logo
Jeff Bezos Has a Very Billionaire-ish Idea of What Freedom Means

Jeff Bezos Has a Very Billionaire-ish Idea of What Freedom Means

Yahoo06-03-2025
Billionaire Jeff Bezos has decided to use his newspaper to propagate an outdated story that Americans like to tell themselves: that economic freedom equals human freedom. The myth of meritocracy might be designed to inspire striving, but in a country with the greatest income inequality in the developed world, it does something more harmful. It threatens Americans' health, gaslighting people to believe that unchecked capitalism delivers personal liberty, when decades of research show it shackles people to financial and emotional insecurity.
Bezos announced on February 26 that The Washington Post's opinion pages will be 'writing every day in support and defense of two pillars: personal liberties and free markets.' The paper will not publish any viewpoints opposing his priorities, he said, while adding, 'Freedom is ethical—it minimizes coercion—and practical—it drives creativity, invention, and prosperity.' For an editorial section that long prided itself as a marketplace of ideas, and a newspaper historically dedicated to holding the powerful accountable, this edict by a union-busting business mogul engaged in a pay-to-play scheme with a president who disdains the Constitution is bad for journalism and democracy and, perhaps most personally, Americans' mental health.
I worked at The Washington Post from 2017 to December 2023, establishing the Opinion section's first documentary film unit and pioneering a column about mental health and society. In 2021, I covered the January 6 attack at the U.S. Capitol as part of the team that won the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service. When I learned of Bezos's editorial edict, I talked to former colleagues and learned of 'heartbreak,' confusion, and anger in the newsroom. I also reached out to Post leadership for a comment on what defines 'personal liberties and free markets' and who would be the arbiter of who deserved this freedom. No response.
What is happening inside the Post is, in some ways, a microcosm of the country. The 'hierarchical, authoritarian nature of most workplaces'—often disguised by language about valuing people's feedback—has been revealed, according to Seth Prins, assistant professor of epidemiology and sociomedical sciences at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health. This forces people to confront the fact they don't have much control under the current structure, which can be extremely stressful—and not just among D.C. journalists and government workers being targeted for cuts.
This is bad for Americans' physical health, mental health, finances. Anxiety, depression, cardiovascular disease, and other stress-related disorders are all caused by precarious employment, overwork, unemployment, and lack of autonomy and control in the workplace. These problems are rife at another Bezos company: Amazon, the world's second-largest employer. Corporate executives say they're concerned about employee health and safety. The Center for Urban Economic Development notes, however, that the intensity, injuries, surveillance, burnout, and high worker-turnover rate at Amazon 'should raise concerns about the potential long-term effects on wellbeing, medical costs, future employment and overall economic security.'
The system Bezos is championing has enabled the rich to get richer faster and the working class to burn out more quickly. And the assignment he's given The Washington Post opinion pages is to make his story look good. There is a dataset that gives it credence: Since the 2020 pandemic, the U.S. economy expanded at a solid pace, wages have grown, and more people are working. But if you widen the lens to look at health, well-being, and human flourishing—some people's definition of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness—the United States does 'abysmally,' social epidemiologist Richard Wilkinson, a professor emeritus at the University of York in Britain, told me.
'The costs of the way the society works are absolutely horrendous,' Wilkinson said in an interview. 'We must, at some point, get people to address that.'
Suicide and drug overdoses are leading causes of death in the U.S., where we're strangled by an epidemic of loneliness—that heartbreaking mix of anxiety, depression, and fear that chips at our physical and mental health. The American mind—some might say spirit—is in crisis. Don't blame Covid-19 alone. In the decade leading up to the pandemic, high school students' persistent feelings of sadness and hopelessness increased by about 40 percent.
This isn't an individual failing, and it can't all be pinned on social media and cell phones, either. Wilkinson and Kate Pickett, his co-author of the book The Spirit Level, have found that in more unequal societies, kids do less well on math and literacy tests, teenage birth rates are higher, there's more homicide, more people in prison, lower levels of trust and public engagement, and higher obesity rates.
Wilkinson focuses on what psychologists refer to as social evaluative threat. It's measurable. In experiments, people facing threats to their self-esteem or social status show sharp spikes in cortisol, while other tasks have little effect.
'That's what makes being lower down on the hierarchy so painful,' Wilkinson told me, noting that research shows people not only despise poverty, they despise themselves for being poor. Self-loathing and internalized shame can play out as violence and tension or conflict in the family, at work, and with authorities.
The rich may be able to buy their way out of some angst, but they can't escape the stress of being judged. Plus, income inequality and low trust can breed resentment, which can inspire violence—and the fear of it. After the killing of UnitedHealth CEO Brian Thompson, several major health care executives reportedly increased personal security measures.
'Whether you are quite resilient or vulnerable to all the social anxieties,' Wilkinson said, 'everyone is more worried about others' judgments of them in more unequal societies.'
Censoring critiques of Bezos's world-view, as is now the rule at Post opinions, doesn't make the problems go away, though. Similarly, the Trump administration's executive order to ban mentions of racism, inequality, and gender in scientific research will not erase them from our lives.
One can understand why it is trying, however. The illusion of truth can be powerful and effective. Misinformation about the 2020 election and the Capitol attack propagated by right-wing media helped President Donald Trump win back the White House. And in a Pew Research Survey conducted before the election, just 30 percent of conservatives said economic inequality is a very big problem in their country, compared with 76 percent of liberals.
When powerful elites control the information ecosystem, perception can feel like reality. But here's the truth: Deregulation and tax breaks for the wealthy have enabled Bezos and his peers, including Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk, to rack up $227 billion, $230 billion, and $359 billion in worth, respectively, according to Forbes.
These oligarchs would like people to believe that if you're innovative and hardworking, you can achieve their success too. At the same time, however, they oppose labor rights and data protections, consumer safety, and regulations—the measures that shield Americans from exploitation and promote social mobility. So while the wealth gap grows, the poor and working classes are slipping down or stuck on the rung their parents stood on. Free markets and personal liberties are excellent ideas that can complement each other, but only when society collectively decides that dignity, health, and well-being are included in the definition of freedom.
'One of the major purposes of the 'individual liberty' language is to divide workers and make them think only of themselves,' Prins told me. 'We know that actually we are stronger when we come together to demand what we want.'
Americans want to do better and feel better.
In 2022, 79 percent of Americans said they believe mental health is a public health emergency and needs more attention from lawmakers. And last year, a majority of Americans suggested they wanted the government to look out for people's health and to regulate business to protect the public interest, according to a Pew Research Survey. But just 22 percent said they trust the government in Washington to do what is right.
It's hard to trust the government to help people feel better when our culture blames individuals for collective problems. Bezos's ideological pivot at one of the world's most influential newspapers reinforces a false narrative that economic freedom and human freedom are the same thing and that it's up to the individual to achieve both. At a time when economic anxiety, loneliness, and distrust in institutions are deepening, the shift is not just misguided—it's dangerous. We need media that advocate for well-being, not gaslight people into believing their suffering is liberty.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gabbard: ODNI to slash costs by 40% as part of major intelligence agency overhaul
Gabbard: ODNI to slash costs by 40% as part of major intelligence agency overhaul

USA Today

timea minute ago

  • USA Today

Gabbard: ODNI to slash costs by 40% as part of major intelligence agency overhaul

Gabbard said ODNI 'must make serious changes' to combat 'abuse of power, unauthorized leaks ... and politicized weaponization' of U.S. intel agencies. WASHINGTON – Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard announced Aug. 20 that her office overseeing all U.S. intelligence agencies will undergo a massive reorganization and slash its spending by 40% to combat "abuse of power" and "politicized weaponization of intelligence." Gabbard called the overhaul ODNI 2.0 in a news release, and its broad contours suggest it is the biggest restructuring of the agency since it was created after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist acts to improve intelligence sharing and operations. One of its goals is "reduce bloat by nearly 50%," in a reference to the Office of the Director of National Intelligence's workforce. The move is expected to save taxpayers over $700 million annually, and better enable ODNI to focus on 'fulfilling its critical role of serving as the central hub for intelligence integration, strategic guidance, and oversight over the Intelligence Community,' said the late afternoon news release. 'Over the last 20 years, ODNI has become bloated and inefficient, and the intelligence community is rife with abuse of power, unauthorized leaks of classified intelligence, and politicized weaponization of intelligence,' Gabbard said in the release. 'ODNI and the IC must make serious changes to fulfill its responsibility to the American people and the U.S. Constitution by focusing on our core mission: find the truth and provide objective, unbiased, timely intelligence to the President and policymakers.'

Most Americans oppose Russia seizing Ukrainian land: Poll
Most Americans oppose Russia seizing Ukrainian land: Poll

The Hill

timea minute ago

  • The Hill

Most Americans oppose Russia seizing Ukrainian land: Poll

Most Americans are opposed to Russia receiving Ukrainian territory at the end of the war, according to a new poll that comes as President Trump has suggested 'land swaps' should be part of a peace deal. When asked in The Economist/YouGov poll about 'how much of Ukraine's territory' they want Russia to have at the end of the war, 68 percent of respondents said 'none of it.' Twenty-one percent in the poll said they were 'not sure' how much territory Russia should get, five percent said they wanted Russia to have 'some of' Ukraine's territory, 2 percent said they wanted Russia to get 'half of' Ukrainian territory and 1 percent said they wanted Russia to have 'most of it.' President Trump met with both Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Russian President Vladimir Putin on U.S. soil within the past week. Putin reportedly wants most of the eastern Donbas region as part of a deal, while Ukraine has rejected ceding territory. Trump is now pushing for Zelensky and Putin to meet face-to-face, as they remain far apart on the terms for peace. Ukraine has demanded a ceasefire before any formal negotiations; a request that Trump previously backed but dropped after meeting Putin in Alaska last week. Russia has sent signals this week that it's in no hurry to have Putin meet with Zelensky. Moscow also said Wednesday that talks between NATO allies and Ukraine about post-war security gaurantees were a 'road to nowhere' unless Moscow takes part in the discussions. 'We cannot agree with the fact that it is now proposed to resolve collective security issues without the Russian Federation. This will not work,' Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said at a press conference. The Economist/YouGov poll took place from Aug. 15 to 18, with 1,568 respondents and plus or minus 3.5 percentage points as its margin of error.

Gabbard to slash offices, nearly half of staff at ODNI
Gabbard to slash offices, nearly half of staff at ODNI

The Hill

timea minute ago

  • The Hill

Gabbard to slash offices, nearly half of staff at ODNI

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard plans to slash 40 percent of the agency's staff by October in a move she said would help transform the head of the intelligence community into 'ODNI 2.0.' Gabbard's cuts would reassign roles or eliminate various centers within the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), including those that monitor foreign efforts to influence Americans, the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, including biological weapons, and a team monitoring for cyberattacks. A fact sheet from ODNI boasts the department has already slashed 500 jobs and that the future cuts would save an estimated $700 million from the agency that helps coordinate among the 18 different agencies that make up the sprawling U.S. intelligence community. Targeted in the restructuring is the Foreign Malign Influence Center, which has dedicated itself to tracking the efforts of U.S. adversaries to influence the U.S. public through social media and disinformation campaigns designed to sow division and shift votes. The Trump administration argues the center has been used 'to justify the suppression of free speech' and cited its work in responding to the Hunter Biden laptop. ODNI also accused the Foreign Malign Influence Center of 'falsely alleging Putin 'aspired' to help President Trump win the 2016 election,' though that conclusion is shared by most reports that have evaluated Russia's efforts in the 2016 contest, including in a bipartisan report from the Senate Intelligence Committee. Gabbard argued that other elements of the intelligence community already monitor foreign influence campaigns, 'making FMIC redundant' — the same argument used for the National Counterproliferation and Biosecurity Center. The fact sheet argues it biosecurity mission is no longer needed after the COVID-related national emergency. 'It has become apparent that taking action to address global health issues falls well outside of ODNI's core mission,' ODNI states. Gabbard said the need for the shift was part of 'ending the weaponization of intelligence and holding bad actors accountable.' 'Over the last 20 years, ODNI has become bloated and inefficient, and the intelligence community is rife with abuse of power, unauthorized leaks of classified intelligence, and politicized weaponization of intelligence,' Gabbard said in a statement. 'ODNI and the IC must make serious changes to fulfill its responsibility to the American people.' The shift comes a day after Gabbard revoked the security clearances of 37 current and former intelligence officials, many with ties to prior Democratic administrations. Even as a top Democrat agreed ODNI could use a revamp, he argued Gabbard was not the person to deliver it. 'Twenty years after it was established, there is broad, bipartisan agreement that the Office of the Director of National Intelligence is in need of thoughtful reform. The Intelligence Authorization Act directs Director Gabbard to submit a plan to Congress outlining her proposed changes, and we will carefully review her proposals and conduct rigorous oversight to ensure any reforms strengthen, not weaken, our national security,' Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, said in a statement. 'But given Director Gabbard's track record of politicizing intelligence — including her decision just yesterday to revoke security clearances from career national security officials — I have no confidence that she is the right person to carry out this weighty responsibility.' Mark Zaid, a longtime national security lawyer, said the redesign was a clear effort to cut staff that might push back against the Trump administration 'This isn't about reform. It isn't about strengthening our intelligence agencies. It is about the Installation of loyalists & getting rid of anyone who opposes the patrimonialistic/authoritarian policies of Trump, regardless of whether DEM or GOP,' he wrote on X. Gabbard also proposes eliminating a number of other offices she accused, without evidence, of leaking intelligence of political biases. Among those slashed is the External Research Council, which Gabbard said amounted to 'politically appointed partisans who brought their external biases,' as well as the Strategic Futures Group, responsible for long-term forecasting on threats, which Gabbard accused of being used 'to push a partisan political agenda.' It's not entirely clear how many staff work at ODNI, but that figure has been a target of Senate Intelligence Chair Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) who earlier this year said the office had nearly 2,000 staff. 'The ODNI staff is measured in the thousands, when it should be measured in the dozens, maybe a few hundred,' Cotton said at a hearing at the beginning of the year. 'I promise, that's going to change.' Cotton on Wednesday praised the move, even as he referenced the need for congressional review. 'Congress created the ODNI to be a lean organization that used small staffs to coordinate across the Intelligence Community and execute specific, important tasks. Today's announcement is an important step towards returning ODNI to that original size, scope, and mission. And it will help make it a stronger and more effective national security tool for President Trump,' he said in a statement. 'I look forwarded [sic] to working with Director Gabbard to implement these reforms and provide the ODNI with the legislative relief necessary to ensure our Intelligence Community can focus on its core mission: stealing secrets from our adversaries.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store