Albuquerque Journal

It’s much easier to be ‘woke’ when you’re wealthy

- VICTOR DAVIS HANSON Columnist Email authorvdh@gmail.com.

Ed Bastian made $17 million in 2019 as chief executive officer of Delta Airlines, Georgia’s largest employer. Bastian just blasted Georgia’s new voting law. He thinks it is racist to require the same sort of ID to vote that Delta requires for its passengers to check in.

Yet most Americans believe voting is a more sacred act than flying Delta and, moreover, may have noticed that Delta has partnershi­ps with systemical­ly racist China. Also, a recent Associated Press poll showed that 72% of Americans favor requiring photo ID to vote.

The most privileged CEOs of corporate America — those who sell us everything from soft drinks and sneakers to profession­al sports and social media — now jabber to America about its racism, sexism and other assorted sins . ...

First, the corporatio­n never harangues unless it feels it has more to lose, whether by boycotts, protests or bad publicity, than it stands to gain staying neutral and silent.

Second, class concerns are never mentioned. Bastian made about $65,000 for each work day of 2019. In a sane world, he(’s) ... a ridiculous voice of the oppressed.

Third, CEOs never fear offending the conservati­ve silent majority, who are assumed not to boycott or protest . ...

Multimilli­on-dollar NBA stars blast America’s “systemic racism.” They utter not a word about Chinese re-education camps, the destructio­n of Tibetan culture or the strangulat­ion of Hong Kong’s democracy. Player salaries depend on coaxing a huge Chinese market. Players’ domestic endorsemen­ts hinge on a young, woke American clientele. Defending the profession­al sports lifestyles of rich and famous stars apparently requires loud penance by blasting an unfair America.

Examine almost any woke hotspot and a growing class divide is clear.

Academia? Tenured administra­tors and university presidents pulling down seven-figure salaries are far more likely to virtue-signal their universiti­es’ “racism” than are untenured, poorly paid, part-time lecturers. It is easier for a college president to blather about his own “unearned privilege” than to support the rights of exploited part-time faculty — much less resign to give someone else a spot.

The woke media? Its clergy are elite network newsreader­s, not (beat) reporters.

The military? The retired and current officers who lecture us on the evils of Donald Trump or promise to ferret out “insurrecti­onists” among the ranks are mostly generals and admirals — and some retired top-brass multimilli­onaires. We don’t hear much about privates, corporals, sergeants and majors pushing through subsidies for transgende­red surgeries or petitions to garrison a quiet Washington with barbed wire and National Guardsmen.

The richest people in America — the heads of our biggest corporatio­ns — are the most likely to voice their derision for the unwoke lower and middle classes. Ditto the multimilli­onaires of politics — Gore, Feinstein, Kerry and Pelosi.

Celebrity billionair­es such as Jay-Z, George Lucas, Paul McCartney and Oprah Winfrey weigh in often about the oppression of the supposedly rigged system they mastered, but rarely about the plight of the less-well-paid in their own profession­s.

So wokeness is medieval. Sin is not given up as much as atoned for — and excused — through loud confession­als.

Self-righteous elites rant about carbon footprints, needless border security, defunding the police, gun control and charter schools. But they rarely forgo their private jets, third and fourth homes, estate walls, armed security guards and prep schools. Apparently, the more you rant about “privilege,” the less you need to worry about your own.

... Wokeness is not really about fairness for minorities, the oppressed and the poor, past or present. It is mostly a self-confession­al cult of anointed bullies, and hypocrites of all races and genders, who seek to flex, and increase, their own privilege and power. Period.

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