The movie The Social Network (2010) portrayed the gifted tech geek Mark Zuckerberg as he was about to start down the road to fame and fortune by founding Facebook, now called Meta. Sarah Wynn-Williams’ memoir Careless People: A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed, and Lost Idealism (2025) traced Zuckerberg’s progress down that road, which led to greed, grandiosity, and subservience to authoritarians, including the most corrupt U.S. president in history.
My neighbor Swamp Rabbit, drunk at noontime, laughed at my remarks about the book, which I’ve finally read. “Who did she expect him to serve, Bernie Sanders? What planet is this woman from?”
I told him that Wynn-Williams was a New Zealand native who worked at Facebook from 2011 to 2017 promoting projects meant to make the company a worldwide force for free speech and other democratic ideals. She shmoozed diplomats and dictators all over the world and apparently assumed Zuckerberg and his lieutenants — Sheryl Sandberg, Joel Kaplan and so on — were on the same ideological page with her. It took her a while to realize they were overgrown brats, in love with power and expensive toys, to hell with the peons.
“I don’t believe it,” Swamp Rabbit said. “She must have known right away that Zuck and his cronies were money-grubbin’ rightwing phonies. Nothing they did should have surprised her.”
What’s surprising, I told him, is that Meta called Careless People “a mix of old claims and false accusations,” but has yet to sue Wynn-Williams for libel. Among many other things, her book accused the company of being partly responsible for the genocide in Myanmar, of bending over backwards to appease China’s oppressive regime, and of knowingly spreading misinformation that arguably helped bring Donald Trump to power twice.
“Last year the Meta lawyers got a gag order imposed that blocks the author from badmouthing the company,” I said. “But they didn’t try to block publication of the book, which almost instantly became a New York Times bestseller. If what she wrote was libelous, they would have sued her for a zillion dollars by now.”
I noted that Careless People does a good job of documenting Zuckerberg’s descent into total corruption. The Zuck fell out with Trump and had him kicked off Facebook after the Jan. 6, 2021 Capitol riot. But then he groveled enough to be invited to Trump’s second inauguration, where he took his place with Jeff Bezos and Elon Muskin in the pantheon of billionaire pigs.
Swamp Rabbit zipped open a beer. “Listen to you, all nasty and scornful. Stop complaining about shit you can’t control. Have a drink, it’ll put you in a better mood.”
“I’m in a great mood,” I said. “I got two likes on Facebook today.”
Footnote: The book’s title was inspired by that great quote from F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby: “They were careless people, Tom and Daisy — they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made.”