Elon Musk calls the UN’s bluff to open a Pandora’s box
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS – Multi-billionaire tech magnate Elon Musk built his Tesla Motors and
SpaceX empire on $4.9 billion in government subsidies. And now he’s calling out
another beneficiary of government largesse: the United Nations.
On November 1, the UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) announced in a press
release: “42 million people are at famine’s door — and $6.6 billion could save
them now.”
The headline didn’t escape one Twitter user’s notice. He pointed out that “2% of
Elon Musk’s wealth is $6B. In 2020 the UN World Food Program (WFP) raised $8.4B.
How come it didn’t solve world hunger?” Musk replied, “If WFP can describe on
this Twitter thread exactly how $6B will solve world hunger, I will sell Tesla
stock right now and do it.”
WFP executive director, David Beasley, then joined the online melee, inviting Musk to discuss the matter. But in doing so, he had pivoted from the initial press release of his own organization. He tweeted, “Headline not accurate. $6B will not solve world hunger, but it WILL prevent geopolitical instability, mass migration and save 42 million people on the brink of starvation. An unprecedented crisis and a perfect storm due to Covid/conflict/climate crises.”
The bait and switch didn’t escape Musk’s attention, either. “Please publish your
current & proposed spending in detail so people can see exactly where money
goes. Sunlight is a wonderful thing,” he replied. To which Beasley responded
that he’d meet Musk “anywhere” to show him their books.
Except that’s not at all what Musk was asking. He wants the UN program to open
its kimono for the whole planet to see and evaluate the funding and spending of
this global governance entity which has benefited from taxpayer largesse on a
global scale. Instead, Beasley is offering special access to a potential
rainmaking donor.
Something has long seemed amiss. How else can one explain that world hunger and
poverty are still global problems when governments have been tossing our money
down this particular well for at least as long as most of us have been alive.
World poverty should have been fixed a long time ago — unless the ultimate
purpose is to maintain the poverty industry in the manner to which it has become
accustomed.
We all remember watching the ads on TV for UN fundraising campaigns — showing
cute kids in foreign countries starving — and wanting to do anything that we
possibly could to help. The message always has been that X amount of money,
donated by you, can save one child from going hungry for a day. We collected
coins in little boxes for the cause each Halloween and held bake sales for which
we undercooked brownies and burnt cookies. All because some of us really wanted
to believe that the money (or at least almost all of it) went straight from our
pockets onto a plate in need.
It’s not that simple with many of these multinational organizations, whose
public transparency regarding the breakdown of administrative, operational, and
other costs on a worldwide scale leaves a lot to be desired. A 2008 publication
in the Journal of Economic Perspectives noted that in 2004, 70 percent of the
WFP’s aid went to “corrupt countries,” and ranked it near the bottom for
transparency and overhead. Even more troubling is that one has to go back that
far in order to find any detailed sources that aren’t published directly by the
organization itself. Why so discreet?
Since this assessment, the WFP has implemented biometric data collection and
verification control systems in the countries in which they operate. They claim
that the measures help prevent fraudulent distribution in the supply chain. Not
a bad idea in principle since the New York Times has previously reported, for
example, that WFP food had been misdirected to Islamist militant groups in
Africa.
But it’s hard not to also be skeptical about the creation of a biometric data
dragnet for eventual use by the organization’s two largest public benefactors:
the United States and the European Union. It would be interesting to know which
private donors might have a particular interest in such information. For
instance, The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, founded by Microsoft’s Bill
Gates, donated $324.7 million to another UN program — the World Health
Organization (WHO) in 2017. That makes Gates the second-largest donor to the
WHO, including nation-states (right behind the U.S. at $401.1 million).
So, while Musk is playing social media footsie with the WFP and dangling a
fortune before their eyes, can we please know how much of a return on investment
tech giants like him could potentially be getting for their involvement? The
only way to find out is to see the current donor list, breakdown of costs, any
earmarked program funding, and a full list of vendors.
Speaking of vendors, in 2010, the American Enterprise Institute’s former
visiting fellow Jon Entine pointed out, citing the UN Monitoring Group on
Somalia, that “three Somali businessmen who held about $160 million in WFP
transport contracts were involved in arms trading while diverting the agency’s
food aid away from the hungry.” Is this just the tip of the iceberg? Let’s find
out.
It’s long past time for someone to break open the books of the UN and its
various organizations. And if Musk succeeds in doing so with a bribe of $6
billion, it might truly be the bribe to end all bribes.
COPYRIGHT 2021 RACHEL MARSDEN