https://cdni.rt.com/files/2020.05/xxl/5ec3fbf520302754ac283767.JPG

JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon has called for “rebuilding a more inclusive economy” in a letter to shareholders. The internet isn’t buying the plutocrat’s change of heart, however, reasoning he’s more concerned about populist rage.

Dimon used his company’s latest shareholder letter on Tuesday to plead for the rebuilding of “an economy that creates and sustains opportunity for dramatically more people, especially those who have been left behind for too long,” lamenting that the coronavirus pandemic had hit “low-income communities and people of color” hardest, “exacerbating… health and economic inequities that were already unacceptably pronounced.”

The last few months have laid bare the reality that, even before the pandemic hit, far too many people were living on the edge,” he concluded.

But Dimon’s sudden concern for the downtrodden masses rang false to many on social media, who pointed out his $1.2 billion net worth and his firm’s history of benefiting from government largesse. 

During the 2008 financial crisis, JP Morgan acquired failed brokerage Bear Stearns and collapsed commercial bank Washington Mutual for bargain-basement prices with help from the US taxpayer, while many of those same taxpayers were being foreclosed on and thrown into the street. As such, the internet felt it was a bit late for a ‘come to Jesus’ moment.

Jamie Dimon’s JPMorgan had to pay a $13 billion fine for bad mortgages that caused the 2008 crash. https://t.co/5HSz8q47ui

After foreclosing on the wealth of a generation, Jamie Dimon thinks we should be fair. Let’s start with home ownership and wealth… @jpmorganhttps://t.co/XOS90nqews

I am heartened to see that, after a year of thinking about it, @jpmorgan CEO Jamie Dimon agrees that workers at his company shouldn’t go hungry while he makes $31 million a year. https://t.co/qqImzXBD6s

Many suspected Dimon was hearing the distant clang of populist pitchforks and aiming to get ahead of the tide of rage by presenting himself as a friend to the needy.

Jamie Dimon is a POS, he just realizes the guillotines are cominghttps://t.co/vXdfRVS63T

Addressing inequalities must include Jamie Dimon busting rocks on a chain gang. https://t.co/RoH22ZVbjr

Some assumed the billionaire had merely found a way to profit off the appearance of economic justice by placing his bank in charge of the “apparatus giving out goodies,” as it already has been as part of the Covid-19 bailout bill. Dimon boasted in his shareholder letter that JP Morgan had doled out over $30 billion in Paycheck Protection Program loans, the troubled stimulus program meant to rescue small businesses that has instead seen a significant chunk of the funding go to large corporations that are anything but needy.

Expect a lot of people like Jamie Dimon to start pivoting towards collectivism (with the understanding that they’ll be in charge of the apparatus giving out goodies, forever).

And a few suspected he was angling for a political appointment – presumably in a Democratic administration, given the lengths to which he’s gone to impugn President Donald Trump.

Jamie Dimon is sounding a lot like a politician… https://t.co/hTgz4o28K9

Ah, Jamie Dimon is trying to spit-shine his image so he can loot the treasury in someone’s administration next year and in his own in 4 years.

Dimon’s performative support for economic justice comes amid the highest unemployment levels since the US Bureau of Labor began keeping statistics. Over 36 million Americans have filed for unemployment since the Covid-19 pandemic arrived in the country, triggering panic and sweeping economic shutdowns. The poor and working classes have indeed been hit the worst – nearly 40 percent of families with incomes under $40,000 have found themselves without jobs, according to the Federal Reserve.

Congress has requisitioned trillions to bail out banks like JP Morgan and large corporations, but money is hard to come by for lowly workers, who tend not to be able to contribute large sums to political campaigns. Given his track record of taking the savings of the poor and trickling them up to the wealthy, it’s unsurprising that so few are buying Dimon’s reinvention as Robin Hood.

Like this story? Share it with a friend!