Opinion: Trump campaign disses Zuck’s ‘wall’ comment, but forgot to do some research

During Facebook’s opening F8 2016 keynote, CEO and co-founder Mark Zuckerberg had some choice words for “fearful voices calling for building walls.” It was a thinly veiled jab at Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, and his campaign is not pleased.

“I think I’ll take Mark Zuckerberg seriously when he gives up all of his private security, moves out of his posh neighborhood, and comes live in a modest neighborhood near a border town, and then I’m sure his attitude would change,” Trump campaign spokesperson Katrina Pierson responded when asked about the remark on CNBC’s Squawk on the Street.

Considering that Trump is worth somewhere in the range of $4 billion (though no one seems to know with absolute certainty but Donald), it’s safe to assume that he, too, does not live in a “modest neighborhood.”

That is, unless he shacks up in one of his many Manhattan real estate properties on occasion – and, being on the Hudson River waterfront, even then their modesty is dubious.

Also, let’s just note the countless impoverished regions Zuckerberg has visited within the past few years to jumpstart his global internet initiative, Free Basics, by attempting to understand what those nations’ people need to get online.

If you listen to Trump’s stump speeches, it’d be hard to believe that he’s ever been south of the border or to the MENA region for any reason other than business – his business. (Well, there was that one time that he tried, but wasn’t invited.)

So, there’s this thing called ‘Google’

Pierson went on to remark that “the CEOs in Silicon Valley should focus on innovation and jobs and their businesses and let the politicians make their policies.”

Considering that Silicon Valley and policy couldn’t be more intertwined as of late (), it’s pretty obvious that said tech CEOs simply don’t have that luxury. When policy or legislation – e.g. Trump’s long-proposed internet wall – directly impacts the work that these companies do to connect the world, what other choice do they have but to speak up?

Sure, it’s in Facebook’s best interest that the world be connected (through its platform), as that means more online ad dollars. But, it’s tough to refute that the byproduct of that is, well, a world with more voices.

Frankly, we could use as many voices as we can muster to drown out the din of flawed, dangerous rhetoric that has all but consumed this presidential election.

Source: techradar.com

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4 Comments
  1. Reply Christa Oberbrunner April 15, 2016 at 9:21 pm

    Suckerbird is going to find himself on the wrong side of a federal investigation and not a minute too soon.

  2. Reply Torey Conroy April 16, 2016 at 5:19 am

    What research did the comment lack? Sure, he's been around the world but I doubt he flew economy. There's only so much awe you can have for someone who qualifies as one of the richest nations on the planet going to visit some of the poorest. Trump might be in a glass house but I don't think there was anything technically wrong with his stones.

  3. Reply Ms. Marian Barrows April 19, 2016 at 12:41 pm

    My beef here is the implication that tech CEOs have a choice to remove themselves from policy and legislation discussions, when one of the world's biggest tech companies is in the middle of several battles with the DOJ over encryption, and the Trump campaign itself is proposing a walled internet.

    A little Googling before making that comment would've saved at least a little bit of face.

  4. Reply Floy Donnelly April 19, 2016 at 1:08 pm

    Yeah,ok

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