As I write these words, on January 16, 2025, Mr. Donald Trump is still President-elect, though heโs certainly acting as though heโs already been inaugurated. Thanks to the peculiar time traveling magic of print periodicals, President Trump will have been in office for at least three days before you read these words, such as they are. (Look, Iโm not any more excited to write about the guy than you are to read about him, but news is news.)
Despite a compelling farewell address (more on that below) from the 46th president of the United States, the absurdity machine is already winding up here in the final days of President Joe Bidenโs term in office, as a casual glance at recent headlines attests.
โTrump Taps Mel Gibson, Sylvester Stallone and Jon Voight as Hollywood โAmbassadorsโ,โ from The New York Times. Makes sense. At 69, 78, and 86, respectively, those venerable gentlemen surely have their collective finger on the pulse of the generation. When I think about connecting with Gen Z, my mind immediately goes to the co-star of 1972โs Deliverance and prominent right-wing nutjob Jon Voight. With Los Angeles devastated by historic and tragic winter Palisades fires, Trumpโs move shows he still has all his old tricks, ready to go. Itโs performative, backwards, and it toes the line between casual cruelty and cluelessness. We are off to a great start indeed.
Worse than Trumpโs sycophantic set of Hollywood โAmbassadorsโ are the rich and empathy-deficient tech titans lining up to pull the presidentโs strings. In his farewell address, Biden warned of this oligarchy of the super-rich and the influence they wield, particularly through technology, and I agree with almost everything he said โ save one minor detail. Biden warned that this tyranny of tech bros is on its way; I say itโs already here. I worry our nation will be as successful ousting the tech-industrial complex as we have with the military-industrial complex President Dwight D. Eisenhower warned of in his farewell address in 1961.
Trump is notoriously susceptible to flattery. His own former national security adviser, H.R. McMaster, already admitted as much in an interview in 2024, not that we needed an expert on security to attest to that fact. With Metaโs Mark Zuckerberg announcing that Facebook and Instagram are letting their fact-checkers go, it will be that much easier to suck up to the new president. He really did have the biggest inauguration crowd of all time โ and no one is allowed to prove otherwise!
Jokes aside, if abandoning fact-checking wasnโt Zuckerbergโs way of saying, โstanding by, dear leader,โ Iโm not nearly as well-versed in the speech patterns of near-human replicants. All those hours watching Blade Runner on repeat and Star Trek: Next Generation on reruns really were wasted, I guess.
Social media โ and the tech industry in general โ are criminally under-regulated. Well, that is to say, their actions arenโt technically crimes, because there arenโt really any regulations. But it should be a crime. Unfortunately, a loosening of techโs stranglehold on U.S. policy seems increasingly unlikely. Between Trumpโs burgeoning friendship with the AI Axis of Evil โ the aforementioned Zuckerberg, Amazonโs Jeff Bezos, and Elon Musk, the grifter who bought Twitter, renamed it X, and is now poised to poison Memphisโ water โ and an aging and out-of-touch legislative branch who donโt see the harm in a little social media, it seems to me that the tech-industrial complex keeping Biden up at night have already set up shop.
Though Iโm sending this missive from a presidency in the past, I sincerely doubt that all hope is lost already, on Thursday, January 23, 2024. You can fire the fact-checkers, but you canโt burn all the facts everywhere. That doesnโt mean that the coalition of the mean and greedy little minds wonโt try. It just means to remember that everyone (including yours truly!) has bias, that book burning is never the last move in someoneโs playbook, and that libraries are a truly radical and wonderful place.
Anyway, at least Iโm sure Iโll get a good laugh out of the โarticleโ my uncle shares on Facebook as proof that the Mississippi is supposed to be on fire, actually, and annual ice storms canโt be climate change, because itโs global warming, not global icing, dummy.
Jesse Davis is a former Flyer staffer; he writes a monthly Books feature for Memphis Magazine. His opinions, such as they are, were minding their own business in Memphis on January 6, 2021. Were yours?

