http://www.dailykos.com/story/2006/7/31/121447/985

Billionaire Scion Tom Friedman

   by david sirota
   Mon Jul 31, 2006

I've documented repeatedly how New York Times columnist Tom Friedman
parrots the propaganda of Big Money, using his column to legitimize
some of the worst, most working-class-persecuting policies this
country has seen in the last century - all while bragging on
television that he doesn't even bother read the details of the
policies he advocates for. I have always believed Friedman's
perspective comes from the bubble he lives in - that is, I have
always believed he feels totally at ease shilling for Big Money and
attacking workers because from the comfortable confines of the
Washington suburbs he lives in and the elite cocktail parties he
attends, what Friedman says seems mainstream to him. But I never had
any idea how dead on I was about the specific circumstances of
Friedman's bubble - and how it potentially explains a lot more than I
ever thought.

As the July edition of the Washingtonian Magazine notes, Friedman
lives in "a palatial 11,400-square-foot house, now valued at $9.3
million, on a 7_-acre parcel just blocks from I-495 and Bethesda
Country Club." He "married into one of the 100 richest families in
the country" - the Bucksbaums, whose real-estate Empire is valued at
$2.7 billion.

Let's be clear - I'm a capitalist, so I have no problem with people
doing well or living well, even Tom Friedman. That said, this does
potentially explain an ENORMOUS amount about Friedman's perspective.
Far from the objective, regular-guy interpreter of globalization that
the D.C. media portrays him to be, Friedman is a member of the elite
of the economic elite on the planet Earth. In fact, he's married into
such a giant fortune, it's probably more relevant to refer to him as
Billionaire Scion Tom Friedman than columnist Tom Friedman, both
because that's more descriptive of what he represents, and more
important for readers of his work to know so that they know a bit
about where he's coming from.

Mind you, I don't think everyone needs to publish their net worth.
But Friedman's not everyone. He's not just "doing pretty well" and is
not just any old columnist. He's not just a millionaire or a
multimillionaire - he's member of one of the wealthiest families in
the world, and is one of the most influential media voices on the
planet, who writes specifically about economic/class issues. If
politicians are forced to disclose every last asset they own, you'd
think at the very least, the New York Times - in the interest of
basic disclosure - should have a tagline under Friedman's economic
columns that says "Tom Friedman is an heir to a multi-billion-dollar
business empire."

Again, there's positively nothing wrong with people being rich in
general, or Tom Friedman being a billionaire scion in specific. The
problem is that so few of his readers know this, even as he
aggressively uses his platform to justify policies that almost
exclusively benefit his super-wealthy brethren - all under the guise
of supposed objectivity.

Then again, the fact that we know so little about who is actually
making opinion in this country isn't surprising. Even looking at this
kind of information as it relates to the most important opinionmaker
in the world is looked down upon by Washington
insiders/elites/politicians. To paraphrase Jack Nicholson from "A Few
Good Men," deep down in places they don't talk about at parties, they
want billionaires like Friedman dictating the debate because they
need someone creating public rationales for policies that enrich Big
Money interests, sell out America and guarantee the next fat campaign
contribution.

Some, of course, might ask: Why should we care about Friedman's
billionaire status, but not the status of very rich people like, say,
Ted Kennedy? Two points on that: First, most people already know that
Kennedy comes from a very wealthy family, so there is no lack of
knowledge by the public about potential conflicts of class interest.
The same can't be said for Friedman, who is constantly billed as just
an average Joe speaking his mind.

But far more important, the superwealth of a political actor (ie. a
politician, columnist, etc.) is really only relevant when that actor
is using their power to push their own class's economic interests,
because then and only then does it really bring up questions of
conflicts of interest, bias and corruption. Ted Kennedy is widely
known as one of the most outspoken advocates for the poor and for
economic progressive causes in general - causes that defy the
interests of his personal economic class. Thus, his wealth really
isn't important in conflict-of-interest, objectivity or personal
corruption terms as it relates to his actions in the political arena.
(Same thing goes, I might add, for wealthy folks who donate to
liberal causes. In the words of Franklin Delano Roosevelt critics,
they are "traitors to their class." They are
altruistically/patriotically donating against their own personal
economic class interests and for the broader good - and therefore
there is no relevant conflict of interest or pay-to-play corruption
going on. That stands in sharp contrast to right-wing billionaires
who fund conservative institutions that purport to be steered only by
principled ideology, but which inevitably spend much of their time
trumpeting the very specific policies that personally benefit their
big donors.)

Friedman, unlike Kennedy, uses his position to push the very specific
economic policies (such as "free" trade) that the superwealthy in
this country are pushing and exclusively benefit from. That's why his
billionaire scion status is so important for the public to know -
because it raises objectivity questions. If, for instance, Richard
Mellon Scaife wrote articles in newspapers demanding the repeal of
the estate tax - don't you think it would be important for readers to
be warned that Scaife was a multimillionaire whose family (and the
few families like his) would almost exclusively benefit from the
policies he was writing about? Of course. That's called full
disclosure and transparency, the very things critical to an objective
free press and democracy - the very thing Friedman says is so
important for other countries when he writes about foreign policy.

So the next time you read a piece by Tom Friedman telling us how
wonderful job outsourcing is or how great it is to pass Big Money's
latest trade deal that include no labor, wage, human rights or
environmental provisions - just remember: Tom Friedman, scion of a
billionaire business empire, is just doing right by his own economic
class.




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