, and where claims of corporate righteousness strengthen that very system. It also means that corporations are less honest about it than they used to be in the heady days of ‘greed is good’ corporate governance. With woke capitalism, corporations have essentially realized that they have needed to change how they go about pursuing the financial self-interest of their shareholders, but have not made any 168
Getting Woke to Woke Capitalism changes to their dedication to that pursuit. They have also realized that they have needed to change how the capitalist system in which that pursuit happens is morally justified. What Warren’s criticism of the Business Roundtable shows, is that this can be done by trying to fool the community (and possibly even themselves) into believing that things are changing at a basic level when in fact they are not. If anything, gross inequality has proceeded to become even more tragically exaggerated since corporations went woke. Warren provides a political role model to us all in being prepared to see through the corporate-speak and woke washing. Warren’s position also reflects her belief that corporations should not just talk the woke talk, but should also walk the woke walk. In holding corporations to account for their claims to caring about all stakeholders, Warren tacitly agrees that woke capitalism – if done authentically – is desirable. Her letter advances the idea that the problem with corporations is that they are not woke enough. What is needed, this suggests, is that corporations should be much more active in assuming social and political responsibilities. This is a similar view to that put forward in the Harvard Business Review by Erin Dowell and Marlette Jackson. They argue that corporate woke washing is woefully inadequate and that corporations need to move from talk to action when it comes to their progressive political positions. No more executive hypocrisy, they demand. What Dowell and Jackson also realize, however, is that change will not come at the hands of corporate benevolence, but instead will be based on democratic action outside corporations themselves. Writing specifically about Black Lives Matter, they argue that: Organizations must be cognizant of the fact that the current outcry for justice is not ephemeral or confined to social media. It is the culmination of decades of advocacy and centuries of discrimination, and as such, consumers are no longer willing to let organizations squander those efforts. Consumers not only hold the power of demand but are increasingly demonstrating that they also have a powerful voice in deciding the manner in which companies meet those demands – and organizations need to be mindful of how this dynamic is becoming part of the new normal.8 169
WOKE CAPITALISM Real change comes from democratic action, not from corporations pulling themselves up by their boot straps. It is time to let go of the idea that as primarily economic actors business organizations will somehow lead the way politically to a more just, equitable and sustainable world. Democratic politics is founded on the ultimate belief that people have the right to rule themselves. This politics needs to be reasserted as primary, with the economy demoted to being secondary. With woke capitalism, we have seen the very opposite trend come to a dangerous culmination as capitalist organizations have encroached more and more on the moral and political life of citizens. Notwithstanding that corporations going woke is harmful to democracy, the more standard conservative response is that woke capitalism is harmful to the capitalist economic system itself. While Warren expressed concern about the lack of action on corporate commitments to society, it is more common for critics of woke capitalism to suggest that big corporations have no business making such commitments in the first place. From this point of view, corporations have somehow been co-opted by manipulative leftists into supporting political positions that they do not necessarily believe in, or at least shouldn’t believe in. Writing in the magazine Quillette, Vincent Harinam epitomizes this position when he claims that woke capitalism is a response by corporations that have been ‘targets of the activist Left’. For businesses, according to Harinam: going woke is a strategic decision to appease those who would otherwise destroy them with taxes and boycotts. As such, woke capitalism is corporate conservationism. It is a fiscal stay-of-execution from the profit-killing axe of the activist Left. […] The activist Left is placated, and customers are reassured of a company’s commitment to corporate social responsibility.9 By this account, weak-willed corporations are trying to appease dangerous socialists, precisely because they fear what those socialists might be able to do if they were not appeased. Another common argument often made by reactionary pundits is that corporate virtue signalling is a sign of businesses playing politics when they should be sticking to their commercial knitting. In his book Corporate Virtue 170
Getting Woke to Woke Capitalism Signalling,10 Jeremy Sammut exemplifies this position. He argues that big business is ‘meddling in politics’, especially progressive politics, and it needs to stop. Why? Because it means that CEOs are using shareholders’ money to pursue objectives that have nothing to do with what a business should be focused on. Like Harinam, Sammut is fearful of, in his words, ‘the takeover of business by “corporate lefties”’. By this logic, we should be working to ensure that ‘the business of business remains business’.11 Essentially, we have two opposing positions. One, from a liberalleft position such as Elizabeth Warren’s, agrees that corporations should genuinely and authentically support the broad interests of society rather than just focusing on shareholders. Another, from a traditional right-wing perspective, believes that corporations should be purely economic entities and not interfere directly in social or political matters. This book has taken a third position. That is, despite how it looks on the surface, corporate engagement with progressive politics is harming democracy and preventing actual progress. What this means is that being critical of woke capitalism does have to necessitate a dismissal of progressive politics. Waking up to the realities of woke capitalism means not being fooled into thinking that it represents any genuine underlying change to the primary interests that capitalist corporations are willing or able to pursue. The real effects of woke capitalism are not about the success of left activism in gaining support from big business. They are about ensuring that there is no fundamental reform of the dominant neoliberal world order that has exacerbated inequality, fuelled fascist populism, and stood by as the climate crisis escalates. Dismissing woke capitalism as just another example of virtue signalling is counterproductive in that it fails to take seriously the real damage that woke capitalism can do. Laughing at corporate progressiveness as a superficial and inauthentic business practice entirely underestimates its real power. This is not simply about the short-term profitability assumed by the ‘go woke, or go broke’ credo. Going woke is about ensuring that market capitalism can continue on the trajectory that it has been on for the past 40 years. Woke capitalism is a strategy for maintaining the economic and political status quo and for quelling criticism. Elizabeth Warren was right to hold the Business Roundtable to account, but what she didn’t consider was the broader anti-progressive effects of both 171
WOKE CAPITALISM the rhetoric and practices of stakeholder-based corporate social purpose, especially when they are successful. It is worth noting that when corporations do align themselves with progressive positions, as Helen Lewis writes in The Atlantic, they are generally engaged with socially radical issues, not economically radical ones. The distinction Lewis is making is between political changes that have social effects and those that lead to structural and economic changes. The examples she gives are as follows: Equal pay is economically radical. Hiring a female or minority CEO for the first time is socially radical. Diversity training is socially radical, at best. Providing social-housing tenants with homes not covered in flammable cladding is economically radical. Changing the name of a building at a university is socially radical; improving on its 5 percent enrolment rate for Black students – perhaps by smashing up the crazy system of legacy admissions – would be economically radical.12 The distinction that Lewis enunciates sets out a blueprint for the woke corporation. Lewis argues that the preservation of corporate power will come by engaging in a modicum of social radicalism, while completely avoiding economic radicalism. This would explain why the minimum wage, aggressive corporate tax minimization, income and wealth redistribution, scandalous executive remuneration, and expanding economic inequality are entirely off limits to the woke corporation’s pseudo-political agenda. If anything, any politics that threaten the corporate bottom line is to be avoided at all costs. This points to a more general facet of woke capitalism. No amount of feel-good moral conviction will allow a corporation to engage in a politics that will harm its own financial fortunes. We saw a telling example of this in 2019 when the National Basketball Association (NBA) became embroiled in Chinese politics and Sino‑American relations. For much of 2019 there had been mass protests in Hong Kong with hundreds of thousands of people assembling on the streets. They were demanding that democracy be upheld in Hong Kong in the face of sanctions put 172
Getting Woke to Woke Capitalism in place by the Beijing government.13 The pro-democracy protests received worldwide media coverage as images of police brutality and violent clashes between police and protesters were beamed around the world.14 Amid the protests, on 4 October 2019, Daryl Morey, general manager of the NBA team the Houston Rockets took to Twitter in support of the protesters. His tweet contained an image with the slogan: ‘Fight for Freedom. Stand with Hong Kong’. Morey’s sentiment was largely uncontroversial among American NBA fans, with many subsequently going to games with banners and t-shirts expressing support for the Hong Kong protesters. The NBA, of course, is well known for being prepared to take political stances in the US. At the time, it even caught the ire of Donald Trump who complained about the league’s pro-democracy and anti-racism activism at home. ‘The NBA has become so political that nobody cares about it anymore,’ Trump insisted during the NBA finals in 2020.15 In this case, Trump was taking issue with NBA mega-star LeBron James’s support of the American Democratic Party and the league’s decision to promote social justice messages through its television broadcasts. This type of support was nowhere to be seen in Daryl Morey’s case, however. Morey’s tweet, simple as it was, drew decisive condemnation in China. This was not just a war of words. Following the tweet, the Chinese Basketball Association made an official statement: ‘The Chinese Basketball Association strongly disagrees with the improper remarks by Daryl Morey, and has decided to suspend exchanges and cooperation with the team.’ Next, the China Central Television (CCTV) network banned the broadcast of Rockets games. The commercial and financial implications were huge and the NBA rapidly went into damage control.16 Just two days after Morey’s tweet, the NBA took action, ostensibly seeking to protect its business interests in China whose value is reported as being greater than US$4 billion. The NBA issued the following statement: We recognize that the views expressed by Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey have deeply offended many of our friends and fans in China, which is regrettable. […] We have great respect for the history 173
WOKE CAPITALISM and culture of China and hope that sports and the NBA can be used as a unifying force to bridge cultural divides and bring people together.17 Back in the US, both the NBA and China were widely condemned: China for using its economic might to silence criticism and dissent, and the NBA for prioritizing profits over values.18 Laid bare were the limits of woke capitalism: no political cause or position will be supported if it is bad for the bottom line. LeBron James had become regarded as something of a villain by his former Chinese fans in Hong Kong on account of not being prepared to speak out about human rights in China. There was even a specific protest against him where replicas of his NBA jersey were burned to the words ‘Hong Kong lives also matter’.19 Let us not forget that James’s US$1 billion deal to endorse Nike products required him not to compromise sales in China by upsetting Beijing. As one Hong Kong citizen put it: It turns out LeBron values the Chinese yuan much more than these fundamental values of the USA. He has freedom of speech, and he enjoys the right to speak on any issue. But he cannot take the moral high ground and call himself a freedom fighter, and then also silence himself on China and Hong Kong.20 The whole NBA–China debacle made one thing clear, when it comes down to it, for woke capitalists the primary motivation is economic, and politics is only of value if it supports that. Woke capitalism is, at the end of the day, a matter concerned with preserving the power, influence and prosperity of big business and its beneficiaries, as well as with ensuring that the capitalist market economy in which it thrives is maintained. The reality is that corporations have neither the will nor the ability to address the real social, environmental and economic problems that neoliberal capitalism has fuelled. Inequality, discrimination, and climate change are prime examples of these problems. If this book has any central message it is not just that woke capitalism is a ruse designed to maintain a status quo of inequality: it is a call both to resist and to not be fooled by it. 174
Getting Woke to Woke Capitalism We return to the original meaning of the word ‘woke’ as it emerged in the Black Lives Matter movement. Taken in its original meaning, the idea of being woke is deeply democratic. As described by Tehama Lopez Bunyasi and Candis Watts Smith in their book Stay Woke: A People’s Guide to Making All Black Lives Matter, staying woke involves two principal components. The first is about ‘having knowledge about the facts of racism and the mechanics that (re)produce racial inequality’. That by itself is not enough, however. What is also needed is putting that ‘knowledge to use to eradicate the problems of racial injustice’.21 In contrast, as we have seen, the meaning of being woke has been sadly misshapen into meaning insincere and self-serving expressions of moral righteousness. When applied to capitalism, this has tended to refer pejoratively to corporations that use politics to pursue economic self-interest, or to denigrate corporations for being hoodwinked into supporting progressive political causes. But, if we retain the original democratic impulse of what it means to stay woke then there is another possible meaning that can be taken from the valuable and important lessons of the Black Lives Matter movement. The approach taken by Black Lives Matter serves as a guiding light for how to respond not just to racial inequality and violence, but also to the broader and interconnected realities of how capitalism has been allowed to run riot in its pursuit of shareholder value over everything else. The gross inequalities and environmental devastation that have resulted are a direct affront to the very meaning of democracy, insofar as that meaning resides in an ongoing pursuit of freedom, justice and shared prosperity for all. Instead of this democracy we live in a world characterized by systems of domination along class, geo-political, gendered and racial lines. This is not just about the formal institutions of democracy, but about democracy as a way of life whose principle values are collaboration, social equality, fairness, participation, and government by popular representation. In sharp contradiction of democratic values, the neoliberal economic order has produced ever widening inequalities of wealth and income culminating in a woke capitalism that perpetuates the exercise of power in the interests of the monied minority. We also have an industrial system that is destroying the environment, making the world progressively less liveable for future generations. 175
WOKE CAPITALISM Despite its pretensions, woke capitalism will not address these problems. In fact, it is both exacerbating and trying to obscure them. Now is the time to be woke to woke capitalism. It is time to be aware of its characteristics and political effects. It is also time to intervene to put the world on a path towards equality and justice for all. 176
Notes and References Chapter 1 1 Kelley, W.M. (1962) If you’re woke you dig it; no Mickey Mouse can be expected to follow today’s Negro idiom without a hip assist. If you’re woke you dig it, The New York Times, 20 May. 2 Oxford English Dictionary (2017) New words notes June. https:// public.oed.com/blog/june-2017-update-new-words-notes 3 Kelley (1962) p. 46. 4 Ellen, B. (2019) It’s easy to mock eco-celebs. Better to give them the benefit of the doubt, The Guardian, 3 August. www. theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/aug/03/easy-to-mockeco-celebs-better-to-give-them-benefit-of-doubt 5 Eloise, M. (2021) A guide to spotting and avoiding ‘wokefishing’ in dating, Cosmopolitan, 8 January. www.cosmopolitan.com/uk/ love-sex/relationships/a34795394/wokefishing 6 Smith, S. (2020) Have you been ‘wokefished’ while dating? Here’s how to tell, VICE, 28 July. www.vice.com/en_uk/article/889daa/ what-is-wokefishing-dating 7 Binyam, M. (2016) Watching the Woke Olympics, The Awl, 5 April. www.theawl.com/2016/04/watching-the-woke-olympics 8 Anon (2020) Once Prince Harry was the life and soul of the party, so how did he go from a fun loving bloke … to Prince of Woke?, The Daily Mail, 9 January. www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ article-7866757/Prince-Harry-went-fun-loving-bloke-PrinceWoke.html 9 Adam, K. (2019) British radio host fired for racist tweet comparing Archie Harrison to a chimp, The Washington Post, 9 May. www. washingtonpost.com/world/2019/05/09/british-radio-hostfired-tweet-comparing-royal-baby-archie-harrison-chimp 10 Ruiz, M. (2019) The Meghan Markle tabloid ‘pile-on’ – and how to fix it, Vanity Fair, 5 April. www.vanityfair.com/style/2019/04/ meghan-markle-tabloids-racism-sexism 177
WOKE CAPITALISM 11 The Royal Household (2016) A statement by the Communications Secretary to Prince Harry, 8 November. www.royal.uk/statementcommunications-secretary-prince-harry 12 Cited in Weatherby, B. (2019) Eamonn Holmes calls Meghan Markle ‘spoilt, weak, woke and manipulative’ in scathing rant, Evening Standard, 11 November. www.standard.co.uk/news/uk/ eamonn-holmes-meghan-markle-royals-sussex-a4331791.html 13 Morgan, P. (2020) Why the Queen must FIRE Their Royal Hustlers: deluded Meghan and Harry should be stripped of their titles before this pair of grasping, selfish, scheming Kardashianwannabes bring down the monarchy, The Daily Mail, 9 January. www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/ar ticle-7868371/PIERSMORGAN-Queen-FIRE-Royal-Hustlers.html 14 The Sun (2020) Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s obnoxious behaviour betrays royalty and abuses the generosity and goodwill of taxpayers, The Sun Says, 9 January. www.thesun.co.uk/ news/10708941/prince-harry-meghan-markles-obnoxiousbehaviour-betrays-royalty-taxpayers 15 Friday, F. (2017) The social causes that united Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, The Observer, 29 November. https://observer. com/2017/11/the-social-causes-that-united-prince-harry-andmeghan-markle 16 Cited in ABC News (2019) Former US president Barack Obama urges ‘politically woke’ to get over themselves, ABC News, 31 October. www.abc.net.au/news/2019-10-30/barack-obamaon-being-woke-donald-trump-us-president/11655790 17 Haiphong, D. (2019) Obama condemns ‘call out culture’ despite being its biggest beneficiary, Black Agenda Report, 13 November. https://blackagendareport.com/obama-condemns-call-outculture-despite-being-its-biggest-beneficiary 18 Berkowitz, J. (2019) Gillette responds to the backlash against its woke viral ad, Fast Company, 17 January. www.fastcompany. com/90293402/gillette-responds-to-the-backlash-against-itswoke-viral-ad 19 Ben and Jerry’s website (2020) The art of Pecan Resist: a Q&A with Favianna Rodriguez. www.benjerry.com/flavors/pecanresist-ice-cream 20 Gutfeld, G. (2019) Gutfeld on Ben & Jerry’s new flavor, Fox News, 31 October. www.foxnews.com/opinion/gutfeld-on-benjerrys-new-flavor 178
Notes and References 21 Demopoulos, A. (2018) More men are wearing stilettos – if they can find their size, Daily Beast, 3 October. www.thedailybeast. com/more-men-are-wearing-stilettosif-they-can-find-their-size 22 Grabowski, M. (2017) Adidas and Reebok should avoid politicizing sports, Washington Examiner, 17 January. www. washingtonexaminer.com/adidas-and-reebok-should-avoidpoliticizing-sports 23 Klein, P. (2021) Republicans should oppose corporate favors in general, not just as retribution against woke capitalism, National Review, 8 April. www.nationalreview.com/corner/republicansshould-oppose-cor porate-favors-in-general-not-just-asretribution-against-woke-capitalism 24 Dreher, R. (2019) Woke capitalism is our enemy, The American Conservative, 22 April. www.theamericanconservative.com/ dreher/woke-capitalism-is-our-enemy 25 Friedman, M. (1970) The social responsibility of business is to increase its profits, The New York Times Magazine, 13 September. 26 Pritchett, J.L. and Tiryakian, E. (2019) Milton Friedman was right on corporate guidance, and ‘woke’ CEOs ignore him at shareholder peril, Foundation for Economic Education, 26 August. https://fee.org/articles/milton-friedman-wasright-on-corporate-guidance-and-woke-ceos-ignore-him-atshareholders-peril 27 See Barkan, J. (2013) Corporate sovereignty: Law and government under capitalism, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press; and Mikler, J. (2018) The political power of global corporations, London: Polity. 28 Piketty, T. (2013) Capital in the twenty-first century, Cambridge: Harvard University Press; Alvaredo, F., Chancel, L., Piketty, T., Saez, E. and Zucman, G. (2018) World inequality report 2018, Paris: World Inequality Lab; United Nations (2020) World social report 2020: Inequality in a rapidly changing world, New York: UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations. 29 Lewis, H. (2020) How capitalism drives cancel culture, The Atlantic, 14 July. www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2020/07/ cancel-culture-and-problem-woke-capitalism/614086 30 Brown, W. (2015) Undoing the demos: Neoliberalism stealth revolution, New York: Zone Books. 31 Whitehead, J.W. (2013) The age of neo-feudalism: a government of the rich, by the rich and for the corporations, Huffington Post, 30 March. www.huffpost.com/entry/the-age-ofneofeudalism_b_2566546 179
WOKE CAPITALISM 32 Stavrakakis, Y. (1997) Ambiguous democracy and the ethics of psychoanalysis, Philosophy and Social Criticism, 23(2): 79–96. 33 Stavrakakis (1997) p. 80. Chapter 2 1 Richards, L. and Brew, N. (2020) 2019–20 Australian bushfires – frequently asked questions, Parliament of Australia website, 12 March. https://parlinfo.aph.gov.au/parlInfo/download/ library/prspub/7234762/upload_binary/7234762.pdf 2 Arriagada, N.B., Palmer, A.J., Bowman, D., Morgan, G.G., Jalaludin, B.B. and Johnston, F.H. (2020) Unprecedented smokerelated health burden associated with the 2019–20 bushfires in eastern Australia, The Medical Journal of Australia, 213(6): 282–3. 3 Gunia, A. and Law, T. (2020) At least 24 people and millions of animals have been killed by Australia’s bushfires, Time, 7 January. https://time.com/5758186/australia-bushfire-size 4 Australia Associated Press (2020) Smoke from Australia’s fires reaches Chile, The Canberra Times, 7 January. www.canberratimes. com.au/story/6569408/smoke-from-australias-fires-reacheschile/?cs=14232 5 Earle, S. (2020) Are Australia’s bushfire’s our future?, New Statesman, 9 September. www.newstatesman.com/australiasbushfires-future-climate-change 6 Shine, J. (2020) Statement regarding Australian bushfires, Australian Academy of Science, 10 January. www.science.org.au/ news-and-events/news-and-media-releases/statement-regardingaustralian-bushfires 7 NSW Government (2020) Final Report of the NSW Bushfire Inquiry, Sydney: NSW Government. 8 Barr, S. (2019) Climate strike 2019: when are the global protests and how can you take part?, The Independent, 27 September. www. independent.co.uk/life-style/global-climate-strike-septemberprotests-when-where-london-sydney-greta-thunberg-a9111931. html 9 Noyes, J. and Chysanthos, N. (2019) Global climate strike LIVE: Australian school students march to protest climate change, The Sydney Morning Herald, 20 September. www.smh.com.au/ national/global-climate-strike-live-australian-school-studentsmarch-in-protest-of-climate-change-20190920-p52t70.html 180
Notes and References 10 Quoted in Murphy, K. (2019) Morrison responds to Greta Thunberg by warning children against ‘needless’ climate anxiety, The Guardian, 25 September. www.theguardian.com/australianews/2019/sep/25/morrison-responds-to-greta-thunbergspeech-by-warning-children-against-needless-climate-anxiety 11 DFAT (2020) Composition of trade Australia 2018–2019, Canberra: Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, January. www.dfat.gov.au/sites/default/files/cot-2018-19.pdf 12 Hamilton, C. (2017) That lump of coal, The Conversation, 15 February. https://theconversation.com/that-lump-ofcoal-73046 13 Athayle, H. (2019) Woke capitalism and its impact on social movements, Medium, 7 February. https://medium.com/@ hrishikeshathalye/woke-capitalism-and-its-impact-on-socialmovements-50629eb85a0 14 Nolan, E. (2020) Tucker Carlson attacks ‘woke’ companies donating to fight racial injustice, Newsweek, 17 June. www. newsweek.com/tucker-carlson-attacks-companies-donatingfight-racial-injustice-1511451 15 Kirby, J. (2020) Welcome to the era of woke capitalism, Maclean’s, 19 February. www.macleans.ca/economy/welcome-to-the-eraof-woke-capitalism 16 Remeikis, A. and Taylor, J. (2020) ‘There is no link’: the climate doubters within Scott Morrison’s government, The Guardian, 16 January. www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2020/jan/16/ there-is-no-link-the-climate-doubters-within-scott-morrisonsgovernment 17 Readfern, G. (2018) Gina Rinehart company revealed as $4.5m donor to climate sceptic thinktank, The Guardian, 21 July. www. theguardian.com/business/2018/jul/21/gina-rinehart-companyrevealed-as-45m-donor-to-climate-sceptic-thinktank 18 Quoted in Kwan, B. and Bolger, R. (2020) Mining magnate Andrew ‘Twiggy’ Forrest has announced a $70 million donation to assist in bushfire recovery efforts, SBS News, 9 January. www. sbs.com.au/news/twiggy-forrest-clarifies-climate-stance-after-70million-bushfire-donation 19 Turner, G. (2020) Philanthropy, the Twiggy Forrest way, Independent Australia, 27 January. https://independentaustralia.net/politics/ politics-display/philanthropy-the-twiggy-forrest-way,13532 181
WOKE CAPITALISM 20 Referenced in: Wilkinson Z. (2020) Tiffany & Co publishes an open letter to Scott Morrison calling for ‘bold and decisive climate action’, Mumbrella, 13 January. https://mumbrella.com.au/tiffanyco-publishes-an-open-letter-to-scott-morrison-calling-for-boldand-decisive-climate-action-612807 21 I draw here on my own discussion in: Rhodes, C. (2020) When corporations back woke capitalism it means climate change action has gone mainstream, ABC News, 18 January. www.abc.net.au/ news/2020-01-18/woke-capitalism-a-barometer-for-changingpublic-attitudes/11875996?view=invalid 22 Quoted in Bates, R. (2020) Tiffany places ads calling for climate action in Australia, JCK, 13 January. www.jckonline.com/ editorial-article/tiffany-places-climate-action-ads 23 The Daily Telegraph (2020) Posh mineral retailer goes woke, 11 January. www.dailytelegraph.com.au/blogs/ tim-blair/posh-mineral-retailer-goes-woke/news-story/ fe4c5da06a2c5bfe2bc6ab8a69534714 24 Sky News (2020) Tiffany and Co try to profit from bushfire tragedy, 15 January. www.skynews.com.au/details/_6122717154001 25 In Powell, D. and Johanson, S. (2020) Business Council of Australia hits back as pressure mounts on climate change, Brisbane Times, 14 January. www.brisbanetimes.com.au/business/companies/ business-council-faces-criticism-over-regressive-climate-changepolicy-20200114-p53raa.html 26 Powell, D., Loussikian, K. and Johanson, S. (2020) Mining giant Rio Tinto pressures BCA on climate as more members depart, The Sydney Morning Herald, 17 January. www.smh.com.au/ business/companies/mining-giant-rio-tinto-pressures-bca-onclimate-as-more-members-depart-20200116-p53ryr.html 27 Lind, M. (2020) The New Class War: Saving Democracy from the Managerial Elite, New York: Penguin. 28 World Economic Forum (2020) World Economic Forum Annual Meeting, www.weforum.org/events/world-economic-forumannual-meeting-2020 29 Wu, T. (2020) The revolution comes to Davos, The New York Times, 23 January. www.nytimes.com/2020/01/23/opinion/ sunday/davos-2020-capitalism-climate.html 30 Burke-White, W. (2020) The World Economic Forum deserves criticism, but we need it now more than ever, Brookings Institution, 28 January. www.brookings.edu/blog/order-fromchaos/2020/01/28/the-world-economic-forum-deservescriticism-but-we-need-it-now-more-than-ever 182
Notes and References 31 Earlier version of the discussion of woke capitalism and COVID-19 that is presented here were published as: Rhodes, C. (2020) Where are the woke capitalists now?, Common Dreams, 1 April. www.commondreams.org/views/2020/04/01/whereare-all-woke-capitalists-now; Rhodes, C. (2020) Don’t be fooled by a wolf in woke clothing: how the world’s billionaires are cashing in on Covid-19, Common Dreams, 25 August. www. commondreams.org/views/2020/08/25/dont-be-fooled-wolfwoke-clothing-how-worlds-billionaires-are-cashing-covid-19 32 Team, T. (2020) Why BlackRock’s strong stock rally isn’t over yet, Forbes, 31 July. www.forbes.com/sites/greatspeculations/ 2020/07/31/blackrocks-stock-has-rallied-76-over-recentmonths-can-it-grow-more/#b3319f02b8fe 33 Dreher, R. (2019) Woke capitalism is our enemy, The American Conservative, 22 April, www.theamericanconservative.com/ dreher/woke-capitalism-is-our-enemy 34 Gregg, S. (2019) How woke capitalism corrupts business, Public Discourse, 2 October. www.thepublicdiscourse.com/ 2019/10/56675 35 Gasparino, C. and Moynihan, L. (2019) BlackRock’s Larry Fink rattles employees amid political posturing, Fox Business, 25 January. www.foxbusiness.com/business-leaders/blackrockslarry-fink-rattles-employees-amid-political-posturing 36 Bartleby (2019) Companies can appeal to workers and consumers with liberal messages, The Economist, 26 January. www.economist. com/business/2019/01/26/companies-can-appeal-to-workersand-consumers-with-liberal-messages 37 Carney, J. (2019) BlackRock’s betrayal: #woke wall street pushes leftist agenda on corporate America, Breitbart, 16 January. www. breitbart.com/politics/2018/01/16/blackrocks-betrayal-wokewall-street-pushes-leftist-agenda-on-corporate-america 38 Gregg (2019). 39 Abad-Santos, A. (2018) Nike’s Colin Kaepernick ad sparked a boycott – and earned $6 billion for Nike, Vox, 24 September. www.vox.com/2018/9/24/17895704/nike-colin-kaepernickboycott-6-billion 40 Nike News (2020) COVID-19 response efforts, 1 October. https://purpose.nike.com/covid-19-response-efforts 183
WOKE CAPITALISM 41 Day One Team (2020) Amazon donates over £3M to relief organizations in the UK to support those impacted by the COVID-19 crisis, The Amazon Blog, 27 March. https://blog. aboutamazon.co.uk/in-the-community/amazon-donates-over3m-to-relief-organisations-in-the-uk-to-support-those-impactedby-the-covid-19-crisis 42 Neate, R. (2019) New study deems Amazon worst for ‘aggressive’ tax avoidance, The Guardian, 2 December. www.theguardian. com/business/2019/dec/02/new-study-deems-amazon-worstfor-aggressive-tax-avoidance 43 Beer, J. (2020) Brands from Heinz to Netflix are donating to COVID-19 relief. How you can join them, Fast Company, 21 March. www.fastcompany.com/90480388/brands-fromheinz-to-netflix-are-donating-to-covid-19-relief-how-you-canjoin-them 44 Blumenthal, E. (2020) Mark Zuckerberg’s Chan Zuckerberg Initiative to give $25M to fight COVID-19, CNET, 27 March. www.cnet.com/news/mark-zuckerbergs-chan-zuckerberginitiative-to-donate-25-million-to-fight-covid-19 45 Thomas, L. (2020) Nike shares rise as pandemic fuels sneaker maker’s online growth, annual revenue outlook gets a boost, CNBC, 18 December. https://www.cnbc.com/2020/12/18/ nike-nke-reports-q2-fiscal-2021-earnings-sales-beat.html 46 CNNWire (2021) America’s billionaires have grown $1.1 trillion richer during the pandemic: Report, ABC11, 27 January. https://abc11.com/mark-zuckerberg-jeff-bezos-elon-muskbillionaires/10057605 47 Nocetti, D.C. and Echazu, L. (2020) Americans may be willing to pay $5 trillion to stop the spread of the coronavirus and save lives, The Conversation, 14 May. https://theconversation.com/ americans-may-be-willing-to-pay-5-trillion-to-stop-the-spreadof-the-coronavirus-and-save-lives-137569 48 L. Hildyard quoted in Neate, R. (2020) Call for super-rich to donate more to tackle coronavirus pandemic, The Guardian, 11 April. www.theguardian.com/news/2020/apr/11/call-forsuper-rich-to-donate-more-to-tackle-coronavirus-pandemic 49 Rushe, D. (2020) Making billions v making ends meet: how the pandemic has split the US economy in two, The Guardian, 16 August. www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/aug/16/usinequality-coronavirus-pandemic-unemployment 184
Notes and References 50 Oxfam America (2020) Pandemic profits exposed, Oxfam media briefing, 22 July. https://assets.oxfamamerica.org/media/ documents/Pandemic_Profiteers_Exposed.pdf 51 Oxfam America (2020), p. 1 52 Woods, H. (2020) How billionaires got $637 billion richer during the coronavirus pandemic, Business Insider Australia, 3 August. www.businessinsider.com.au/billionaires-net-worth-increasescoronavirus-pandemic-2020-7?r=US&IR=T 53 Inequality.org (2020) Updates: billionaire wealth, US job losses and pandemic profiteers, 6 August. https://inequality.org/ billionaire-bonanza-2020-updates 54 Neate, R. (2020) Billionaires’ wealth rises to $10.2 trillion amid Covid crisis, The Guardian, 7 October. www.theguardian.com/ business/2020/oct/07/covid-19-crisis-boosts-the-fortunes-ofworlds-billionaires 55 Yun, J. (2020) Covid-19 has worsened inequality. So why are shares higher than ever?, Yahoo! Finance, 12 August. https://au.finance. yahoo.com/news/covid19-inequality-shares-212319670.html 56 Hanley, S. (2020) BlackRock CEO calls for social justice in corporate culture, CleanTechnica, 17 January. https://cleantechnica. com/2018/01/17/blackrock-ceo-calls-social-justice-corporateculture 57 Brown, K. (2020) 5 global issues to watch in 2020, United Nations Foundation, 8 January. https://unfoundation.org/blog/post/5global-issues-to-watch-in-2020 58 Business Roundtable (2019) Statement on the Purpose of a Corporation, Business Roundtable, 19 August. https:// opportunity.businessroundtable.org/wp-content/uploads/ 2020/03/BRT-Statement-on-the-Purpose-of-a-Corporationwith-Signatures.pdf 59 Newsome, S. (2020) Coronavirus bailouts will cost taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars – unlike past corporate rescues that actually made money for the US Treasury, The Conversation, 27 April. https://theconversation.com/coronavirus-bailoutswill-cost-taxpayers-hundreds-of-billions-of-dollars-unlike-pastcorporate-rescues-that-actually-made-money-for-the-us-treasury -136138; Inman, P. (2020) UK Covid-19 business bailouts have already cost more than £100bn, The Guardian, 1 May. www. theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/30/uk-coronavirus-businessbailouts-have-already-cost-more-than-100bn 185
WOKE CAPITALISM 60 Anon (2020) The pandemic shock will make big, powerful firms even mightier, The Economist, 28 March. www.economist.com/ business/2020/03/26/the-pandemic-shock-will-make-bigpowerful-firms-even-mightier Chapter 3 1 Sanneh, K. (2016) Godmother of Soul: Erykah Badu’s expanding musical universe, The New Yorker, 18 April. www.newyorker. com/magazine/2016/04/25/erykah-badu-the-godmother-ofsoul?verso=true 2 Ugwu, R. (2019) Erykah Badu helped define ‘wokeness’. Now she’s a target, The New York Times, 6 February. www.nytimes. com/2019/02/06/movies/erykah-badu-what-men-want.html 3 King Jr., M.L. (1965) Remaining awake through a great revolution [speech], The King Papers Project, Stanford: The Martin Luther King, Jr. Research and Education Institute. 4 Beckham, B. (1972) Garvey Lives!, Charlottesville, VA: University of Virginia. 5 Martin, T. (1976) Race first: The ideological and organizational struggles of Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. 6 Ransby, B. (2015) The class politics of Black Lives Matter, Dissent, 62(4): 31–4. 7 Luscombe, R. (2012) Trayvon Martin case: new evidence includes video from night of shooting, The Guardian, 19 May. www.theguardian.com/world/2012/may/18/trayvon-martinsurveillance-video-zimmerman 8 Linder, D.O. (2020) The George Zimmerman trial: an account, Famous Trials, Kansas: The University of Missouri-Kansas City Law School. www.famous-trials.com/zimmerman1/2319-home 9 Bates, K.G. (2018) A look back at Trayvon Martin’s death, and the movement it inspired, NPR, 31 July. www.npr.org/sections/ codeswitch/2018/07/31/631897758/a-look-back-at-trayvonmartins-death-and-the-movement-it-inspired 10 Alvarez, L. and Buckley, C. (2013) Zimmerman is acquitted in Trayvon Martin killing, The New York Times, 13 July. www. nytimes.com/2013/07/14/us/george-zimmerman-verdicttrayvon-martin.html 11 Upright, E. and Fagenson, Z. (2013) Thousands take to streets to protest Trayvon Martin verdict, Reuters, 31 July. www.reuters. com/article/us-usa-florida-shooting/thousands-take-to-streetsto-protest-trayvon-martin-verdict-idUSBRE96T1AL20130730 186
Notes and References 12 Lewis, P. (2013) ‘Trayvon Martin could have been me 35 years ago’, Obama says, The Guardian, 20 July. www.theguardian.com/ world/2013/jul/19/trayvon-martin-obama-white-house 13 In Goodman, A. (2013) Cornel West: Obama’s response to Trayvon Martin case belies failure to challenge ‘New Jim Crow’, Democracy Now, 22 July. www.democracynow.org/2013/7/22/ cornel_west_obamas_response_to_trayvon 14 Haiphong, D. (2016) The Obama legacy part iv: protecting the racist state, scorning Black America, Black Agenda Report, 26 July. https://blackagendareport.com/obama_legacy_iv_scorning_blacks 15 West, C. in Goodman (2013). 16 Johnson, G. (2016) The growth of #blacklivesmatter on social media, #BlackLivesMatter, 7 December. https://scalar.usc.edu/ works/blacklivesmatter/the-growth-of-blacklivesmatter-onsocial-media?path=the-history 17 Chase, G. (2017) The early history of the Black Lives Matter movement, and the implications thereof, Nevada Law Journal, 18: 1091–112. 18 Garza, A., Cullors, P. and Tometi, A. (2020) Herstory, Black Lives Matter. https://blacklivesmatter.com/herstory 19 Richardson, E. and Ragland, A. (2018) #StayWoke: the language and literacies of the #BlackLivesMatter movement, Community Literacy Journal, 12(2): 27–56 20 Pulliam-Moore, C. (2016) How ‘woke’ went from black activist watchword to teen internet slang, Splinter, 1 August. https:// splinter news.com/how-woke-went-from-black-activistwatchword-to-teen-int-1793853989 21 Zimmer, B., Solomon, J. and Carson, C.E. (2017) Among new words, American Speech, 92(2): 204–30, p. 206. 22 Zimmer et al (2017), p. 212. 23 Trudon, T. (2016) Say goodbye to ‘on fleek’, ‘basic’ and ‘squad’ in 2016 and learn these 10 words instead, MTV News, 1 May. www.mtv.com/news/2720889/teen-slang-2016 24 Blackman, M. (2015) Can we talk about how woke Matt McGorry was in 2015?, Buzzfeed, 17 December. www.buzzfeed. com/michaelblackmon/can-we-talk-about-how-woke-mattmcgorry-was-in-2015#.mfdypXQdX 25 Brown, K. (2016) The wokest baes of January 2016, Jezebel, 2 January. https://jezebel.com/the-wokest-baes-of-january-2016-1755751157 26 Pulliam-Moore (2016). 27 Brooks, D. (2000) Bobos in paradise: The new upper class and how they got there, New York: Simon & Schuster. 187
WOKE CAPITALISM 28 Frank T. (1997) The conquest of cool: Business culture, counterculture, and the rise of hip consumerism, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, p. 4. 29 Heath, J. and Potter, A. (2004) The rebel sell: How the counterculture became consumer culture, New York: HarperCollins. 30 Watson, E. (2018) The origin of woke: how Erykah Badu And Georgia Anne Muldrow sparked the ‘stay woke’ era, Okayplayer, 27 February. www.okayplayer.com/originals/georgia-muldrowerykah-badu-stay-woke-master-teacher.html 31 Pulliam-Moore (2016). 32 Whiteout, S. (2018) Popularizing wokeness, Harvard Kennedy School Journal of African American Public Policy, 2017–18: 63–70. 33 Angbeletchy, C. (2018) ‘Stay woke’ is the new watchword: here’s why, GRIOT, 18 May. http://griotmag.com/en/stay-woke-isthe-new-watchword-heres-why 34 Gervais, R. (2020) Full text: Ricky Gervais’ Golden Globes speech, The Spectator, 6 January. https://blogs.spectator. co.uk/2020/01/full-text-ricky-gervais-golden-globes-speech 35 Spiked (2020) Ricky Gervais bursts Hollywood’s woke bubble, 6 January. www.spiked-online.com/2020/01/06/ricky-gervaisbursts-hollywoods-woke-bubble 36 Stepman, J. (2020) At the Golden Globes, Ricky Gervais exposes Hollywood’s ‘woke’ culture, The Daily Signal, 6 January. www. dailysignal.com/2020/01/06/at-the-golden-globes-ricky-gervaisexposed-hollywoods-woke-culture 37 Soave, R. (2020) Ricky Gervais slams woke Hollywood’s sanctimony in Golden Globes Speech, Reason, 5 January. https://reason.com/2020/01/05/ricky-gervais-golden-globeshollywood-woke 38 Blair, L. (2020) Conservatives praise Ricky Gervais after he takes ‘massive dump’ on Hollywood’s ‘woke’ culture at Golden Globes, The Christian Post, 6 January. www.christianpost.com/news/ conservatives-praise-ricky-gervais-after-he-takes-massive-dumpon-hollywoods-woke-culture-at-golden-globes.html 39 Kahn-Harris, K. (2020) If everyone was a little bit shameless, it might deflate the ‘anti-woke’ right, The Guardian, 2 March. www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/mar/02/anti-wokeright-liberals 40 Ransby, B. (2017) Black Lives Matter is radical democracy in action, The New York Times, 21 October. www.nytimes.com/ 2017/10/21/opinion/sunday/black-lives-matter-leadership.html 188
Notes and References 41 Bunyasi, T.L. and Smith, C.W. (2019) Stay woke: A people’s guide to making All Black Lives Matter, New York: NYU Press, p. 202. Chapter 4 1 Douthat, R. (2018) The rise of woke capital, The New York Times, 28 February. www.nytimes.com/2018/02/28/opinion/ corporate-america-activism.html 2 Itkowitz, C. (2019) Trump referred to ‘gun violence’ in his Parkland remembrance. Hours later, he changed it to ‘school violence’, The Washington Post, 15 February. www.washingtonpost. com/politics/2019/02/14/trumps-lengthy-parkland-shootingremembrance-doesnt-meaningfully-mention-guns 3 Thompson, D. (2018) Why are corporations finally turning against the NRA?, The Atlantic, 26 February. www.theatlantic.com/ business/archive/2018/02/nra-discounts-corporations/554264 4 Douthat (2018). 5 Douthat (2018). 6 Thompson, D. (2018). 7 Piketty, T. (2014) Capital in the twenty-first century, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. 8 Bowen. H.R. (1953) Social responsibilities of the businessman, Iowa City, IA: University of Iowa Press. 9 Heald, M. (1957) Management’s responsibility to society: the growth of an idea, Business History Review, Winter: 375–84, p. 376. 10 Cited in Heald (1957) p. 376. 11 Bowen (1953) p. xvii. 12 Bowen (1953) p. 3. 13 Bowen (1953) p. 4. 14 Demuijnck, G. and Fasterling, B. (2016) The social license to operate, Journal of Business Ethics, 136(4): 675–85. 15 Bowen (1953) p. 26. 16 Bowen (1953) p. 105. 17 Levitt, T. (1958) The dangers of social responsibility, Harvard Business Review, October: 41–50, p. 41. 18 Levitt (1958) p. 42. 19 Friedman, M. (1962) Capitalism and freedom, Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. 20 Friedman (1962) p. 133. 21 e.g. Wiseman, O. (2019) In defence of shareholder capitalism, CapX, 23 August. https://capx.co/in-defence-of-shareholdercapitalism 189
WOKE CAPITALISM 22 Friedman (1962) p. 133. 23 Friedman (1962) p. 134. 24 Frederick, W.C. (1960) The growing concern over business responsibility, California Management Review, 2(4): 54–61. 25 Frederick (1960) p. 56. 26 Business Roundtable (2019) Statement on the purpose of a corporation, 19 August. https://opportunity.businessroundtable. org/ourcommitment 27 Lee, L.-E. (2020) Companies must walk their lofty Davos talk – they have no choice, The Telegraph, 20 January. www.telegraph. co.uk/business/2020/01/29/companies-must-walk-lofty-davostalk-have-no-choice 28 Frederick (1960) p. 58. 29 Frederick (1960) p. 59. 30 Frederick (1960) p. 60. 31 Davis, K. (1960) Can business afford to ignore social responsibilities?, California Management Review, 2(3): 70–6. 32 Davis (1960) p. 73, italics in original. 33 Davis, K. (1967) Understanding the social responsibility puzzle, Business Horizons, Winter: 45–50. 34 Davis (1967) p. 49. 35 Davis (1973) The case for and against business assumption of social responsibilities, The Academy of Management Journal, 16(2): 312–22, p. 321. 36 Committee for Economic Development (1971) Social responsibilities of business corporations, Arlington, VA: CED, p. 10. 37 Committee for Economic Development (1971) pp. 11–12. 38 Inequality.org (2020) The facts that define our grand divides. https://inequality.org/facts 39 Alvaredo, F., Chancel, L., Piketty, T., Saez, E. and Zucman, G. (2018) The world inequality report, Paris: World Inequality Lab. 40 Gros, F. (2020) Disobey! A guide to ethical resistance, London: Verso, p. 5. 41 Gros (2020) p. 5. 42 Franklin, B. in Speake J. (2015) The Oxford Dictionary of Proverbs, 6th edn, Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 230. 43 Johnson, J. (2020) ‘An absolute outrage’: Sanders rips ‘wealthy tax cheats’ as CBO estimates $381 billion in annual unpaid taxes, Common Dreams, 9 July. www.commondreams.org/ news/2020/07/09/absolute-outrage-sanders-rips-wealthy-taxcheats-cbo-estimates-381-billion-annual 190
Notes and References 44 Oxfam International (2020) Inequality and poverty: the hidden costs of tax dodging. www.oxfam.org/en/inequality-and-povertyhidden-costs-tax-dodging 45 Stiglitz, J. (2019) Corporate tax avoidance: it’s no longer enough to take half measures, The Guardian, 7 October. www.theguardian. com/business/2019/oct/07/corporate-tax-avoidance-climatecrisis-inequality 46 Asen, E. (2019) Corporate tax rates around the world, 2019, Tax Foundation, 10 December. https://taxfoundation.org/corporatetax-rates-around-the-world-2019 47 Gros (2020) p. 3. Chapter 5 1 All quotations from: Thatcher, M. (1985) Speech to Conservative Party conference, 11 October, Margaret Thatcher Foundation. www.margaretthatcher.org/document/106145 2 Fukuyama, F. (1992) The end of history and the last man, New York: Free Press. 3 Brown, A. (2020) Political leadership in the cold war’s ending: Thatcher and the turn to engagement with the Soviet Union [blog], The London School of Economics and Political Science, 10 June. https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/thatcher-endof-cold-war 4 Karjanen, D. (2015) World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and neoliberalism, London: Wiley. 5 Heilbron, J., Verheul, J. and Quak, S. (2014) The origins and early diffusion of ‘shareholder value’ in the United States, Theory and Society, 43: 1–22. 6 Glyn, A. (2007) Capitalism unleashed: Finance, globalization, and welfare, Oxford: Oxford University Press. 7 For excellent historical reviews of neoliberalism, see: Harvey, D. (2007) A brief history of neoliberalism, Oxford: Oxford University Press; Brown, W. (2015) Undoing the demos: Neoliberalism’s stealth revolution, New York: Zone Books. 8 Thatcher, M. (1986) Speech to Conservative Party conference, 10 October, Margaret Thatcher Foundation. www.margaret thatcher.org/document/106498 9 Foucault, M. (2002) The birth of biopolitics: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1978‒1979, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, p. 145. 191
WOKE CAPITALISM 10 Thatcher, M. (1981) Economics are the method: the object is to change the soul, Interview for Sunday Times, 3 May, Margaret Thatcher Foundation. www.margaretthatcher.org/ document/104475 11 Marquand, D. (2009) The warrior woman, New Statesman, 26 February. www.newstatesman.com/uk-politics/2009/02/ thatcher-social-moral-society 12 Taylor, B.E. (2015) Reconsidering the rise of ‘shareholder value’ in the United States, 1960–2000, Economic History Working Paper Series (214/2015), London: The London School of Economics and Political Science. 13 Nelson, E. (2017) Reaffirming the influence of Milton Friedman on UK economic policy, Working Papers 2017–01, University of Sydney, School of Economics. https://ideas.repec.org/p/syd/ wpaper/2017-01.html 14 Cited in Cornwell, R. (2006) Milton Friedman, free-market economist who inspired Reagan and Thatcher, dies aged 94, The Independent, 17 November. www.independent.co.uk/news/ world/americas/milton-friedman-free-market-economist-whoinspired-reagan-and-thatcher-dies-aged-94-424665.html 15 Berle, A.A. and Means, G.C. (1932) The modern corporation and private property, New York: Harcourt, Brace and World. 16 Robé, J.P. (2012) Being done with Milton Friedman, Accounting, Economics, and Law, 2(2): 1–31. 17 Heilbron et al (2014). 18 Merin, B., Mayper, A.G. and Tolleson, T.D. (2010) Neoliberalism, deregulation and Sarbanes-Oxley: the legitimation of a failed corporate governance model, Accounting, Auditing and Accountability Journal, 23(6): 774–92, p. 777. 19 Heilbron et al (2014). 20 Lazonick, W. and O’Sullivan, M. (2000) Maximizing shareholder value: a new ideology for corporate governance, Economy and Society, 29(1): 13–35. 21 Reimann, B.C. (1985) Does your business create real shareholder value?, Business Horizons, September–October: 44–51. 22 Davis, A. and Walsh, C. (2017) Distinguishing financialization from neoliberalism, Theory, Culture & Society, 34(5–6): 27–51. 23 Umah, R. (2008) CEOs make $15.6 million on average– here’s how much their pay has increased compared to yours over the year, CNBC, 22 January. www.cnbc.com/2018/01/22/hereshow-much-ceo-pay-has-increased-compared-to-yours-overthe-years.html 192
Notes and References 24 Heilbron et al (2014) p. 17. 25 Lazonick, W. (2011) From innovation to financialization: how shareholder value ideology is destroying the US economy, In G. Epstein and M.H. Wolfson (eds) The handbook of the political economy of financial crises, pp. 491–511, Oxford: Oxford University Press. 26 Lazonick and O’Sullivan (2000). 27 Jeffries, T. (2015) What happened to Thatcher’s share ownership dream? It’s nowhere near as common as the ex-Tory PM hoped 30 years ago – but does it matter?, This Is Money, 9 October. www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/investing/article-3265284/ What-happened-Margaret-Thatcher-s-share-ownership-dream. html 28 Lougee, B. and Wallace, J. (2008) The corporate social responsibility (CSR) trend, Journal of Applied Corporate Finance, 20(1): 96–108, p. 96. 29 Ireland, P. and Pillay, R.G. (2010) Corporate social responsibility in a neoliberal age, In P. Utting and J.C. Marques (eds), Corporate social responsibility and regulatory governance, pp. 77–104, London: Palgrave Macmillan, p. 78. 30 Martin, J., Petty, W. and Wallace, J. (2009) Shareholder value maximization – is there a role for corporate social responsibility?, Journal of Applied Corporate Finance, 21(2): 110–18, p. 117. 31 Brammer, S., Jackson, G. and Matten, D. (2012) Corporate social responsibility and institutional theory: new perspectives on private governance, Socio-Economic Review, 10(1): 3–28. 32 Porter, M.E. and Kramer, M.R. (2011) Creating shared value, Harvard Business Review, January–February: 62–77. 33 Crane, A., Palazzo, G., Spence, L.J. and Matten, D. (2014) Contesting the value of ‘creating shared value’, California Management Review, 56(2): 130–53, p. 140. 34 Anderson, S. and Cavanagh, J. (2000) Top 200: the rise of global corporate power, Global Policy Forum. https://archive.globalpolicy. org/socecon/tncs/top200.htm 35 Michayluk, D. (2008) The rise and fall of single-letter ticker symbols, Business History, 50(3): 368–85. 36 Fleming, P. and Jones, M.T. (2013) The end of corporate social responsibility: Crisis and critique, London: Sage. 37 Banerjee, S.B. (2008) Corporate social responsibility: the good, the bad and the ugly, Critical Sociology, 34(1): 51–79. 38 Shamir, R. (2004) Between self-regulation and the Alien Tort Claims Act: on the contested concept of corporate social responsibility, Law & Society Review, 38(4): 635–64. 193
WOKE CAPITALISM 39 World Economic Forum (2020) Our mission. www.weforum. org/about/world-economic-forum 40 Wu, T. (2020) The revolution comes to Davos, The New York Times, 23 January. www.nytimes.com/2020/01/23/opinion/ sunday/davos-2020-capitalism-climate.html 41 Schwab, K. (2019) Davos manifesto 2020: the universal purpose of a company in the fourth industrial revolution, World Economic Forum, 2 December. www.weforum.org/agenda/2019/12/ davos-manifesto-2020-the-universal-purpose-of-a-company-inthe-fourth-industrial-revolution 42 Cited in Foulkes, I. (2020) Welcome to a ‘woke’ WEF, SWI swissinfo.ch, 21 January. www.swissinfo.ch/eng/inside-geneva_ welcome-to-a--woke--wef/45507380 43 Cliffe, J. (2020) Solving global inequality through vacuous buzzwords: welcome to the new ‘woke Davos’, New Statesman, 22 January. www.newstatesman.com/world/europe/2020/01/ solving-global-inequality-through-vacuous-buzzwords-welcomenew-woke-davos Chapter 6 1 Fink, L. (2019) Larry Fink’s 2019 letter to CEOs: profit & purpose. www.blackrock.com/americas-offshore/2019-larryfink-ceo-letter 2 Fink, L. (2018) Larry Fink’s 2018 letter to CEOs: a sense of purpose. www.blackrock.com/corporate/investor-relations/2018larry-fink-ceo-letter 3 Carney, J. (2018) BlackRock’s betrayal: #WokeWallStreet pushes leftist agenda on corporate America, Breitbart News, 16 January. www.breitbart.com/politics/2018/01/16/blackrocks-betrayalwoke-wall-street-pushes-leftist-agenda-on-corporate-america 4 Gasparino, C. and Moynihan, L. (2019) BlackRock’s Larry Fink rattles employees amid political posturing, Fox Business, 25 January. www.foxbusiness.com/business-leaders/blackrockslarry-fink-rattles-employees-amid-political-posturing 5 Fink, L. (2020) Larry Fink’s 2020 letter to CEOs: a fundamental reshaping of finance. www.blackrock.com/corporate/investorrelations/2020-larry-fink-ceo-letter 6 Helmore, E. (2020) Activists cheer BlackRock’s landmark climate move but call for vigilance, The Guardian, 15 January. www. theguardian.com/environment/2020/jan/15/blackrock-climatechange-environment-divestment-coal 194
Notes and References 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Horst, P. (2018) BlackRock CEO tells companies to contribute to society. Here’s where to start, Forbes, 16 January. www.forbes.com/ sites/peterhorst/2018/01/16/blackrock-ceo-tells-companies-tocontribute-to-society-heres-where-to-start/#8f3556a971d6 Mooney, A. (2020) BlackRock punishes 53 companies over climate inaction, Financial Times, 14 July. www.ft.com/ content/8809032d-47a1-47c3-ae88-ef3c182134c0 Gilbert, M. (2020) BlackRock’s climate activism has a passive problem, The Washington Post, 16 January. www.washingtonpost. com/business/blackrocks-climate-activism-has-a-passiveproblem/2020/01/14/80e233d6-36c5-11ea-a1ff-c48c1d59a4a1_ story.html Richardson, V. (2020) BlackRock CEO Larry Fink ripped over climate change, social justice agenda, The Washington Times, 20 May. www.washingtontimes.com/news/2020/may/20/ blackrock-ceo-larry-fink-ripped-over-climate-chang BlackRock (2020) Awards and recognition as of December 2020. www.blackrock.com/corporate/literature/publication/ blk-awards-and-recognition-web.pdf Aston, J. (2020) Climate warrior Larry Fink’s $98m Gulfstream, Australian Financial Review, 26 February. www.afr.com/ rear-window/climate-warrior-larry-fink-s-98m-gulfstream20200226-p544j0 The Spectator (2020) Treating oil companies as pariahs will kill off any green revolution, 18 January. www.spectator.co.uk/2020/01/ treating-oil-companies-as-pariahs-will-kill-off-any-greenrevolution Gregg, S. (2019) How woke capitalism corrupts business, Public Discourse, 2 October. www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2019/10/ 56675 Gregg (2019). Dreher, R. (2019) Woke capitalism is our enemy, The American Conservative, 22 April. www.theamericanconservative.com/ dreher/woke-capitalism-is-our-enemy Dreher, R. (2019) Woke capitalism’s cultural imperialism, The American Conservative, www.theamericanconservative.com/ dreher/woke-capitalism-cultural-imperialism-lgbt-religiousliberty-poland Fink (2019). Fink (2019). Fink (2020). Fink (2018). 195
WOKE CAPITALISM 22 George, B. (2018) Why BlackRock CEO Larry Fink is not a socialist, Forbes, 12 March. www.forbes.com/sites/ hbsworkingknowledge/2018/03/12/why-blackrock-ceo-larryfink-is-not-a-socialist/#2c443fee685b 23 Kramer, M.R. (2019) The backlash to Larry Fink’s letter shows how far business has to go on social responsibility, Harvard Business Review, 31 January. https://hbr.org/2019/01/the-backlash-tolarry-finks-letter-shows-how-far-business-has-to-go-on-socialresponsibility 24 Fink (2018). 25 Fink (2019). 26 Fink (2019). 27 Fink (2018). 28 Fink (2019). 29 Ferreras, I. (2017) Firms as political entities: Saving democracy through economic bicameralism, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 30 Business Roundtable (2019) About us. www.businessroundtable. org/about-us 31 Business Roundtable (2019) Our commitment. https:// opportunity.businessroundtable.org/ourcommitment 32 Wartzman, R. (2019) America’s top CEOs say they are no longer putting shareholders before everyone else, FastCompany, 19 August. www.fastcompany.com/90391743/top-ceo-groupbusiness-roundtable-drops-shareholder-primacy 33 Continetti, M. (2019) Corporate America wants to be woke, National Review, 7 September. www.nationalreview. com/2019/09/corporate-america-wants-to-be-woke 34 Murray, A. (2019) America’s CEOs seek a new purpose for the corporation, Fortune, 19 August. https://fortune.com/longform/ business-roundtable-ceos-corporations-purpose 35 Akinci, M. (2018) Inequality and economic growth: trickle-down effect revisited, Development Policy Review, 36(51): O1–O24. 36 Konczal, M., Milani, K. and Evans, A. (2020) The empirical failures of neoliberalism. https://rooseveltinstitute.org/ publications/the-empirical-failures-of-neoliberalism 37 Alvaredo, F., Chancel, L., Piketty, T., Saez, E. and Zucman, G. (2018) World inequality report 2018, Paris: World Inequality Lab, p. 5. 38 Fink (2019). 39 Fink (2019). 196
Notes and References Chapter 7 1 Bezos, J. [@jeffbezos] (2020) Post [Instagram profile], 6 March. www.instagram.com/p/B8rWKFnnQ5c 2 Forbes (2019) Billionaires: the richest people in the world, 5 March. www.forbes.com/billionaires/#43c099a4251c 3 Brändlin, A-S. (2019) 2019: The year of climate consciousness, MSN, 27 December. www.msn.com/en-us/weather/topstories/ 2019-the-year-of-climate-consciousness/ar-BBYodrV 4 BBC News (2020) Greta Thunberg: what is she and what does she want?, 28 February. www.bbc.com/news/world-europe49918719 5 BBC News (2020). 6 Alter, C., Haynes, S. and Worland, J. (2020) Time 2019 Person of the Year: Greta Thunberg, Time. https://time.com/person-ofthe-year-2019-greta-thunberg 7 Thunberg, G. (2019) Greta Thunberg UN Climate Change Conference speech transcript, REV, 11 December. www.rev.com/ blog/transcripts/greta-thunberg-un-climate-change-conferencespeech-transcript 8 Day, M. and Roston, E. (2019) Amazon’s emissions bigger than some rivals, trail Walmart, Bloomberg News, 20 September. www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-09-20/amazon-semissions-bigger-than-some-rivals-trail-walmart 9 Tarnoff, B. (2019) Hey, Jeff Bezos: I work for Amazon – and I’m protesting against your firm’s climate inaction, The Guardian, 10 September. https://amp.theguardian.com/technology/2019/ sep/10/jeff-bezos-amazon-climate-strike-aecj 10 Samuel, S. (2020) Donating $10 billion isn’t the best way for Jeff Bezos to fight climate change, Vox, 19 February. www.vox.com/ platform/amp/future-perfect/2020/2/19/21142312/jeff-bezosclimate-change-ten-billion-philanthropy 11 Leskin, P. (2020) Here’s how much Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, the richest person in the world, has personally given to charity, Business Insider, 5 March. www.businessinsider.com/jeff-bezosamazon-how-much-donations-charity-2019-5?r=US&IR=T 12 Hamilton, I.A. (2019) Jeff Bezos shot straight to the top of a ranking of America’s biggest donors – here’s how much tech moguls gave away to good causes in 2018, Business Insider, 13 February 2010. www.businessinsider.com.au/jeff-bezosleads-tech-mogul-donations-to-good-causes-in-2018-20192?r=US&IR=T 197
WOKE CAPITALISM 13 Di Mento, M. (2019) Bezoses and Bloomberg top Chronicle list of the 50 donors who gave the most to charity, The Chronicle of Philanthropy, 12 February. www.philanthropy.com/specialreport/ bezoses-and-bloomberg-top-chro/198?CID=cpw_directory_data 14 Wang, J. (2019) America’s top 50 givers; meet the philanthropists who gave away the most money in 2018. Forbes, 20 November. www.forbes.com/top-givers/#17a1b93066ff 15 Marx, P. (2020) Jeff Bezos’ climate change philanthropy has quite a few (hidden) strings attached, NBC News, 28 February. www.nbcnews.com/think/opinion/jeff-bezos-climate-changephilanthropy-has-quite-few-hidden-strings-ncna1143791 16 Rhodes, C. and Bloom, P. (2018) The trouble with charitable billionaires, The Guardian, 24 May. www.theguardian.com/ news/2018/may/24/the-trouble-with-charitable-billionairesphilanthrocapitalism 17 Wealth-X (2019) UHNW giving trends: Wealth-X philanthropy report 2019, Wealth-X, 3 December. www.wealthx.com/ report/uhnw-giving-philanthropy-report-2019/?mod=article_ inline#downloadform 18 Albrecht, L. (2020) These are the favorite charitable causes of the world’s wealthiest families – and climate change is NOT one of them, MarketWatch, 25 January. www.marketwatch.com/story/ the-1-gives-more-money-to-arts-culture-and-sports-than-tofighting-climate-change-survey-of-billionaires-finds-2020-01-23 19 Di Mento, M. (2020) The Philanthropy 50, The Chronicle of Philanthropy, 11 February. www.philanthropy.com/article/thephilanthropy-50/#id=browse_2020 20 Carlson, T. (2019) ‘Woke’ billionaires love socialism because it doesn’t cost them much, Fox News, 22 February. www.foxnews. com/opinion/tucker-carlson-woke-billionaires-love-socialismbecause-it-doesnt-cost-them-much 21 Bendix, A. (2018) Jeff Bezos could be the first ‘woke’ billionaire philanthropist – but only if he’s willing to help solve the problems he’s created, Business Insider, 20 September. www. businessinsider.com/jeff-bezos-woke-billionaire-philanthropist2018-9?r=US&IR=T 22 Kapoor, S. (2020) What corporate leadership on fighting climate change really looks like, Washington Monthly, 23 February. https://washingtonmonthly.com/2020/02/23/what-corporateleadership-on-fighting-climate-change-really-looks-like 198
Notes and References 23 Burkee, A. (2020) Amazon wants Trump to testify about how much he hates Jeff Bezos, Vanity Fair, 11 February. www. vanityfair.com/news/2020/02/amazon-jeff-bezos-trump-testifypentagon-contract 24 Stefansky, E. (2018) Always be escalating: Trump ratchets up attack on Amazon, Washington Post, Vanity Fair, 31 March. www. vanityfair.com/news/2018/03/trump-washington-post-amazonbezos 25 Umoh, R. (2017) These 5 highly-successful tech CEOs are not happy with Donald Trump’s travel ban, CNBC, 28 June. www. cnbc.com/2017/06/28/these-5-tech-ceos-are-not-happy-withtrumps-travel-ban.html 26 Amazon staff (2017) Human Rights Campaign honors Jeff Bezos with 2017 Equality Award, Amazon News, 2 November. www. aboutamazon.com/news/workplace/human-rights-campaignhonors-jeff-bezos-with-2017-equality-award 27 Schleifer, T. (2019) Jeff Bezos is quietly letting his charities do something radical – whatever they want, Vox, 12 August. www. vox.com/recode/2019/8/12/20758787/jeff-bezos-day-onefund-philanthropy-charity-homelessness 28 Szmigiera, M. (2021) Number of billionaires worldwide 2019, by gender, Statistica, 23 April. www.statista.com/statistics/778577/ billionaires-gender-distribution 29 Bloom, P. and Rhodes, C. (2018) CEO society: The corporate takeover of everyday life, London: Zed. 30 Perrett, T. (2020) ‘Woke’ capital: pinkwashing exploitation, The Pangean, 22 January. https://thepangean.com/PinkwashingExploitation 31 Neate, R. (2019) New study deems Amazon worst for ‘aggressive’ tax avoidance, The Guardian, 2 December. www.theguardian. com/business/2019/dec/02/new-study-deems-amazon-worstfor-aggressive-tax-avoidance 32 Myers, K. (2020) Amazon paid a 1.2% tax rate on $13,285,000,000 in profit for 2019, Yahoo Finance, 6 February. https://finance. yahoo.com/news/amazon-paid-a-12-tax-rate-on-13285000000in-profit-for-2019-210847927.html 33 Neate (2019). 34 Hiscott, G. (2019) Amazon’s £90million ‘tax avoidance’ cash could pay for nearly 2,400 nurses, Daily Mirror, 2 December. www.mirror.co.uk/money/amazons-90million-tax-avoidancecash-21007123 199
WOKE CAPITALISM 35 Fair Tax Mark (2020) Tax gap of Silicon Six over $100 billion so far this decade, News, 2 December. https://fairtaxmark.net/taxgap-of-silicon-six-over-100-billion-so-far-this-decade 36 CNBC Documentaries (2014) Amazon rising, www.cnbc.com/ amazon-rising 37 Ghosh, S. (2018) Undercover author finds Amazon warehouse workers in UK ‘peed in bottles’ over fears of being punished for taking a break, Business Insider, 16 April. www.businessinsider. com/amazon-warehouse-workers-have-to-pee-into-bottles2018-4?r=US&IR=T 38 Anon (2019) German Amazon workers strike on Black Friday, DW News, 29 November. www.dw.com/en/german-amazonworkers-strike-on-black-friday/a-51473877 39 Sainato, M. (2020) ‘I’m not a robot’: Amazon workers condemn unsafe, grueling conditions at warehouse, The Guardian, 5 February. www.theguardian.com/technology/2020/feb/05/ amazon-workers-protest-unsafe-grueling-conditions-warehouse 40 Swagazon Tees website. https://swagazontees.com 41 www.amazon.com/Being-Stower-Like-Riding-T-Shirt/dp/ B07JFCK9JR 42 Grush, L. (2020) International coalition of activists launches protest against Amazon, The Verge, 27 November. www.theverge. com/2020/11/27/21722421/make-amazon-pay-protestcampaign-black-friday 43 https://makeamazonpay.com 44 Jackson, P. (2020) Jeff Bezos to the planet’s rescue, Fair Observer, 19 February. www.fairobserver.com/region/north_america/ jeff-bezos-10-billion-climate-change-grants-philanthropynews-15541 45 Giridharadas, A. (2018a) Winner takes all: The elite charade of changing the world, London: Penguin. 46 Giridharadas, A. (2018b) Beware rich people who say they want to change the world, The New York Times, 24 August. www. nytimes.com/2018/08/24/opinion/sunday/wealth-philanthropyfake-change.html 47 Giridharadas (2018a) p. 6. 48 Giridharadas (2018a) p. 10. 49 Amazon Employees for Climate Justice (2019) Open letter to Jeff Bezos and the Amazon Board of Directors, Medium, 11 April. https://medium.com/@amazonemployeesclimatejustice/ public-letter-to-jeff-bezos-and-the-amazon-board-of-directors82a8405f5e38 200
Notes and References 50 Amazon Employees for Climate Justice (2020) Statement on Jeff Bezos’ Earth Fund, Medium, 18 February. https://medium. com/@amazonemployeesclimatejustice/amazon-employees-forclimate-justice-statement-on-jeff-bezos-earth-fund-bf39f6906589 51 Foer, F. (2020) It’s Jeff Bezos’s planet now, The Atlantic, 20 February. www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/02/bezosclimate-oligarchy/606847 52 Levine, M. (2020) Movement capture: looking Bezos’s gift horse in the mouth, Nonprofit Quarterly, 5 March. https:// nonprofitquarterly.org/movement-capture-looking-bezoss-gifthorse-in-the-mouth 53 Johnstone, C. (2018) Six things we can learn about US plutocracy by looking at Jeff Bezos, Medium, 17 March. https://medium. com/@caityjohnstone/six-things-we-can-learn-about-usplutocracy-by-looking-at-jeff-bezos-532ca4482ae2 Chapter 8 1 Böhm, S., Skoglund, A. and Eatherley, D. (2018) What’s behind the current wave of ‘corporate activism’?, The Conversation, 14 September. https://theconversation.com/whats-behind-thecurrent-wave-of-corporate-activism-102695 2 MacLellan, L. (2019) Apple’s Tim Cook has pushed CEO activism into uncharted territory, Quartz, 3 October. https:// qz.com/work/1721279/on-daca-apples-tim-cook-pushes-ceoactivism-into-new-territory 3 Reuters (2017) Three CEOs resign from Trump council over Charlottesville, The Irish Times, 15 August. www.irishtimes.com/ business/economy/three-ceos-resign-from-trump-council-overcharlottesville-1.3187216 4 M.T. Barra quoted in Lewis (2017) These 18 CEOs had strong words for President Trump’s Charlottesville response, Fortune, 18 August. https://fortune.com/2017/08/17/ceos-trumpcharlottesville-criticized 5 Gelles, D. (2017) The moral voice of corporate America, The New York Times, 19 August. www.nytimes.com/2017/08/19/business/ moral-voice-ceos.html 6 Dimon, J. (2018) Chairman & CEO letter to shareholders, JPMorgan Chase & Co. Annual report 2018. https://reports.jpmorgan chase.com/investor-relations/2018/ar-ceo-letters.htm?a=1 201
WOKE CAPITALISM 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Quoted in Walker, S. (2018) You’re a CEO – stop talking like a political activist, The Wall Street Journal, 27 July. www. wsj.com/articles/youre-a-ceostop-talking-like-a-politicalactivist-1532683844 O’Toole, J. (2019) The enlightened capitalists: Cautionary tales of business pioneers who tried to do well by doing good, New York: Harper. Kaps, B. (2019) Four ways CEO activism can strengthen your brand, Rent a PR, 15 May. www.rentapr.ch/en/2019/05/15/ four-ways-ceo-activism-can-strengthen-your-brand Chatterji, A.K. and Toffel, M.W. (2018) The new CEO activists. The Harvard Business Review, January–February. https://hbr. org/2018/01/the-new-ceo-activists Grillo, F. and Blessington, M. (2018) Does CEO activism create a more human brand?, The Marketing Journal, 31 May. www. marketingjournal.org/does-ceo-activism-create-a-more-humanbrand-frank-grillo-and-mark-blessington Maks-Solomon, C. (2020) Corporate activism is more than a marketing gimmick, The Conversation, 8 July. https:// theconversation.com/corporate-activism-is-more-than-amarketing-gimmick-141570 Böhm et al (2018). Mark Benioff in Steinmetz, K. (2016) Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff: ‘Anti-LGBT’ bills are ‘anti-business’, Time, 31 March. https://time.com/4276603/marc-benioff-salesforce-lgbt-rfra Gooch, A. (2019) Corporate activism in an age of radical uncertainty, Communication Director, 5 March. www.communicationdirector.com/issues/game-changer/corporate-activism-ageradical-uncertainty/#.XpoZ3pozY2w Ball, C.A. (2019) The queering of corporate America: How big business went from LGBTQ adversary to ally, Boston, MA: Beacon Press. Karp, P. (2018) Marriage equality campaign seeks abolition of religious rights to discriminate, The Guardian, 4 February. www. theguardian.com/australia-news/2018/feb/14/marriage-equalitycampaign-seeks-abolition-of-religious-rights-to-discriminate AAP (2018) Religious schools want right to hire, fire, SBS News,14 February. www.sbs.com.au/news/religious-schoolswant-right-to-hire-fire 202
Notes and References 19 Hunter, F. (2017) Marriage plebiscite: Tony Abbott urges a ‘no’ vote to reject political correctness and protect religious freedom, The Sydney Morning Herald, 9 August. www.smh.com.au/politics/ federal/marriage-plebiscite-tony-abbott-urges-a-no-vote-toreject-political-correctness-and-protect-religious-freedom20170809-gxs6m6.html 20 Bickers, C. (2017) PM won’t ban inaccurate posters, The Courier Mail, 22 August. www.couriermail.com.au/news/queensland/ sunshine-coast/pm-wont-ban-inaccurate-posters/news-story/ f969ed968cb09d308a0fd1f38cafbf27 21 Elphick, L. (2018) The ‘gay wedding cake’ dilemma: when religious freedom and LGBTI rights intersect, The Conversation, 27 March. https://theconversation.com/the-gay-weddingcake-dilemma-when-religious-freedom-and-lgbti-rightsintersect-93070 22 Australian Bureau of Statistics (2017) 1800.0 – Australian Marriage Law Postal Survey, 2017, 15 November. www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/ abs@.nsf/mf/1800.0 23 Australian Government (2004) Marriage Amendment Act 2004, Canberra: Federal Register of Legislation. 24 Australian Marriage Equality (2020) Join 851 corporations that support marriage equality. www.australianmarriageequality.org/ open-letter-of-support 25 Karp, P. (2017) Marriage equality: lots of support but little funding from corporate Australia, The Guardian, 2 September. www. theguardian.com/australia-news/2017/sep/02/marriage-equalitylots-of-support-but-little-funding-from-corporate-australia 26 The discussion of Alan Joyce and Qantas draws on my previously published articles: Rhodes, C. (2017) The market for virtue: why companies like Qantas are campaigning for marriage equality’, The Conversation, 28 August. https://theconversation.com/the-marketfor-virtue-why-companies-like-qantas-are-campaigning-formarriage-equality-82905; Rhodes, C. (2019) Swollen executive pay packets reveal the limits of corporate activism. The Conversation, 25 September. https://theconversation.com/swollen-executivepay-packets-reveal-the-limits-of-corporate-activism-123988 27 Quoted in Belot, H. (2017) Qantas CEO Alan Joyce to campaign for Yes vote on same-sex marriage, ABC News, 21 August. www. abc.net.au/news/2017-08-21/same-sex-marriage-alan-joyce-yescampaign-support/8826682 203
WOKE CAPITALISM 28 Financial Times (2017) The OUTstanding lists: LGBT leaders and allies today, 3 May. www.ft.com/content/b6a08ba0-b40c-11e7aa26-bb002965bce8 29 Quoted in Belot, H. (2017) Qantas to continue advocating for same-sex marriage despite criticism from Peter Dutton, ABC News, 18 March. www.abc.net.au/news/2017-03-18/ qantas-continue-same-sex-marriage-support-peter-duttoncriticism/8366306 30 Johnson, C. (2017) Turnbull is on the winning side on marriage equality, but his troubles are far from over, The Conversation, 15 November. https://theconversation.com/turnbull-is-on-thewinning-side-on-marriage-equality-but-his-troubles-are-farfrom-over-86928 31 Liddy, M., Hoad, N. and Spraggon, B. (2017) How Australians think about same-sex marriage, mapped, ABC News, 14 September. www.abc.net.au/news/2017-09-13/same-sexmarriage-support-map-vote-compass/8788978?nw=0 32 Joyce, A. (2017) Alan Joyce Opinion Piece – From economics to equality, why companies speak up on the big issues, Qantas News Room, 21 March. www.qantasnewsroom.com.au/speeches/ alan-joyce-opinion-piece-from-economics-to-equality-whycompanies-speak-up-on-the-big-issues 33 Palazzon, G. and Basu, K. (2007) The ethical backlash of corporate branding, Journal of Business Ethics, 73: 336–46. 34 Vogel, D. (2006) The market for virtue: The potential and limits of corporate social responsibility, Washington DC: Brookings Institution Press. 35 Joyce (2017). 36 Deloitte (2017) Missing out: The business case for customer diversity, Sydney: Deloitte Australia. 37 Hafenbrädl, S. and Waeger, D. (2017). Ideology and the microfoundations of CSR: Why executives believe in the business case for CSR and how this affects their CSR engagements. Academy of Management Journal, 60(4): 1582–606. 38 Rhodes, C. and Pullen, A. (2018). Critical business ethics: from corporate self-interest to the glorification of the sovereign pater, International Journal of Management Reviews, 20(2): 483–99. 39 Cockburn, P. (2017) Same-sex marriage: Qantas CEO Alan Joyce urges ‘good businesses’ to support ‘yes’ vote, ABC News, 25 August. www.abc.net.au/news/2017-08-25/alan-joyce-callsfor-businesses-to-support-same-sex-marriage/8842332 204
Notes and References 40 Pinto, P.R. (2019) Inequality by numbers: the making of a global political issue?, In Histories of Global Inequality, pp. 107–28, Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. 41 Yeates, C. (2019) Qantas chief Alan Joyce tops CEO pay table, The Sydney Morning Herald, 17 September. www.smh.com.au/ business/companies/qantas-chief-alan-joyce-tops-ceo-pay-table20190916-p52rta.html 42 Burgess, K. (2019) Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce says airport fees stop Jetstar operating in Canberra, The Canberra Times, 18 September. www.canberratimes.com.au/story/6392297/whyjetstar-wont-fly-to-canberra 43 Coorey, P. (2019) Qantas needs to be ‘out there’ on social issues, Australian Financial Review, 18 September. www.afr.com/politics/ federal/qantas-needs-to-be-out-there-on-social-issues-20190918p52sor Chapter 9 1 Quoted in Bieler, D. and Bonesteel, M. (2018) ‘What was Nike thinking?’ President Trump reacts to Nike ad featuring Colin Kaepernick, The Washington Post, 7 September. www. chicagotr ibune.com/sports/ct-spt-donald-trump-colinkaepernick-nike-ad-20180907-story.html 2 Heller, S. (2018) ‘Here’s the backstory of everyone who appeared in the new Nike ad featuring Colin Kaepernick, Business Insider, 16 September. www.businessinsider.com/all-the-athletesin-the-nike-dream-crazy-ad-with-colin-kaepernick-20189?r=AU&IR=T 3 Martin, L.L. (2018) Black community uplift and the myth of the American dream, Lanham, MD: Lexington Books. 4 The Editors of GQ (2017) Colin Kaepernick is GQ’s 2017 Citizen of the Year, GQ Magazine, 13 November. www.gq.com/ story/colin-kaepernick-cover-men-of-the-year 5 Quoted in Wells, A. (2016) Colin Kaepernick sits during national anthem before Packers vs. 49ers, Bleacher Report, 2 September. https://bleacherreport.com/articles/2660085-colin-kaepernicksits-during-national-anthem-before-packers-vs-49ers 6 Carissimo, J. (2016) People are burning Colin Kaepernick jerseys over his refusal to stand during the national anthem, The Independent, 28 August. www.independent.co.uk/news/people/ people-are-burning-colin-kaepernick-jerseys-over-his-refusal-tostand-during-the-national-anthem-a7214281.html 205
WOKE CAPITALISM 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 Kimberley, M. (2017) Freedom rider: Kaepernick and true protest, Black Agenda Report, 24 August. www.blackagendareport.com/ freedom-rider-kaepernick-and-true-protest Quoted in Reid, J. (2017) How Colin Kaepernick became a cause for activists, civil rights groups and others, The Undefeated, 22 August. https://theundefeated.com/features/how-colinkaepernick-became-a-cause-for-activists-civil-rights-groups Towler, C.C., Crawford, N.N. and Bennet, R.A. (2020) Shut up and play: black athletes, protest politics, and black political action, Perspectives on Politics, 18(1): 111–27. Quoted in Robinson, C. (2020) In light of George Floyd’s death, ex-NFL exec admits what we knew all along: protests ended Colin Kaepernick’s career, Yahoo Sports, 31 May. https:// au.sports.yahoo.com/in-light-of-george-floyds-death-ex-nflexec-admits-what-we-knew-all-along-protests-ended-colinkaepernicks-career-175616379.html Chomsky, N. (2017) Requiem for the American dream: The 10 principles of concentration of wealth & power, New York: Seven Stories Press, p. 51. See Piketty, T. (2020) Capital and ideology, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Quoted in Jenkins, A. (2017) Read President Trump’s NFL speech on national anthem protests, Time, 23 September. https:// time.com/4954684/donald-trump-nfl-speech-anthem-protests Wallis, J. (2007) America’s original sin: the legacy of white racism, Cross Currents, 57(2): 197–202. Gordon-Reed, A. (2018) America’s original sin: slavery and the legacy of white supremacy, Foreign Affairs, 97: 2–5. Boren, C. (2020) A timeline of Colin Kaepernick’s protests against police brutality, The Washington Post, 2 June. www. washingtonpost.com/sports/2020/06/01/colin-kaepernickkneeling-history Russo, S. (2020) The politics of sport, Political Analysis, 21: 1–17. Badenhausen, K. (2020) Michael Jordan has made over $1 billion from Nike – the biggest endorsement bargain in sports, Forbes, 3 May. www.forbes.com/sites/kurtbadenhausen/2020/05/03/ michael-jordans-1-billion-nike-endorsement-is-the-biggestbargain-in-sports/#20bdfbd46136 Morgan Hertzman quoted in Nash, B. (2020) A new documentary takes a look into the darker side of the Air Jordan brand, GQ, 21 May. www.gq.com.au/style/news/a-new-documentary-takesa-look-into-the-darker-side-of-the-air-jordan-brand/news-story /3c3ae4cc04460489a653f6ee97347c40 206
Notes and References 20 Bontemps, T. (2020) Michael Jordan stands firm on ‘Republicans buy sneakers, too’ quote, says it was made in jest, ESPN, 4 May. www.espn.com.au/nba/story/_/id/29130478/michael-jordanstands-firm-republicans-buy-sneakers-too-quote-says-was-madejest 21 Tyler, J. (2018) Nike’s Colin Kaepernick ad isn’t the first time the brand’s commercials have made a social statement. See some of the most memorable campaigns in its history, Business Insider, 8 September. www.businessinsider.com.au/nike-ads-make-socialstatements-2018-9?r=US&IR=T 22 New Idea (2019) Nike sweatshops: inside the scandal, New Idea, 18 November. www.newidea.com.au/nike-sweatshops-the-truthabout-the-nike-factory-scandal 23 Quoted in Wazir, B. (2001) Nike accused of tolerating sweatshops, The Guardian, 20 May. www.theguardian.com/world/2001/ may/20/burhanwazir.theobserver 24 Bain, M. (2017) Nike is facing a new wave of anti-sweatshop protests, Quartz, 1 August. https://qz.com/1042298/nike-isfacing-a-new-wave-of-anti-sweatshop-protests 25 Burns, W. (2018) With new Kaepernick ad, what does Nike believe in?, Forbes, 4 September. www.forbes.com/sites/ willburns/2018/09/04/with-new-kaepernick-ad-what-doesnike-believe-in/#39a8b89e1081 26 Castle, S. and Bebek, G. (2017) Any publicity is good publicity: Nike’s controversial campaigns and management of celebrities, in S. Chadwick, D. Arthur, and J. Birch (eds) International cases in the business of sport, 2nd edn, pp. 87–96, London: Routledge. 27 Carras, C. and Nordyke, K. (2019) Creative Arts Emmys: complete winners list, The Hollywood Reporter, 14 October. www. hollywoodreporter.com/lists/creative-arts-emmys-2019-fullwinners-list-updating-live-1236953/item/outstanding-animatedprogram-1236957 28 Quoted in Gibson, K. (2018) Colin Kaepernick is Nike’s $6 billion man, CBS News, 21 September. www.cbsnews.com/ news/colin-kaepernick-nike-6-billion-man 29 Le, M. (2020) 2019’s Air Jordan 11 ‘Bred’ was Nike’s best-selling sneaker in history, Sneaker News, 25 March. https://sneakernews. com/2020/03/25/top-selling-nike-sneaker-in-history-jordan-11bred 207
WOKE CAPITALISM 30 Mason, M. (2020) How Nike’s deal with Michael Jordan gave rise to sneaker culture, Australian Financial Review, 19 May. www.afr. com/life-and-luxury/fashion-and-style/how-nike-s-deal-withmichael-jordan-gave-rise-to-sneaker-culture-20200501-p54p1j 31 Reid, J.A. (2017) How Colin Kaepernick became a cause for activists, civil rights groups and others, The Undefeated, 22 August. https://theundefeated.com/features/how-colinkaepernick-became-a-cause-for-activists-civil-rights-groups 32 Quoted in Bailey, P.M. (2018) Kentucky lawyer says Colin Kaepernick is ‘by definition racist’, Courier Journal, 5 September. www.courier-journal.com/story/news/politics/2018/09/05/ kentucky-lawyer-alex-white-says-colin-kaepernick-realracist/1200310002 33 Peterson, J. (2009) A ‘race’ for equality: print media coverage of the 1968 Olympic protest by Tommie Smith and John Carlos, American Journalism, 26(2): 99–121. 34 Saeed, A. (2002) What’s in a name? Muhammad Ali and the politics of cultural identity, Sport in Society, 5(3): 52–72. 35 Quoted in BoxRec (2017) Tommy Burns vs. Jack Johnson. https://boxrec.com/media/index.php/Tommy_Burns_vs._Jack_ Johnson 36 Quoted in Nilsson, J. (2020) A black champion’s biggest fight, The Saturday Evening Post, 2 July. www.saturdayeveningpost. com/2020/07/a-black-champions-biggest-fight 37 Cited in Putnam, P. (2005) Johnson–Jeffries (Part 2): Jeff answers call of the wild, The Sweet Science, 16 November. https://tss.ib.tv/ boxing/boxing-articles-and-news-2005-videos-results-rankingsand-history/2864-johnsonjeffries-part-2-jeff-answers-call-of-thewild 38 Quoted in Nilsson (2020). 39 Lamb, C. (2016) Introduction, in C. Lamb (ed.) From Jack Johnson to Lebron James: Sports, media and the color line, pp. 1–18. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. 40 Barra, A. (2018) If Trump pardons Jack Johnson it won’t be for his contribution to black America, The Guardian, 15 May. www. theguardian.com/sport/2018/may/15/jack-johnson-presidentialpardon-donald-trump-boxing-mann-act 41 Williams, J.C. (2016) The oppressive seeds of the Colin Kaepernick backlash, The Conversation, 8 October. https:// theconversation.com/the-oppressive-seeds-of-the-colinkaepernick-backlash-66358 208
Notes and References 42 Chicago Tribune Staff (2017) When sports and politics collide, The Chicago Tribune. www.chicagotribune.com/sports/ct-whensports-and-politics-collide-20170928-photogallery.html 43 Dumenco, S. (2018) Risky business: in defence of fear itself, Advertising Age, 89(21): 30. 44 Matlon, J. (2019) Black masculinity under racial capitalism, Black Agenda Report, 24 July. www.blackagendareport.com/blackmasculinity-under-racial-capitalism Chapter 10 1 Treisma, R. (2020) The NFL will play ‘Lift every voice and sing’ before each season-opener game, NPR, 2 July. www.npr.org/sections/ live-updates-protests-for-racial-justice/2020/07/02/886936096/ the-nfl-will-play-lift-every-voice-and-sing-before-eachseason-opener-game 2 NAACP (2020) NAACP History: ‘Lift every voice and sing’. www.naacp.org/naacp-history-lift-evry-voice-and-sing 3 Peretti, B.W. (2009) Lift every voice: The history of African American music, Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield. 4 Karimi, F. and Willingham, A.J. (2020) What makes ‘Lift every voice and sing’ so iconic, CNN, 10 September. https://edition. cnn.com/interactive/2020/09/us/lift-every-voice-and-sing-trnd/ index.html 5 Redmond, S.L. (2014) Anthem: Social movements and the sound of solidarity in the African diaspora, New York: New York University Press, p. 79. 6 Redmond, S.L., cited in Lindsay-Haberman, C. (2018) Till victory is won: the staying power of ‘Lift every voice and sing’, NPR Music, 16 August. www.npr.org/2018/08/16/638324920/ american-anthem-lift-every-voice-and-sing-black-nationalanthem 7 Lyrics published in NAACP (2020). 8 Byrd, R.P. (2010) Song reflects racial pride, never intended as anthem, CNN, 30 July. https://edition.cnn.com/2010/ OPINION/07/27/byrd.james.johnson/index.html 9 Ross, W.T. (2009) The Negro national anthem controversy, Texas Wesleyan Law Review, 16(4): 561–76. 10 Transcribed in Cadeaux, E. (2020) Roger Goodell releases statement condemning racism, admits NFL was wrong not listening to players, NBC Sports, 5 June. www.nbcsports. com/washington/redskins/roger-goodell-releases-statementcondemning-racism-admits-nfl-was-wrong-not-listening 209
WOKE CAPITALISM 11 BBC (2020) George Floyd: what happened in the final moments of his life, BBC News, 16 July. www.bbc.com/news/world-uscanada-52861726 12 Groppe, M. and Phillips, K. (2020) From coastal cities to rural towns, breadth of George Floyd protests – mostly peaceful – captured by data, USA Today, 20 June. www.usatoday.com/story/ news/politics/2020/06/10/george-floyd-black-lives-matterpolice-protests-widespread-peaceful/5325737002 13 Smith, D. (2019) A court has been told that the situation was ‘frantic’ as questions focus on resuscitation efforts, NITV, 5 March. www.sbs.com.au/nitv/nitv-news/article/2019/03/05/daviddungay-inquest-doctor-breaks-down-while-giving-evidence 14 Daley, D. (2020) A wake up call to end Australia’s ongoing racism, Independent Australia, 3 July. https://independentaustralia. net/australia/australia-display/a-wake-up-call-to-end-australiasongoing-racism,14062 15 Buchanan, L., Bui, Q. and Patel, J.K. (2020) Black Lives Matter may be the largest movement in US history, The New York Times, 3 July. www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/07/03/us/georgefloyd-protests-crowd-size.html 16 Quoted in Zisin, D. (2020) Michael Bennett thinks the NFL is starting to wake up, The Nation, 20 July. www.thenation.com/ article/society/michael-bennett-nfl-racism 17 Quoted in Intermite, S. (2019) Brand activism: an interview with Philip Kotler and Christian Sarkar, The Marketing Journal, 18 December. www.marketingjournal.org/brand-activism-aninterview-with-philip-kotler-and-christian-sarkar 18 In Vatour, M. (2020) Black Lives Matter: NFL pledges $250 million to ‘combat systemic racism’, MSN Sports, 11 June. www.msn.com/en-us/sports/nfl/black-lives-matter-nfl-pledgesdollar250-million-to-combat-systemic-racism/ar-BB15m4J1 19 Boren, C. (2020) NFL end zones will bear ‘end racism’ and ‘it takes all of us’ messages in home openers, The Washington Post, 29 July. www.washingtonpost.com/sports/2020/07/28/nflend-zones-will-bear-end-racism-it-takes-all-us-messages-homeopeners 20 Quoted in Bunn, C. (2020) Black fans call NFL’s plan to play ‘Lift every voice and sing’ a ‘joke’, ‘placating’, ‘pandering’, NBC News, 10 July. www.nbcnews.com/news/nbcblk/black-fans-callnfl-s-plan-play-lift-every-voice-n1233164 21 Quoted in Bunn (2020). 210
Notes and References 22 Bleier, E. (2020) NFL putting money where its mouth is after Black Lives Matter pledge, Inside Hook, 12 June. www.insidehook. com/daily_brief/sports/nfl-putting-money-where-its-mouth-is 23 Christie, D. (2020) McDonald’s names victims of police brutality, racist violence in new ad, Marketing Dive, 4 June. www. marketingdive.com/news/mcdonalds-names-victims-of-policebrutality-racist-violence-in-new-ad/579184 24 In Mirzaei, A. (2020) Big brands take a stand and support Black Lives Matter, AdNews, 11 June. www.adnews.com.au/news/bigbrands-take-a-stand-and-support-black-lives-matter 25 In Hsu, T. (2020) Corporate voices get behind Black Lives Matter cause, The New York Times, 10 June. www.nytimes. com/2020/05/31/business/media/companies-marketing-blacklives-matter-george-floyd.html 26 Ace Metrix (2020) Consumers put brands that stand with BLM under the microscope, Ace Metrix Insights [blog], 22 June. www. acemetrix.com/insights/blog/black-lives-matter-ads-2020 27 Quoted in Stein, C. (2020) McDonald’s and African Americans: it’s complicated, professor says, Yahoo! News, 26 July. https:// au.news.yahoo.com/mcdonalds-african-americans-complicatedprofessor-says-034138318--spt.html 28 Chatelain, M. (2020) Franchise: The golden arches in black America, New York: Liveright. 29 Blakemore, E. (2020) Why people rioted after Martin Luther King, Jr’s assassination, History.com, 15 January. www.history. com/news/mlk-assassination-riots-occupation 30 Chatelain (2020) p. 126. 31 Chatelain (2020) p. 18. 32 Chatelain (2020) p. 4. 33 Kelley, R.D.G. (2017) What did Cedric Robinson mean by racial capitalism?, Boston Review, 12 January. http://bostonreview.net/ race/robin-d-g-kelley-what-did-cedric-robinson-mean-racialcapitalism 34 Robinson, C.J. (1983) Black Marxism: The making of the black radical tradition, Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. 35 Robinson (1983) p. 3. 36 In MB4L (2016) A vision for black lives: policy demands for black power, freedom and justice. https://cjc.net/wp-content/ uploads/2017/04/A-Vision-For-Black-Lives-Policy-DemandsFor-Black-Power-Freedom-and-Justice.pdf 211
WOKE CAPITALISM 37 Issar, S. (2020) Listening to Black Lives Matter: racial capitalism and the critique of neoliberalism, Contemporary Political Theory, Online ahead of print: https://doi.org/10.1057/s41296-02000399-0, p. 2. 38 Issar (2020) p. 10. 39 Issar (2020) p. 11. 40 Ransby, B. (2018) Making all Black Lives Matter: Reimagining freedom in the twenty-first century, Oakland, CA: University of California Press. 41 Ransby (2018) p. 236. 42 Hogan, T. (2020) Let’s not turn Black Lives Matter into Black Lives Marketing, Black Enterprise, 29 June. www.blackenterprise. com/lets-not-turn-black-lives-matter-into-black-lives-marketing 43 Lerman, R. (2020) From wake word to woke word: Siri and Alexa tell you Black Lives Matter, but tech still has a diversity problem, The Washington Post, 11 June. www.washingtonpost. com/technology/2020/06/10/big-tech-black-lives-matter Chapter 11 1 The discussion of Gillette’s here is adapted from: Rhodes, C. (2019) ‘Gillette’s corporate calculation shows just how far the #metoo movement has come’, The Conversation, 17 January. https://theconversation.com/gillettes-corporate-calculationshows-just-how-far-the-metoo-movement-has-come-109936 2 For a discussion of the politics of addressing toxic masculinity see: Kimmel, M. and Wade, L. (2018) Ask a feminist: Michael Kimmel and Lisa Wade discuss toxic masculinity. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 44(1): 233–54; Sculos, B.W. (2017) Who’s afraid of ‘toxic masculinity’?, Class, Race and Corporate Power, 5(3): 1–5. 3 Gillette (2020) Our Story. https://gillette.com/en-us/about/ our-story 4 Rossen, J. (2018) Oral History: The strangest super bowl halftime show ever, Mental Floss, 4 February. www.mentalfloss.com/ article/74902/oral-history-strangest-super-bowl-halftime-showever 5 See the ad at Gillette (1989) 1989 Gillette – The Best a Man Can Get, SuperBowlAds.com. https://superbowl-ads.com/1989gillette-the-best-a-man-can-get 6 Khamis, S. (2020) Branding diversity: New advertising and cultural strategies, Abingdon: Routledge. 212
Notes and References 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Deighton, K. (2018) Gillette upgrades its ‘Best a man can get’ slogan for the expressive modern male, The Drum, 17 August. www.thedrum.com/news/2018/08/17/gillette-upgrades-itsbest-man-can-get-slogan-the-expressive-modern-male The full advertisement is on Gillette’s YouTube channel and can be viewed at www.youtube.com/watch?v=koPmuEyP3a0 Wilson-Beevers, H. (2019) As the mum of a young son I salute the new Gillette advert, here’s why …, Glamour, 15 January. www. glamourmagazine.co.uk/article/gillette-campaign J. Halberstam quoted in Fairyington, S. (2019) Gillette’s new campaign takes on toxic masculinity in a way you’ve never seen before, Thrive Global, 14 January. https://thriveglobal.com/ stories/gillette-ad-campaign-best-a-man-can-get-we-believetoxic-masculinity-progress Dreyfus, E. (2019) Gillette’s ad proves the definition of a good man has changed, Wired, 16 January. www.wired.com/story/ gillette-we-believe-ad-men-backlash APA (2018) APA guidelines for psychological practice with men and boys, Washington: American Psychological Association. Morgan, P. (2019) I’m so sick of this war on masculinity and I’m not alone – with their pathetic man-hating ad, Gillette have just cut their own throat, The Daily Mail, 16 January. www.dailymail. co.uk/news/article-6594295/PIERS-MORGAN-Im-sick-warmasculinity-Gillette-just-cut-throat.html Duke, S. (2019) Gillette insults customer base, telling men to shave their ‘toxic masculinity’, The New American, 14 January. Taylor, C. (2019) Why Gillette’s new ad campaign is toxic, Forbes, 15 January. www.forbes.com/sites/charlesrtaylor/2019/01/15/ why-gillettes-new-ad-campaign-is-toxic/#3e240bb45bc9 J. Woods quoted in Gilchrist, J.E. (2019) Gillette ad infuriates bigots including James Woods and Piers Morgan, Advocate, 15 January. www.advocate.com/media/2019/1/15/bigots-jameswoods-piers-morgan-are-furious-gillette Slater, T. (2019) Gillette and the rise of woke capitalism, The Spectator, 19 January. www.spectator.co.uk/article/gillette-andthe-rise-of-woke-capitalism Gregg, S. (2019) How woke capitalism corrupts business, Public Discourse, 2 October. www.thepublicdiscourse.com/2019/ 10/56675 213
WOKE CAPITALISM 19 Kantor, J. and Twohey, M. (2017) Harvey Weinstein paid off sexual harassment accusers for decades, The New York Times, 5 October. https://web.archive.org/web/20171014011811/www. nytimes.com/2017/10/05/us/harvey-weinstein-harassmentallegations.html 20 Contactmusic.com (2020) Harvey Weinstein: biography. www. contactmusic.com/harvey-weinstein 21 Farrow, R. (2018) From aggressive overtures to sexual assault: Harvey Weinstein’s accusers tell their stories, The New Yorker, 10 October. www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/fromaggressive-overtures-to-sexual-assault-harvey-weinsteins-accuserstell-their-stories 22 Mangan, D. (2020) Harvey Weinstein sentenced to 23 years in prison for rape and sex assault in case that sparked ‘MeToo’ movement, CNBC, 11 March. www.cnbc.com/2020/03/11/ harvey-weinstein-sentenced-in-prison-for-sex-assault.html 23 Pflum, M. (2018) A year ago, Alyssa Milano started a conversation about #MeToo. These women replied, ABC News, 16 October. www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/year-ago-alyssa-milanostarted-conversation-about-metoo-these-women-n920246 24 Anon (2020) #MeToo: A timeline of events, The Chicago Tribune, 10 August. www.chicagotribune.com/lifestyles/ct-me-tootimeline-20171208-htmlstory.html 25 Burke, T. (2017) #MeToo: Ten years before it was a hashtag, it began as one woman’s search for safety, ABC News, 19 October. www.abc.net.au/news/2017-10-19/me-too-a-beginning-not-anend-of-fight-against-sexual-abuse/9065814 26 Wakefield, J. (2018) MeToo founder Tarana Burke: Campaign now ‘unrecognisable’, BBC News, 29 November. www.bbc.com/ news/world-46393369 27 Zacharek, S., Dockterman, E. and Edwards, H.S. (2017) Time Person of the Year 2018: the silence breakers, Time, 18 December. https://time.com/time-person-of-the-year-2017-silence-breakers 28 Chatterji, A.K. and Toffel, M.W. (2019) The new CEO activists, in HBR’s 10 Must Reads, Boston: Harvard Business Review Press. 29 Chatterji, A.K. and Toffel, M.W. (2016) Assessing the impact of CEO activism. Harvard Business School Technology and Operations Management Unit Working Paper No. 16-100, Duke I&E Research Paper No. 16-11, https://ssrn.com/ abstract=2742209 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2742209 214
Notes and References 30 Peirso-Hagger, E. (2019) M is for #MeToo: how a Hollywood moment became a global movement, New Statesman, 17 December. www.newstatesman.com/politics/feminism/2019/12/m-metoohow-hollywood-moment-became-global-movement 31 Venetis, cited in Reilly, K. (2019) How the #MeToo movement helped make new charges against Jeffrey Epstein possible, Time, 9 July. https://time.com/5621958/jeffrey-epstein-charges-metoo-movement 32 T. Burke, cited in Criss, D. (2018) The media’s version of #MeToo is unrecognizable to the movement’s founder, Tarana Burke, CNN, 30 November. https://edition.cnn.com/2018/11/30/us/ tarana-burke-ted-talk-trnd/index.html 33 Rucha Naidu, S.J. (2019) P&G posts strong sales, takes $8 billion Gillette writedown, Reuters, 30 July. www.reuters.com/article/ us-proctergamble-results/pg-posts-strong-sales-takes-8-billiongillette-writedown-idUSKCN1UP1AD 34 Haverluck, M.F. (2019) Gillette cut by $8B loss after ‘toxic masculinity’ ad, OneNewsNow, 2 August. https://onenewsnow. com/business/2019/08/02/gillette-cut-by-8b-loss-after-toxicmasculinity-ad 35 Morse, B. (2019) Gillette’s ‘woke’ ad that insulted men cost P&G billions, RedState, 31 July. www.redstate.com/brandon_ morse/2019/07/31/gillettes-woke-ad-insulted-men-cost-pgbillions 36 Kay, B. (2019) After going woke and losing $8 billion, Gillette embraces masculinity again, The Post Millennial, 22 August. https://thepostmillennial.com/after-losing-8-billion-gilletteembraces-masculinity-again 37 Morse, B. (2019) Gillette CEO says the billions of dollars lost over the ‘toxic masculinity’ ad was worth it, RedState, 2 August. www.redstate.com/brandon_morse/2019/08/02/gillette-ceosays-billions-dollars-lost-toxic-masculinity-ad-worth 38 G. Coombe, in Gage, J. (2019) Gillette CEO: losing customers over #MeToo campaign is ‘price worth paying’, Washington Examiner, 1 August. www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/ gillette-ceo-losing-customers-over-metoo-campaign-is-priceworth-paying 39 G. Coombe, in Fleming, M. (2019) Gillette boss: alienating some consumers with #MeToo campaign was a price worth paying, Marketing Week, 29 July. www.marketingweek.com/gillettemetoo-campaign-fallout 215
WOKE CAPITALISM 40 Turtis, M. and Lufkin, B. (2019) How socially-charged adverts could become the norm, BBC Worklife, 19 January. www.bbc. com/worklife/article/20190118-how-socially-charged-advertscould-become-the-norm 41 Marketing Week Reporters (2019) Gillette, McDonald’s, CocaCola: 5 things that mattered this week and why, Marketing Week, 2 August. www.marketingweek.com/gillette-mcdonalds-cocacola-5-things-that-mattered-this-week-and-why 42 Holt, D.B. (2006) Jack Daniel’s America: iconic brands as ideological parasites and proselytizers, Journal of Consumer Culture, 6(3): 355–77. 43 Leshem, D. (2016) The distinction between the economy and politics in Aristotle’s thought and the rise of the social, Constellations, 23(1): 122–32. 44 Varoufakis, Y. (2016) Is capitalism compatible with democracy?, TED Radio Hour, 4 November. www.npr.org/ transcripts/500126088 45 Lyons, M. (2001) Third sector: The contribution of non-profit and cooperative enterprise in Australia, London: Routledge. 46 Milanovic, B. (2020) Trump as the ultimate triumph of neoliberalism, globalinequality, Blogger, 7 April. https://glineq. blogspot.com/2020/04/trump-as-ultimate-triumph-of.html Chapter 12 1 The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation (2020) The Mellon Foundation announces transformation of its strategic direction and new focus on social justice [press release], 30 June. https://mellon.org/newsblog/articles/mellon-foundation-announces-transformation-itsstrategic-direction-and-new-focus-social-justice 2 Scirri, K. (2019) Andrew Carnegie: Industrialist and philanthropist, New York: Cavendish, p. 73. 3 Stoller, M. (2019) Goliath: The 100-year war between monopoly power and democracy, New York: Simon & Schuster. 4 Twain, M. and Warner, C.D. (1873) The Gilded Age: A tale of today, San Francisco, CA: American Publishing Company. 5 Twain, M. (2002) Mark Twain’s letters, volume 6, 1874–1875, M.B. Frank and H.E. Smith (eds), Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. 6 Green, C. (2020) At $200B net worth, Jeff Bezos is still not richest man of all time, News Break, 27 August. www. industryleadersmagazine.com/at-200b-net-worth-jeff-bezos-isstill-not-richest-man-of-all-time 216
Notes and References 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Bostaph, S. (2017) Andrew Carnegie: An economic biography, London: Rowman & Littlefield. Carnegie, A. (1889/2017) The Gospel of Wealth, New York: Carnegie Foundation. Carnegie (1889/2017) p. 1. Carnegie (1889/2017) pp. 1–3. Carnegie (1889/2017) p. 3. Carnegie (1889/2017) p. 4. Carnegie (1889/2017) p. 5. Carnegie (1889/2017) p. 10. Carnegie (1889/2017) p. 11. Nichols, C.M. and Unger, N.C. (2017) The companion to the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, Chichester: Wiley. Carnegie (1989/2017) p. 17. Zhulina, A. (2018) Performing philanthropy from Andrew Carnegie to Bill Gates, Performance Research, 23(6): 50–7, p. 51. The Week Staff (2016) A brief history of billionaire philanthropists and the people who hate them, The Week, 9 January. https:// theweek.com/articles/597963/br ief-history-billionairephilanthropists-people-who-hate Pizzigatti, S. (2018) How Gary Cohn and Andrew Mellon both failed America, Fortune, 10 March. https://fortune. com/2018/03/09/gary-cohn-resigning-tariffs-andrew-mellon World Inequality Database (2020) USA. https://wid.world/ country/usa UNDESA (2020) World Social Report 2020: Inequality in a rapidly changing world, New York: United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs. UNDESA (2020) p. 5. Burgis, T. (2012) Origins of the Occupy movement, Financial Times, 19 January. www.ft.com/content/90108158-41f7-11e1a1bf-00144feab49a Anderson, K. (2011) Person of the Year 2011, Time, 14 December. http://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/ article/0,28804,2101745_2102132_2102373,00.html See Rhodes, C. and Bloom, P. (2018) The trouble with charitable billionaires, The Guardian, 24 May. www.theguardian.com/ news/2018/may/24/the-trouble-with-charitable-billionairesphilanthrocapitalism Morvaridi, B. (2012) Capitalist philanthropy and hegemonic partnerships, Third World Quarterly, 33(7): 1191–210. 217
WOKE CAPITALISM 28 Huyssen, D. (2019) We won’t get out of the Second Gilded Age the way we got out of the first, Vox, 1 April. www.vox.com/ first-person/2019/4/1/18286084/gilded-age-income-inequalityrobber-baron 29 Johnston, M. (2019) A history of income inequality in the United States, Investopedia, 25 June. www.investopedia.com/articles/ investing/110215/brief-history-income-inequality-united-states. asp 30 E. Alexander quoted in Florsheim, E. (2020) Elizabeth Alexander’s fierce vision of social justice, Wall Street Journal Magazine, 13 August. www.wsj.com/articles/elizabeth-alexanders-fiercevision-of-social-justice-11597343784 31 Daniels, A. (2020) Elizabeth Alexander outlines Mellon Foundation’s shift to social-justice grant making, The Chronicle of Higher Education, 2 July. www.chronicle.com/article/elizabethalexander-outlines-mellon-foundations-shift-to-social-justicegrant-making 32 Yale Law School (2020) Mellon Foundation, Justice Collaboratory Announce Million Book Project, Yale Law School, 30 June. https://law.yale.edu/yls-today/news/mellon-foundation-justicecollaboratory-announce-million-book-project 33 Lloyd, A. and Whitehead, P. (2018) Kicked to the curb: the triangular trade of neoliberal polity, social insecurity, and penal expulsion, International Journal of Law, Crime and Justice, 55: 60–9. 34 Lloyd and Whitehead (2018) p. 63. 35 Lloyd and Whitehead (2018) p. 66. 36 Huyssen (2019). 37 Forbes (2020) World’s billionaires list. www.forbes.com/billionaires 38 The Giving Pledge (2020) The history of The Giving Pledge. https://givingpledge.org/About.aspx 39 The Giving Pledge (2019) More than 200 philanthropists have now joined The Giving Pledge, committing to give at least half their wealth to charitable causes [press release], 28 May. https:// givingpledge.org/PressRelease.aspx?date=05.28.2019 40 Fullerton, J. (2011) Carnegie’s ‘Gospel of wealth’ and the Gates/Buffett giving pledge, The Capital Institute, 3 January. https://capitalinstitute.org/blog/carnegies-gospel-wealth-andgatesbuffett-giving-pledge 41 Sawaya, F. (2008) Capitalism and philanthropy in the (new) Gilded Age, American Quarterly, 60(1): 201–13. 42 Reich, R. (2018) Just giving: Why philanthropy is failing democracy and how it can do better, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. 218
Notes and References 43 Schwab, T. (2020) Bill Gates’s charity paradox, The Nation, 20 March. www.thenation.com/article/society/bill-gates-foundationphilanthropy Chapter 13 1 Warren, E. (2020) Letter to Business Roundtable, 17 September. www.warren.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/2020.09.17%20 Letter%20to%20the%20Business%20Roundtable%20re%20oneyear%20anniversary%20of%20their%20Statement%20of%20 Principles.pdf 2 Business Roundtable (2020) Members. www.businessroundtable. org/about-us/members 3 The relevance of the Business Roundtable’s statement to woke capitalism is discussed in more detail in Chapter 5, as well as mentioned in Chapters 2 and 4. 4 Business Roundtable (1997) Statement on corporate governance: a White Paper from The Business Roundtable, Washington: BRT. 5 Business Roundtable (2019) Business Roundtable redefines the purpose of a corporation to promote ‘an economy that serves all Americans’, 19 August. www.businessroundtable.org/businessroundtable-redefines-the-purpose-of-a-corporation-to-promotean-economy-that-serves-all-americans 6 Warren (2020) p. 2. 7 Warren (2020) p. 3. 8 Dowell, E. and Jackson, M. (2020) ‘Woke-washing’ your company won’t cut it, Harvard Business Review, 27 July. https://hbr. org/2020/07/woke-washing-your-company-wont-cut-it 9 Harinam, V. (2020) Is woke capitalism profitable?, Quillette, 21 July. https://quillette.com/2020/07/21/is-woke-capitalismprofitable 10 Sammut, J. (2019) Corporate virtue signalling: How to stop big business from meddling in politics, Cleveland, OH: Connor Court Publishing. 11 Sammut (2019) back cover. 12 Lewis, H. (2020) How capitalism drives cancel culture, The Atlantic, 14 July. www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2020/07/ cancel-culture-and-problem-woke-capitalism/614086 13 Roth, K. (2020) China is desperate to stop Hong Kong’s prodemocracy movement, Human Rights Watch, 19 August. www. hrw.org/news/2020/08/19/china-desperate-stop-hong-kongspro-democracy-movement 219
WOKE CAPITALISM 14 BBC News (2019) The Hong Kong protests explained in 100 and 500 words, BBC News, 28 November. www.bbc.com/news/ world-asia-china-49317695 15 D. Trump quoted in Fox Sports (2020) ‘He’s a hater’: Donald Trump lashes ‘nasty’ LeBron James in angry NBA rant, Fox Sports, 10 October. www.foxsports.com.au/basketball/nba/ finals/nba-2020-lebron-james-donald-trump-los-angeles-lakersvs-miami-heat-nba-finals/news-story/042a42e99ef1a6231abb7 6d6c7043387 16 Perper, R. (2019) China and the NBA are coming to blows over a pro-Hong Kong tweet. Here’s why, Business Insider, 11 October. www.businessinsider.com.au/nba-china-feud-timeline-darylmorey-tweet-hong-kong-protests-2019-10?r=US&IR=T 17 In Greer, J. (2019) The Daryl Morey controversy, explained: how a tweet created a costly rift between the NBA and China, Sporting News, 9 October. www.sportingnews.com/au/other-sports/ news/daryl-morey-controversy-tweet-nba-china-explained/ r6fzkcu3pwct1q993qiz5xlzm 18 Gatto, T. (2019) NBA’s response to Daryl Morey’s Hong Kong tweet draws scorn from US politicians, Sporting News, 7 October. www.sportingnews.com/us/nba/news/daryl-moreyhong-kong-tweet-china-nba-response-politicians/1dergufmvkn mu1vdkm5t2x3pxn 19 Guardian Sport (2019) ‘LeBron stands for money’: Hong Kong protesters burn James jerseys, The Guardian, 16 October. www. theguardian.com/sport/2019/oct/15/hong-kong-protestorsburn-lebron-james-jerseys-nba 20 Quoted in HKFP (2020) LeBron James’s fall from grace: how the basketball star alienated loyal Hong Kong fans, Hong Kong Free Press, 16 August. https://hongkongfp.com/2020/08/16/lebronjamess-fall-from-grace-how-the-basketball-star-alienated-loyalhong-kong-fans 21 Bunyasi, T.P. and Smith, C.W. (2019) Stay woke: A people’s guide to making all black lives matter, New York: New York University Press, p. 12. 220
Index A Ace Metrix 132 ad hominem arguments 4 ‘age of indecency’, Gros 54 Air Jordan, Nike brand 116–17, 119 Ali, Mohammed, refusal to fight in Vietnam 122 Amazon aggressive tax avoidance 55, 90, 91 climate inaction 86, 95 inhumane working conditions 91–3 token donation to COVID-19 pandemic 24 Trump’s ‘Post Office scam’ accusation 88 see also Bezos, Jeff Amazon Employees for Climate Justice 95 Amazon Rising (documentary) 91 American Conservative, The (magazine) 9, 75–6 American Dialect Society, definition of woke 35 American dream 112, 114–15 ‘Dream Crazy’ campaign, Nike 111, 114, 116, 118, 119, 120 ‘Lift Every Voice and Sing’ 124–5 Andrew W. Mellon Foundation 151–2, 160, 162 Angbeletchy, Celine, on social media distortion of ‘woke’ 38 anti-capitalism 76, 133, 159–60 anti-wokeness 37 Apple 98 support for marriage equality 102 athletes, African American, as political activists 114, 122 Australian bushfire crisis 17–22 B Badu, Erykah, ‘stay woke’ 29, 35 ‘bae’ 35 Baldwin, James, ‘indifference makes one blind’ 131 Ballinger, Jeffrey, child exploitation scandal 117 Banerjee, Bobby, CSR 67 Barra, Mary T., General Motors CEO 99 basketball 111–12, 172–4 Beckham, Barry, Garvey Lives (play) 30–1 Ben and Jerry’s, Pecan Resist ice cream 8 Benioff, Marc, Salesforce CEO 101 Bennet, Robert 114 Bennett, Michael, Things that Make White People Uncomfortable 128 221
WOKE CAPITALISM ‘best a man can be’ ad, Gillette (2019) 138, 140, 142–3, 145, 147 ‘best a man can get’ slogan, Gillette (1989) 138, 139, 140 Beyond the Swoosh (documentary by Jim Keady) 117–18 Bezos, Jeff 25, 54 climate fund 84, 85–6, 94, 95 donations to progressive causes 86, 87, 88 during Covid-19 pandemic 93 feud with Donald Trump 88 Foer’s critique of 96–7 tax avoidance 90–1 Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation 24, 86 billionaires cashing in on COVID-19 pandemic 23, 25–6 and increased inequality 54–6, 81–2 philanthropy of 86–9, 94, 160–6 Binyam, Maya, ‘Woke Olympics’ 3 Black Enterprise (online magazine) 137 Black Lives Matter 31, 32, 126–30 deradicalized by woke corporations 136 and George Floyd 126–7, 129 hashtag #BlackLivesMatter 34 McDonald’s support of 132 and the National Football League 125–6, 129–31 political demands 134–6 protests 32, 126, 127, 128, 132 radical democracy in action 40 and #StayWoke 35 taken over by marketing 137 Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition (Robinson) 134 BlackRock 23, 71–4 Blessington, Mark, CEO activism 100 Bloomberg, Michael 86, 87, 165 Bobos in Paradise (Brooks) 36 bohemian bourgeoisie, Brooks 36 books for prisoners, Mellon initiative 162, 163–4 Bowen, Howard R., social responsibility 44–7, 48 boxing 121–2 Boyer, Nate, advice to Kaepernick 116 brands/branding brand activism 129 and CEO activism 100, 106 Gillette and #MeToo 142–3, 145, 147–8 Nike and Kaepernick 116–17, 122–3 ‘socially conscious’ 117 Brooks, David, Bobos in Paradise 36 Brown, Kara, feminist writer on woke men 35 Brown, Michael, shooting of 34 Brown, Wendy, on democracy 12 Buffett, Warren 54, 86, 164 Burke, Tanya, #MeToo founder 144, 146 Burke-White, William 22 Burns, Tommy 121 bushfires, Australia 17–22 Business Roundtable 27, 50, 51 letter from Senator Warren 167–8, 169 statement on the purpose of a corporation 80–1 Byrd, Prof. Rudolph P., ‘Lift Every Voice and Sing’ 125 C Cannon-Brookes, Mike 21 Capitalism and Freedom (Friedman) 48, 52 222
INDEX carbon emissions, Amazon 85–6, 95–6 Carlos, John 120–1 Carlson, Tucker, woke capitalism critique 87 Carnegie, Andrew 153–8, 160, 161, 165 CEO activism 98–110 charitable giving justifying extreme inequality 155 path to political power 166 by rich vs poor people 25 see also philanthropy Charlottesville, Virginia, racist extremism 98–9 Chatelain, Marcia 132–4 China-NBA fiasco 172–4 Chomsky, Noam, Requiem for the American Dream 114–15 civil rights 1960s movement 30, 133 Black Lives Matter protesters 32 Kaepernick 113, 120 NAACP 124 Cliff, Jeremy, Davos manifesto 69–70 climate change and Australian bushfires 17–22 Bezos Earth Fund 84, 85–6, 90, 94, 95–6 denying/downplaying, Morrison 18–19 Greta Thunberg’s influence 84–5 Larry Fink’s response 72–3, 76–7 Coates, Rodney, on NFL’s position 130 colonialism 135–6 Cook, Tim, Apple CEO 98 Coombe, Gary, Gillette CEO 147–8, 149 corporate activism 21–2, 43, 101–2, 109–10, 137, 145 corporate capitalism 67–8 Wall Street protests 159–60 corporate righteousness 15, 24, 28, 168 corporate self-interest 38, 43, 129 Gillette 145, 149 McDonald’s 132–3 Qantas 109–10 and social responsibility 64–5, 106 Tiffany & Co. 20–1 corporate social responsibility (CSR) 51, 64–6, 67–8, 74, 77, 90, 105 corporate socialism 24, 72 corporate tax rates, fall in 55–6 Corporate Virtue Signalling (Sammut) 170–1 COVID-19 crisis 23–7, 93 Crawford, Nyron 114 ‘Creating shared value’ (Porter and Kramer) 66 criminal justice system 33, 163 D Davis, Keith, corporate social responsibility 51–2 Davos 2020, WEF convention 22–3, 68–9 de-democratization 13 Deloitte study, marriage equality 107, 108 democracy 12 de-democratization 13 failure of, Giridharadas 94–5 Hong Kong protests 172–3 radical, Black Lives Matter movement 40–1 three sectors of 149–50 values of 79, 119 Dimon, Jamie, JPMorgan Chase CEO 19, 99 Douthat, Ross, New York Times columnist 42–3 Dowell, Erin, corporate woke washing 169 223
WOKE CAPITALISM ‘Dream Crazy’ ad campaign, Nike 111, 118–19, 120 Dreher, Rod, condemnation of woke capitalism 9, 75–6 Duke, Selwyn, response to Gillette ad 141 Dungay, David, death of in prison 127 Dutton, Peter, stoush with Alan Joyce 105 E earnings of Alan Joyce 109–10 of executives 63–4 footballers’ contracts 131 inequality 82, 158–9 of Jeff Bezos 93 Earth Fund, Jeff Bezos 84, 85–6, 95–6 economic inequality 154–5, 158–9 bulimic effects of 163 continual expansion of 164 destroying democracy, Fink 80 link to racial injustice 136–7 Elson, Charles, critique of woke capitalism 72 Epstein, Jeffrey 39, 146 equality 31 American value 116 democratic value 79, 119 marriage equality 102–10 see also inequality ‘ethical behaviour’ of corporations 106, 109 ‘ethical custom’ 10 exploitation African American footballers 130 black people 135–6, 137 of Nike factory workers 117–18 of racialized groups of people 134 F Facebook 137 marketing of brand activism 129 origins of hashtag #BlackLivesMatter 33–4 tax avoidance 90 token contribution to COVID-19 pandemic 24 Farrow, Ronan, stories of Weinstein’s accusers 143 ‘fauxgressiveness’ 2–3 feudalism 12, 45, 48, 134, 135 Fink, Larry, BlackRock 71–83 Floyd, George, death of 126–7 Foer, Franklin, on the emergence of a ‘private state’ 96 football 111–18, 122, 124–6, 128–31 Ford Foundation 99, 157 Forrest, Andrew (‘Twiggy’), donation towards bushfire relief 21 Foucault, Michel 60 Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America (Chatelain) 133 Frank, Thomas, ‘conquest of cool’ 36 Frederick, William C., on social responsibility 49–50, 51 freedom of speech 39–40, 115–16, 174 Friedman, Milton 9–10, 48–50, 51, 52, 61–2, 64 Fullerston, John, on the Giving Pledge 165 G Garner, Eric, killed by police 136 Garvey Lives (play, Beckham) 30–1 Garza, Alicia, ‘love note to black people’ 33–4 Gates, Bill 54, 86 Giving Pledge 164, 165, 166 Gervais, Ricky, Golden Globes speech 39–41 224
INDEX Getty, John Paul, art foundation 157 Ghent, William J., ‘benevolent feudalism’ created by capitalism 45 Gilded Age, America 152, 156–7 Carnegie’s ‘Gospel of wealth’ 157 and the Giving Pledge 165 New/Second 164 Gillette 138–50 alignment with #MeToo 142–3, 145–6, 147–8, 149 ‘best a man can be’ ad (2019) 138, 140, 142–3, 145, 147 Super Bowl ad 138–9 Giridharadas, Anand, failure of democracy 94–5 Giving Pledge 164–5, 166 Golden Globes Awards ceremony 39–41 Goodell, Roger, NFL Commissioner 125–6 Google 2, 87, 137 support for marriage equality 102 tax avoidance 90 Gospel of Wealth (essay, Carnegie) 153, 165 Green, Stephen A., People’s Consortium 113 Gregg, Samuel, on corruption of businesses 75 Grillo, Frank, on CEO activism 100 Gros, Frédéric, wealth inequality 54–5, 56 Guidelines for Psychological Practice with Boys and Men (APA) 141 gun control 42 H Haiphong, Danny 7, 33 Halberstam, Jack, cultural shift around masculinity 140–1 Harinam, Vincent, on the activist Left 170, 171 Harry, Prince, media attack on 4–5 Hildyard, Luke, on charitable giving 25 Hogan, Tiffany, on exploitation of black employees 137 Hollywood Golden Globes Awards ceremony 39–41 Weinstein, Harvey 143–4 Woods’ boycott of Gillette products 142 Holmes, Eamonn, attack on Meghan Markle 5 Holt, Douglas, Gillette as ideological parasite and proselytizer 149 homophobia 103 Hong Kong protests 172–4 Houston Rockets games, CCTV banning of 173–4 human rights and NBA–China debacle 174 and Nike workers 117–18 Olympic Project for Human Rights 120–1 Huyssen, David, present era as a New Gilded Age 164 hypocrisy 9, 36, 39, 40, 73–4, 89 I IKEA 69, 76 imperialism 76, 122, 134, 135 incarceration, US 162–4 income inequality 82, 158–9 indigenous people, Australia, deaths in police custody 127 industrial capitalism 151–5, 157, 164 inequality created by capitalism 79, 80, 81, 153–4, 159–60 Davos manifesto 69–70 in earnings/income 82, 158–9 225
WOKE CAPITALISM inequality (continued) and economic growth 82 harmonious, Carnegie’s 156 rationalization of, Carnegie 154–5 wealth 25–6, 44, 54–5, 56 Ireland, Paddy, shareholder value and CSR 65 L Levitt, Theodore, social responsibility critique 47–8 Lewis, Helen 11, 172 LGBTQI+ people, rights of 102–8 ‘Lift Every Voice and Sing’ 124–5, 129–31 Lloyd, Anthony, incarceration rates 163 J Jackson, Marlette, corporate woke washing 169 James, LeBron 173, 174 Jeffries, James J. 121 Jenner, Kendall 19 Johnson, Jack 121–2 Johnson, James Weldon, ‘Lift Every Voice and Sing’ 124 Johnson & Johnson 27, 66 Johnson, Kevin, Starbucks CEO 98 Jordan, Michael 116–17, 119 Joyce, Alan, Qantas CEO 104–5, 106–7, 108, 109–10 Judd, Ashley, Weinstein abuse victim 143 K Kaepernick, Colin 111–20, 122–3 Kantor, Jodi, Weinstein story 143 Keady, Jim, Nike documentary 117–18 Kelley, William Melvyn 1–2 Kimberley, Margaret 113 King Jr, Martin Luther 30, 35 McDonald’s attempt to link their image to 133 Klein, Philip 8 kneeling protest, Kaepernick 111–16, 124 Kotler, Philip, on ‘brand activism’ 129 Kramer, Mark 66, 77–8 M Major League Baseball (MLB) 8 ‘Make Amazon Pay’ campaign 93 Make America Great Again (MAGA), Trump’s slogan 114–15 Making All Black Lives Matter (Ransby) 136 Maks-Solomon, Cory, on CEO activism 100 marketing McDonald’s 132–3 Nike 116–17, 118, 122–3 woke washing 8 Markle, Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, media attack on 4–5, 6 Maroney, McKayla, sexual assault of 144 marriage equality, Australia 102–10 Martin, Trayvon, shooting of 31–3 masculinity toxic, Gillette’s 2019 ad 138, 140, 142, 145, 147, 148 traditional, Gillette’s 1989 Super Bowl ad 139 mass incarceration, US 162–3 Matlon, Jordanna, urban sociologist 123 McAdam, Prof Douglas, ‘social change tipping point’ 127–8 McDonald’s and Black America 131–4, 135 McGorry, Matt, ‘bae and woke’ actor 35 226
INDEX McMillon, Doug, Walmart CEO 19, 99 Mellon, Andrew, W. 151–2, 157–8 Mellon Foundation 151–2, 160, 162 Mellon Institute of Industrial Research 157–8 #MeToo movement 142–50 Michayluk, Prof. David, ‘single-letter ticker symbols’ 67 Microsoft 25, 36, 86 Milano, Alyssa, #MeToo 144 Milanovic, Branko 150 Million Book Project, Mellon’s grant to 162 moralization of business through CSR 67 Morey, Daryl, Houston Rockets general manager 173–4 Morgan, Piers 5, 40, 141 Morrison, Scott, Australian prime minister 18–19 Tiffany & Co.’s climate action demand to 20–1 Morse, Brandon, on Gillette’s ad 147 Morvaridi, Behrooz, capitalism’s intrusion into philanthropy 161 Movement for Black Lives (M4BL) 134–5 Murray, Alan, on the Business Roundtable 81 Musk, Elon 25, 165 National Rifle Association (NRA) 42 neoliberalism 27 changing economic-political link 149 Foucault 60 and income/wealth inequality 81–2, 158–9, 160 response to increased crime rates 163 Thatcher 58, 59–61 Nestlé 74 Netflix 24, 55, 131 ‘New Gilded Age’, current era as 164 Nike 24, 36 ‘Dream Crazy’ ad campaign 111, 112, 118–19, 120 factory workers’ inhumane living conditions 117–18 marketing and politics 116–17, 122–3 O Obama, Barack 6–7, 32–3 Occupy Wall Street movement 159–60 Olympic Project for Human Rights 120–1 Oxfam ‘pandemic profiteering’ 25 tax ‘dodging’ by the super-rich 55 P N National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) 124 National Basketball Association (NBA) 111, 118, 122 China debacle 172–4 National Football League (NFL) 111–18, 122, 124–6, 128–31 Pendergrass, Teddy, ‘Wake Up Everybody’ song 31 ‘performative wokeness’, Douthat 43 Perret, Tom, critique of billionaires 89 philanthropy of billionaires 86–9, 94, 160–6 Carnegie’s 153–60, 161 227
WOKE CAPITALISM philanthropy (continued) contemporary 160–1 of robber barons 151–60 Piketty, Thomas, effects of widening inequality 44 Pillay, Regine, shareholder value and CSR 65 plutocracy 96, 156, 157, 158, 166 political activism African American athletes 122 Black Lives Matter protests 127–8 Burke’s initiation of #MeToo 144–5 climate change, Thunberg 84 Kaepernick 112–14, 118, 122–3 by woke corporations 98–110, 133, 145 political correctness 3, 9, 21, 30, 38, 40 ‘popular capitalism’, Thatcher 59–60 popular discontent 159–60 populism corporate 26–7 pressurizing corporations 73–4 rise of 82–3 and Trump presidency 39, 88, 101, 113, 116, 120 Porter, Michael 66 poverty 136–7 Carnegie’s vision 153–4 trickle-down effect 81–2 prison deaths 127 prisoners, giving books to 162–4 Procter & Gamble, Gillette writedown 146–7 profit motive 51, 100, 150 progressive politics 2–3, 41 billionaires tipping their hats towards 26 corporations usurping political power 43–4, 68 incompatible with conservative economics 9, 10 ironic use of ‘the woke’ to make fun of 38 perceived insincerity of 5–6 recent dominance of 3–4 ‘woke’ corporations 8, 15, 21–2 Q Qantas airlines, and marriage equality 104–5, 107, 108, 109, 110 Quillette (magazine) 170 R racial capitalism 124–37 racism 33, 34, 36, 38 Charlottesville rally 98–9 towards Meghan Markle 4–5 radicalism Black 134, 135 economic and social issues 172 Ransby, Barbara, Black Lives Matter movement 31, 40, 136 Reagan, Ronald 58, 59, 63, 66, 70 Redmond, Shana L., significance of ‘Lift Every Voice and Sing’ 124–5 REF market for virtue, trading in 106–7, 108 Reimann, Bernard, shareholder primacy 62–3 religious freedoms 102–3 Requiem for the American Dream (Chomsky) 114 Rinehart, Gina, mining magnate 19–20 robber barons 151–2, 157–8, 164 Robinson, Cedric J., ‘racial capitalism’ 134 Rockefeller, John D., robber baron 152 Rollins, Nolan 130–1 royalty 4–6 Ruiz, Michelle, on racism towards Meghan Markle 5 228
INDEX S same-sex marriage Bezos’s vocal and financial support for 88 plebiscite, Australia (2017) 102, 103–4, 105–6 Sammut, Jeremy, Corporate Virtue Signalling 170–1 Sawaya, Prof. Francesca, on capitalist philanthropy 165 ‘Second Gilded Age’, present era as 164 self-righteousness 3, 11, 24, 36, 38, 74 sexual harassment 140 #MeToo movement 142–3, 144–5 by Weinstein 143–4 wider exposure of 146 shared value creation, Porter and Kramer 66 shareholder primacy 62–6, 157–8, 167–8 shareholder value 61–8, 77, 78, 175 single-letter ticker symbols 67 slavery 134–6 Smith, Adam, ‘invisible hand’ 49, 50 Smith, Serena, ‘wokefishing’ 2 Smith, Tommie 120–1 social justice awareness of (stay woke) 35, 36 Mellon Foundation 151, 162 and the NFL 129–30 woke capitalism’s agenda 14, 26, 160 Social Responsibilities of the Businessman (Bowen, 1953) 44 social responsibility 44–53, 56 corporate social responsibility (CSR) 64–6, 67–8, 74, 77, 90, 105 socialism, threat of 47, 59, 158 ‘speaking truth to power’ 39, 99 Spectator (magazine) 74, 142 stakeholder capitalism 50, 68 stakeholders, commitment to, Business Roundtable 81, 167–8 Stanford, Leland, robber baron 152 Star-Spangled Banner 112, 124 Starbucks 98, 131 Stay Woke: A People’s Guide to Making All Black Lives Matter (Lopez, Bunyasi and Smith) 41, 175 #StayWoke 35–6, 38–9 Stiglitz, Joseph, on tax evasion 55–6 Stormy Daniels, Trump affair allegations 88 Super Bowl (1989) and Gillette’s ad 138–9 Swagazon, satirical t-shirts 92–3 T tax avoidance and evasion 14, 55–6, 90–1, 109 Thatcher, Margaret 57–61 and corporate social responsibility (CSR) 66 popular capitalism 59–60 shareholder primacy 63, 64 Things that Make White People Uncomfortable (Bennett) 128 Thunberg, Greta, climate change activist 18, 84–5 Tiffany & Co., climate change action ad 20–1 Time (magazine) 85, 144–5, 160 Towler, Christopher 114 toxic masculinity ad, Gillette 8, 138, 140, 142, 145, 147, 148 ‘trickle-down economics’ 82, 161, 165 Trump, Donald 87–8 affair with Stormy Daniels 88 corporate tax cuts 42–3 critique of Thunberg 85 feud with Bezos 88 229
WOKE CAPITALISM Trump, Donald (continued) and the Kaepernick controversy 114–16, 120 lack of action on gun control 42 lack of leadership at Charlottesville 98–9 political populist 39, 88, 101, 113, 116, 120 Twain, Mark, The Gilded Age 152 Twitter 88, 111, 131, 142, 144, 173 Twohey, Megan, Weinstein story 143 U ‘ungendered clothing’, Zara 8 Unite the Right, neo-Nazi rally (2017) 98–9 V Vanderbilt, Cornelius, robber baron 152 Varoufakis, Yanis, change in economic-political link 149 Venetis, Prof. Penny 146 ‘virtue signalling’ 3, 8, 15, 170–1 Perret’s argument 89–90 Vogel, David, ‘the market for virtue’ 106 W Walker, Darren, Ford Foundation president 99 Wall Street protests 159–60 Walmart 19, 87, 99, 102 Warner, Charles Dudley, The Gilded Age 152 Warren, Elizabeth, US Senator 167, 168–9, 170, 171–2 Wartzman, Rick, Drucker Institute 81 Watson, Elijah 37 wealth inequality 54–5, 156–7 Weinstein, Harvey 143–4 White racism, ‘America’s original sin’ 116 white supremacy 115, 121–2, 134–5 Whitehead, Philip, incarceration rates 163 Whiteout, Sam, wokeness popularization 37–8 Williams, J. Corey, psychiatrist 122 Williams, Serena 119 Wilson, Russell, earnings of 131 Winner Takes All (Giridharadas) 94 woke 1–2 ironic use of ‘the woke’ 38 original meaning of 35–6, 175 pejorative application of 4–5 reversed meaning of 30, 38–9, 41 woke billionaires 86–7 woke capitalism 42–56 problem with 1–16 woke corporations 138–50 Woke Olympics 3 woke washing 8, 9, 72–3, 169 Woods, James, boycotting of Gillette products 142 working conditions Amazon 91–3 Nike 117–18 World Economic Forum, Davos 2020 convention 22–3, 68–9 Wu, Tim 69 Y Yale Law School, on US incarceration 162 Z Zara, ‘ungendered clothing’ 8 Zhulina, Alisa, public policy taken over by the wealthy 157 Zimmerman, George, shooting of Trayvon Martin 31–2 and Obama’s speech 32–3 political response to acquittal 33–4 Zuckerberg, Mark 24, 165 230