Marc Benioff Says Trump Should Send Guard Troops to San Francisco
Posted3 months agoActive3 months ago
nytimes.comOtherstory
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San Francisco GovernanceNational Guard DeploymentTrump Administration
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San Francisco Governance
National Guard Deployment
Trump Administration
Marc Benioff suggests Trump deploy National Guard troops to San Francisco, sparking controversy and debate among commenters about governance, authority, and the implications of such a move.
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- 01Story posted
Oct 10, 2025 at 7:32 PM EDT
3 months ago
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Oct 10, 2025 at 7:42 PM EDT
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3 months ago
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ID: 45544997Type: storyLast synced: 11/20/2025, 1:42:01 PM
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So that entitles you to call for an invasion of the city?
> Since the pandemic, he has mostly lived on the Big Island of Hawaii, where he has bought up numerous parcels of land.
An antisocial, entitled oligarch. Just what we need. I think at this point it's fair to say we don't really live in a democracy. The people with money can do whatever they please, while whatever value they return to society is debatable at best (Salesforce??? wtf). This system is well and truly broken.
I have only used Salesforce briefly, and over a decade ago, and I honestly wasn't impressed. But there are all sorts of products made by companies that I personally don't like or have no use for, and this also has extremely little relationship with whether other people find them useful enough to pay for. If you have an argument that Salesforce the company is doing something untoward to make money, then make that argument. But I have no reason to think that Salesforce isn't doing the same thing that many other successful companies have done, which is selling a product that many people want, and earning a lot of money for their shareholders by doing so. None of this seems like a broken system to me.
Who knows what Benioff actually thinks - he supported Democratic presidential candidates as recently as Hillary Clinton's last run. Now we see effusive praise for Trump and his policies. Rather than a rightward shift in his political and moral convictions, I imagine this is a naked appeal to the president's legendary susceptibility to flattery ("I fully support the president. He's doing a great job.") I'm not even sure if Benioff and his peers have such convictions.
Do they have any?
Benioff and Diddy were business partners on a 'Black Enterprise' venture when Benioff was a DEI fanboy. I guess he's got a lot of Trump bootlicking to do to make up for it.
Benioff needs those sweet army contracts so much he's got to vouch for calling in the guard to SF to glaze Trump. Of course he won't be there. He'll be in his billionaire bunker in Hawaii playing with his 'ohana'.
Everyone is running out of new ideas, there’s an AI bubble that is about to pop. And everyone hates big tech, I don’t know that there’s a world where the next Democrat president moves back to them, and I suspect they’re right not to. That the kind of support big tech needs right now doesn’t align with Democrat values.
So, in an attempt to “conserve” their wealth and position they move to the right. The question becomes. Is that sustainable either. Trump is perceived as the head honcho in that big tech is groveling too, but I doubt anyone else will be seen that way. “JD Vance, the big tech president” doesn’t sound like a great sales pitch, nor a way to keep MAGA happy. And I doubt other elements of the right have truly lost their skepticism of big tech.
If the AI bubble pops and it takes the rest of the economy down with it, big tech probably doesn’t come out of that looking great. Criminal investigations not great? We shall see.
During the first Trump administration, I think it was said that inequality decreased. What was the mechanism, and is that still true in Trump 2.0?
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