Thank God for Pope Leo. He’s the leader our world desperately needs | Arwa Mahdawi

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Do you remember the early 2000s, when Silicon Valley buzzed with idealism and tech bros told us they were going to save the world? “Don’t be evil” was Google’s unofficial motto; it’s 2004 IPO prospectus declared that doing “good things for the world” was more important than “short term gains”. Mark Zuckerberg similarly wrote in Facebook’s 2012 IPO letter that the social network was “built to accomplish a social mission – to make the world more open and connected”.

As was obvious to anyone paying attention, this was all performative bullshit. Nevertheless, it’s hard not to feel nostalgic about that period of time – which came to a definitive end in 2018, with the Cambridge Analytica scandal. By and large, billionaires and CEOs still cared what the hoi polloi thought of them. They were self-aware enough to realize that, even with all their billions, there’s a lot more of us than there are of them.

Now, however, there has been a seismic vibe shift. Donald Trump has made cruelty cool, and normalized greed and corruption. Tech titans, meanwhile, have lined up to kiss the ring – and extract as much money from his administration as they can. Elon Musk has gone from quirky rocketman to rightwing agitator. Zuckerberg is in his macho era, urging companies to unleash their “masculine energy” and saying he regrets apologizing so much in the past.

As for the mantra “don’t be evil”? Ha. Now tech companies are unapologetically fueling unimaginable evil. Project Nimbus, for example, a $1.2bn contract awarded by Israel to Google and Amazon, has been accused of playing a role in the ongoing genocide in Gaza. Sergey Brin, Google’s co-founder, meanwhile, has said using the term genocide in connection to Gaza, which scores of leading human rights organizations and scholars do, is “offensive”.

Amid this vibe shift, something odd has happened: the Vatican City has replaced Silicon Valley as ground zero for disruptive thinking. The Catholic church, dripping with gold, burdened by a sordid history of sexual abuse and cover-ups, is becoming a beacon of light in a very dark world. Even for nonbelievers like me, the pope has become a reassuring – and all too rare – voice of moral clarity.

Pope Francis, who died last year, started this transformation. He wasn’t exactly an unproblematic LGBTQ+ ally, but he maintained that people shouldn’t be marginalized for their sexual orientation and called laws criminalizing homosexuality “unjust”. He was vocal about caring for immigrants, spoke out about climate justice and criticized the Trump administration’s mass deportations. He told churches in South Sudan that they could not remain neutral amid injustice. And he condemned Israel’s assault on Gaza. “This is not war. This is terrorism,” he said in November 2023. One of his last requests was that his popemobile be turned into a health clinic for the children of Gaza. Israel, of course, has still not allowed it in.

When Pope Leo XIV succeeded Francis, many wondered whether he would continue to advocate for the most vulnerable. To the Trump administration’s chagrin, he has. Leo has spoken out against the war on Iran, and Maga’s use of religious justifications for it. He has reminded the world that “the people of Gaza are still not receiving humanitarian aid”, which is a fact that most world leaders seem keen to ignore. He has rattled Trump and his supporters so much that the president accused him of being “WEAK on crime” and Fox News’s Sean Hannity wondered on-air whether the pope had “even read the Bible”.

Now, Leo is becoming a thorn in Silicon Valley’s side. On 25 May, the pope released his first encyclical, which is an official statement outlining the church’s stance on an important topic. Titled Magnifica Humanity: On Safeguarding the Human Person in the Time of Artificial Intelligence, it warns about the dangers of unregulated AI, noting that “the growing dominance of a technocratic paradigm” risks “reducing creation to an object of exploitation and human beings to mere cogs in a system driven toward ever greater efficiency”.

The encyclical is very long (more than 40,000 words) and full of interesting nuggets. But here’s one of the sections I think is most crucial:

“The search for truth is an essential element of democracy … When questions about what is true lose their appeal, and a pragmatism takes hold that is content with what appears useful or effective, then democratic life is weakened … Indifference to the truth leads, slowly but surely, to a descent into totalitarianism. As the philosopher Hannah Arendt wrote, the ideal subjects of such regimes are not so much those who are ideologically convinced, but rather ‘people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction (ie, the reality of experience) and the distinction between true and false (ie, the standards of thought) no longer exist’.”

Social media, which has been used for good as well as evil, should not be blamed for all our woes. But it seems quite clear that the moral rot eating away at the world set in as social media enveloped the planet, turning us all into data points that could be manipulated. A fact is a fragile thing and, in her essay Truth and Politics, Arendt warned that a flood of lies undermines our sense of reality. AI, of course, is already supercharging this – eroding our critical thinking, casting doubt on everything, collapsing the distinction between fact and fiction. This is why the Trump administration loves AI so much: it helps make the rich richer, and the rest of us more compliant.

Leo’s note about a dangerous “pragmatism” taking hold is also important. The world seems to be run by the gleefully evil and the pathetically pragmatic. On the one hand, you have people like Stephen Miller, Donald Trump, Benjamin Netanyahu: people who revel in cruelty. Then, just as bad, albeit not as brazen, are the people who are just going along with it all, because it’s easier that way.

In a January piece in the Wall Street Journal, of all places, former US treasury secretary Robert E Rubin lamented the fact that business leaders are quiet about Trump’s trampling of democracy. “In my experience, many leaders harbor deep concerns about Mr Trump’s lawlessness, weaponization of the government, and interference in markets,” Rubin wrote. “They refrain from public criticism not because they find nothing to criticize but because they’re intimidated.”

We are ruled by cretins and cowards. From our universities to our courts, our institutions have not met the present moment with courage. Thank God then for the pope. He is still a mere mortal, he is not perfect, but he is proving to be a much-needed force for good. He is speaking truth to a higher power.

  • Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian US columnist and the author of Strong Female Lead

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