Preface xiii
Introduction: The
Power Elite on the Promenade 3
- Each
One Is One in a Million: Meet the Superclass
- The
Corporate Side of the Superclass
- Vilfredo
Pareto's Enduring Insight: The 80/20 Rule and the Superclass
- A
Snapshot of the Superclass
- What
Does Disproportionate Power Look Like?
- What
the People Who Have Everything Really Want
- Six
Central Issues Associated with the Superclass
Ceteris Non
Paribus: Inequality, Backlash, and the New
Order 51
- Not
All Boats Are Lifted
- Not a
Country But a Country Club
- Not
Just a Chilean Paradox
- And
After the Easy Part ...
- Ceteris
Non Paribus: Inequality of Power, Inequality of Wealth
- War of
the Rich and the Superrich?
- The
Inequitable Distribution of Luck
- Premium
Pay in the Executive Suite
- Inequality
Revisited
Lessons of
History: The Rise and Fall of Elites 77
- The
Power of History
- The
Power of Institutions
- The
Power of Money
- The
Power of Politics
- The
Power of Force
- The
Power of Networks
- From
the Wanaxes to the Robber Barons: The Rise and Fall of Elites
- Stirrings
of Democracy: Greece from 2000 to 323 BCE
- The
Forbidden City Opened from Within: China in the Seventeenth Century
- Robber
Barons or Inventors of Modernity: America After the Civil War
The Multinational
Moment: When Finance and Business Became the Center of It
All 111
- The
Corporate Cluster Within the Superclass
- The
Interlinked Corporate Elite
- What
Global Power Can Do
- Energy
Elites: A UniquePublic-Private Network
- From
the "Sun King" to the "God Pod"
- Global
Industry, Global Leadership
Globalists vs.
Nationalists: Political Fault Line for a New
Century 145
- The
Power Vacuum
- Gangsters
for Capitalism?
- The
Rules Change But the Game Stays the Same: Political Elites Worldwide
- Behind
the Scenes: The Globalization of the Smoke-Filled Back Room
- Tangled
Webs and Tottering Institutions
- An
Informal Affair: The Sovereignty vs. Democracy Trade-Off
- The
Global Network of Antiglobalists
The Age of
Asymmetry: Decline of the Titans and the Rise of Shadow
Warriors 190
- The
Terrorist Threat in Perspective
- The
Roots of Global Networks
- Green
Is Not Just the Color of the Uniforms
- Consolidation
and Concentration of Military Power
- Networks
Among Defense Firms
- They're
All in a Tiny Room
- The
Privatization of the Military: A Two-Way Street
- Permanent
War's Bottom Line: A Country and an Alliance Beyond All Others
- The
Fly and the Lion
The Information
Superclass: The Power of Ideas 221
- Fresh
and Yet Strangely Familiar
- An
Ascendant Voice of Change in the Middle East
- New
Media Monkey-Gland Injections: A Quick Shot of Sizzle
- Pro
Bono
- Saving
the World One Idea at a Time
- The
Reenchantment of the World
- Pastor
of Partying
- The
Telemuslim
- Dissident
Spirituality or Subversive Cult?
- The
Pragmatic Fanatic
How to Become a
Member of the Superclass: Myth, Reality, and the Psychopathology of
Success 254
- A Very
Short History of Things That Didn't Really Happen-And Their Very Real
Consequences
- When
Is a Trowel Just a Trowel?
- Can It
Be Considered an Academic Elite Society If George W. Bush Was a Member?
- The
"Ex-Presidents' Club"
- The
Big Events: Less Than Meets the Eye?
- The
Clinton Global Initiative and the Power of Global Philanthropy
- California's
Superclass Summer Camp
- Asian
and Latin American "Wannabes" or Harbingers of the Supermeetings of
Tomorrow?
- How to
Become a Member of the Superclass
- The
Psychopathology of Success
The Future of the
Superclass-And What It May Mean for the Rest of
Us 296
- In
Praise of Our Elites vs. Their Elites
- Disproportionate
Concentration of Power
- Agenda-Setting
- Informal
Mechanisms of Governance
- Elites
vs. the Disenfranchised
- Elites
vs. Women
- Elites
and Mobility
- Institutions
vs. Individuals
- The
Emerging Superclass: A Coming Culture Shock?
- Global
Governance vs. Global Government
- Is a
Crisis Inevitable?
- On
Balance
Notes 325
Acknowledgments 357
Index 363
WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING ABOUT
"SUPERCLASS":
From
the Publisher
Each
of them is one in a million. They
number six thousand on a planet of six billion. They run our
governments, our largest corporations, the powerhouses of international
finance, the media, world religions, and, from the shadows, the world's
most dangerous criminal and terrorist organizations. They are the
global superclass, and they are shaping the history of our time.
Today's
superclass has achieved unprecedented levels of wealth and power. They
have globalized more rapidly than any other group. But do they have
more in common with one another than with their own countrymen, as
nationalist critics have argued? They control globalization more than
anyone else. But has their influence fed the growing economic and
social inequity that divides the world? What happens behind closed door
meetings in Davos or aboard corporate jets at 41,000 feet? Conspiracy
or collaboration? Deal-making or idle self-indulgence? What does the
rise of Asia and Latin America mean for the conventional wisdom that
shapes our destinies? Who sets the rules for a group that operates
beyond national laws?
Drawn from scores of exclusive interviews and extensive original
reporting, Superclass answers
all of these questions and more. It draws back the curtain on a
privileged society that most of us know little about, even though it
profoundly affects our everyday lives. It is the first in-depth
examination of the connections between the global communities of
leaders who are at the helm of every major enterprise on the planet and
control its greatest wealth. And it is an unprecedented examination of
the trends within the superclass, which are likely to alter our
politics, our institutions, and the shape of the world in which we
live.
Andrea
Sachs - Time
There
are just over
6,000 people in the superclass. So says the author of this fascinating
book, a field guide to the world's most élite citizens. See the
rich
and powerful in their natural habitats, from Davos and Bilderberg to
the Bohemian Grove....
sysop@TeamInfinity.com,
April 30, 2008,
SuperClass is a Must Read
If
you want to be all you can be, you need to understand what the world
looks like through the eyes of those at the top.
SuperClass is an excellent book that will help you to know yourself
better as you get to know the elites better.
Once you better understand the Elites, you can then proceed to reach
out to them, because they are in the best position to change the world
in directions that perhaps only those NOT at the top can fully
appreciate the need for. You must let them know you exist and are
important and that with their reach and leverage, while adopting the
correct approach, they can change the world in ways few fully
appreciate.
Specifically you want to understand the coming 'Robotic Wageless
Economy', and then reach out to the elites and persuade them to steer
the world in the direction where the 'Robotic Wageless Economy'
can
become a reality in our lifetimes, emancipating humans from the
machinery of economy and ushering in an Age of Recreation never before
possible, and more likely if the SuperClass realizes its potential to
achieve it, so READ the book SuperClass, you will enjoy it, and you
will be better positioned to change the world by leveraging the
SuperClass yourself !
Also recommended: Tragedy and Hope - Professor Quigley,
True Believer - Eric Hoffer,
All Franz Kafka Works,
Mao: The Untold Story
|
Kirkus
Reviews
Some
6,000 people,
about one for every million in the world's population, drive the
decisions that directly affect the global economic climate in which our
governments, corporations, military leaders, technocrats and workers
must strive. In other words, they run our lives. So declares Rothkopf
(International Affairs/Columbia Univ.; Running the World: the Inside
Story of the National Security Council and the Architects of American
Power, 2005, etc.), who dubs this elite the "Superclass." Members may
be found in places like Davos, Switzerland, where the World Economic
Forum convenes annually, or at gatherings in California's Bohemian
Grove, where Republican powerbrokers howl and grunt like Neanderthals.
Though international in origin, they share a number of traits: wealth
(sometimes mega-wealth), blue-chip educations garnered at
world-renowned universities and access to networked ways of getting
things done that few of us can even imagine. Key clusters of these
individuals comprise the top functionaries of national governments and
those who peddle influence among them, the corporate elite, the power
media and the military/industrial complex (now far more integrated and
tightly knit across national borders). Together they are essentially
herding the industrialized nations, including Asian giants China and
India, into a corral that the author labels "global governance." His
book details the means by which they acquire, negotiate and exercise
the clout to do this. "It is hard to ignore the many ways they are the
primary beneficiaries of the global order that they shape," opines
Rothkopf, partner in an international consulting firm and a Washington
insider in the Clinton Administration who boasts firsthand experience
of
how power is wielded. An impressively knowledgeable guide to the
world's elite and how they have coalesced as a kind of natural order.
Agent: Esmond Harmsworth/Zachary Shuster Harmsworth
What
People Are Saying
Richard Holbrooke
"Whether
you like it or not, there is no way to deny the enormous,
disproportionate, concentration of power and wealth in the hands of a
relatively small number of people in the world today. David Rothkopf
has described who they are, and how they operate and interact, vividly
in his valuable (and often disturbing) new book."--(Richard Holbrooke,
Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations)
Lawrence Summers
"The activities of a
growing cosmopolitan elite are having profound effects. They can be
highly desirable when they promote international cooperation or more
problematic when the interests of the elites diverge from those of
their citizens. David Rothkopf's Superclass skillfully probes these
issues and many more and should be read by all those concerned with the
international economy and the evolving global system."--(Lawrence
Summers, former U.S. Secretary of the Treasury)
Ernesto Zedillo
"Thanks to Rothkopf's
special blend of analysis, direct interaction with his subjects and
vivid writing, this is a must read book for people interested in
understanding the genesis of leadership in the new global
economy."--(Ernesto Zedillo, Director of the Yale Center for the Study
of Globalization and Former President of Mexico)
Clyde Prestowitz
"David Rothkopf has
written a super book about the people presently executing an historic
shift of world economic and political power and about how they are
doing it and why. If you want to know how your choices are being
determined and the circumstances of your life conditioned, you must
read this book."--(Clyde Prestowitz, President of the Economic Strategy
Institute and author of Three Billion New Capitalists)
Alan Blinder
"No, no vast conspiracy
runs the world. But, according to Rothkopf's book, a tiny but diverse
global elite, a Superclass, comes close. His finely-honed prose takes
the reader on a joyous, entertaining, and erudite romp around the globe
in search of that class."--(Alan Blinder, Former Vice Chairman of the
Federal Reserve Bank of the United States)
EXCERPTs
from SUPERCLASS:
Page:
48
Overwhelming
and
perhaps confusing as this list [of 6000] may be, it reveals the complex
nature of connections among members of the SuperClass. It is, by
necessity, a partial list for a small cross section of people, but
already illustrates how tangled a web of relationships between
individuals is. For all its twists and turns and intricate
linkages, it explains in the clearest way possible how Schwarzman and
others in the SuperClass have come to see their group as such a "small
world", with everyone just a connection or two away from everyone else.
So
among the roughly
six thousand members of the superclass there are countless threads
linking members to one another. Business associations. Investments.
Board Memberships. Old school ties. Exclusive
neighborhoods. Aviation terminals. Meetings.
Restaurants. Hotels.
In
fact, spread
around the world though they are, rare as they may be among the teeming
billions on the planet, it is easy to see them as a community and to
see the geography of that community take shape at least in the mind's
eye - a geography that stretches from South Kensington to the Upper
East Side of Manhattan; from St. Tropez to Dubai; from the breeding
grounds at Harvard, Yale, Cambridge, and Tokyo University to meeting
place on the boards of cultural institutions, banks, and political
bodies. Linked together by common interests, a common culture,
and private aircraft, these islands become a glittering, superpowered
archipelago amid oceans of aspirants and of the disenfranchised -
oceans of people who work for them, are buffeted by their market
decisions, are swept along by their political impulses, are profoundly
influenced by their views.
It
is not a geography
visible on any map, [except perhaps in books like
this] yet it touches the lives in the global era more
surely than do the fading borders and old distance scales found on any
common globe. Over the course of the next several chapters, I try
to put that geography into context - in terms of issues, history, and a
more detailed look at the membership of this emerging SuperClass.
Synopsis
Each
of them is one in a million. They number six
thousand on a planet of six billion. They run our governments, our
largest corporations, the powerhouses of international finance, the
media, world religions, and, from the shadows, the world's most
dangerous criminal and terrorist organizations. They are the global
superclass, and they are shaping the history of our time.
Today's
superclass has achieved unprecedented levels of wealth and power. They
have globalized more rapidly than any other group. But do they have
more in common with one another than with their own countrymen, as
nationalist critics have argued? They control globalization more than
anyone else. But has their influence fed the growing economic and
social inequity that divides the world? What happens behind closeddoor
meetings in Davos or aboard corporate jets at 41,000 feet? Conspiracy
or collaboration? Deal-making or idle self-indulgence? What does the
rise of Asia and Latin America mean for the conventional wisdom that
shapes our destinies? Who sets the rules for a group that operates
beyond national laws?
Drawn from scores of exclusive interviews and extensive original
reporting, Superclass answers
all of these questions and more. It draws back the curtain on a
privileged society that most of us know little about, even though it
profoundly affects our everyday lives. It is the first in-depth
examination of the connections between the global communities of
leaders who are at the helm of every major enterprise on the planet and
control its greatest wealth. And it is an unprecedented examination of
the trends within the superclass, which are likely to alter our
politics, our institutions, and theshape of the world in which we live.
Read
a Sample Chapter
Superclass
The Global Power Elite and the World They Are Making
By Rothkopf, David Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Copyright © 2008
Rothkopf, David
All right reserved.
ISBN: 9780374272104
Excerpt
Gentiana
is a small restaurant that would scarcely warrant a second glance in
any other village in Europe. It is rather traditional, only slightly
more charming than the bland shops and modest hotels around it. One
nearby storefront offers a remarkable array of Swiss Army knives,
another boxes of chocolates, another fur hats and mountain gear. The
restaurant has a cozy, neighborhood feel to it. Beside the door there
is a blackboard highlighting a few specials, and on the ground floor
there may be seating for twenty if they are both thin enough and
friendly enough. Upstairs there are a few small rooms for private
parties, the biggest of which seats ten people squeezed in on either
side of a long narrow table. Most of its character comes from a feel of
woody intimacy, the dark wood façade, dark wood floors, dark
wood
tables. In fact, for all its charm, it is definitely not a place for
claustrophobes—or people with an extreme fear of splinters. The
reason
to go to Gentiana is the fondue, especially the cheese fondue, which is
offered in robust portions that recall an era before cardiologists. My
wife, Adrean, has a special weakness for fondue, and every year that we
have gone to the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos we
have gone to Gentiana for her birthday. We make reservations long in
advance because during the week of theJanuary meetings, which are
attended each year by more than 2,000 business and government leaders
from around the world, getting a table at Gentiana is not much easier
than getting one at renowned eateries like Aragawa in Tokyo, Gordon
Ramsay in London, or Le Bernardin in New York. Perhaps more
surprisingly, for that one week the clientele at this humble Swiss
bistro looks pretty much the same as what you might find at those
world-class restaurants. Of course, even during that week, there
are
still a few tables at Gentiana occupied by locals. One regular is a
particularly garrulous drunk who loves to hobnob with the CEOs, heads
of state, and rock stars who are wedged in, elbow to elbow, spinning
hunks of bread on long forks in the pots of bubbling Gruyère.
The local
speaks only Swiss-German to the polyglot crowds around him, and few
understand him, although judging by his demeanor the casual observer is
not sure whether that has to do with the language he speaks or the
local beer that he favors. No matter. He smiles and they smile, and the
general effect is cheerful and relaxed. One afternoon during a
recent
Davos, my wife and I were hurrying along the sidewalk on our way to
Gentiana. This can be dangerous, as the locals do not shovel away the
snow and ice lurks just about everywhere. In fact, attendees at Davos
can see with some regularity central bank governors and senior
executives of the IMF and other distinguished middle-aged men and women
swaddled in cashmere, calfskin, and politically incorrect pelts of many
origins launched skyward, only to land on their broader, softer
regions. We walked gingerly, therefore, but with purpose, knowing we
were meeting our friends in just a few minutes. The weather was
typical. A light snow was falling. It was very cold. But the Alpine air
was crisp and dry and invigorating. We chatted about the meetings, who
we had seen and who we hoped to run into. As we walked, we reflexively
did what most of the visitors to this small mountain town do: We
glanced at the people passing us in the street, trying to determine who
they were. (Given the nature of Davos, they were likely to have been
somebody.) It’s a ritual made easier by the fact that everyone at the
meeting has to wear a badge around his or her neck at all times. The
badge is used to get through the many security checkpoints—there are at
least two Swiss soldiers and policemen in Davos for every delegate who
attends the meetings—to register for sessions, and to let everyone know
who you are. Your name is on the badge, along with the organization you
represent. So too is your picture. People tend to walk with their
badges dangling in plain sight so they don’t have to fumble with them
getting in and out of buildings or past police. That’s how it was for
everyone except for the universally recognizable—people like Bill
Clinton, Bill Gates, Tony Blair, Bono, or Angelina Jolie. The
badge-scanning move is so ubiquitous you might call it the Davos dip:
Bend the knee slightly, cast a subtle glance downward, assess and move
on. Leaving the Congress Centre and walking along Davos’s main
street,
the Promenade, we passed Thierry Desmarest, the CEO of Total; a small
cluster of Harvard professors; a senior executive of Saudi Aramco; and
a woman pulling her two small children on a sled. (She was local and
the sled seemed to hint at the reason they don’t shovel the sidewalks.)
We stopped briefly to chat with Tom Donohue, the CEO of the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce, who happens to be my wife’s boss, then paused a
few steps later to chat with an Indian-born U.S. venture capitalist
with whom I had some business. It was a typical sample. Five minutes
along the Davos Promenade in January offered a cavalcade of
freeze-dried economic leaders from three continents. About two
blocks
from Gentiana, I was grousing about how one of the conversations that I
had most wanted to have had resulted in a frustrating series of near
misses. The objective was a long-delayed chat with Paulo Coelho, the
Brazilian author of The Alchemist. Coelho has sold more than one
hundred million copies of his books worldwide and is, after the Harry
Potter author, J. K. Rowling, the second-best-selling author on
the
planet. He is also one of the few cultural regulars at Davos, one of a
handful of people who might offer a different perspective on the Davos
zeitgeist. We had intended to meet almost a year earlier but, due to a
series of scheduling mishaps, had repeatedly failed to do so. Finally,
we aimed for Davos, but I had yet to lay eyes on him. What did I expect
from a man who lived on the other side of the world and was constantly
in motion—a Brazilian who lived much of the time in Europe and sold
many of his books in Russia? There was a little bit of hubris in
thinking we might ever be able to end up in the same place at the same
time. And then: “Oh, my God,” said a voice I did not recognize, “it’s
you.” A smallish man in a fur hat was staring at my name badge. He
had
a graying goatee, and he greeted me like a long-lost cousin. It was
Coelho, appearing almost miraculously out of the Alpine mist as if
conjured by our conversation. Passing along the sidewalk from the
Congress Centre where we had just heard an address by the German
chancellor, Angela Merkel, and comments from the Indian steel magnate
Lakshmi Mittal, through the stream of big name boulevardiers, and then
walking directly into this icon of the global literary scene—it was
made clear again that Davos was truly the incarnation of Marshall
McLuhan’s global village. It was like small-town Planet Earth, or the
once-a-year Brigadoon of globalization: a community connected to
everywhere and, in one way or another, to everyone. Indeed, during the
course of this meeting, top trade ministers would caucus to try
unsuccessfully to rescue global trade talks, Africa activists would
meet with corporate chiefs and political leaders to seek funding for
medical aid programs, global warming would “go mainstream” as mostly
American skeptics were persuaded by session after session of expert
views, and proponents of different solutions for dealing with
everything from anxiety about immigrants to anxiety about terrorism
would present their views directly to those in a position to implement
them. If, as Hillary Clinton has asserted, it takes a village to raise
a child, this seemed to be the village it took to run the
world. Coelho
and I had never met, but thanks to the wonders of the information age
we had enough e-mail history that our conversation was familiar and
fairly ebullient. He offered to have lunch, but we gestured toward
Gentiana, explaining that we had a prior engagement. I eagerly made an
appointment to sit down with him later that afternoon at the Kongress
Hotel. Over the three and a half decades of its existence, this
mountaintop gathering clearly had done more than merely transform Davos
from sleepy ski town to cosmopolitan hub. More than a meeting place for
international business, government, media, and cultural leaders, it now
was a symbol for the knitting together of the world, literally and
figuratively a summit of summits. The concept of what the political
scientist Samuel Huntington called “Davos man”—the global citizen, the
leader for whom borders were increasingly irrelevant—described a new
leadership class for our era. When founded in 1971 by Klaus
Schwab, the
organization that would become known as the World Economic Forum had a
narrower mission. It was focused on convening European business leaders
for a discussion of that continent’s rather uncertain economic
fortunes. To put the moment in context, it is worth recalling that
in
1971, Europe was still living in the aftermath of World War II and was
on the front line of the cold war, still more the self-anointed seat of
civilization than the “modern” Europe of more modest, less imperial,
more multilateralist inclinations. In fact, it was not until three
years later that the first of Europe’s great colonial powers, Portugal,
granted independence to Guinea-Bissau, Angola, and Mozambique. The
United Kingdom, Ireland, and Denmark did not join the European Union
until 1973. Though the Treaty of Rome had initiated the creation of
Europe’s Common Market in 1957, it would be more than two decades
before the Maastricht Treaty institutionalized the idea of a true
single market among the nations of the continent. Europe was clearly in
transition at the moment of the forum’s birth. I was in high
school at
the time, and in college when the World Economic Forum was really
gaining its sea legs in the late 1970s. I’ll admit, international
conferences didn’t really capture my imagination when I was a teenager,
but my education was absolutely colored with the Western worldview of
those times, with classical education built on the presumed superiority
of European ideas and the history and cultural contributions of other
regions seen as exotic and secondary. At Columbia University, we were
required to take the “core curriculum,” which was built around two
major courses. One, Humanities, was a survey course of the defining
works in literature. The second, Contemporary Civilization, was a
survey of the great works in political philosophy and related
disciplines, beginning with the Greeks and continuing through the
modern era. The two courses, in retrospect, were undoubtedly the
highlight of my education and have benefited me probably every day of
my life since I took them. (Of course, I did not recognize this at the
time.) In Contemporary Civilization, we read—at the pace of one
significant, sometimes mind-blowing, occasionally mind-numbing book a
week—the writings of everyone (male and white) from Plato to Descartes
to Darwin. Somewhere around Max Weber and other analysts and critics of
modernity, the curriculum got more varied, with different professors
assigning different texts, as it was harder to agree on what qualified
as essential reading. One of the more popular assignments at that point
in the course was The Power Elite by C. Wright Mills, a 1956 book that
explored the national power structure in the United States. Mills,
a
former Columbia professor of sociology, wrote the book as a study of
how America really worked. His central claim was that at the top tier
of the business, government, and military communities, there was a
remarkably small and overlapping echelon of “deciders.” This national
“power elite” wascomposed of men whose positions enable them to
transcend the ordinary environments of ordinary men and women; they are
in positions to make decisions having major consequences . . . They are
in command of the major hierarchies and organizations of modern
society. They rule the big corporations. They run the machinery of the
state and claim its prerogatives. They direct the military
establishment. They occupy the strategic command posts of the social
structure, in which are now centered the effective means of the power
and the wealth and the celebrity which they enjoy.Mills asserted that
these elites took similar paths to positions of privilege, ensuring
that many among their homogeneous numbers knew one another. In
addition, they often crossed sectors: from top roles in government to
top roles in business, from the the White House cabinet to the
boardroom, from military commands to politics, from one position of
great responsibility to another. Thus, Mills claimed, they created a
kind of interlocking directorate for the United States of
America. Mills’s book was as much a critique as it was a
description of
this group and America’s midcentury leadership. It explored, in
meticulous detail, the concentration of power among a comparatively few
corporations and individuals, and the manifold links of American
leaders to key institutions. The book then veered into polemic,
lamenting the disproportionate influence of this group. One of the men
who no doubt inspired many of Mills’s points, President Eisenhower,
also best illustrated them. A former supreme allied commander in Europe
as well as a former president of Columbia University, Eisenhower
captured much of Mills’s spirit in his farewell address as president in
1961:[The] conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large
arms industry is new in the American experience. The total
influence—economic, political, even spiritual—is felt in every city,
every State house, every office of the Federal government. We recognize
the imperative need for this development. Yet we must not fail to
comprehend its grave implications. Our toil, resources and livelihood
are all involved; so is the very structure of our society. In the
councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of
unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the
military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of
misplaced power exists and will persist. One little-remembered
aspect
of Eisenhower’s speech is that it contained not one but two central
warnings. While the first, concerning the military-industrial complex,
is more often cited, he also expressed equivalent concerns about the
emergence of what he called the “scientific-technological elite.” His
concerns, like Mills’s, reflect the zeitgeist of the 1950s, in which
the predominant historical memory was of World War II and the
subjugation of all U.S. political, financial, and industrial efforts to
the goal of military victory. The predominant fear of the moment was of
technology run amok as manifested in the growing threat of global
thermonuclear war. Since Eisenhower spoke in 1961, technological
innovation has not only fueled America’s unprecedented growth but it
has empowered people in new ways; it perhaps even helped to bring down
the United States’ cold war adversary, as the rise of the information
age made it impossible for a closed society to compete. Yet, despite
the resilient strength of America’s military-industrial establishment,
defense spending and manpower have receded from their highs during
World War II and the cold war years. In his speech, Eisenhower speaks
of a 3.5-million-person military; today the U.S. military is only 1.5
million men and women strong (with nearly 1 million more in the
reserves). He also notes that at the time of his speech the U.S.
military budget exceeded the total net income of all U.S. companies.
Today, while the defense budget exceeds $425 billion, the earnings of
only the fifty most profitable U.S. companies top that number and,
indeed, the combined revenues of just the top two, ExxonMobil and
Wal-Mart, dwarf it, beating it by more than 50 percent. Without a
doubt, corporate economic clout has grown dramatically. Mills’s
book is
still read and is now considered a classic critique of America’s power
structure, but it is also clear that the world has changed profoundly
in the fifty years since its publication. Excerpted from
Superclass by
David Rothkopf. Copyright © 2008 by David Rothkopf. Published in
March
2008 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux, LLC. All rights reserved.
Continues...
Excerpted from Superclass by Rothkopf, David Copyright
© 2008 by Rothkopf, David. Excerpted by permission.