One of the successes of neoliberal capitalism has been convincing us that we’re paying less while actually paying more. They promise lower taxes, then they privatise the services, health insurance becomes a private tax, car finance becomes a transport tax, rent becomes a housing tax, student debt becomes an education tax. The electricity surcharge for AI data centres becomes another hidden tax.
You voted to reduce taxes, but all that happened was public taxes became private payments to corporations. A vote for “tax cuts” too becomes a vote for hidden taxes. The same trick plays out across the digital world. We’re encouraged to embrace platforms and AI systems that consume enormous amounts of energy, degrade the quality of public knowledge, undermine independent publishing, harvest our personal data, and concentrate even more power in the hands of a handful of tech oligarchs.
We’re told this is innovation, but it’s mostly enclosure. The latest scandals around Elon Musk and his political networks aren’t the real story. They’re symptoms of a deeper problem. Billionaires don’t simply own companies, they increasingly shape media, public debate, infrastructure and politics itself.
This is what the #deathcult looks like in practice: private wealth buying public power. One path we can take is not simply replacing one billionaire with another or one political party with another, it’s rebuilding the commons. Public goods instead of private monopolies, community media instead of billionaire media, the #openweb instead of the #dotcons and economic democracy instead of oligarchy.
That’s why #OMN exists – not simply to criticise the mess, but to build practical alternatives to mediate the mess as the next crisis arrives.