"Ever since researching and writing The Ideas Industry, I have felt an obligation to keep periodic tabs on how Silicon Valley founders attempt to engage the marketplace of ideas. See, for example, my critique of Marc Andreessen’s technological manifesto. Indeed, there’s now enough there there for me to publish journal articles about the topic.
I’m hardly the only one keeping tabs on this genre. TechDirt’s Mike Masnick has also written about, as he put it, “the disturbing trend of tech founders and VCs nodding along to the neoreactionary pitch that democracy is holding back innovation, and that what the industry really needs is a ‘tech-friendly’ strongman to sweep away institutional guardrails.”
So when I saw over the weekend that Palantir decided to publish a 22-point executive summary of co-founder Alex Karp’s co-authored book The Technological Republic: Hard Power, Soft Belief, and the Future of the West, I knew I was gonna have to take a look at it."
Another Bizarre Corporate Manifesto Released Into the WildAnother Silicon Valley CEO aspires for profundity and lands... somewhere else
Ever since researching and writing The Ideas Industry, I have felt an obligation to keep periodic tabs on how Silicon Valley founders attempt to engage the marketplace of ideas. See, for example, my critique of Marc Andreessen’s technological manifesto. Indeed, there’s now enough there there for me to publish journal articles about the topic. I’m hardly the only one keeping tabs on this genre. TechDirt’s Mike Masnick has also written about, as he put it, “the disturbing trend of tech founders and VCs nodding along to the neoreactionary pitch that democracy is holding back innovation, and that what the industry really needs is a ‘tech-friendly’ strongman to sweep away institutional guardrails.” So when I saw over the weekend that Palantir decided to publish a 22-point executive summary of co-founder Alex Karp’s co-authored book The Technological Republic: Hard Power, Soft Belief, and the Future of the West, I knew I was gonna have to take a look at it. Drezner’s World is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber. The manifesto has prompted some searing critiques — see Masnick as well as Spencer Ackerman, for example. For the hard-working staff here at Drezner’s World, the complicating fact is that, without any context, some of the 22 points are perfectly anodyne. Consider, for example, point 8: “Public servants need not be our priests. Any business that compensated its employees in the way that the federal government compensates public servants would struggle to survive.” Sure, I think a lot of government employees deserve to be paid more — that sounds great! Though if this point really means that it’s cool for public employees to have private companies on the side, well, that sounds an awful lot like corruption — so maybe even this point isn’t so anodyne. Let’s just focus on my wheelhouse, the international relations component of the manifesto. Here are the highlights:
Okay so there is a lot going on in these points. In order:
Then there’s the batshit crazy stuff — like these last two points:
I don’t even think the ghost of Samuel Huntington would buy the crap that Karp is trying to sell in these last two points. Having Palantir post this manifesto seems manifestly unnecessary — and yet, Palantir went and did it. Some of the other planks of the manifesto, like criticizing “the pervasive intolerance of religious belief” or claiming, “many politicians across the United States have essentially shrugged when it comes to violent crime,” sound positively Trumpian in their employment of truthful hyperbole. The whole manifesto is super-friendly to a Trump administration theory of state-corporate symbiosis that is definitely not fascist — if you read Niall Ferguson at least. As Masnick warns:
So, to sum up: The folks at Palantir think they’ve got it all sorted out in the marketplace of ideas. This half-based manifesto suggests otherwise. Thanks for reading Drezner’s World! This post is public so feel free to share it.
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