The Working Class Can’t Be Bought Off Quite So Easily

In one email to Jeffrey Epstein, former CEO of Barclays Jes Staley explains that the reason the masses aren’t in revolt against the rich is that they’re placated by consumerism and celebrity culture. Unfortunately for them, people aren’t that easy to deceive.

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Commodity consumption can heighten self-awareness, inflame a sense of entitlement, and expand the desire for recognition and fair treatment. (David Paul Morris / Bloomberg via Getty Images)


In the wake of last week’s release of three million pages of files related to Jeffrey Epstein, the commentary has understandably and necessarily focused on powerful men’s sexual exploitation of young women and girls. But the documents paint a truly holistic picture of how the world’s wealthiest men think and talk, and not just about women. Here, for example, is an email in its totality and verbatim from Jes Staley, the former CEO of the global finance behemoth Barclays, who also appears to have been sexually involved with women under Epstein’s influence:

you want to know why we are not São Paolo, watch the TV adds on the Superbowl. Its all about hip blacks in hip cars with white women.

The group that should be in the streets, has been bought off. By Jay Z

This email offers a rare glimpse into the minds of the financial superelite, with São Paolo standing in for a volatile megacity given to frequent eruptions of mass unrest. They know the system that made them wealthy beyond imagination should logically produce popular revolt, even in rich capitalist countries, which are nonetheless highly unequal. Why doesn’t it? Staley’s simple answer is that consumerist ideology hypnotizes the masses with the prospect of transcending their status by emulating celebrities and acquiring commodities.

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